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Twitter Bemoans Temporary Shutdown Fix as US Gov’t Heads Back to Work

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The United States woke up Thursday to lick its wounded international image after the 16-day government shutdown was declared over – at least until the next looming deadline to fund the government early next year.

WASHINGTON, October 17 (by Karin Zeitvogel for RIA Novosti) – The United States woke up Thursday to lick its wounded international image after the 16-day government shutdown was declared over – at least until the next looming deadline to fund the government early next year.

A banner headline on The Boston Globe screamed “CRISIS OVER*” but specified in an asterisked footnote that the Band-Aid that US lawmakers had put on the US economy and system of governance would only last for three months until the next budget deadline.

Gary Younge, a correspondent for Britain’s The Guardian newspaper, said the last-minute deal to raise the debt ceiling and end the shutdown solved nothing.

“US politics is stuck in chronic dysfunction,” he tweeted, and in the paper wrote, that while Americans were blaming “cranky conservative Tea Party” Republicans for the shutdown, the crisis was really “rooted in an electoral system that is heavily gerrymandered, where only those who can pay, can play.”

The United States did not avert a default with the last-minute deal reached by the Senate on Wednesday and passed within hours by both Houses, but diverted one, someone tweeted.

John Chambers, managing director of credit rating agency Standard & Poor’s, which in August 2011 downgraded the United States from its top-notch AAA rating to AA+, citing Congressional bickering, predicted on CNN that “we’ll be back here in January, debating the same issues and, given the composition of Congress, it will be still acrimonious.”

“This is, I fear, a permanent feature of our budgetary process,” he said.

Standard &Poor’s said the shutdown had cost the United States $24 billion.

With shutdown havoc wreaked on the reputation of America’s political system, the Republican Party’s popularity, which sank to an all-time low of 28 percent in one Gallup poll, and Tea Party-backed Republican Sen. Ted Cruz, whom many pointed to as the instigator of the shutdown, some looked even further into the future, saying the Republicans’ missteps made an as-yet-to-be-selected Democrat a shoe-in for the White House.

Federal workers returned to work in Washington Thursday, jamming Metro trains and highways during morning rush hour.

The government agency that was the hardest hit by the shutdown, NASA, where around 95 percent of the workforce was furloughed, posted a message on its Twitter feed for the first time in two weeks on Thursday.

But life at the space agency will take some time to get back into full swing because “experiments have been left unattended for more than two weeks… Equipment needs to be powered back on,” wrote the space website Universe Today.

Many federal workers – the men, at least – grew beards during the shutdown, and ceremoniously shaved them off when it ended at midnight. But some of them acknowledged that they’ll probably be sprouting new whiskers in a few months.

Americans resumed planning for weddings and camping trips in national parks, which had been closed during the shutdown.

And Americans looked on the bright side when they realized that they had missed more than two weeks in the life of the National Zoo’s newborn panda because of the shutdown, which darkened the zoo’s Panda Cam on Oct. 1.

 

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