192
   

monitoring Trump and relevant contemporary events

 
 
ehBeth
 
  1  
Tue 26 Jun, 2018 11:42 am
https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/democrats-are-wrong-about-republicans-republicans-are-wrong-about-democrats/

a really interesting read
thanks to TKO for posting it elsewhere
0 Replies
 
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ehBeth
 
  1  
Tue 26 Jun, 2018 11:56 am
https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/why-republicans-may-have-a-narrow-senate-advantage/

lots of interesting poll links in there

hey - did we forget about NK already? it was only two weeks ago (crazy news cycle - thank you twitter)


Quote:
A Quinnipiac University poll found that a majority of Republicans believe Trump’s June 12 summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un was a success for the U.S. A majority of Democrats believe it was a failure. Almost 80 percent of both Democrats and Republicans agree that the summit was a success for North Korea.

0 Replies
 
layman
 
  -1  
Tue 26 Jun, 2018 11:57 am
Finally a true leader has emerged for the democrats:

https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTyp1vBjIAYFUQHFg8u_hO0g27dw7RkZbZqiB82NMnM7T3bY_qjwQ
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firefly
 
  2  
Tue 26 Jun, 2018 12:26 pm
Frank Clemente: Trump, GOP get failing grades on new tax law
Jun. 21, 2018

This is the time of year for final report cards, so it’s a good time to grade President Trump and Congressional Republicans on their massive tax cuts mostly benefitting the wealthy and corporations. Six months after enactment, their new tax law is seriously underperforming, failing to achieve passing marks in one important subject after another.

Tax Fairness

Once the law is fully phased in, 83% of the benefits will go to the wealthiest 1%. Those one-percenters will get an average tax cut of over $50,000 this year. Folks making under $86,000—the bottom three-fifths of the income scale—will get only about a dollar a day.

Increasing Worker Pay

Trump and other Republicans claimed that giving corporations huge tax breaks would help workers, going so far as to guarantee them a $4,000 pay raise. Unfortunately, only 4% of American workers are getting any kind of payout tied to the corporate tax cuts.

Most of those are one-time bonuses, not permanent wage hikes, and few are anywhere close to $4,000. Moreover, the government reported last week that average real hourly wages for four out of five workers in the private sector have actually gone down over the past year.

Sharing the Wealth

Only 402 of the nation’s six million employers have announced any plans to share their tax cuts with employees through bonuses or wage hikes. The total is estimated at $7 billion so far. But that pales in comparison to the $77 billion in tax cuts that just 156 corporations we have estimates for are getting this year.

Meanwhile, since the tax law was enacted, corporations have announced nearly $500 billion in stock buybacks that principally enrich their CEOs and other wealthy shareholders. So, corporations are spending 69 times more benefitting speculators on Wall Street than they are on bonuses and wage hikes boosting workers on Main Street.

The High Cost

When the tax cuts were signed into law, budget experts figured they would cost $1.5 trillion over 10 years. That price tag has since ballooned to $1.9 trillion. That big bill pushes up the deficit, which Trump and congressional Republicans aim to reduce by cutting Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, education, nutrition and other public services vital to working families. What a cruel exchange: cut taxes mostly for the rich and Wall Street, then pay for those tax cuts by cutting health care and retirement for working families.


Protecting Health Care

The Trump-GOP tax plan weakens a key part of Affordable Care Act (ACA) and uses the savings to pay for tax cuts that mostly benefit the wealthy and corporations. The result: 13 million Americans will lose health care coverage by 2025, and insurance premiums for ACA health plans will spike by 10%, on average, most years for the next decade.

Drug companies, on the other hand, make out like bandits, as they always do. Five pharmaceutical giants will together get an estimated $6 billion tax cut this year. The industry will save tens of billions more in the future from a hefty U.S. tax discount on their accumulated offshore profits. Big Pharma received this tax handout after recently jacking up the prices to consumers of some of their most widely-prescribed drugs by as much as 14 times the rate of inflation.

Learning from Mistakes

Despite these disastrous results, Trump and his GOP allies want to repeat their mistakes by passing a second round of tax cuts, which would once again highly favor the rich. The most frequently suggested form of this “Round 2” tax cut would give over 40% of the benefits to the richest 5% of families, those making over $290,000 a year. It would cost another $650 billion, further imperiling important public services.

To get passing marks on how well they address the needs of the American people, Trump and his Republican allies need to repeal their tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations. Then we could use that money to fix roads and repair bridges, build schools and make college more affordable, expand broadband and ensure cleaner water, and expand quality health care to all and ensure secure retirements.

But if Republicans refuse to improve their failing grades on this most basic test of good governance, the American people may decide to expel them from office.
https://augustafreepress.com/frank-clemente-trump-gop-get-failing-grades-on-new-tax-law/
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MontereyJack
 
  3  
Tue 26 Jun, 2018 12:43 pm
@coldjoint,
From the party of Donald Trump,Rush Limbaugh, Joe McCarthy, Ann Coulter, Glen Beck, Sean Hannity, Bill O'Reilly, and Michelle Bachman, gungasnaKKKe, oralloy, layman, and coldjoint,just to name a few, complaints about supposed liberal incivility ring more htan just a little hollow. You guys have seven decades of incivility to answer for. Can we hear a GOP apology for that? Yeah, I thought not.
firefly
 
  4  
Tue 26 Jun, 2018 12:43 pm
@coldjoint,
I notice you're NOT defending Trump's new tax law--or refuting anything in that article with facts to counter its findings. Laughing


McGentrix
 
  -1  
Tue 26 Jun, 2018 12:47 pm
@MontereyJack,
MontereyJack wrote:

From the party of Donald Trump,Rush Limbaugh, Joe McCarthy, Ann Coulter, Glen Beck, Sean Hannity, Bill O'Reilly, and Michelle Bachman, gungasnaKKKe, oralloy, layman, and coldjoint,just to name a few, complaints about supposed liberal incivility ring more htan just a little hollow. You guys have seven decades of incivility to answer for. Can we hear a GOP apology for that? Yeah, I thought not.


We are just, almost, over the 8 years of Bush hostility your side flung upon us.

Do I really need to remind you of that?
McGentrix
 
  -2  
Tue 26 Jun, 2018 12:49 pm
@firefly,
firefly wrote:

I notice you're NOT defending Trump's new tax law--or refuting anything in that article with facts to counter its findings. Laughing


Why would anyone need to? His story leads back to a single biased source. It's hardly ground breaking when you use a source that believe everyone should pay "Their fair share" (which means pay what they think you should, not what the government thinks you should)
0 Replies
 
MontereyJack
 
  3  
Tue 26 Jun, 2018 12:51 pm
@McGentrix,
Do we really need to remind you of the eight years of mindless, irrational hostility you displayed agaihnst Obama, who incidentally pulled your chestnuts out of the fire and saved the capitalist system after your side came within a whisker of succeeding in creating a worldwide economic meltdown.
layman
 
  -2  
Tue 26 Jun, 2018 01:24 pm
In closing, the Supreme Court said this in the muslim travel ban case:

Quote:
Because plaintiffs have not shown that they are likely tosucceed on the merits of their claims, we reverse the grant of the preliminary injunction as an abuse of discretion.


Before long, they're gunna have to prohibit some of these circuit courts of using any discretion at all, because they always abuse it.
0 Replies
 
layman
 
  -3  
Tue 26 Jun, 2018 01:33 pm
Another excerpt, directed to Sotomeyer, who dissented:

Quote:
It cannot be said that it is impossible to “discern a relationship to legitimate state interests” or that the policy is “inexplicable by anything but animus.” Indeed, the dissent can only attempt to argue otherwise by refusing to apply anything resembling rational basis review.


Indeed, it seems that only the dissent itself is “inexplicable by anything but animus,” eh?
0 Replies
 
gungasnake
 
  -3  
Tue 26 Jun, 2018 01:47 pm
"Obunga" means "super stupid asshole" in Bantu and Swahili.

You might could accuse republicans of racism due to some of the pictures of Maxine Waters being seen lately but the honest truth is that the ugliest of the ugly amongst demokkkrat women isn't even black...

https://scontent-dfw5-1.xx.fbcdn.net/v/t1.0-9/36200139_10214661451228869_565318468971266048_o.jpg?_nc_cat=0&oh=1ee2cbad93c73ea1e2f73896e6eca45c&oe=5BA70A41
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oralloy
 
  -3  
Tue 26 Jun, 2018 02:00 pm
@ehBeth,
ehBeth wrote:
McGentrix wrote:
"Obunga" is racist?!
it is indeed
__
there is no upside to being disingenuous about it
It doesn't look racist to me.
0 Replies
 
oralloy
 
  -3  
Tue 26 Jun, 2018 02:01 pm
@MontereyJack,
MontereyJack wrote:
From the party of Donald Trump,Rush Limbaugh, Joe McCarthy, Ann Coulter, Glen Beck, Sean Hannity, Bill O'Reilly, and Michelle Bachman, gungasnaKKKe, oralloy, layman, and coldjoint,just to name a few, complaints about supposed liberal incivility ring more htan just a little hollow. You guys have seven decades of incivility to answer for. Can we hear a GOP apology for that? Yeah, I thought not.
If you have trouble remembering which political party I belong to, you might want to glance at my Gravatar image from time to time.
0 Replies
 
oralloy
 
  -4  
Tue 26 Jun, 2018 02:02 pm
@MontereyJack,
MontereyJack wrote:
Do we really need to remind you of the eight years of mindless, irrational hostility you displayed agaihnst Obama,
No such hostility. That's just Democratic propaganda to excuse Obama's failures as a president.
hightor
 
  7  
Tue 26 Jun, 2018 02:36 pm
@McGentrix,
Quote:
Do you agree with this Hightor?

The quoted excerpts or the whole piece?

I think the author is onto something, in that the "Oh, I'm so shocked at such uncivil behavior, at such atrocious manners" is a bit disingenuous considering the political climate which has been going downhill since Clinton discussed his choice of underwear back in '92. There are people on both sides who throw juvenile insults around but, as I tried to point out over the weekend, mocking people's appearance, distorting their names, and incessantly bringing up political transgressions of the past without providing context eventually becomes tedious and does nothing to promote mutual understanding. The difference with Trump is that you didn't hear Obama, Bush II, or Clinton engaging in this sort of trash-talking themselves and so I do think he deserves some criticism on that score.
 

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