12
   

Trump (says) approval rating would be 75 percent without Mueller

 
 
Real Music
 
  2  
Reply Mon 10 Dec, 2018 10:45 pm
@Brandon9000,
Since Donald Trump loves defending Russia's dictator Putin, while bashing the United States, maybe Trump should change his slogan to (Make Russia Great). If I didn't know any better, I would think that Russia's President Putin and Donald Trump were best buddies. What's next? Will Trump have Americans singing the Russian national anthem?

Published on Dec 20, 2015
Real Music
 
  2  
Reply Mon 10 Dec, 2018 10:48 pm
@Brandon9000,
The Republican Party is now Trump's Corruption Party. Here's how to fix the GOP and DC.

https://able2know.org/topic/485312-1
0 Replies
 
Real Music
 
  2  
Reply Mon 10 Dec, 2018 10:54 pm
@Brandon9000,
President Donald Trump On Charlottesville:
You Had Very Fine People, On Both Sides

Published on Aug 15, 2017
0 Replies
 
nehashah94
 
  -3  
Reply Mon 10 Dec, 2018 10:57 pm
Then what we have to do ? tell me
0 Replies
 
Real Music
 
  3  
Reply Mon 10 Dec, 2018 11:10 pm
@Brandon9000,
Republican front-runner Donald Trump is receiving criticism from both parties for his refusal to disavow the Klu Klux Klan and white supremacist David Duke during an interview Sunday. Republican rival Marco Rubio condemned Trump for not disavowing the KKK, saying it makes him "unelectable." Trump later responded on Twitter.

Published on Feb 28, 2016
0 Replies
 
Real Music
 
  3  
Reply Mon 10 Dec, 2018 11:18 pm
@Brandon9000,
Trump again praises Putin, while Putin manipulates Trump like a puppet.

Published on Sep 8, 2016
0 Replies
 
Real Music
 
  3  
Reply Mon 10 Dec, 2018 11:35 pm
@Brandon9000,
Tax cuts, spending to raise deficit to $1 trillion by 2019.


Published April 9, 2018
Quote:
WASHINGTON — The combined effects of President Trump's tax cuts and last month's budget-busting spending bill is sending the government's budget deficit toward the $1 trillion mark next year, according to a new analysis by the Congressional Budget Office.

The CBO report, released Monday, says that that the twin tax and spending bills will push the budget deficit to $804 billion this year and just under $1 trillion for the upcoming budget year.

CBO says economic growth from the tax cuts will add 0.7 percent on average to the nation's economic output over the coming decade. Those effects will only partially offset the deficit cost of the tax cuts. The administration had promised the cuts would pay for themselves.

The economic growth promises to drop the nationwide unemployment rate below 4 percent, CBO predicts

The report paints an unrelentingly bleak picture of federal deficits, which would permanently breach the $1 trillion mark in 2020 unless Congress stems the burst of red ink. The government would borrow about 19 cents of every dollar it spend this year. Deficits would grow to $1.5 trillion by 2028 — and could exceed $2 trillion if the tax cuts are fully extended and if Washington doesn't cut spending.

Republicans controlling Washington have largely lost interest in taking on the deficit, and the issue has fallen in prominence in recent years. Trump has ruled out cuts to Social Security and Medicare, and Capitol Hill Republicans have failed to take steps against the deficit since Trump took office.

Now that conservatives complained about the $1.3 trillion catchall spending bill — which blew through previous budget limits by $300 billion over this year and next, House GOP leaders have scheduled a vote this week on a proposed amendment to the Constitution to require a balanced federal budget. The vote is sure to fall well short of the two-thirds required to pass. The White House is also likely to propose rolling backing some of the domestic spending increases in last month's government-wide funding bill.

Many economists believe that if deficits continue to rise and the national debt grows, government borrowing will "crowd out" private lending and force up interest rates. And if interest rates go up, the government would have to pay much more to finance the more than $14 trillion in Treasury debt held by investors.

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/congress/tax-cuts-spending-raise-deficit-1-trillion-2019-n864041
0 Replies
 
Real Music
 
  3  
Reply Mon 10 Dec, 2018 11:56 pm
@Brandon9000,
Trump’s budget hits poor Americans the hardest.


Published February 12, 2018
Quote:
President Trump proposed a budget Monday that hits the poorest Americans the hardest, slashing billions of dollars in food stamps, health insurance and federal housing subsidies while pushing legislation to institute broad work requirements for families receiving housing vouchers, expanding on moves by some states to require recipients of Medicaid and food stamps to work.

The Trump budget proposal would gut the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, better known as food stamps, by $17.2 billion in 2019 — equivalent to 22 percent of the program’s total cost last year. It calls for cuts of more than $213.5 billion over the next decade, a reduction of nearly 30 percent, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

In addition, Trump is proposing a full-scale redesign of SNAP, which provides an average of $125 per month to 42.2 million Americans. For the last 40 years, the program has allowed beneficiaries to use SNAP benefits at grocery stores as if they were cash. Under the budget proposal, the Department of Agriculture would use a portion of those benefits to buy and deliver a package of U.S.-grown commodities to SNAP households that receive $90 or more in assistance each month, using the government’s buying power to obtain common foods at lower costs.

“This budget proposes taking away food assistance from millions of low-income Americans — and on the heels of a tax cut that favored the wealthy and corporations,” said Stacy Dean, president for food assistance policy at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. “It doesn’t reflect the right values.”

The proposal repeats several cost-cutting measures from last year, including new restrictions on eligibility and stricter requirements around the use of work-requirement waivers, which allow states with high unemployment rates to extend benefits to adults who are out of work for longer than three months.

Congress has final say over spending — but Monday's budget proposal is seen as an important sign of Trump's priorities.

The budget proposal would also alter programs at the Department of Housing and Urban Development “to encourage work and self-sufficiency,” the document said.

Trump's proposed budget for the 2019 fiscal year includes a 14 percent cut to HUD, amounting to $6.8 billion below the agency’s current $48 billion spending, an even deeper cut than his previous year's proposal, which had been the most dramatic cut to HUD since President Ronald Reagan slashed the agency’s funding in the early 1980s.

The administration has proposed eliminating the entire fund for public housing capital repairs, a savings of nearly $2 billion a year. The targeted cut comes at a time when public housing faces a backlog of capital needs upward of $40 billion, said Diane Yentel, president and chief executive of the National Low Income Housing Coalition. In New York City, about 80 percent of public housing tenants suffered heating and hot water outages in recent months because the aging boiler systems are in desperate need of repair, Yentel said.

“The administration wants state and local governments to take care of that, which is just a total abdication of its responsibility,” she said.

Trump also proposed cutting a federal housing subsidy program, known as Section 8 vouchers, by nearly $1 billion, which Yentel said would result in more than 250,000 low-income families losing their housing assistance. The cuts would come on top of the administration's proposal to raise the rent for low-income families receiving public housing help.

The proposed HUD budget, like last year, would eliminate funding for community development block grants, which play a key role in disaster recovery, as well as grants to states and local governments to increase homeownership for the lowest-income Americans, and funding for neighborhood redevelopment. The Trump administration said it has proposed shutting down programs that are “duplicative or have failed to demonstrate effectiveness” and that state and local governments are better equipped to shoulder the responsibility for community and economic development.

On health care for low-income Americans, Trump’s budget calls for cutting federal Medicaid funding by $250 billion over the next 10 years, as the administration envisions passing a law “modeled closely” on a Senate Republican proposal that failed last fall to repeal the Affordable Care Act.

The White House plan, similar to that spearheaded by Sens. Lindsey O. Graham (R-S.C.) and Bill Cassidy (R-La.), would dramatically cut federal health spending and send some of the savings to the states. Republicans say doing so would give governors the flexibility to bring down costs, but experts say the overall reduction in government spending would cost millions of Americans their health insurance.

The White House plan also calls for new per-person limits on the amount of health care each Medicaid enrollee can use, as well as tying federal spending on the program to the cost of inflation.

The budget envisions a sweeping change to Medicaid, turning a portion of the federal funding of the vast safety-net insurance program into a block grant. That grant, starting with $146 billion in 2020 and reaching $1.6 trillion over the coming decade, would free states from basic federal Medicaid rules that spell out which medical benefits the program must cover and which residents must be allowed to qualify.

All of the deep cuts to the social safety net that Trump proposed last year were rejected by Congress on a bipartisan basis, and the budget bill passed by Congress last week increased spending amounts in discretionary programs. But Yentel said she fears the drastic cuts in Trump's budget proposal lower the bar for what's considered acceptable.

“The president’s budget request is always considered dead on arrival in Congress, especially in an election year,” Yentel said. “My concern is that it leaves open a space for a compromise to be less severe but still a significant cut to programs.”

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2018/02/12/trumps-budget-hits-poor-americans-the-hardest/?utm_term=.5dc9ca713ce7
0 Replies
 
izzythepush
 
  4  
Reply Tue 11 Dec, 2018 01:51 am
@Brandon9000,
It's fairly obvious, and the truth will out but lickspittles like to deny the truth in favour of servility.

Along with selling your country down the river Trump has also used the office of president to enrich himself, pouring tax payers money into his resorts in Florida and elsewhere.

Trump could **** on the American flag, suck off Putin and nuke NYC and you'd still wax lyrical about how wonderful he is.

Finn dAbuzz
 
  -3  
Reply Tue 11 Dec, 2018 01:53 pm
@Real Music,
Rolling Eyes Rolling Eyes Rolling Eyes
0 Replies
 
coldjoint
 
  -3  
Reply Tue 11 Dec, 2018 04:24 pm
@izzythepush,

Quote:
Along with selling your country down the river

How has he done that? You don't have to reply to me, just tell us how Trump has done that. Or stop your nonsense.
farmerman
 
  5  
Reply Tue 11 Dec, 2018 05:38 pm
@coldjoint,
well, just today hes removed large controls from water quality regs for streams and wetlands.
The state of Pa has the second longest amount of stream miles of the 50 states (84000 miles) and a good 1/3 are polluted by all kinds of coal mine wastes and now chemical wastes that fish cannot live in them. We will now have to ait till we can get rid of thi asshole president before we can begin again to restore these dtreams.

THATS GOOD ENOUGH FOR ONE POINT PINKY?? Or are you till in major denia l about facts
coldjoint
 
  -2  
Reply Tue 11 Dec, 2018 05:51 pm
@farmerman,
Quote:
restore these dtreams.

Tell that to people feeding their families who live today and tomorrow and the next day on a job that killed fish. Run their asses out of town.
farmerman
 
  6  
Reply Tue 11 Dec, 2018 10:53 pm
@coldjoint,
you realize that we can have both?? I think the pink has gotten into your brain.

He is actually LOWERING the water quality standards already in effect. We have the technology to clean up the discharge water before we let it back into the river, you know that right??
farmerman
 
  3  
Reply Tue 11 Dec, 2018 10:54 pm
@farmerman,
Also, the costs necessary to achieve higher water quality numbers would be EXPENSED.
0 Replies
 
coldjoint
 
  -2  
Reply Wed 12 Dec, 2018 11:18 am
@farmerman,
Quote:
We have the technology to clean up the discharge water before we let it back into the river,

What did Trump do to stop that? Wouldn't that be the companies responsibility? Are you telling me Trump says the technology should not be used. Again, be specific.
farmerman
 
  4  
Reply Wed 12 Dec, 2018 11:25 am
@coldjoint,
he lowere the cleanup requirements by raising the concentrations for pollutants entering streams or wetlands. He also redefined wetlands , lowering protection stds to our waterways
farmerman
 
  4  
Reply Wed 12 Dec, 2018 11:31 am
@coldjoint,
Quote:
Wouldn't that be the companies responsibility?
yes, as I said in another thread, Ive NEVER seen companies "do whats right" absent regulations requiring them to NOT POISON OUR WATER,AIR, and SOILS

Quote:
Are you telling me Trump says the technology should not be used.
Trump has lowered cleanup requirements for waters receiving industrial discharges. WHAT DOES THAT TELL YOU EINSTEIN?

Quote:
Again, be specific.
The "game" you play, (being unable to understand plin english ), IS, i hope, just a game. NOBODY here can be that stupid and live.
0 Replies
 
coldjoint
 
  -2  
Reply Wed 12 Dec, 2018 11:32 am
@farmerman,
Quote:
he lowere the cleanup requirements

The ones Obama's weaponized EPA imposed? Obama was about killing businesses and this was a way to do it.
farmerman
 
  4  
Reply Wed 12 Dec, 2018 11:47 am
@coldjoint,
Please dont play dim. As a "business savvy" Conservative you should know that improving a product by improving its ancillary streams (including waste water), are xpensable amounts of payout , not a tax deduction but a direct line by line tax saving

Quote:
Obama was about killing businesses and this was a way to do it
You really have but one trick dont you (and even that one is all full of ****) Ive been in the business for 40 years an have made mining companies hundreds of millions of dollars employing an innovative refining processes and improved waste streams that allowed them to actually produce resources from even lower percentage ores .They saved money from direct tax write offs and made more money by greater production.

Listening to your groundless opinions, pinky is often like listening to a budgie try to explain continental drift.

 

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