Have you ever noticed right wingers here always claim to be apolitical? Wouldn't you know it, just by coincidence they
happen to defend whatever the president said, thats all..
Notice how the left wingers always are predictable in what they say? Wouldn't you know it, just by coincidence they
happen to challenge whatever the president said, thats all...
Same old, same old from the same old. Didn't even try to put a little Covid spin on it. Some just want to watch the world burn.
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As to the proposition of helping the states. I won't get into the partisan nonsense but will get in a few points.
1. I'm a fiscal conservative as a core political value and there is no one standing up for me. (Maybe Rand Paul.) Trump, Democrats and Republicans all want to spend a lot more money than I do.
2. States are going to have a huge mismatch between revenue and expenses. As
@florduh says, they don't have the magic money tree the feds have so can't pay with promises.
3. We're going to have to have the feds use the magic tree to give magic money to the states or the states will go BK. States can't go BK. Only the magic money fairy can have any chance of making this better.
4. Does the magic money tree last for all amounts? I mean, if we can drop $6 trillion without really blinking, why not $100 trillion? It all depends on where the rest of the world feels safe in leaving it's money. At some level of spending...
At what level that is we won't know until it happens. If it happens, kiss your ass goodby. There will be nothing anyone will be able to do.
5. What we're really talking about in the state issue is how we spread and allocate the harm. Remember, we were all hit by this pandemic. Is it fair and right those in states that have been better at managing their budget through the years, managing the pandemic cost effectively and did less actions that would hurt revenue as mitigation, pay for those who did not? Especially when the most profligate spenders or revenue destroyers seem to have an inverse relationship to success in health outcomes in the pandemic, what can the fair measure be?
6. We cannot prevent societal change if society wants to change. If people don't want buggy whips, we shouldn't join together to make sure all the whip cutter's jobs are maintained. The economic pain is just beginning. We ain't seen nothing yet. Money might be better spent in helping displaced workers get training and help in changing life roles for them over some money that would extend a job until that money runs out.