I got a buck that says Trump has paid no income taxes, at all..
https://www.washingtonpost.com/poli...a2f63c-1b7c-11e6-b6e0-c53b7ef63b45_story.html
https://www.washingtonpost.com/poli...a2f63c-1b7c-11e6-b6e0-c53b7ef63b45_story.html
I think we should start with Auditing the Fed and shed some transparency on spending. This will effect how future laws will be written on a few levels. Less back deal horse trading. Some Full-time horse traders will have to be un-elected because they simply will have less clout.Taxes? How about getting the size of government down to reasonable levels of cost to function efficiently and equitably, and then evaluate what our taxes (bracketed or flat) should be to support it, and on an ongoing basis adjust... with a nationalized consensus of citizen-run local government oversight?
Here is one you can use as an example...Not sure what the percentage of tax rate is for european countries as a barometer I used to refer to.
Well, he did say the other day that he wouldn't mind paying a little more... a little more than nothing is better than nothing I guess...I got a buck that says Trump has paid no income taxes, at all..
https://www.washingtonpost.com/poli...a2f63c-1b7c-11e6-b6e0-c53b7ef63b45_story.html
No. He does not and never has supported what you implied.The socialism Bernie envisions involves taxation similar to northern Europe, perhaps triple or quadruple what our middle class now pays.
Well, even the official Berni-nomics says your paycheck will go down by 8%. For somebody making 38K a year I estimate that to be at least a 50% increase in their tax rates. However, I have my doubts. Either the Europeans are remarkably inefficient in their socialism or Bernie is giving us over-optimistic, low-ball figures.No. He does not and never has supported what you implied.
Well, even the official Berni-nomics says your paycheck will go down by 8%. For somebody making 38K a year I estimate that to be at least a 50% increase in their tax rates. However, I have my doubts. Either the Europeans are remarkably inefficient in their socialism or Bernie is giving us over-optimistic, low-ball figures.
http://dailycaller.com/2016/04/17/t...will-look-like-under-bernie-sanders-tax-plan/Show me the money Show me where Bernies policies will lower your paycheck 8%.
Paul Krugman
The Truth About the Sanders Movement
May 23, 2016 6:17 pm May 23, 2016 6:17 pm
In short, it’s complicated – not all bad, by any means, but not the pure uprising of idealists the more enthusiastic supporters imagine.
The political scientists Christopher Achen and Larry Bartels have an illuminating discussion of Sanders support. The key graf that will probably have Berniebros boiling is this:
"Yet commentators who have been ready and willing to attribute Donald Trump’s success to anger, authoritarianism, or racism rather than policy issues have taken little note of the extent to which Mr. Sanders’s support is concentrated not among liberal ideologues but among disaffected white men."
The point is not to demonize, but, if you like, to de-angelize. Like any political movement (including the Democratic Party, which is, yes, a coalition of interest groups) Sandersism has been an assemblage of people with a variety of motives, not all of them pretty. Here’s a short list based on my own encounters:
1.Genuine idealists: For sure, quite a few Sanders supporters dream of a better society, and for whatever reason – maybe just because they’re very young – are ready to dismiss practical arguments about why all their dreams can’t be accomplished in a day.
2.Romantics: This kind of idealism shades over into something that’s less about changing society than about the fun and ego gratification of being part of The Movement. (Those of us who were students in the 60s and early 70s very much recognize the type.) For a while there – especially for those who didn’t understand delegate math – it felt like a wonderful joy ride, the scrappy young on the march about to overthrow the villainous old. But there’s a thin line between love and hate: when reality began to set in, all too many romantics reacted by descending into bitterness, with angry claims that they were being cheated.
3.Purists: A somewhat different strand in the movement, also familiar to those of us of a certain age, consists of those for whom political activism is less about achieving things and more about striking a personal pose. They are the pure, the unsullied, who reject the corruptions of this world and all those even slightly tainted – which means anyone who actually has gotten anything done. Quite a few Sanders surrogates were Naderites in 2000; the results of that venture don’t bother them, because it was never really about results, only about affirming personal identity.
4.CDS victims: Quite a few Sanders supporters are mainly Clinton-haters, deep in the grip of Clinton Derangement Syndrome; they know that Hillary is corrupt and evil, because that’s what they hear all the time; they don’t realize that the reason it’s what they hear all the time is that right-wing billionaires have spent more than two decades promoting that message. Sanders has gotten a number of votes from conservative Democrats who are voting against her, not for him, and for sure there are liberal supporters who have absorbed the same message, even if they don’t watch Fox News.
5.Salon des Refuses: This is a small group in number, but accounts for a lot of the pro-Sanders commentary, and is of course something I see a lot. What I’m talking about here are policy intellectuals who have for whatever reason been excluded from the inner circles of the Democratic establishment, and saw Sanders as their ticket to the big time. They typically hold heterodox views, but those views don’t have much to do with the campaign – sorry, capital theory disputes from half a century ago aren’t relevant to the debate over health reform. What matters is their outsider status, which gives them an interest in backing an outsider candidate – and makes them reluctant to accept it when that candidate is no longer helping the progressive cause.
So how will this coalition of the not-always disinterested break once it’s over? The genuine idealists will probably realize that whatever their dreams, Trump would be a nightmare. Purists and CDSers won’t back Clinton, but they were never going to anyway. My guess is that disgruntled policy intellectuals will, in the end, generally back Clinton.
The question, as I see it, involves the romantics. How many will give in to their bitterness? A lot may depend on Sanders – and whether he himself is one of those embittered romantics, unable to move on.
Always interested in what the clearly unbiased Paul Krugman has to say about Hillary V Bernie.snip
Always interested in what the clearly unbiased Paul Krugman has to say about Hillary V Bernie.
Krugman Over the Edge: He Should Apologize for Smearing Bernie Sanders With False Charges
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/danny...e-edge-smearing-bernie-sanders_b_9721316.html
Over the past week, Mr. Sanders has declared that Mrs. Clinton leads only because she has won in the “Deep South,” which is a “pretty conservative part of the country.” The tally so far, he says, “distorts reality” because it contains so many Southern states.
He no longer has any chance but keeps telling his followers he has a chance because otherwise his campaign contributions would fall off to nothing. He lost the popular vote by a large margin, so all he can do is suggest the process is rigged, though it only appears rigged if you drink the Kool-aid and resolutely ignore the vote counts.So again i don't follow all that closely so how is my guy Bernie doing? A decent chance? Seems like Trump and Hillary lost some steam, hoping that means it is Bernies Sanders's chance to shine.