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TPS

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Everything posted by TPS

  1. I know this is focused on R1, but with what they've done, I think RB gets pushed up in their draft, with R3 not being out of the question.
  2. As long as they have enough $$ left for one more OL, preferably RT.
  3. That's why I said signing Gore and cutting Ivory is a wash.
  4. Good point about Ivory. Capwise, it nets to $0 if they release ivory.
  5. They were in the market for an all-purpose TE, with good blocking skills, hence the "interest" in James. Interestingly, the early rumors had them linked to James and Paradis. Good head fakes on both!
  6. Tiberius posted this earlier. Two related ponts: one, global trading patterns are developed over time as firms make decisions on where to produce and source. Given the significant outsourcing of US production to China and Mexico, trying to change those patterns will take several years at best. Two, Given those current production and sourcing patterns, the "propensity to import" out of income is much higher for the US than the rest of the world's propensity to import US goods. As a consequence, even if the US and world incomes grow by the same rate, the US trade deficit will grow. In 2018, The US grew faster than most countries, which caused the deficit to widen even faster. Until we start making massed-produced consumption goods here, that pattern won't change. An example to help. For every $100 of income growth, the US imports $20; for the rest of the world, they import $15 of US goods for every $100. So even if income is growing at the same rate globally, the US deficit will go up--if global growth goes up by $100, US imports grow by $20 and exports by $15. if the US grows faster than the rest of the world, as happened in 2018, then the trade deficit will grow even wider. This also explains why the only time you see the trade deficit shrink is during a US recession--as income falls, our imports fall faster than our exports. Trump is a victim of his expansionary Keynesian policies last year....and bringing home production will take time.
  7. After reading some of the AB threads on TBD, I feel like this was a really productive discussion today...
  8. I see. We've been comparing apples to oranges. I'm talking discretionary spending, and you're adding in mandatory expenditures. If we are considering the latter, then you'd have to agree Trump is quite the Keynesian too since spending has gone up $250 billion in his first two years...
  9. Yes, otherwise I'd say one of Bosa, Allen, or QWilliams.
  10. Is he a 3 technique?
  11. So now the Fed's policy is lumped in with Keynesian spending? Weird definition...(almost as bad as Austrians defining inflation as an increase in the money supply...) Also, the budget wasn't re-set by the value of the stimulus. Again, about 1/3 was tax cuts and credits, not spending; Of the nearly $500 billion spent from 2009-11, $200 billion was in transfers to states so they wouldn't have to make cuts and worsen the situation. That leaves $300 billion over a three year period, or $100 billion/year, which is < 1% of GDP each year. The main cause (about 3/4) of the significant rise in deficits in those years was the loss of tax revenue and the rise in transfer payments associated with higher unemployment and transfers to states.
  12. I wasn't crediting him. You stated that lackluster growth during his terms proved that huge Keynesian spending policies don't work. I am simply pointing out that, while there was a temporary stimulus to help stabilize the economy, spending declined for most of the rest of his terms--there was no additional Keynesian expansion after that, and the Republicans certainly saw to this in his second term. Again, Trump has been more of a Keynesian than post-2010 Obama. I agree that ee was not a good president. Endless war and no visionary policies.
  13. PFF's ranking: https://www.profootballfocus.com/nfl/players/wyatt-teller/46131 Interesting, if you click on the link about the Bills' Oline ranking, they had this to say about Teller:
  14. I feel bad for the Sacklers, being tossed out of an investment fund. Well, at least they didn't die from Opioid addiction like thousands of others... https://www.wsj.com/articles/hedge-fund-tosses-family-that-controls-maker-of-oxycontin-11551985100?mod=hp_lead_pos4
  15. What's worth defending, and what I'm defending, is the right to criticize Israel's (any country's) policies, AIPAC's undue influence, and excessive force used by Israel on Gaza protesters.
  16. You're suggesting they shouldn't stick with the dems because a handful call out AIPAC? The majority are trying to pass anti-semitic legislation. I've said this before, why is it so difficult to understand that there are conservative and liberal Jews? Yes, we can all find posts that support our POV. We're all BMan now...
  17. You misunderstand me. I'm simply trying to point out that Obama did not raise your taxes during the actual recession. I'm not saying I approve, I'm simply saying your statement was not factual. 2011, yes; the recession, no.
  18. You're not talking about the recession in 2009 or 2010. He extended the Bush tax cuts for all but the top rate (you I presume) starting 2011. You claimed he raised taxes during the recession, which was 2009, which is what I was responding to. He raised taxes in 2011 by not extending your rate and passing ACA.
  19. Another self-hating Jew.... https://www.haaretz.com/us-news/.premium-keep-it-up-ilhan-omar-1.6999623
  20. The leader of the self-hating Jews on the Omar controversy: https://www.huffpost.com/entry/bernie-sanders-ilhan-omar-anti-semitism-statement_n_5c80385be4b0e62f69e98739 Funny that so many US conservatives seem to think that you're anti-semitic if you don't support Netanyahu's regime or call out Israel's disproportionate use of force on the Palestinians protesting in Gaza, as if that regime represents all Israelis. In fact, it's quite possible that Bibi will lose the upcoming election due to all of those self-hating Jews in Israel...
  21. What taxes went up in the recession? I'll give you either 2009 or 2010, but please do provide the information.... "Eventually something will happen" is about the best argument anyone has made about the debt...
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