Jump to content

Homelander

Community Member
  • Posts

    59
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Homelander

  1. Of course - able-bodied people should contribute if they can. But let’s be real: this conversation isn’t about encouraging work; it’s about punishing poverty and giving tax breaks to the rich who do not need it. If the goal was really to help people succeed, we’d invest in job training, childcare, and healthcare - not just slash benefits.
  2. Right over your head. The US totally isn’t dictating policy except when JD Vance is lecturing Europe on their free speech laws, and Trump’s busy trying to strong-arm Israeli prosecutors to protect his buddy Bibi. But sure, tell me more about how we’re just minding our own business.
  3. She’s of Indian descent and this still reeks of hypocrisy.
  4. Another win for @BillsFanNC and @B-Man
  5. We shouldn’t be slashing vital programs just to hand out more tax cuts to the wealthy. I’d much rather see the top 1% pay their fair share than gut support for the most vulnerable in our society.
  6. So free speech is sacred but only when it flatters your flag. Criticize the US? Deport them. Say something uncomfortable? Ban them. Yet when your side storms the Capitol screaming '1776' cosplay slogans, it’s patriotism. And now the UK is your model for speech laws? Cool - should we start arresting half your Twitter feed too, or does censorship only apply to people you don’t like.
  7. From the article - "actual information" you did not want to highlight The Senate version could add approximately $3.3–$4 trillion to the national debt over the next decade - $1 trillion more than the House plan. The House version alone is projected to increase deficits by $2.4 trillion. As much as $930 billion in Medicaid cuts over ten years; strict work requirements could slash eligibility for those with parents of older teens. SNAP (food stamp) changes: House version pushes high work mandates. CBO estimates: 11.8 million more uninsured by 2034 under the Senate plan. House bill alone could leave 10.9 million without health insurance. Extends 2017 Trump-era tax cuts, with special deductions for seniors, tips, and overtime but caps those benefits. SALT deduction remains capped at $10,000 (Senate) vs. $40,000 (House), favoring higher earners in wealthier states. Senate bill includes a staggering $5 trillion debt-limit hike, significantly more than the House’s $4 trillion proposal.
  8. American greatness, right @Big Blitz - the golden years - truly a shining example of decline.
  9. Well, would you look at that - all of @BillsFanNC VPN puppets lined up in a row.
×
×
  • Create New...