Jump to content

The Trump Economy


GG

Recommended Posts

1 hour ago, Nanker said:

Thank you for your service ALF. But you seem to specialize in finding a dark circle around every rainbow. It’s tiring. 

 

Nanker's PPP: A place where we remember to be thankful every day and full of optimism about how the last 20 years are the best time to be alive, especially in America.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 7.7k
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

1 hour ago, ALF said:

Living in her car, she was afraid and harassed. Then she found an unexpected refuge

 

As an Uber driver, Lauren Kush tries to keep her Toyota Prius spotless.

But keeping it tidy serves a dual purpose. The 36-year-old woman is homeless and has been sleeping in her car at night, converting the back seat into a bed.

 

Kush started sleeping in her car when she could no longer afford an apartment in Los Angeles, where median rent for a one-bedroom is $2,350 per month. She's now among more than 16,000 people in LA County who live in their vehicles -- about a quarter of the nearly 60,000 homeless people here.

 

https://www.cnn.com/2019/12/23/us/homeless-living-in-vehicles-los-angeles/index.html

 

But the economy is so great and don't look at the budget deficit

 

She should move to North Carolina and rent one of those 500.00 houses 

Just now, John Adams said:

 

Nanker's PPP: A place where we remember to be thankful every day and full of optimism about how the last 20 years are the best time to be alive, especially in America.

 

Pretending to care about other countries on the internet won’t get you laid. 

  • Haha (+1) 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, ALF said:

Living in her car, she was afraid and harassed. Then she found an unexpected refuge

 

As an Uber driver, Lauren Kush tries to keep her Toyota Prius spotless.

But keeping it tidy serves a dual purpose. The 36-year-old woman is homeless and has been sleeping in her car at night, converting the back seat into a bed.

 

Kush started sleeping in her car when she could no longer afford an apartment in Los Angeles, where median rent for a one-bedroom is $2,350 per month. She's now among more than 16,000 people in LA County who live in their vehicles -- about a quarter of the nearly 60,000 homeless people here.

 

https://www.cnn.com/2019/12/23/us/homeless-living-in-vehicles-los-angeles/index.html

 

But the economy is so great and don't look at the budget deficit

Ever notice stories like this tend to involve Los Angeles and San Francisco?  Dont hear too many sob stories from Oklahoma or Utah

  • Like (+1) 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, John Adams said:

 

Nanker's PPP: A place where we remember to be thankful every day and full of optimism about how the last 20 years are the best time to be alive, especially in America.

once again with absolutely nothing to contribute to the board.

 

2 hours ago, ALF said:

 

I'm a 6 year vet and retired factory worker and consider myself very blessed but I have empathy for those less fortunate. 

 

Merry Christmas Nanker

empathy for the less fortunate is one thing, giving someone a pass for idiocy is an altogether different matter. if there is no water in the desert, do you stay and try to grow crops there, or would it be somewhat wiser to move to where there might be fertile land? 

Edited by Foxx
  • Like (+1) 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

19 minutes ago, Foxx said:

 

empathy for the less fortunate is one thing, giving someone a pass for idiocy is an altogether different matter. if there is no water in the desert, do you stay and try to grow crops there, or would it be somewhat wiser to move to where there might be fertile land? 

How about sending a child on a guilt trip tour of neighboring lands

  • Haha (+1) 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, ALF said:

Living in her car, she was afraid and harassed. Then she found an unexpected refuge

 

As an Uber driver, Lauren Kush tries to keep her Toyota Prius spotless.

But keeping it tidy serves a dual purpose. The 36-year-old woman is homeless and has been sleeping in her car at night, converting the back seat into a bed.

 

Kush started sleeping in her car when she could no longer afford an apartment in Los Angeles, where median rent for a one-bedroom is $2,350 per month. She's now among more than 16,000 people in LA County who live in their vehicles -- about a quarter of the nearly 60,000 homeless people here.

 

https://www.cnn.com/2019/12/23/us/homeless-living-in-vehicles-los-angeles/index.html

 

But the economy is so great and don't look at the budget deficit

 

This story has very little to do with the national economy and the exploding debt.

  • Thank you (+1) 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

21 minutes ago, John Adams said:

 

DR will be here to thumbs up your stellar contribution any moment. 

be better. you do have it within you.

 

also, Merry Christmas. i hope you and yours enjoy all the festiveness that this time of year affords.

  • Like (+1) 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, Foxx said:

be better. you do have it within you.

 

Thanks for standing in judgment of me. And note: Your judgment means nothing to me.

 

So blow me.

 

1 minute ago, Foxx said:

 

also, Merry Christmas. i hope you and yours enjoy all the festiveness that this time of year affords.

 

Merry Christmas to you too Foxx. We will be celebrating Jolabokaflod tonight and rocking around the in-laws tree tomorrow! 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, GG said:

 

This story has very little to do with the national economy and the exploding debt.

However, I guess we should expect these Dickensian tales at this time of year. You know Bob Cratchit, Tiny Tim, Scrooge and all... including The Ghost of Trump Past, Present, and Future. 

  • Haha (+1) 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 hours ago, ALF said:

Living in her car, she was afraid and harassed. Then she found an unexpected refuge

 

As an Uber driver, Lauren Kush tries to keep her Toyota Prius spotless.

But keeping it tidy serves a dual purpose. The 36-year-old woman is homeless and has been sleeping in her car at night, converting the back seat into a bed.

 

Kush started sleeping in her car when she could no longer afford an apartment in Los Angeles, where median rent for a one-bedroom is $2,350 per month. She's now among more than 16,000 people in LA County who live in their vehicles -- about a quarter of the nearly 60,000 homeless people here.

 

https://www.cnn.com/2019/12/23/us/homeless-living-in-vehicles-los-angeles/index.html

 

But the economy is so great and don't look at the budget deficit

 

Lauren Kush = The economy?  

6 hours ago, Nanker said:

Wet blanket sob story. She should drive that Prius to a state that has less than $2,350 per month rentals. That, or learn to code. 

 

Turns out there was more to the story that ALF left off, including the fact that she IS learning how to code:

 

https://www.cnn.com/2019/12/23/us/homeless-living-in-vehicles-los-angeles/index.html  

  • Like (+1) 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Corporations Brought Back $1 Trillion From Overseas Due to Trump Tax Plan

For decades before President Donald Trump’s tax plan took effect, U.S. corporations with foreign subsidiaries had no (sane economic) choice but to keep their overseas profits abroad. After all, they’d face double taxation if they wanted to bring them home. Their profits were already taxed by the foreign country they’re operating in, and then to repatriate those funds would’ve required them to pay the U.S. corporate tax rate, which was then among the highest in the world. By year end 2017, right before Trump signed his Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), upwards of $2.5 trillion in cash was parked overseas.

 

The TCJA reduced the corporate tax rate from 35% to 21%, but offered extra incentives to repatriate cash. After all, we’d rather have that money in America for economic reasons regardless of how much the government can get their hands on. The Trump tax law allowed corporations to repatriate cash at a discounted 15.5% tax rate, and a reduced 8% rate to repatriate other assets that are non-cash or illiquid.

 

While estimates differ on how much cash was parked overseas pre-TCJA, between 40% and 66% has made its way back to America. ...

 

  • Like (+1) 1
  • Thank you (+1) 4
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 12/25/2019 at 8:34 AM, Foxx said:

Corporations Brought Back $1 Trillion From Overseas Due to Trump Tax Plan

For decades before President Donald Trump’s tax plan took effect, U.S. corporations with foreign subsidiaries had no (sane economic) choice but to keep their overseas profits abroad. After all, they’d face double taxation if they wanted to bring them home. Their profits were already taxed by the foreign country they’re operating in, and then to repatriate those funds would’ve required them to pay the U.S. corporate tax rate, which was then among the highest in the world. By year end 2017, right before Trump signed his Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), upwards of $2.5 trillion in cash was parked overseas.

 

The TCJA reduced the corporate tax rate from 35% to 21%, but offered extra incentives to repatriate cash. After all, we’d rather have that money in America for economic reasons regardless of how much the government can get their hands on. The Trump tax law allowed corporations to repatriate cash at a discounted 15.5% tax rate, and a reduced 8% rate to repatriate other assets that are non-cash or illiquid.

 

While estimates differ on how much cash was parked overseas pre-TCJA, between 40% and 66% has made its way back to America. ...

 


This, unsurprisingly has been an underreported intended effect of the tax cut law.  This is  trillion dollars of potential stimulus, money that wouldn’t have come back to the US without some incentive to do so.   I’m sure most of it hasn’t been applied in a manner that has been stimulative but certainly some of it has.   Not to mention the revenues that it created at the 15.5% that it generated.

 

This is why I believe that those who believed that the tax law would just be a short-lived sugar high as Krugman and Zandi have claimed have it all wrong.   The tax cut is an ongoing form of stimuli and just because a company in year one or two have decided to not implement xyz measures that promote growth for their company and the economy doesn’t necessarily mean they won’t do so In the future.

 

The economic numbers continue to confound many economists.   Why?  Because they are too dogmatic with their views and cannot wrap their heads around why targeted tax cuts, smart deregulatory measures, policies that promote people to work as opposed to living off of safety net measures in perpetuity and a pro business agenda actually are contributing to a these cascading effects that we are witnessing.

  • Like (+1) 4
  • Thank you (+1) 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 12/24/2019 at 9:54 AM, Foxx said:

once again with absolutely nothing to contribute to the board.

 

empathy for the less fortunate is one thing, giving someone a pass for idiocy is an altogether different matter. if there is no water in the desert, do you stay and try to grow crops there, or would it be somewhat wiser to move to where there might be fertile land? 

Everything I ever needed to know I learned from Sam Kinison. 

 

  • Like (+1) 1
  • Thank you (+1) 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

×
×
  • Create New...