Hunter biden gets sweetheart deal. Child support pmt reduced 75 pct.

And this has nothing to do with politics

Sorry USMB doesn't have a "Biden Crime Family Scandal of the Day" forum.

The mods should make one, though. It could be a sub-forum of the "Law and Justice System" forum.
 
All families of presidents do it, yet you don't care about anyone else.
Sure I do. I've been quite explicit on that point.

It's all the whataboutism crap coming from the leftards that indicates they don't care about others.
 
Sorry USMB doesn't have a "Biden Crime Family Scandal of the Day" forum.

The mods should make one, though. It could be a sub-forum of the "Law and Justice System" forum.
Are you kidding? That would be a month long parade, like Pride Month or something.
 
Let me get this straight, $60K a year for child support is a “sweetheart deal”, but asking for a minimum wage of $15/hr(~$30K/yr) is socialism? :rolleyes-41:

15 dollars minimum wage is a bad idea, although I'm not sure where you got the socialism idea from.
 
15 dollars minimum wage is a bad idea, although I'm not sure where you got the socialism idea from.
Why is it a bad idea? It would seem worse to have ever increasing gaps in income. That’s how revolutions start.

Also, there are those that consider any minimum wage at all to be socialist. I’m surprised you’re not aware of that fact!
 
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15 dollars minimum wage is a bad idea, although I'm not sure where you got the socialism idea from.
Let's see... 15x8 is 120, and 120x5 is 600, and 600x4 is 2400. Minus taxes.

A one bedroom apartment in Burbank will cost you... 2400.

You are absolutely right $15 an hour is a bad idea. It should be 30.

If you're working full time, you should be able to pay the rent.

Period. End of story.
 
Let's see... 15x8 is 120, and 120x5 is 600, and 600x4 is 2400. Minus taxes.

A one bedroom apartment in Burbank will cost you... 2400.

You are absolutely right $15 an hour is a bad idea. It should be 30.

If you're working full time, you should be able to pay the rent.

Period. End of story.

Shouldn't be 15 or 30. You don't think about consequences and results, you're just focused on the right now and the idea that everyone no matter their job should make a living wage.

I make 32 dollars an hour at my job now. If you made minimum wage 15 dollars and hour my employer would have to give me a raise to 40 dollars an hour. Raise the minimum to 30 and they would have to pay me 55 dollars an hour. Because why would anyone do a skilled labor job only to make 2 dollars more than someone that runs the fry machine at McDonald's?

When everyone is suddenly making a lot more money at minimum wage then costs of everything will rise to meet that. For two reasons. 1 if companies have to start paying more money to employees then they will raise the costs of their products to compensate for that. 2 when companies know even a stocker at Walmart is making more money they will raise prices on basic necessities because they know there is more money out there. Sure you can make minimum wage 30 bucks an hour but what does that mean when a loaf of break costs 13 dollars?

You can make minimum wage 100 dollars an hour but a gallon of gas will cost 47 dollars. You can make it 1000 dollars and you'll have a shit load of millionaires in America that are broke. Just keeping raising minimum wage will just be meaningless, you're just chasing bigger numbers with equally bigger numbers.

And no, that isn't the end of the story.

The end of the story is if you don't make enough money then you need to go to school, show ambition, get experience, realize a non skilled labor job is going to pay non skilled labor wages, and you need to work harder at improving yourself. That's the real end of the story, people need to be responsible for their own level of ambition.

I make pretty good money and I have no formal education in what I do. Where I work I'm the building guy. I am a electrician, I'm a refrigeration guys a plumber, a pipe fitter, a welder, a painter, I do safety, I plan and call in contractors and guide them in what needs to be done, I do a lot of things. I started as a guy replacing light bulbs and plunging toilets at a hotel and I showed ambition and a desire to learn. Now I am the building engineer at a manufacturing plant, I'm the only one here by myself that is a building guy. I worked my way up and I worked hard. Anyone can do what I did.


Let's live in fantasy land for a moment where minimum wage is 30 bucks an hour and nothing rises in price, everything is fixed and anyone can live a decent life. Who is going to do the real work? When you can pour coffee at Starbucks and afford to take care of your family why would you ever want to go to school, build an education, get experience, have ambition and push to do better in a career? Who the hell would want to be an underwater welder when you can live a content life working at a gas station 40 hours a week?
 
Shouldn't be 15 or 30. You don't think about consequences and results, you're just focused on the right now and the idea that everyone no matter their job should make a living wage.

I make 32 dollars an hour at my job now. If you made minimum wage 15 dollars and hour my employer would have to give me a raise to 40 dollars an hour. Raise the minimum to 30 and they would have to pay me 55 dollars an hour. Because why would anyone do a skilled labor job only to make 2 dollars more than someone that runs the fry machine at McDonald's?

When everyone is suddenly making a lot more money at minimum wage then costs of everything will rise to meet that. For two reasons. 1 if companies have to start paying more money to employees then they will raise the costs of their products to compensate for that. 2 when companies know even a stocker at Walmart is making more money they will raise prices on basic necessities because they know there is more money out there. Sure you can make minimum wage 30 bucks an hour but what does that mean when a loaf of break costs 13 dollars?

You can make minimum wage 100 dollars an hour but a gallon of gas will cost 47 dollars. You can make it 1000 dollars and you'll have a shit load of millionaires in America that are broke. Just keeping raising minimum wage will just be meaningless, you're just chasing bigger numbers with equally bigger numbers.

And no, that isn't the end of the story.

The end of the story is if you don't make enough money then you need to go to school, show ambition, get experience, realize a non skilled labor job is going to pay non skilled labor wages, and you need to work harder at improving yourself. That's the real end of the story, people need to be responsible for their own level of ambition.

I make pretty good money and I have no formal education in what I do. Where I work I'm the building guy. I am a electrician, I'm a refrigeration guys a plumber, a pipe fitter, a welder, a painter, I do safety, I plan and call in contractors and guide them in what needs to be done, I do a lot of things. I started as a guy replacing light bulbs and plunging toilets at a hotel and I showed ambition and a desire to learn. Now I am the building engineer at a manufacturing plant, I'm the only one here by myself that is a building guy. I worked my way up and I worked hard. Anyone can do what I did.


Let's live in fantasy land for a moment where minimum wage is 30 bucks an hour and nothing rises in price, everything is fixed and anyone can live a decent life. Who is going to do the real work? When you can pour coffee at Starbucks and afford to take care of your family why would you ever want to go to school, build an education, get experience, have ambition and push to do better in a career? Who the hell would want to be an underwater welder when you can live a content life working at a gas station 40 hours a week?
Why is it never the billionaires that should take less? They get tax cuts so it can trickle down to everyone else, meanwhile the middle class has been shrinking since the 80s. They’ve convinced many that the lower paid and unskilled are the enemy, when the reverse is true.
 
If you tell Hunter all he has to do is a genetics test stating he is really Black, he won't have to pay anything at all, prompting him to be the next Rachel Dolezal
 

Roberts’ lawyer, Clint Lancaster, told The Post late Thursday that final terms were still to be determined and declined to confirm that his client had agreed to a reduced monthly payment of $5,000.

Although that's what it was
It's a good deal for Dad, mom, and baby, as long as Hunter is on the hook for medical care and college.
 

Roberts’ lawyer, Clint Lancaster, told The Post late Thursday that final terms were still to be determined and declined to confirm that his client had agreed to a reduced monthly payment of $5,000.

Although that's what it was
The poor thing (Hunter) must be almost penniless.
 

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