- Banned
- #61
I am against all government transfers.
No welfare, grants, subsidies, bailouts or entitlements of any kind. No taking money from somebody that earned and giving it somebody that didn't earn it.
That includes everybody.
Will you join me?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature currently requires accessing the site using the built-in Safari browser.
I am against all government transfers.
keep in mind,, tax breaks are not taking from one and giving to the other,,I am against all government transfers.
No welfare, grants, subsidies, bailouts or entitlements of any kind. No taking money from somebody that earned and giving it somebody that didn't earn it.
That includes everybody.
Will you join me?
I am against all government transfers.
No welfare, grants, subsidies, bailouts or entitlements of any kind. No taking money from somebody that earned and giving it somebody that didn't earn it.
That includes everybody.
Will you join me?
A country as great as the US should not make slaves of its citizen by taking the money the citizens make and giving away to sorry ass ghetto shitheads and Illegals.No. A country that is supposed to be as great as the USA should be willing to help its poor.
A country as great as the US should not make slaves of its citizen by taking the money the citizens make and giving away to sorry ass ghetto shitheads and Illegals.
I am quite capable of deciding how much I need to help the poor. I don't need the goddamn government to make the decision for me. That is called oppression.
No. A country that is supposed to be as great as the USA should be willing to help its poor.
We do....we have transferred 23 trillion dollars trying to help the poor....
This year the federal, state, and local governments will spend close to a combined $1 trillion to fund more than 100 separate anti‐poverty programs. In fact, since Lyndon Johnson declared “war on poverty” in 1965, government efforts to fight poverty have cost more than $23 trillion.
What’s Missing in the War on Poverty?
Reforming criminal justice, education, and housing policy, while encouraging job creation, economic growth, and individual savings will do more to help reduce poverty than anything we are doing today.www.cato.org