When I read posts like yours I can only see there are a lot of Americans whose brains left them for good. But Trump has been making America great regardless. It's just a lot more difficult for him to repair the country which is full of loons like you.
Every time another Cult45 fuck brain drools the words 'make America great again', a Pope dies. Don't you understand that? If empty, meaningless terms is all you've got, then it sure seems like the loon is
you, correct? What do
you bring to the table, Cult45 member, other than empty words and an idle hardon for an ex-reality show star? I'll tell you. Absolutely
nothing, kitten. America listens, yet doesn't ultimately rely on the opinions of the perpetually outraged riff-raff. Sorry, bud. Your opinion is shit. Stick to the Orange Virus telling you and yours what to do and think, K? As for the rest of America? Well, I suppose we secretly hope you'll take up needlepoint and stop harassing the rest us with your 'political wisdom'. Your shit is tired.
People like you simply don't know what the fuck they're talking about. Idle chatter. White noise.
Hard no, asswipe.
Tell us sloppy drunk guy...how is America shitting the bed under YOUR current President?
I'm sorry, T_T doesn't recognize your request for: 'current president' right now.
Please try again later, you fucking rube. Bwaahahahah!
That’s an effective play for dumbasses who just want to be pissed at nothing. When you can’t refute a claim just bow out like any nutless pussy would...NICE!
Nothing? No. I'm not pissed at nothing, and I don't require you to try and lie on my behalf, you nutless retard. I'm very simply disappointed. However, I am very grateful to the life I lead, so no harm, no foul. What claim am I supposed to refute? You never seem to bring anything of ideological substance to the debate.
So tell me, kemosabe,
what are you bringing to the table? Go right ahead. Dazzle me with your bullshit.
Does this dazzle you?
This is appalling. Both parties are to blame ... no one is saying, "We shouldn't be doing this" ... but the Republicans (the party of "conservatism") are the absolute worst. They're spending like drunken sailors in a whorehouse.
stock market windfall from the corporate tax cuts is being financed on the backs of our grandkids. That is, if there's not a fiscal crisis before then, like in Greece.
U.S. deficit soars despite good times
GOP tax cut, bipartisan spending fuel trend, which could get worse
Damian Paletta and Erica Werner, The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — The U.S. budget deficit is reaching levels that are abnormally high for a robust economy, and lawmakers from both parties are proposing ideas that would make the deficit swell even further.
The government spent $895 billion more than it brought in from taxes and other revenue sources during the past 11 months, the Congressional Budget Office said this week, a 33 percent increase from one year before.
Typically, the deficit shrinks during strong economic times, as the need for costly government support wanes and tax revenue rises. In 2000, the last time the unemployment rate was at its current level of 3.9 percent, the government ran a surplus.
The dynamic is much different now.
Corporate tax receipts fell 30 percent in the past 11 months, the CBO said, precipitated by the massive tax cuts passed by Congress last year. Spending has jumped as a result of a bipartisan agreement to shed budget caps and pour more money into both military and domestic programs.
“It’s not just irresponsible, it’s wildly irresponsible,” said retired Sen. Kent Conrad, D-N.D. “If you are seeking elective office, the hardest thing in the world is to say, ‘I’m going to raise your taxes or cut spending on popular programs.’”
Among Republicans, the loudest cautionary voices recently have come from outside Congress. “With a booming economy, full employment, a soaring stock market and record asset values, we should be shrinking the deficit, not growing it,” Mitt Romney, a Republican and Senate candidate in Utah, wrote on his campaign website Monday. He said other conservatives have largely been “silent” on the issue since President Donald Trump took office.
Yet there are signs the borrowing binge has only begun. Leading House Republicans proposed an additional $646 billion in tax cuts this week — a number that could grow to roughly $2 trillion over a decade — and prominent Democrats have proposed expanding access to government-sponsored health care, which could add trillions more.
A number of congressional Republicans have defended the tax law’s impact on the debt, saying they believe that cutting taxes will ultimately lead to so much economic growth that it more than compensates for the loss in revenue.
“I think it’s a very modest investment in a dramatically better economy where a lot of people in our country who really lost hope in finding a good-paying job now have hope and are actively seeking those jobs,” House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Kevin Brady, R-Texas, told reporters last week.
Lawmakers from both parties have said rising debt saddles future generations with huge fiscal burdens. It could also make it extremely difficult to respond to an unforeseen shock, such as a financial crisis. And when the U.S. government borrows, it often must turn to countries such as China for funding, at times complicating already tense relationships.
The government has $21.5 trillion in debt, up from $12.8 trillion in 2010. And the cost of maintaining this debt is snowballing, driven higher not just by spending but also by rising interest rates.
The CBO projects $390 billion in spending on interest payments alone next year, an amount almost equivalent to its entire $401 billion budget for Medicaid, the health insurance program for the poor.
Congressional Republicans spent much of the Obama administration decrying deficits and forcing restrictions on spending. They largely abandoned those sentiments when Trump took office.
Taken together, the tax cuts and new spending levels are expected to add more than $5 trillion to the debt over the next decade, according to the nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.
The deficit is projected to reach 4.2 percent of gross domestic product this year, up from 2.5 percent in 2015.