so you're ok with people on welfare and receiving food stamps? see I thought you all liked unemployment and dependents. government telling you how to live your lives. spend your money and tell you what to eat. knew it.
Oh and open borders and violence.
Nah, i like corporate welfare so much more. You know like you do!
I love americans working, my neighbors and my countrymen. Not illegals. not jobs shipped to other countries because taxes are so fking high on our industries.
And you love corporate welfare, you just said so!
I have no fking idea what corporate welfare is, it's your bumper sticker, I don't have a definition. so stop talking for me since you have no idea who I am. you speak for you bubba, Loser.
Corporate welfare
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Corporate welfare is a term that
analogizes corporate
subsidies to
welfare payments for the poor.
[1] The term is often used to describe a government's bestowal of money grants,
tax breaks, or other special favorable treatment for
corporations. It highlights how wealthy corporations are less in need of such treatment than the poor.
[1]
The definition of corporate welfare is sometimes restricted to direct government subsidies of major corporations, excluding tax loopholes and all manner of regulatory and trade decisions, which, in practice, could be worth much more than any direct subsidies.
[...]
Background
Subsidies considered excessive, unwarranted, wasteful, unfair, inefficient, or bought by
lobbying are often called corporate welfare.
[1] The label of corporate welfare is often used to decry projects advertised as benefiting the general welfare that spend a disproportionate amount of funds on large corporations, and often in uncompetitive, or
anti-competitive ways. For instance, in the United States,
agricultural subsidies are usually portrayed as helping independent farmers stay afloat. However, the majority of income gained from commodity support programs actually goes to large
agribusiness corporations such as
Archer Daniels Midland, as they own a considerably larger percentage of production.
[22]
Alan Peters and Peter Fisher, Associate Professors at the
University of Iowa,
[23] have estimated that state and local governments provide $40–50 billion annually in economic development incentives,
[24] which critics characterize as corporate welfare.
[25]
Some economists consider the
2008 bank bailouts in the United States to be corporate welfare.
[26][27] U.S. politicians have also contended that zero-interest loans from the
Federal Reserve System to financial institutions during the
global financial crisis were a hidden, backdoor form of corporate welfare.
[28]
[...]
Corporate welfare - Wikipedia