Trump Tax Scam

edward37

Gold Member
Jan 19, 2017
25,452
2,271
290
Opinion
The Trump Tax Scam, Phase II
Deficits are up? Cut Medicare and Social Security!


By Paul Krugman

Opinion Columnist

  • Oct. 18, 2018
Image
merlin_145116843_122ffc66-1284-4c23-8e40-f0dccf5a5366-articleLarge.jpg

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.CreditCreditCarolyn Kaster/Associated Press
When the Trump tax cut was on the verge of being enacted, I called it “the biggest tax scam in history,” and made a prediction: deficits would soar, and when they did, Republicans would once again pretend to care about debt and demand cuts in Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security.

Sure enough, the deficit is soaring. And this week Mitch McConnell, the Senate majority leader, after declaring the surge in red ink “very disturbing,” called for, you guessed it, cuts in “Medicare, Social Security and Medicaid.” He also suggested that Republicans might repeal the Affordable Care Act — taking away health care from tens of millions — if they do well in the midterm elections.

Any political analyst who didn’t see this coming should find a different profession. After all, “starve the beast” — cut taxes on the rich, then use the resulting deficits as an excuse to hack away at the safety net — has been G.O.P. strategy for decades.

Oh, and anyone asking why Republicans believed claims that the tax cut would pay for itself is being naïve. Whatever they may have said, they never actually believed that the tax cut would be deficit-neutral; they pushed for a tax cut because it was what wealthy donors wanted, and because their posturing as deficit hawks was always fraudulent. They didn’t really buy into economic nonsense; it would be more accurate to say that economic nonsense bought them.

costs of hurricane relief.

The flimsy justification for such claims is that in dollar terms, federal revenue over the past year is slightly up from the previous year, while spending is about 3 percent higher.

But that’s a junk argument, and everyone knows it. Both revenue and spending normally grow every year thanks to inflation, population growth and other factors. Revenue during Barack Obama’s second term grew more than 7 percent a year. The sources of the deficit surge are measured by how much we’ve deviated from that normal growth, and the answer is that it’s all about the tax cut.

Dishonesty about the sources of the deficit is, however, more or less a standard Republican tactic. What’s new is the double talk that pervades G.O.P. positioning on the budget and, to be fair, just about every major policy issue

1,495 Americans Describe the Financial Reality of Being Really Sick



What do I mean by double talk? Well, consider the fact that even as McConnell blames “entitlements” (that is, Medicare and Social Security) for deficits, and declares (falsely) that Medicare in particular is “unsustainable,” Paul Ryan’s super PAC has been running ads accusing Democrats of wanting to cut Medicare. The cynicism is breathtaking.

But then, it’s no more cynical than the behavior of Republicans like Dean Heller, Josh Hawley and even Ted Cruz who voted to repeal the Affordable Care Act, which protects Americans with pre-existing medical conditions, or supported a lawsuit trying to strip that protection out of the act, and are now running on the claim that they want to … protect people with pre-existing conditions.

The point is that we’re now in a political campaign where one side’s claimed position on every major policy issue is the opposite of its true position. Republicans have concluded that they can’t win an argument on the issues, but rather than changing their policies, they’re squirting out clouds of ink and hoping voters won’t figure out where they really stand.
Opinion | The Trump Tax Scam, Phase II
ELE
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Yeah he's a card Just look at yourself believing all the BS being thrown at you by republicans I would say dupe would describe you well
 
Opinion
The Trump Tax Scam, Phase II
Deficits are up? Cut Medicare and Social Security!


By Paul Krugman

Opinion Columnist

  • Oct. 18, 2018
Image
merlin_145116843_122ffc66-1284-4c23-8e40-f0dccf5a5366-articleLarge.jpg

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.CreditCreditCarolyn Kaster/Associated Press
When the Trump tax cut was on the verge of being enacted, I called it “the biggest tax scam in history,” and made a prediction: deficits would soar, and when they did, Republicans would once again pretend to care about debt and demand cuts in Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security.

Sure enough, the deficit is soaring. And this week Mitch McConnell, the Senate majority leader, after declaring the surge in red ink “very disturbing,” called for, you guessed it, cuts in “Medicare, Social Security and Medicaid.” He also suggested that Republicans might repeal the Affordable Care Act — taking away health care from tens of millions — if they do well in the midterm elections.

Any political analyst who didn’t see this coming should find a different profession. After all, “starve the beast” — cut taxes on the rich, then use the resulting deficits as an excuse to hack away at the safety net — has been G.O.P. strategy for decades.

Oh, and anyone asking why Republicans believed claims that the tax cut would pay for itself is being naïve. Whatever they may have said, they never actually believed that the tax cut would be deficit-neutral; they pushed for a tax cut because it was what wealthy donors wanted, and because their posturing as deficit hawks was always fraudulent. They didn’t really buy into economic nonsense; it would be more accurate to say that economic nonsense bought them.

costs of hurricane relief.

The flimsy justification for such claims is that in dollar terms, federal revenue over the past year is slightly up from the previous year, while spending is about 3 percent higher.

But that’s a junk argument, and everyone knows it. Both revenue and spending normally grow every year thanks to inflation, population growth and other factors. Revenue during Barack Obama’s second term grew more than 7 percent a year. The sources of the deficit surge are measured by how much we’ve deviated from that normal growth, and the answer is that it’s all about the tax cut.

Dishonesty about the sources of the deficit is, however, more or less a standard Republican tactic. What’s new is the double talk that pervades G.O.P. positioning on the budget and, to be fair, just about every major policy issue

1,495 Americans Describe the Financial Reality of Being Really Sick



What do I mean by double talk? Well, consider the fact that even as McConnell blames “entitlements” (that is, Medicare and Social Security) for deficits, and declares (falsely) that Medicare in particular is “unsustainable,” Paul Ryan’s super PAC has been running ads accusing Democrats of wanting to cut Medicare. The cynicism is breathtaking.

But then, it’s no more cynical than the behavior of Republicans like Dean Heller, Josh Hawley and even Ted Cruz who voted to repeal the Affordable Care Act, which protects Americans with pre-existing medical conditions, or supported a lawsuit trying to strip that protection out of the act, and are now running on the claim that they want to … protect people with pre-existing conditions.

The point is that we’re now in a political campaign where one side’s claimed position on every major policy issue is the opposite of its true position. Republicans have concluded that they can’t win an argument on the issues, but rather than changing their policies, they’re squirting out clouds of ink and hoping voters won’t figure out where they really stand.

ELE

Paul Krugman??

That's says it all right there.
 
Opinion
The Trump Tax Scam, Phase II
Deficits are up? Cut Medicare and Social Security!


By Paul Krugman

Opinion Columnist

  • Oct. 18, 2018
Image
merlin_145116843_122ffc66-1284-4c23-8e40-f0dccf5a5366-articleLarge.jpg

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.CreditCreditCarolyn Kaster/Associated Press
When the Trump tax cut was on the verge of being enacted, I called it “the biggest tax scam in history,” and made a prediction: deficits would soar, and when they did, Republicans would once again pretend to care about debt and demand cuts in Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security.

Sure enough, the deficit is soaring. And this week Mitch McConnell, the Senate majority leader, after declaring the surge in red ink “very disturbing,” called for, you guessed it, cuts in “Medicare, Social Security and Medicaid.” He also suggested that Republicans might repeal the Affordable Care Act — taking away health care from tens of millions — if they do well in the midterm elections.

Any political analyst who didn’t see this coming should find a different profession. After all, “starve the beast” — cut taxes on the rich, then use the resulting deficits as an excuse to hack away at the safety net — has been G.O.P. strategy for decades.

Oh, and anyone asking why Republicans believed claims that the tax cut would pay for itself is being naïve. Whatever they may have said, they never actually believed that the tax cut would be deficit-neutral; they pushed for a tax cut because it was what wealthy donors wanted, and because their posturing as deficit hawks was always fraudulent. They didn’t really buy into economic nonsense; it would be more accurate to say that economic nonsense bought them.

costs of hurricane relief.

The flimsy justification for such claims is that in dollar terms, federal revenue over the past year is slightly up from the previous year, while spending is about 3 percent higher.

But that’s a junk argument, and everyone knows it. Both revenue and spending normally grow every year thanks to inflation, population growth and other factors. Revenue during Barack Obama’s second term grew more than 7 percent a year. The sources of the deficit surge are measured by how much we’ve deviated from that normal growth, and the answer is that it’s all about the tax cut.

Dishonesty about the sources of the deficit is, however, more or less a standard Republican tactic. What’s new is the double talk that pervades G.O.P. positioning on the budget and, to be fair, just about every major policy issue

1,495 Americans Describe the Financial Reality of Being Really Sick



What do I mean by double talk? Well, consider the fact that even as McConnell blames “entitlements” (that is, Medicare and Social Security) for deficits, and declares (falsely) that Medicare in particular is “unsustainable,” Paul Ryan’s super PAC has been running ads accusing Democrats of wanting to cut Medicare. The cynicism is breathtaking.

But then, it’s no more cynical than the behavior of Republicans like Dean Heller, Josh Hawley and even Ted Cruz who voted to repeal the Affordable Care Act, which protects Americans with pre-existing medical conditions, or supported a lawsuit trying to strip that protection out of the act, and are now running on the claim that they want to … protect people with pre-existing conditions.

The point is that we’re now in a political campaign where one side’s claimed position on every major policy issue is the opposite of its true position. Republicans have concluded that they can’t win an argument on the issues, but rather than changing their policies, they’re squirting out clouds of ink and hoping voters won’t figure out where they really stand.

ELE
It was Paul Krugman who said "If Donald Trump is elected President, the stock market would crash". And you libfucks still listen to that retard? Takes a retard to fool a retard, that is for sure...

Paul Krugman: Trump will bring global recession
Paul Krugman: The Economic Fallout
 
That is exactly what the GOP and Trump admin is planning, and by the way , they have already started to cut social programs and that include Medicare.
 
Krugman is a fcking loon...hey Paul where is the disaster of an economy and busted markets you said would happen if Trump was elected? Goddamn dope
 
Krugman is the funniest thing in the newspapers, since Bill Watterson quit writing Calvin and Hobbes cartoons.

View attachment 223463
Oh gee, another Right-wing deliberate misquote, no surprise there!
Here it is, straight out of one end of the horse or another, Corky.


So typical of the lying scum Right, continuing to lie in the face of the truth.
As your own video shows, he didn't say an alien invasion would be good, he said if we thought there was an alien invasion coming and we built infrastructure to combat it and it turned out that there was NO invasion, the building of the infrastructure would not have been a waste! So it was the building of the infrastructure that was GOOD, not an alien invasion!
A far cry from your typically dishonest meme.
 
So typical of the lying scum Right, continuing to lie in the face of the truth.
As your own video shows, he didn't say an alien invasion would be good, he said if we thought there was an alien invasion coming and we built infrastructure to combat it and it turned out that there was NO invasion, the building of the infrastructure would not have been a waste! So it was the building of the infrastructure that was GOOD, not an alien invasion!
A far cry from your typically dishonest meme.
So typical of lying commie scum, telling me that my own lying eyes and ears didn't tell me what I heard.
 
So typical of the lying scum Right, continuing to lie in the face of the truth.
As your own video shows, he didn't say an alien invasion would be good, he said if we thought there was an alien invasion coming and we built infrastructure to combat it and it turned out that there was NO invasion, the building of the infrastructure would not have been a waste! So it was the building of the infrastructure that was GOOD, not an alien invasion!
A far cry from your typically dishonest meme.
So typical of lying commie scum, telling me that my own lying eyes and ears didn't tell me what I heard.
Like I said you lying Fascist scum always lie in the face of the truth.

"Just remember, what you are seeing and what you are reading is not what's happening,"
- Donald Jackass Tramp
 
A radical scum a lying loon ?? How come republicans can say that about our brightest but kiss the lying cheating pervert Trumps ass?
 

Forum List

Back
Top