Wizardspride wrote:?s=19
Dislike! Hope she's ok.
Moderators: LyricalRico, nate33, montestewart

closg00 wrote:Tom Arnold is certainly milking that pic of him and Cohen for all it's worth, I take what he saying with a huge grain of salt
Some random troll wrote:Not to sound negative, but this team is owned by an arrogant cheapskate, managed by a moron and coached by an idiot. Recipe for disaster.

TGW wrote:closg00 wrote:Tom Arnold is certainly milking that pic of him and Cohen for all it's worth, I take what he saying with a huge grain of salt
I don't know what's dumber...Tom Arnold acting like he has inside information on the case, or the mainstream fake news media acting like Tom Arnold has inside information.
CNN was stroking their collective c**ks over that news. Nothing like a [washed up] celebrity involved in politics to milk the ratings.

JWizmentality wrote:I'm totally here for Trump officials being shamed in public. Human decency and democracy fighting back.
dckingsfan wrote:And now George Will has flipped over - it is hard at his age. But good for you George.
https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/george-will-vote-against-gop_us_5b2d95dee4b00295f15c8a75
In addition, and no less troubling, Congress has essentially stopped acting as a co-equal branch of government, by failing to engage in the kind of oversight of the law that the Constitution requires and the public expects.
In fairness, some Republicans have taken their constitutional and legislative responsibilities seriously, like my friend John McCain. But too many have been absolutely feckless, including — most disappointingly — the House leadership.
Zonkerbl wrote:Actually now that I've slept on it, I don't think a luxury tax on investment income would cause a mass exodus of businesses. Presumably we're at an equilibrium now where most of the businesses who want to be offshore are already offshore. Other countries also have crazy tax requirements that chase companies here or to tax havens like the Maldives. The *marginal* effect will be low, at least at first.
Made me think about national treatment of investment that the US is always trying to negotiate in the WTO - wait, so companies that don't contribute any money to the US treasury are supposed to be treated the same? How does that make sense? You should at least pay a "using the resources of the court" fee.


dckingsfan wrote:Zonkerbl wrote:Actually now that I've slept on it, I don't think a luxury tax on investment income would cause a mass exodus of businesses. Presumably we're at an equilibrium now where most of the businesses who want to be offshore are already offshore. Other countries also have crazy tax requirements that chase companies here or to tax havens like the Maldives. The *marginal* effect will be low, at least at first.
Made me think about national treatment of investment that the US is always trying to negotiate in the WTO - wait, so companies that don't contribute any money to the US treasury are supposed to be treated the same? How does that make sense? You should at least pay a "using the resources of the court" fee.
I don't think it is business - it is high net worth individuals, right? Are you thinking a luxury tax on businesses as well? And if we have loopholes in out tax policy, we wouldn't have loopholes in our luxury tax?
dckingsfan wrote:And now George Will has flipped over - it is hard at his age. But good for you George.
https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/george-will-vote-against-gop_us_5b2d95dee4b00295f15c8a75
Zonkerbl wrote:dckingsfan wrote:Zonkerbl wrote:Actually now that I've slept on it, I don't think a luxury tax on investment income would cause a mass exodus of businesses. Presumably we're at an equilibrium now where most of the businesses who want to be offshore are already offshore. Other countries also have crazy tax requirements that chase companies here or to tax havens like the Maldives. The *marginal* effect will be low, at least at first.
Made me think about national treatment of investment that the US is always trying to negotiate in the WTO - wait, so companies that don't contribute any money to the US treasury are supposed to be treated the same? How does that make sense? You should at least pay a "using the resources of the court" fee.
I don't think it is business - it is high net worth individuals, right? Are you thinking a luxury tax on businesses as well? And if we have loopholes in out tax policy, we wouldn't have loopholes in our luxury tax?
I think the implication is if we put a luxury tax on investment income that that will indirectly encourage businesses to go offshore. I don't know how that works - I thought if you are a US citizen and you make income on an investment you have to pay tax on it. Doesn't matter where the company is. Right? Then it doesn't matter and you can go ahead and put a luxury tax on investment income.
Zonkerbl wrote:I just don't want to turn into a country where we yell at each other in restaurants. But I think this is an inevitable outcome of being completely disempowered. The victims of Trump's evil feel there is literally nothing they can do but heckle Trump administrators wherever they find them. I just hope things don't get so ugly that people just close up and refuse to vote. I think that's what happened in 2016 - people got so turned off by how ugly things were that they just didn't show up at the ballot box at all.
Harley-Davidson plans to shift some motorcycle production away from the US to avoid the "substantial" burden of European Union tariffs.
verbal8 wrote:Recently I had a thought "What if Trump had run and won as a Democrat?". What would the presidency with "Democrat Trump" look like.
gtn130 wrote:Harley-Davidson plans to shift some motorcycle production away from the US to avoid the "substantial" burden of European Union tariffs.
So much whining from the glacial brain Trump administration economic disasters