Dresden wrote:PlayerUp wrote:dice wrote:it's nancy, and whatever you think of her politics, she's been very effective at her job for a long time
There are much better options to lead.
Such as?
Hakeem Jeffries
Moderators: HomoSapien, Ice Man, dougthonus, Michael Jackson, Tommy Udo 6 , kulaz3000, fleet, DASMACKDOWN, GimmeDat, RedBulls23, AshyLarrysDiaper, coldfish, Payt10
Dresden wrote:PlayerUp wrote:dice wrote:it's nancy, and whatever you think of her politics, she's been very effective at her job for a long time
There are much better options to lead.
Such as?
musiqsoulchild wrote:TheStig wrote:dougthonus wrote:Agreed, the rich got richer during the pandemic and the poor got poorer.
To be fair, that's American capitalism.
Its not.
It's what has become of American capitalism.
And its dangerous.
dice wrote:blatantly disingenuous statistic
march 18 was nearly the bottom of the stock market crash
the vast majority of investors are doing better since march 18, not just the billionaires. the question is how the billionaires are doing since FEBRUARY 18. and the answer is probably "marginally better." just like the stock market. there are very obvious reasons why jeff bezos and zuckerberg are wealthier due to the pandemic, and there's nothing systemic about it
what's fair to discuss is why wall street is so disconnected from main street right now
ZOMG wrote:Would the Trump cult die for their idol? HELL NO. It's just posturing. They like their trucks, HD TV's and fast food - in short, their lives - way too much.
There will be no civil war, there will be no pro-Trump riots. In fact, it remains to be seen if even Trump himself has the energy to keep causing trouble. He's an old man, and although he's addicted to publicity and "winning", the lure of golf is strong. I wouldn't be shocked if we heard very little from him over the next couple of months.
dougthonus wrote:Ignore billionaires and replace with capital providers (which are all investors), whom are up 7% on the year while laborers are obviously suffering considerably (or what you say, wall street vs main street).
Ice Man wrote:Capital up, labor down. The story for the past 40 years. By and large, the people seem fine with that. There is more support for cutting taxes than for redistributive policies. As witnessed by the rejection of the Fair Tax Proposal. (I hate the name, I am not arguing that the tax change would be "Fair," nor I am necessarily arguing that the proposal should have been passed. I merely point out that the proposal unquestionably aimed to help labor at the expense of capital, and the people chose otherwise.)
dougthonus wrote:I think its gone so far that you can never attack the uber wealthy on a tax basis, they can just hide the money too well. Capital gains being taxed at a lower rate than income is really the big kick in the balls that got us here though as well as breaks on dividend tax rates for a long time.
Ice Man wrote:dougthonus wrote:I think its gone so far that you can never attack the uber wealthy on a tax basis, they can just hide the money too well. Capital gains being taxed at a lower rate than income is really the big kick in the balls that got us here though as well as breaks on dividend tax rates for a long time.
As one who now lives mostly on capital rather than labor, I cannot overstate how much the tax laws favor us.
Ice Man wrote:Capital up, labor down. The story for the past 40 years. By and large, the people seem fine with that. There is more support for cutting taxes than for redistributive policies. As witnessed by the rejection of the Fair Tax Proposal. (I hate the name, I am not arguing that the tax change would be "Fair," nor I am necessarily arguing that the proposal should have been passed. I merely point out that the proposal unquestionably aimed to help labor at the expense of capital, and the people chose otherwise.)
PlayerUp wrote:I don't think you realize what is to come here.
There are so many demographic groups in America compared to before. They all want major changes. The reason they went out to vote Biden over Trump was they were hopeful certain things can happen under a Biden administration. The reality is Biden in no way can offer all these path to citizenships, boost immigration, help the black community, help the progressives, help the poor community. It's just not possible and they're expecting so much from him while at the same time Biden is getting big dollars from donors in wall street pushing him into office which we all know that means Biden promised there would be minor changes under his administration.
Some are already getting negative about a Biden administration but give it more time these groups will start turning on Biden as well. For me personally, if I was in Bidens shoes I would focus in certain areas being the citizens of this country 1st and then once major progress has been made, then focus on non citizens after that. If you try to do too many things, next to nothing will get done.
Dresden wrote: Things like universal health coverage, raising taxes on the rich, taking action on climate change, doing something about student debt, creating a more sustainable economy through investment in green job creation, more focus on early childhood education and child poverty. These things have widespread support. The challenge will be to get the Senate to agree to any of it.
Michael Jackson wrote:You state a lot of truth there. Politics and who is in office has very little effect on us the little people day to day, I guarantee that Biden is more interested in what Mitch McConnell thinks than any thought I have in my head good or bad. They really are a different class of people and they try hard to sell us that they care about us, which in a broad sweeping way they may, a little but but ultimately they are concerned with what their contemporaries think and feel. It’s not anything new, goes back to the beginning of man.
moorhosj wrote:Ice Man wrote:Capital up, labor down. The story for the past 40 years. By and large, the people seem fine with that. There is more support for cutting taxes than for redistributive policies. As witnessed by the rejection of the Fair Tax Proposal. (I hate the name, I am not arguing that the tax change would be "Fair," nor I am necessarily arguing that the proposal should have been passed. I merely point out that the proposal unquestionably aimed to help labor at the expense of capital, and the people chose otherwise.)
I’d be careful about pulling too many conclusions from the “Fair Tax” vote. A lot of things specific to Illinois made it a tough sell. Incredibly wealthy opponents, retirement income still isn’t taxed, they never tried to change the constitution on the pension issue, etc.
We can look at Arizona and see a similar tax did pass. The difference is that they addressed their pension problems beforehand and this tax was primarily for schools. Our tax proposal was to make up for bi-partisan mismanagement over the past 50 years (a mostly Dem legislature and mostly Rep governors during that time).
Ice Man wrote:Dresden wrote: Things like universal health coverage, raising taxes on the rich, taking action on climate change, doing something about student debt, creating a more sustainable economy through investment in green job creation, more focus on early childhood education and child poverty. These things have widespread support. The challenge will be to get the Senate to agree to any of it.
They have widespread support when people are polled about the individual issues, but politicians who adopt such platforms are labeled as socialists and in most districts lose to opponents who have views that don't poll well, such as reversing gay marriage, loosing gun regulations, and rolling back the ACA.
Seemingly strange but true -- and thus a challenge for politicians who wish to push forward such agendas.
Dresden wrote:Joe Biden adopted a platform that included all those things, and he won the national vote by 4-5 million votes.
Democrats can't be afraid of labels. Obamacare was decried as socialist medicine, and was not very popular when it first passed, but 12 years later, it's actually quite popular, now that people see how well it works. Democrats do need to work on their messaging I think. they have to do a better job of selling these things to the American people not as part of a broad leftist agenda, but as measures that are going to help ordinary Americans.
moorhosj wrote:Dresden wrote:Joe Biden adopted a platform that included all those things, and he won the national vote by 4-5 million votes.
Democrats can't be afraid of labels. Obamacare was decried as socialist medicine, and was not very popular when it first passed, but 12 years later, it's actually quite popular, now that people see how well it works. Democrats do need to work on their messaging I think. they have to do a better job of selling these things to the American people not as part of a broad leftist agenda, but as measures that are going to help ordinary Americans.
You are correct, but in between Obamacare and today the Democrats have lost legislative control across the country. Republicans have run against Obamacare for 10 years and been very successful (without ever even providing an alternative). They are fighting these policies because they know that once Americans experience them, we won't accept going back. Pre-existing conditions is the perfect example, no politician will come out against it, it is here to stay, but Democrats have paid a heavy political price for being "right".
moorhosj wrote:
This pandemic has shifted an enormous amount of wealth from small businesses to big businesses. When book stores, toy stores, bars, restaurants and local gyms were shut down; people simply shifted that spending to Amazon, Walmart, Costco, Peloton, and Uber Eats. The stock market growth simply reflects the fact that smaller businesses (not publicly traded) are getting crushed while larger businesses (publicly traded) continue to grow. That’s how GDP goes down and stocks go up.
Planet Money had a recent podcast about it for those interested: https://www.npr.org/2020/11/04/931496888/whats-next-for-the-economy
dougthonus wrote:While this is somewhat true, the PE ratio of the stock market is at a crazy high right now historically:
https://www.multpl.com/s-p-500-pe-ratio
This suggests that the market is expecting massive profit growth over the next couple years. Maybe that will happen because corporate profits decreased temporarily due to covid and will bounce back to normal and our PE ratio will level out again, but if that isn't true then we are in a massive bubble.
Dresden wrote:I don't agree. Democrats did very well in the '18 elections, taking back the house, and it was their stance on health care that was the primary driver of their wins.