Trump adds $1 TRILLION in DEBT (with pitifully insignificant economic growth)

taxslave

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Nov 25, 2008
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WHo, exactly gets to decide what is a just distribution? WOuld that be the same person that gets to decide what a "fair share" of taxes is?

On GOP Tax Bill: The Democrats And The Media Are Eating So Much Crow Right Now
https://townhall.com/tipsheet/mattv...because-the-gop-tax-bill-produced-re-n2426483

But think of all the monuments that are not going to get build now and the thousands of trips fro bureaucrats that will be missed without all this tax money.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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This proves my point of pushing so far away from Christianity that you just end up going full circle all while thinking you've distanced yourself.

From Cliffy's Nature is Conscious thread.

The further someone pushes themselves from Christianity the more fervent they apparently become at upholding the ethics and morals of Christianity.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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MARKETS

Here's who actually owns the stock market (Big Evil Everything)


Bob Bryan May 25, 2016, 11:25 AM ET

It's easy to think that the stock market is the playground of hedge funds and day traders, but in reality most of the stock market is owned by the average Joe.

In fact, the largest chunk is doing one thing: helping people retire.

In a white paper, Steven Rosenthal and Lydia Austin of the Tax Policy Center have broken out exactly which kind of investors own the stock market. They found that a majority of corporate stock is owned by different types of retirement plans, the largest being IRAs and defined-benefit plans.

Of the $22.8 trillion in stock outstanding (not including US ownership of foreign stock and stock owned by "pass-through entities" such as exchange-traded funds), retirement accounts owned roughly 37%, the most of any type of holder.




Rosenthal and Austin's main focus was the precipitous decline of taxable investment accounts. In 50 years, the amount of stock owned by individual investors and funds outside retirement and nontaxable accounts such as 529 college-savings plans has dropped off a cliff - to about 25% in 2015 from over 80% in 1965.

After adjusting the data in several important respects, we estimated that taxable accounts held only 24.2 percent of C corporation equity in taxable accounts in 2015," the researchers said. "Our exercise revealed that the share of U.S. stocks held by taxable accounts declined sharply over the last 50 years, by more than two-thirds."

The other startling finding was the growth in foreign investment in the US stock market. What was once a small sliver of the makeup now accounts for a quarter of all stock ownership at $5.5 trillion. Part of this may be due to increasing wealth in foreign countries, but, as the researchers noted, it could also be influenced by corporate inversions, in which foreign-domiciled firms have large direct holdings of US-based stock.

Other significant chunks were owned by insurance companies ($1.6 trillion, or 5.6%) and nonprofits ($956 billion, or 4.2%).
 

Walter

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Jan 28, 2007
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Huff post is a media outlet - not 'polls'.
Here is an excerpt from the Huffpo article. I highlighted some werds.
Florida, Nevada and North Carolina have leaned toward Clinton in the polling averages. The forecast in recent weeks, along with the strength of early voting numbers, makes it seem very likely that these will stay with her. All three states are more than 80-percent likely to swing Democratic. New Hampshire polls have wavered recently, but the HuffPost model still predicts those four electoral votes will go to Clinton with more than 90 percent certainty. And Clinton should fairly easily hold onto Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania.
 

mentalfloss

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Jun 28, 2010
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You extrapolated all that information from a poll.

Poor Wally.

Still the village idiot as always.
 

Walter

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My favourite quote from Isaac Asimov, "Against stupidity, the gods themselves contend in vain."