If the federal budget is a moral document—a statement of values and priorities—then the current debate on where we will spend our money in tough fiscal times is a defining moment for the character of this nation.
Currently, a record 47 million people live below the poverty line—$22,400 per year for a family of four—including one in five children. Over 100 million people, or one in three Americans, live on less than $46,000 for a family of four.
http://www.thenation.com/article/159381/us-poverty-past-present-and-future
What do you think is needed to fix these decisions?
Good luck with that last part. and for that matter the first part. The problem is that the prices for everything would soar because of our set paycheck amount. So its a pipe dream, but we would be the better for it, the quality of the old days are seen today in American Pickers.
This is a decent reply, it goes somewhat in the spirit of my post.Good luck with that last part. and for that matter the first part.
Wha? You mean price inflation? why would buying american cause price inflation? And just what is a "set paycheck amount"? Did the federal government suddenly mandate what everyone makes?The problem is that the prices for everything would soar because of our set paycheck amount.
Do you really think there would suddenly be an improvement in quality if people were forced to "buy american"? Think about it.its a pipe dream, but we would be the better for it, the quality of the old days are seen today in American Pickers.
Inspired by a comment in the thread "Citizens Against Spending".
What are your views on the sloppy economic situation the U.S has gotten into. Our debt being owned by other countries, wasteful spending, etc.
What do you think is needed to fix these decisions?
Lastly, allow the States to set up thier own citizenship requirements and take it out of the hands of the Feds.
Come on STR. this is your bread and butter, where are ya?
The problem isn't the tax rate, but tax loopholes. That was one of the highlights of the Simpson-Bowles Deficit Commission. We could reduce corporate rates AND personal rates and still bring in more income by removing asinine little exceptions that were intended for the middle class, but were taken to ridiculous extents by the wealthy.KJbushway said:I do know that its BS that the wealthy can't pay just 4% more tax than they are today. Even if makes small buisness pay a little bit more, the boss doesn't have to buy a golden toilet.
Having said all that, the US really has unnecessarily abused that ability to borrow, and its longer-term interests would be well-served by a reduction. It has a LOT more time to play with than any other country would have with its debt/GDP level, but short-termist politicians have kept postponing the necessary budget reductions for 20+ years. Each year that passes makes the decisions harder. If the US was wise, it would use its long range ability to manage high deficits constructively, to gradually reduce them with little real impact, while it still can. In 20-30 years time, it will be too late, and more drastic measures will be required.
fix immigration.
As in decreasing it? The US naturalizes a million plus new citizens a year, you seem to be suggesting increasing that number, starting with a group of people who began their time in America by committing the crime of illegal immigration, my family managed to immigrate to this country without breaking any laws. Why put people who have at the head of the line?
Fix health care
Getting rid of Obamacare would be the first step, then enact legislation to reduce prices and costs. No cookie-cutter government health care.
Given the use of the term "junk money," that I think you might have just invented (there's no such thing in any economics textbook I've read), and with all due respect, I don't think you truly know if it is, or is not a good idea. I will hand it to you, it sounds nice, why don't we just stop borrowing money? Reality is that our money supply deflated to the tune of trillions of dollars. All the money banks are too afraid to lend, all the credit cards that had their limits chopped. All the homes repossessed. All harmed the money supply. See, the government isn't the sole source of inflation. Honestly, it's not even the biggest. Banks are.stop printing money.
Having the government stop printing "junk money" is a good idea.
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