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Previous comments... You are currently on page 2.
You may want to look a bit further back than the last month on trump. He is a long road of contradiction, theft by relationship to politicians through government programs, theft through bankrupcy. Yes his actions are legal, but still theft.
Perhaps the worst thing he will do is the thing I dislike most about Obama, and he has made it clear he will do it. He has stated he will use executive order to get things done, he will just do good things. A tyrant who does good things is still a tyrant, and we cannot have another or it will be so cemented in our culture that we will never remove the tyrants power.
No Trump has clearly told us he is a tyrant, but he will be a good tyrant. I want no more tyrants.
The other dangerous but far more acceptable plan is end user consumption taxing only at that point Puts people in charge of government.
Along with a few other goodies. the Cruz/Rand plan i saw was 16% on each and every business .and the danger point is getting both on the books at the same time.
What they want is both on the books at the same time.
So let's say Cruz get's his passed ....all goingi well.....and then some other Soros disciple gets in...where's the protection?
There is none except income tax goes and the end user tax comes in....no overlap
16% on business is not a business profit tax it's just more overhead to pass on to the consumer.
Also I didn't see any specifics about how he would cut gov't. He says the payroll taxes system would be eliminated, but SS and Medicare would remain funded. How? If we suppose for the moment that we take care of SS and Medicare, the next biggest thing is military. And he has carried on about using the military more. So I don't see where the cuts could come from. Cutting the EPA is one item, but not enough to move the needle. Moreover, turning that over to the states makes it hard to fight non-local threats like global warming. If we don't do something about that, it will cost more than a few billion dollars. Maybe he has a plan to deal with that without a large federal agency, which I is something I would support.
I think he is right unless you can change the culture first to a constitutional culture, then repeal the needed amendments and add a very explicit one removing all other taxes constitutionally, your going to just get an additional tax.
I am not sure I trust that he will do it, but who else has even said they would do it.
he has said, and did say to those in Iowa, at meetings attempting to preserve them, that he would do away with all subsidies, including the corn/methanol subsidies. A person who will tell people this just before the big vote day is the kind of person I think we need.
He thinks he can do the 10% tax, I think he will have to settle for something more like Mike Lee's plan, but either would be a huge improvement.
If it were so, I'd rather have a president in fear of those consequences, even if he only understood them in a pagan sense rather than someone like obobo with no moral guide, no mind, no conscience nor the slightest knowledge of our constitution and the rule of law.
The problem with progressives and establishment types alike is they have no respect or mutuality for conscious human life.
In spite of what were taught, there is much to admire about us. Those that have caused the world problems, those that blame mankind are in fact the problem and are nothing like the majority of men. (historically includes women also)
An all or nothing approach will never work, and will never get us back. It may have in 1890 had someone opposed rail road subsidies and Sherman law. We are to far from the correct path to right it in one blow now, incremental political process is the only way it will happen.
I give you a point up but a question to ponder.
I must agree with you.
There are many things that frighten me about Trump, but I'll illustrate just one of them
Trump says he'll level the playing field with China. China has devalued its currency which artificially causes their prices to be lower and therefore more competitive. Trump wants them to stop this practice, but how will he make them do so? The only way he can is to place a tariff on their products. China then has many retaliatory options, none of them good. They can start a tariff war. As the prices rise it will slow down the purchase of both countries goods and caught in the middle will be the American consumer. Worst of all, if the battle gets hotter still, China can turn to selling the billions in American bonds that it holds. In the end, because of our great size and China's great size not only will our economies suffer, but world-wide economies will start sliding, which can lead to a hot war, and the villain would be us.This illustrates that either Trump cannot comprehend basic global economics, or he is just spouting rhetoric. Either way, I wouldn't trust him to be president. When he realizes his true position in the world, he well might turn to Fascism.
As to Cruz: He's way too religious in his proclamations -- but, no one knows or understands the Constitution better than him. He has won cases at Supreme Court level and is the only senator to stick up for the promises he's made to constituents, even to his own peril. Of all of the bison herd of Republican contenders, he has the most integrity. No, he's not perfect. You'll not find Howard Roark or John Galt, or Hank Reardon running for office, but Cruz is as close as you're going to get with any chance of winning.
I think every one of the GOP candidates except Trump has been tripped up by at least the appearance, if not the actual evidence, of hypocrisy, from contradictory statements made, not in the distant past, but in the course of the current campaign. The insistence by the media of a candidate making sworn concrete, immutable statements on every position is a trap that a real leader with any sense avoids.
I've spent a lot of time reviewing statements of every potential candidate, and of all of them, as outrageous as it may sound to others in this forum, Trump exhibits more common sense than all the others. Taking just one issue, taxation, to which every other candidate has rigidly endorsed one or the other attractive-sounding position. I've heard proposals for a flat tax, fair tax (my favorite), no tax, or a simplified version of the current tax. When asked his position on taxes, Trump simply acknowledged that all of those proposals have the possibility of helping the economy, and that he would work to implement the best, most achievable changes as quickly as possible. While he makes inflammatory public statements to draw media attention and discover the public's deepest motivations, he's pragmatic, rather than rigidly ideological.
Ideologues either fail, or lead people into catastrophic historical events. It takes real skill to induce people to stop waiting for government to take care of them, and get them excited about what they can accomplish if the government does its best to remove barriers. Perverse as it may sound to some here, Donald Trump seems to be the only political figure sending that message.
The RINO "mainstream" of the hypocrisy party I've come to despise hates Cruz for his conservative principles.
Cruz is listed as a Republican libertarian too. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberta...
I consider voting for Cruz as making a statement.
I have Johnson under consideration for the general election.
Every presidential election since I became aware of politics has had someone on this promise. It sidesteps the tough questions of how to reduce gov't. I don't think it's realistic. OTOH, I'd rather here this than what I heard last night. I caught about 20% of the marathon Democratic debate. I heard them both say they would increase taxes by $100 billion a year, and that sounds like not enough to cover all of Sanders' spending promises. I'm disappointed that Clinton didn't say she opposed all net increases in tax.
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