Politics isn't a religion. It is an interest.
And something I like about Trump and other Republicans (particularly the less-insider sorts, DJT being a madly and greedily resented outsider and outside force that is just what the free republic needs after generations of the opposite) is how they on occasion think like libertarians. There has been for four generations a cry for running the government in a businesslike fashion. Trump has answered that cry at long last. Four more years will answer the cry even better. Plus sequelae -- really putting the end to the era of big government, that we all may be the wealthier, breathe the freer, and make our sexual desirability the greater. Makes America the greater too, hmm? See, my eyes are open -- and there are those who are so philosophically bankrupt that they have run out of substantive rebuttals, have exhausted their antifreedom arguments and sallies, and ad-hominemwise tell me I'm "pompous" for being open-eyed. This is a dimbulb's attempt at saving face, and it is contemptible. When you can't, simply can't, brighten the free republic, you're a mess. |
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Category errors are a thing. |
He's right, look at all the successful businesses running a trillion dollar deficit.:rolleyes:
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Previously posted were other GE assets sold to mask massive losses. Add to that list latest sales of their biopharmaceutical division to Danaher Corp and their aircraft leasing division to Apollo (an investment retirement fund). Then a massive deficit, that has existed for decades, again is not obvious to stock brokers and other bean counters. America is selling off to mask losses created by business school (bean counter) graduates who routinely stifle innovation. Innovation being the only source of actual profits, growth, and jobs. Examples of people, with a plumber's education, getting rich by selling off America. And so the expression "going down the drain". Companies running massive deficits to mask unproductive management include Boeing and Lockheed-Martin. First indication starts with underfunded pension funds. Which has been using a 'tax cut inspired bubble' on the stock market to mask increasing financial losses. Sears used sale of Kmart to play fast and loose with money games. Now on the list is Xerox trying to do same with HP. How curious. Those are the same games that Trump used. Including four Atlantic City casinos that never once earned a profit. But Trump is an honest man. So that must not be a concern. |
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That's what religion is. |
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The Trump administration's philosophy is what running government in a businesslike fashion looks like -- and whaddaya know; it worked. People who think this can't work, or for some reason shouldn't (I can't think of any) aren't thinking like libertarians. They ought to start. |
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Also amazing how the most easily brainwashed resort to profanity to justify their misinformation. |
Indeed? Is what you want to call "stiffing contractors" actually, say, a lawsuit over nonfulfillment by said contractors? Cranks are so very seldom reliable reporters, O Tantalus. My mentality being manifestly non-crankish puts you in a very deep hole.
Absolutely no one who is taken seriously points to the Present POTUS as stiffing anybody, and unprejudiced people have taken notice. Persons of prejudice can't afford to take that notice lest they have to turn in their sheets, hoods, and red-white-and-black brassards. At least then these emperors of penile encephaly will have no clothes. |
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You don't know what the fuck your talking about. He's a dyed in the wool criminal, the con man tax cheat thief you wish you could be. |
https://theweek.com/articles/783976/...ltime-swindles
3. A paint seller and event workers in Florida After putting in long hours for a special event at Trump National Doral, a Miami resort, 48 servers had to sue for unpaid overtime. The settlements averaged around $800 per worker, but went as high as $3,000 in one case. On top of that, a paint shop owner named Juan Carlos Enriquez also sued Trump's business, claiming he never got the final payment for a paint shipment to the same resort. In 2017, after a three-year legal fight, a court found in Enriquez's favor, and ordered Trump's company to pay the final $32,000, plus $300,000 in legal fees. https://www.miamiherald.com/entertai...e91353232.html |
https://www.mediamatters.org/coronav...dnt-be-trusted
It's probably wise to consider that when these guys say "Deep State" they're talking about anyone who may have expertise in their field and is a government employee. Government incompetence becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy when we elect anti-government folks to run the government. https://www.amazon.com/Fifth-Risk-Mi.../dp/1324002646 |
From Fortune Magazine:
Why U.S. Law Makes It Easy for Donald Trump To Stiff Contractors Quote:
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