President Obama didn’t create today’s budget problem. Bush did.
The politicians we sent to Washington DC should start pointing this out.
President Obama didn’t create today’s budget problem. Bush did.
The politicians we sent to Washington DC should start pointing this out.
Everything old is new again. Are you listening, Kansas?
(Source: cognitivedissonance)
George Carlin from a long time ago, explaining how the country really works:
Geophysical porn: A time-lapse video of yesterday’s Phoenix dust storm
Remember when Grover Nordquist said that he wanted to weaken government until it could be strangled in its own bathwater?
We seem to be close.
I wonder if Obama has noticed?
See this chart? It’s 29 public companies who had more cash on hand than the U.S. Treasury Department as of July 13th. American companies are highlighted in yellow.
According to ThinkProgress:
In the first half of July alone, Treasury cash balances were depleted from from $130 billion to just $39 billion. That means the most powerful nation on earth currently is tied with Google for the amount of cash that it has, and is less flush than Bank of America, JP Morgan Stanley, and Goldman Sachs, among others.
Note that several companies received hefty bailouts and paid little to no income tax in 2010. From Sen. Bernie Sanders’ office:
“Bank of America received a $1.9 billion tax refund from the IRS last year, although it made $4.4 billion in profits and received a bailout from the Federal Reserve and the Treasury Department of nearly $1 trillion. Over the past five years, while General Electric made $26 billion in profits in the United States, it received a $4.1 billion refund from the IRS. Goldman Sachs in 2008 only paid 1.1 percent of its income in taxes even though it earned a profit of $2.3 billion and received an almost $800 billion from the Federal Reserve and U.S. Treasury Department.”
This is completely outrageous. ThinkProgress sums it up nicely:
The numbers effectively rebut Republican claims that the government has plenty of money to keep funding essential services while paying down its debt. It also belies GOP claims that companies are in need of lower corporate taxes. American corporations have a record amount of cash — they are just refusing to invest domestically while lobbying for tax breaks.
Several Republican candidates have called for drastically lowering the corporate tax rate, while congressional Republicans are refusing to concede in debt ceiling negotiations that corporate tax loopholes should be closed to give the government more much-needed revenue.
So, who will the US Congress represent? This list, or we the people?
… it’s because most of us don’t have a clear personal idea of 1) what public goals we want to achieve, or 2) what public problems we face.
Agree on either the goal or the problem and you can discuss politics constructively. You’ll usually find that you have a lot in common with someone you thought was an adversary.
The real problem; comes with people who don’t respect you enough to tell you the truth. You can’t discuss anything constructively with a person who has no respect for you — and this is not unique to politics.
@10 months ago with 7 notesSometimes when I go to a Tumblr blog, I get a popup window instead of the blog.
The popup window fills my screen. It says “You don’t have the latest version of Flash. Click here and we will install it.”
The window also displays an OK button, but no ‘X’ close button. You can not close the window. You have to click OK to close the screen and read the blog.
THIS IS A MALWARE EXPLOIT.
DO NOT EVER CLICK ON THAT OK BUTTON.
If you see this screen, immediately close the blog you were trying to access.
This morning, I am wondering how this exploit got onto Tumblr and why they aren’t running security measures that protect visitors from malware.
@10 months ago with 58 notesToo bad. They have promise. It’s easy to format a blog (lots of templates) and easy to use, and you can easily embed outside files, music and video.
But their HTML editor uses deprecated HTML tags. They won’t support stylesheets. Not only do they refuse to support HTML comment tags, but they THROW AWAY CONTENT they find inside those tags. When updating your content, the editor sometimes looses formatting you’ve already applied, and can lose more content as well. Google won’t support JavaScript, even calls to their own libraries, so you can’t add even incidental animation to your blog. Google doesn’t seem to care about any of these problems.
As a blogger, I would use WordPress instead and put up with a steeper learning curve — or I’d use Tumblr, which is actually FUN.
@10 months ago with 10 notesThat’s the thing about poking around the internet.
I’ve just spent 45 minutes on Wikipedia clicking on politics and philosophy links that I was curious about. I’m better for it, but I have no idea where I’ve been.
… wound up reading about Chopin, Unitarianism and street photography.
There are just too many internet tubes out here.
I need to go empty out my head now.
@11 months ago with 5 notes