Search Results
7/18/2025, 2:46:25 PM
6/26/2025, 10:17:43 AM
>>508768472
Fascists cry the second a brown person walks into the room. I don't know how your get off criticizing the left.
North Carolina was a strong red state till it got down rain and then every single independent young Republican was asking for welfare, liquid cash, and free gibs.
Your a capitalist by greed and a socialist by need and in the meantime you literally cry because of your own laws like 82nd Congress hr 5678 Texas preciso, which legalized illegal labor.
It's like children are playing pretend with a real country.
Fascists cry the second a brown person walks into the room. I don't know how your get off criticizing the left.
North Carolina was a strong red state till it got down rain and then every single independent young Republican was asking for welfare, liquid cash, and free gibs.
Your a capitalist by greed and a socialist by need and in the meantime you literally cry because of your own laws like 82nd Congress hr 5678 Texas preciso, which legalized illegal labor.
It's like children are playing pretend with a real country.
6/22/2025, 8:40:12 AM
>>508296339
Why would you think that?
Why would you think that?
6/22/2025, 3:40:10 AM
>>936086886
He doesn't care about laws. Those are things for normies and poors to concern themselves with. He's doing the dictator thing. Pay attention
He doesn't care about laws. Those are things for normies and poors to concern themselves with. He's doing the dictator thing. Pay attention
6/22/2025, 3:22:56 AM
6/17/2025, 5:21:06 PM
6/15/2025, 5:30:59 PM
>>507480985
Israel is a shithole and I hope Iran defends itself all the way to Israeli dissolution.
Israel is a shithole and I hope Iran defends itself all the way to Israeli dissolution.
6/5/2025, 5:41:27 AM
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/04/us/politics/trump-budget-bill-republicans-tax-cuts.html
Even before House Republicans learned the full price of their tax package on Wednesday, one of the bill’s chief authors, Representative Jason Smith of Missouri, was sowing doubt about the accuracy of the estimate.
“I’m skeptical,” Mr. Smith quipped at an event last month when asked about the coming analysis of the legislation’s cost. “Unless I like the number, I’m against the number.”
In the bitter war over the nation’s fiscal future, President Trump and his Republican allies have united around a new foe: the economists and budget experts who have warned about the costs of the party’s tax ambitions. Republican leaders have set about trying to discredit any hint of unfavorable accounting on their signature legislation as they race to enact it before the president’s self-imposed July 4 deadline.
The latest estimate arrived on Wednesday, projecting that the sprawling bill endorsed by Mr. Trump could add about $2.4 trillion to the federal debt over the next decade.
By then, though, the package of tax, spending and welfare cuts had already ignited an intense wave of political attacks and recriminations. While Republicans scrambled to cast their proposal as fiscally responsible, Wall Street was getting the jitters about the nation’s growing debt burden. The tech executive Elon Musk, having left behind his role seeking to slash government spending for Mr. Trump, savaged the bill again on social media on Wednesday, calling for new legislation to be drafted that “doesn’t massively grow the deficit.”
Even before House Republicans learned the full price of their tax package on Wednesday, one of the bill’s chief authors, Representative Jason Smith of Missouri, was sowing doubt about the accuracy of the estimate.
“I’m skeptical,” Mr. Smith quipped at an event last month when asked about the coming analysis of the legislation’s cost. “Unless I like the number, I’m against the number.”
In the bitter war over the nation’s fiscal future, President Trump and his Republican allies have united around a new foe: the economists and budget experts who have warned about the costs of the party’s tax ambitions. Republican leaders have set about trying to discredit any hint of unfavorable accounting on their signature legislation as they race to enact it before the president’s self-imposed July 4 deadline.
The latest estimate arrived on Wednesday, projecting that the sprawling bill endorsed by Mr. Trump could add about $2.4 trillion to the federal debt over the next decade.
By then, though, the package of tax, spending and welfare cuts had already ignited an intense wave of political attacks and recriminations. While Republicans scrambled to cast their proposal as fiscally responsible, Wall Street was getting the jitters about the nation’s growing debt burden. The tech executive Elon Musk, having left behind his role seeking to slash government spending for Mr. Trump, savaged the bill again on social media on Wednesday, calling for new legislation to be drafted that “doesn’t massively grow the deficit.”
Page 1