Forum Replies Created
-
AuthorPosts
-
CA renter
ParticipantAll of our financial institutions have sent us e-mails/messages telling us not to worry.
Funny, that’s when I worry.
CA renter
ParticipantAll of our financial institutions have sent us e-mails/messages telling us not to worry.
Funny, that’s when I worry.
CA renter
ParticipantAll of our financial institutions have sent us e-mails/messages telling us not to worry.
Funny, that’s when I worry.
CA renter
ParticipantAll of our financial institutions have sent us e-mails/messages telling us not to worry.
Funny, that’s when I worry.
CA renter
ParticipantAll of our financial institutions have sent us e-mails/messages telling us not to worry.
Funny, that’s when I worry.
CA renter
ParticipantIn my personal experience, the harder I worked, the less I was paid. As I worked my way up the ladder, the jobs became MUCH easier, and I had far more freedoms than when I worked for minimum wage.
Where are you getting the idea that the “rich” have somehow “earned” their money?
Also, wasn’t Bill Gates embroiled in antitrust lawsuits because he’s structured the business so there can be no real competition? Do the customers benefit from his actions?
http://news.cnet.com/2100-1040-232565.html
Isn’t he also the one who hired permanent “temporary” workers so he didn’t have to pay healthcare benefits and pensions, etc.? Did the employees benefit from this?
http://www.crn.com/it-channel/18812579
So, taxing Google’s **profits** will somehow make them go bankrupt or eliminate any incentive to keep working…please explain, in detail, how you come to this conclusion.
Not sure where you get the idea that “lazy, beer-swilling couch potatoes” are the recipients of the taxpayers’ largesse. The numbers would certainly prove that claim wrong.
The largest expense, by far, is defense spending. Social Security and Medicare follow close behind. Are these the “lazy” people you’re referring to?
Here is a chart:
http://www.usgovernmentspending.com/#usgs302
Where does the “No Bankers Left Behind” bill fit into your thesis that the “rich” earned their money???? Aren’t the banks and financial players some of the wealthiest people in the nation? Is this what you would call “class warfare”?
CA renter
ParticipantIn my personal experience, the harder I worked, the less I was paid. As I worked my way up the ladder, the jobs became MUCH easier, and I had far more freedoms than when I worked for minimum wage.
Where are you getting the idea that the “rich” have somehow “earned” their money?
Also, wasn’t Bill Gates embroiled in antitrust lawsuits because he’s structured the business so there can be no real competition? Do the customers benefit from his actions?
http://news.cnet.com/2100-1040-232565.html
Isn’t he also the one who hired permanent “temporary” workers so he didn’t have to pay healthcare benefits and pensions, etc.? Did the employees benefit from this?
http://www.crn.com/it-channel/18812579
So, taxing Google’s **profits** will somehow make them go bankrupt or eliminate any incentive to keep working…please explain, in detail, how you come to this conclusion.
Not sure where you get the idea that “lazy, beer-swilling couch potatoes” are the recipients of the taxpayers’ largesse. The numbers would certainly prove that claim wrong.
The largest expense, by far, is defense spending. Social Security and Medicare follow close behind. Are these the “lazy” people you’re referring to?
Here is a chart:
http://www.usgovernmentspending.com/#usgs302
Where does the “No Bankers Left Behind” bill fit into your thesis that the “rich” earned their money???? Aren’t the banks and financial players some of the wealthiest people in the nation? Is this what you would call “class warfare”?
CA renter
ParticipantIn my personal experience, the harder I worked, the less I was paid. As I worked my way up the ladder, the jobs became MUCH easier, and I had far more freedoms than when I worked for minimum wage.
Where are you getting the idea that the “rich” have somehow “earned” their money?
Also, wasn’t Bill Gates embroiled in antitrust lawsuits because he’s structured the business so there can be no real competition? Do the customers benefit from his actions?
http://news.cnet.com/2100-1040-232565.html
Isn’t he also the one who hired permanent “temporary” workers so he didn’t have to pay healthcare benefits and pensions, etc.? Did the employees benefit from this?
http://www.crn.com/it-channel/18812579
So, taxing Google’s **profits** will somehow make them go bankrupt or eliminate any incentive to keep working…please explain, in detail, how you come to this conclusion.
Not sure where you get the idea that “lazy, beer-swilling couch potatoes” are the recipients of the taxpayers’ largesse. The numbers would certainly prove that claim wrong.
The largest expense, by far, is defense spending. Social Security and Medicare follow close behind. Are these the “lazy” people you’re referring to?
Here is a chart:
http://www.usgovernmentspending.com/#usgs302
Where does the “No Bankers Left Behind” bill fit into your thesis that the “rich” earned their money???? Aren’t the banks and financial players some of the wealthiest people in the nation? Is this what you would call “class warfare”?
CA renter
ParticipantIn my personal experience, the harder I worked, the less I was paid. As I worked my way up the ladder, the jobs became MUCH easier, and I had far more freedoms than when I worked for minimum wage.
Where are you getting the idea that the “rich” have somehow “earned” their money?
Also, wasn’t Bill Gates embroiled in antitrust lawsuits because he’s structured the business so there can be no real competition? Do the customers benefit from his actions?
http://news.cnet.com/2100-1040-232565.html
Isn’t he also the one who hired permanent “temporary” workers so he didn’t have to pay healthcare benefits and pensions, etc.? Did the employees benefit from this?
http://www.crn.com/it-channel/18812579
So, taxing Google’s **profits** will somehow make them go bankrupt or eliminate any incentive to keep working…please explain, in detail, how you come to this conclusion.
Not sure where you get the idea that “lazy, beer-swilling couch potatoes” are the recipients of the taxpayers’ largesse. The numbers would certainly prove that claim wrong.
The largest expense, by far, is defense spending. Social Security and Medicare follow close behind. Are these the “lazy” people you’re referring to?
Here is a chart:
http://www.usgovernmentspending.com/#usgs302
Where does the “No Bankers Left Behind” bill fit into your thesis that the “rich” earned their money???? Aren’t the banks and financial players some of the wealthiest people in the nation? Is this what you would call “class warfare”?
CA renter
ParticipantIn my personal experience, the harder I worked, the less I was paid. As I worked my way up the ladder, the jobs became MUCH easier, and I had far more freedoms than when I worked for minimum wage.
Where are you getting the idea that the “rich” have somehow “earned” their money?
Also, wasn’t Bill Gates embroiled in antitrust lawsuits because he’s structured the business so there can be no real competition? Do the customers benefit from his actions?
http://news.cnet.com/2100-1040-232565.html
Isn’t he also the one who hired permanent “temporary” workers so he didn’t have to pay healthcare benefits and pensions, etc.? Did the employees benefit from this?
http://www.crn.com/it-channel/18812579
So, taxing Google’s **profits** will somehow make them go bankrupt or eliminate any incentive to keep working…please explain, in detail, how you come to this conclusion.
Not sure where you get the idea that “lazy, beer-swilling couch potatoes” are the recipients of the taxpayers’ largesse. The numbers would certainly prove that claim wrong.
The largest expense, by far, is defense spending. Social Security and Medicare follow close behind. Are these the “lazy” people you’re referring to?
Here is a chart:
http://www.usgovernmentspending.com/#usgs302
Where does the “No Bankers Left Behind” bill fit into your thesis that the “rich” earned their money???? Aren’t the banks and financial players some of the wealthiest people in the nation? Is this what you would call “class warfare”?
October 6, 2008 at 2:59 AM in reply to: Fed in bold move to thaw credit markets says it will buy massive amounts of short-term debt #281831CA renter
ParticipantWoo-hoo!! So glad the bailout passed so we can avoid market crashes!!! Yippee, we’re SAVED!!!!
Oh, wait…
October 6, 2008 at 2:59 AM in reply to: Fed in bold move to thaw credit markets says it will buy massive amounts of short-term debt #282111CA renter
ParticipantWoo-hoo!! So glad the bailout passed so we can avoid market crashes!!! Yippee, we’re SAVED!!!!
Oh, wait…
October 6, 2008 at 2:59 AM in reply to: Fed in bold move to thaw credit markets says it will buy massive amounts of short-term debt #282113CA renter
ParticipantWoo-hoo!! So glad the bailout passed so we can avoid market crashes!!! Yippee, we’re SAVED!!!!
Oh, wait…
October 6, 2008 at 2:59 AM in reply to: Fed in bold move to thaw credit markets says it will buy massive amounts of short-term debt #282156CA renter
ParticipantWoo-hoo!! So glad the bailout passed so we can avoid market crashes!!! Yippee, we’re SAVED!!!!
Oh, wait…
-
AuthorPosts
