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kewp
Participant[quote=pri_dk]
But can we recover faster also? Careful what you wish for. If we recover too quickly, we will probably be primed to do it all again…[/quote]One of my hobbies is volatility arbitrage so that is fine by me!
kewp
Participant[quote=pri_dk]
But can we recover faster also? Careful what you wish for. If we recover too quickly, we will probably be primed to do it all again…[/quote]One of my hobbies is volatility arbitrage so that is fine by me!
kewp
Participant[quote=pri_dk]
But can we recover faster also? Careful what you wish for. If we recover too quickly, we will probably be primed to do it all again…[/quote]One of my hobbies is volatility arbitrage so that is fine by me!
kewp
Participant[quote=pri_dk]
But can we recover faster also? Careful what you wish for. If we recover too quickly, we will probably be primed to do it all again…[/quote]One of my hobbies is volatility arbitrage so that is fine by me!
kewp
Participant[quote=Djshakes]This is the condition that California and other states with powerful public-sector unions find themselves in. California has ~2.3 million unionized government workers and ~18.6 million civilians. With so many people organized with a laser-like focus on increasing taxes and spending, the private working citizens of California find it nearly impossible to prevent government workers from voting their own paychecks.
[/quote]Then the civilians are doing something wrong, as they have a clear majority.
kewp
Participant[quote=Djshakes]This is the condition that California and other states with powerful public-sector unions find themselves in. California has ~2.3 million unionized government workers and ~18.6 million civilians. With so many people organized with a laser-like focus on increasing taxes and spending, the private working citizens of California find it nearly impossible to prevent government workers from voting their own paychecks.
[/quote]Then the civilians are doing something wrong, as they have a clear majority.
kewp
Participant[quote=Djshakes]This is the condition that California and other states with powerful public-sector unions find themselves in. California has ~2.3 million unionized government workers and ~18.6 million civilians. With so many people organized with a laser-like focus on increasing taxes and spending, the private working citizens of California find it nearly impossible to prevent government workers from voting their own paychecks.
[/quote]Then the civilians are doing something wrong, as they have a clear majority.
kewp
Participant[quote=Djshakes]This is the condition that California and other states with powerful public-sector unions find themselves in. California has ~2.3 million unionized government workers and ~18.6 million civilians. With so many people organized with a laser-like focus on increasing taxes and spending, the private working citizens of California find it nearly impossible to prevent government workers from voting their own paychecks.
[/quote]Then the civilians are doing something wrong, as they have a clear majority.
kewp
Participant[quote=Djshakes]This is the condition that California and other states with powerful public-sector unions find themselves in. California has ~2.3 million unionized government workers and ~18.6 million civilians. With so many people organized with a laser-like focus on increasing taxes and spending, the private working citizens of California find it nearly impossible to prevent government workers from voting their own paychecks.
[/quote]Then the civilians are doing something wrong, as they have a clear majority.
kewp
Participant[quote=afx114]
Did higher taxes drive businesses away in the 1990s? I still have yet to see numbers backing the taxes-kill-business claim. I’m perfectly open to be convinced otherwise.“Everyone else bring data.”
[/quote]You will never, ever get an answer from the free-market free-loaders.
kewp
Participant[quote=afx114]
Did higher taxes drive businesses away in the 1990s? I still have yet to see numbers backing the taxes-kill-business claim. I’m perfectly open to be convinced otherwise.“Everyone else bring data.”
[/quote]You will never, ever get an answer from the free-market free-loaders.
kewp
Participant[quote=afx114]
Did higher taxes drive businesses away in the 1990s? I still have yet to see numbers backing the taxes-kill-business claim. I’m perfectly open to be convinced otherwise.“Everyone else bring data.”
[/quote]You will never, ever get an answer from the free-market free-loaders.
kewp
Participant[quote=afx114]
Did higher taxes drive businesses away in the 1990s? I still have yet to see numbers backing the taxes-kill-business claim. I’m perfectly open to be convinced otherwise.“Everyone else bring data.”
[/quote]You will never, ever get an answer from the free-market free-loaders.
kewp
Participant[quote=afx114]
Did higher taxes drive businesses away in the 1990s? I still have yet to see numbers backing the taxes-kill-business claim. I’m perfectly open to be convinced otherwise.“Everyone else bring data.”
[/quote]You will never, ever get an answer from the free-market free-loaders.
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