BoyNextDoor
I hate liars
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2010
- Posts
- 14,158
Tricky Trumpy decided this weekend to pay people not to work, by using executive orders. (wasn't that the biggest of Obama's sins? Maybe that is a different thread)
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Tricky Trumpy decided this weekend to pay people not to work, by using executive orders. (wasn't that the biggest of Obama's sins? Maybe that is a different thread)
Ummm.... Yay?
Or are you trying to say that he shouldn't be giving money to those who can't work because of Democrat governors shutting down their State economies?
Ummm.... Yay?
Or are you trying to say that he shouldn't be giving money to those who can't work because of Democrat governors shutting down their State economies?
Ummm.... Yay?
Or are you trying to say that he shouldn't be giving money to those who can't work because of Democrat governors shutting down their State economies?
I think that's what he's saying. He always phrases things stupidly though so it's hard to tell.![]()
Yes, that's what he could be saying and if he meant it literally would indeed be stupid.
Then again he could be pointing out the hypocrisy in that not so long ago the Trump administration was using pretty much that exact phrase to oppose unemployment payments to those out of work, but now that the election is getting tight decided to pander to those who they tried to screw earlier.
Hmmmmmm...I wonder which one it is???
Comshaw
This is hilarious. It's like you don't remember who signed the relief bill into law or something.
It's okay as long as trump is doing it. Had obama done it, these republitards would be losing their shit. It's a double standard.![]()
As expected, you try to detour the conversation to keep from addressing the reality of what the Donald said. Did or did not his administration use that phrase to oppose the unemployment payment? Choose wisely.
Comshaw
It's amazing that you cannot seem to wrap your head around THE FACT that Trump signed TWO BILLS about coronavirus relief already.
He opposed the second bill on the grounds that he wanted a payroll tax cut to be included but signed it anyway even without that provision. He also opposed any "new" relief while the current relief funds were still available and unspent.
So, unless you have something other than that, I don't remember him directly opposing unemployment benefits for furloughed workers. I could be wrong, but I don't REMEMBER anything like what you're suggesting.
Tricky Trumpy decided this weekend to pay people not to work, by using executive orders. (wasn't that the biggest of Obama's sins? Maybe that is a different thread)
It's okay as long as trump is doing it. Had obama done it, these republitards would be losing their shit. It's a double standard.![]()
Waaaaah! Trump did something I agree with. Waaaah!
Cumshaw
On the other hand the payroll tax deferment pays people who are working to continue doing so.
I would think an enthusiastic socialist such as yourself would be pleased that he's redistributingdas capital to das workers and das indolent
...
It is now clear that the Future of Work is here, having arrived in the form of a pandemic. The lowest-paid and lowest-skilled Americans have been displaced from work at heightened rates. A significant number will need to be retrained as the economy realigns. And while workers are at home awaiting a vaccine or other mitigation for the public-health disaster, employers are rapidly automating their tasks with robots that have evolved faster than anyone imagined. Robots don’t need child care, can’t catch COVID, won’t sue, and can even appear remarkably human. The order is backwards (supply shock sidelines workers and makes them costlier, then robots arrive), but the result is the same — except instead of a slow drip, the dam broke.
For many American workers, the pandemic has been a disaster. For public policy, it has been attention-focusing. Is there a congressperson in Washington who thinks labor-market policy is not the most important question on the table right now? Let’s hope not.
So let’s call the $600-per-week unemployment insurance (UI) debate what it is: a shadow debate over a national policy about income guarantees that will define the arguments for years. Conservatives have long argued that a universal basic income will have detrimental labor-supply effects. Why work when the returns to not working are so high? In Tennessee, where I live, a two-earner household earning $15 per hour each would earn roughly $60,000 in labor income over the course of a year, but earned nearly $90,000 in annualized income under the CARES Act.
To the surprise of American employers struggling to fill jobs, quantitative evidence published so far shows negligible labor-supply effects. But economists know, or should know, that these are highly unusual economic conditions. Whatever the labor-supply effects of our current generous UI system, they do not imply effects from UBI. For one thing, there are four times as many unemployed workers as available jobs; as the labor market recovers, the labor-supply effects may intensify. Moreover, any worker reluctance is not only about the generosity of UI, but also about health risks. Economists are documenting that the pace of exit from UI is not remarkably different across workers with high and low income-replacement rates from the UI system, and suggesting this means there is no labor-supply effect of generous UI. But if health concerns are driving decision-making, then the lack of a replacement-rate effect is not terribly surprising. And in the absence of a pandemic, the effect would likely reemerge.
It's almost like luk doesn't care anymore. Pretending to be multiple Canadiens. Not living off of his mom's and buddie's dimes and goodwill.
Mehbe there should be a pole/poll if he could ever make it on his own.
Lawlz!