The BidenGood Thread

Can't wait till gay marriage comes up again.
I don’t think Biden’s drag show ban on military bases poses any threat to gay marriage. He actually served as the catalyst for getting Obama to come out in support of gay marriage.
 
I don’t think Biden’s drag show ban on military bases poses any threat to gay marriage. He actually served as the catalyst for getting Obama to come out in support of gay marriage.
I agree. The gay marriage topic will come from the right during the 2024 campaign.
 
"Let us agree in the 21st century America, high-speed internet is not a luxury, it's a necessity," said Vice President Kamala Harris speaking at the White House.

"Whether it's connecting people to the digital economy, manufacturing fiber optic cable in America or creating good-paying jobs building internet infrastructure in the states, the investments we're announcing will increase our competitiveness and spur economic growth across the country for years to come," said Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo.

Each state will receive a minimum of $107 million, with 19 states receiving over $1 billion. Texas is slated to receive more than $3.3 billion under the program.
yes, thankyou, Pres.B and his administration and all those who voted for him...and now watch all those republicans attempt to take credit for rolling out those benefits in their states. Someone needs to remind them all, all of the time, how republicans tried to block the infrastructure bill.
 
Syracuse to see $100 B investment over next 20 years, thanks to CHIPS—a bipartisan deal but led by President Biden and which would have never seen the light of day under trump
That story of decline and exodus was repeated in any number of cities and towns around the country during those years. It was driven in no small part by place-agnostic policy choices that let the “invisible hand” of the market pick where jobs would go. This led to concentrated growth in a few big cities, while regions like Central New York and much of the Midwest were relegated to stagnation or worse. It fostered animosity among the people who had been sold out, forging a ready-made constituency for Donald Trump and the politics of resentment.
In October, the semiconductor manufacturer Micron Technology announced that it will spend as much as $100 billion over the next 20 years to build a plant outside Syracuse. It’s an unheard-of amount of money for Central New York. The deal was sealed by last summer’s CHIPS and Science Act, a bipartisan $50 billion investment in American-made semiconductor chips. It is, to date, the biggest example of—and the biggest bet on—the Biden administration’s rediscovery of an old idea about the economy: that geography matters. This approach recognizes that when it comes to growth and opportunity, the question is not just how much, but where and for whom.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/m...p&cvid=defa57f552c24430801db39266319adf&ei=25
 
President Biden’s plan to fund broadband infrastructure expansion is going to benefit large parts of America that didn’t vote for him for president. Like Obama and the ACA, Biden did this to benefit all Americans, but unlike the ACA, more access to the internet may possibly introduce nuggets of information contrary to the way they vote. More red state Republicans will have to jump in front of this to change the narrative.
 
yes, thankyou, Pres.B and his administration and all those who voted for him...and now watch all those republicans attempt to take credit for rolling out those benefits in their states. Someone needs to remind them all, all of the time, how republicans tried to block the infrastructure bill.
So butters, my question to you is where is all of this money coming from?
If you do a little kitchen table math, the average American is paying just at 47% of their wages in taxes. My next question is how far can the Biden regime push the average wallet? Free money isn't free....
 
So butters, my question to you is where is all of this money coming from?
If you do a little kitchen table math, the average American is paying just at 47% of their wages in taxes. My next question is how far can the Biden regime push the average wallet? Free money isn't free....
I’m surprised that a smart person, as yourself, would ask this question when it can be easily found on the innernettes. It’s funny that this question is always asked by fiscal hawks who acknowledge that we need to spend money on defense, but only balk when the spending concerns infrastructure, education, or social safety nets. The infrastructure bill, believe it or not, was bipartisan. Tell me what state you’re in and I will gladly give you the number to your senator, so you can complain to them.

Just speaking for myself, I am all for deficit spending. The American taxpayer never gets to see money spent on defense or wars come back home to benefit them as they sit at their kitchen table and pay out bills. It’s almost immeasurable what proper healthcare, or accessible broadband will bring to all Americans.
 
I’m surprised that a smart person, as yourself, would ask this question when it can be easily found on the innernettes. It’s funny that this question is always asked by fiscal hawks who acknowledge that we need to spend money on defense, but only balk when the spending concerns infrastructure, education, or social safety nets. The infrastructure bill, believe it or not, was bipartisan. Tell me what state you’re in and I will gladly give you the number to your senator, so you can complain to them.

Just speaking for myself, I am all for deficit spending. The American taxpayer never gets to see money spent on defense or wars come back home to benefit them as they sit at their kitchen table and pay out bills. It’s almost immeasurable what proper healthcare, or accessible broadband will bring to all Americans.
I need to correct myself here: this isn’t deficit spending, the infrastructure bill is paid for. Just another reason why it was bipartisan.
Also, Irezumikiss, my apologies to your Biden Good thread.
Buffalo, you’re free to reply back to me, but I won’t respond back here. Please, feel free to start a thread and I will gladly continue the back-and-forth.
 
I’m surprised that a smart person, as yourself, would ask this question when it can be easily found on the innernettes. It’s funny that this question is always asked by fiscal hawks who acknowledge that we need to spend money on defense, but only balk when the spending concerns infrastructure, education, or social safety nets. The infrastructure bill, believe it or not, was bipartisan. Tell me what state you’re in and I will gladly give you the number to your senator, so you can complain to them.

Just speaking for myself, I am all for deficit spending. The American taxpayer never gets to see money spent on defense or wars come back home to benefit them as they sit at their kitchen table and pay out bills. It’s almost immeasurable what proper healthcare, or accessible broadband will bring to all Americans.
Here's the thing..... the Biden regime gave Ukraine 100 billion dollars to a country that will lose their struggle. Ask yourself what that 100 billion dollars would accomplish here in the states.?...remember it Biden who gave the money to Ukraine. As for deficit spending? The country's total debt from borrowed money at the present rate here shortly, the interest will out strip the income from all collected taxes. At that time the United States will become Insolvent. ie..... Venezuela.
So I'm not sure of your fiscal prowess but here's a tip when you borrow money you become a slave to the one who loaned you the money..... my question is do like/want to be a slave???
 
So butters, my question to you is where is all of this money coming from?
If you do a little kitchen table math, the average American is paying just at 47% of their wages in taxes. My next question is how far can the Biden regime push the average wallet? Free money isn't free....
this is my only reply to you, given your ignorance or willful disinformation (i actually believe it's the latter)

you say: the average American's paying 47% of their wages in tax
i say: you're a liar

Key Takeaways​

  • One measure of average income tax burden reports a figure of 13.3% for all taxpayers, but coming up with an average is surprisingly difficult.
  • For the tax year 2022, the federal income tax brackets range from 10% to 37%.
  • The top 50% of taxpayers paid 97.1% of all federal income taxes in 2018. Among those taxpayers, the average income tax rate was 14.6% and the average tax paid was $20,663.
  • The OECD reported that the U.S. "tax wedge" for the average single worker was 28.4% in 2021.
https://www.thebalancemoney.com/what-the-average-american-pays-in-taxes-4768594#The U.S. Tax Wedge
 
this is my only reply to you, given your ignorance or willful disinformation (i actually believe it's the latter)

you say: the average American's paying 47% of their wages in tax
i say: you're a liar

Key Takeaways​

  • One measure of average income tax burden reports a figure of 13.3% for all taxpayers, but coming up with an average is surprisingly difficult.
  • For the tax year 2022, the federal income tax brackets range from 10% to 37%.
  • The top 50% of taxpayers paid 97.1% of all federal income taxes in 2018. Among those taxpayers, the average income tax rate was 14.6% and the average tax paid was $20,663.
  • The OECD reported that the U.S. "tax wedge" for the average single worker was 28.4% in 2021.
https://www.thebalancemoney.com/what-the-average-american-pays-in-taxes-4768594#The U.S. Tax Wedge
Hey there butters, you Neglected to list the "other" taxes.... property tax, license plates, fuel tax, taxes on phone bills internet, groceries, electricity, natural gas, sales taxes... oh and I am required to pay an environmental tax/fee on the oxygen I use for my torches in my shop... and the list continues... these are all "taxes" that add up. So in closing, if you had the tits to own and operate a business such as I do you'd know better. And I'm not a liar.......I actually work for my hard earned money
 
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