The Nation's Financial Condition
Re: The Nation's Financial Condition
Just read a good story, that if Medicare spends $1.00 for home-delivered meals to Medicare recipients just released from the hospital, they can save $1.57 on each $1.00 spent. This is like magic. My suggestion is that they get out of the medical field all together and go into the food home delivery business, they will be solvent in no time. It is all so simple.
A cold beer and a warm woman is all I need to keep me happy. Sometimes a cold beer is enough...
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Re: The Nation's Financial Condition
So...I agree.cradleandshoot wrote: ↑Fri Jul 26, 2019 12:44 pmNo problem there a Fan. The nation just has to shift gears and tax the nation all the way back to prosperity. It is such a magical formula you can make it happen without cutting one thin dime of spending. Like with Houdini and all magicians... it's just an illusion
But what would you cut in spending that would actually move the needle?
We've been through the #'s a whole bunch of times on this and predecessor threads, but there simply aren't anywhere near enough discretionary dollars, outside of defense to move the needle. You could go to zero and not get there. So, now you're back to entitlements like Medicare and Social Security...and defense.
Where you gonna cut?
And OBTW, we have massively underinvested in infrastructure...
But, hey, those corporate tax cuts sure were necessary to drive up stock market prices, buybacks, and dividends...
BTW, I do think we could adjust Social Security, and I think we could dramatically re-think healthcare spending priorities to prevention and away from end of life extraordinary care. And we could dramatically re-shape our food system to drive down obesity which is so causal in over 50% of all health care costs (chronic diseases: heart disease, diabetes, metabolic disorder, joint, some cancer, etc). Stop subsidizing corn=SUGAR production and instead subsidize fresh fruit and vegetables with free access to poor populations as 'Food is Medicine'.
Lots of 'smart' things we could do with we could stop the partisan demonization and actually focus on what really can work.
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Re: The Nation's Financial Condition
Obviously you exaggerate, but it's exactly that sort of casual dismissal of what actually works that is so stupid in how our partisanship gets in the way of rational policy choices.frmanfan wrote: ↑Fri Jul 26, 2019 12:50 pm Just read a good story, that if Medicare spends $1.00 for home-delivered meals to Medicare recipients just released from the hospital, they can save $1.57 on each $1.00 spent. This is like magic. My suggestion is that they get out of the medical field all together and go into the food home delivery business, they will be solvent in no time. It is all so simple.
We've long known that Food is Medicine, but we ignore it.
“The doctor of the future will give no medication, but will interest his patients in the care of the human frame, diet and in the cause and prevention of disease.”
Thomas Edison
We subsidize corn=SUGAR instead...so stupid.
We have food stamps to help poor people not starve, but we are unwilling to bother to ensure those dollars pay for healthy, nutritionally dense food rather than whatever sugar and fat and salt filled garbage looks delicious and fulfills calorie needs cheaply.
It's not that we don't actually know what foods are healthy and nutritionally dense, it's that we don't want to hurt the 'businesses' of those pushing the garbage to us and our kids. It's also not that nutritionally dense, healthy food is actually costly. Using what's on sale at one's local grocery store, a family can easily achieve $3 per serving for dinners that are healthy and nutritionally dense. Food stamps cover Doritos but not a rotisserie chicken because it's 'prepared'. Doesn't matter that grocers use rotisserie chickens as loss leaders so they're often cheaper than actually cooking a chicken yourself, we're too stupid to let food stamps cover it.
And of course, from the far right, how many times do we have to hear 'nanny state' and see people badly obese walk out of a 7-Eleven with super big gulp of Coca Cola or some artificial garish colored Slurpee? Dumb.
Tax added sugar, don't subsidize it. Simple. But here come the lobbyists...
Re: The Nation's Financial Condition
this is something that smart people like the late Charles Krauthammer have been calling for since the 80's. And if we had listened then, the problem would likely be solved.
We need (needed) to raise the retirement age. When the age threshold was established, it was set to be three years past the average life expectancy! So, people were expected to prudently save enough money to live three years past what was prudent to expect to live. Then, and only then, was the government supposed to step in. It really was insurance you see...
If you tell people when they are 20 that they should expect to receive benefits in their 70's rather than their 60's then they can plan accordingly. But the AARP fought it tooth and nail - they were scared of not getting those members until 10 years later..... No one suggested yanking the rug out from under someone who was 58. You ease in. Tell 40 year olds, their qualifying age is pushed out 2 years. Tell 30 year olds, theirs is pushed out 5 years. Tell 20 year olds 10 - putting their retirement age somewhere in the mid to late 70's as it should be..
STILL somewhere back in the day....
...and waiting/hoping for a tinfoil hat emoji......
...and waiting/hoping for a tinfoil hat emoji......
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Re: The Nation's Financial Condition
Yup, and some moderate means testing.HooDat wrote: ↑Fri Jul 26, 2019 1:19 pmthis is something that smart people like the late Charles Krauthammer have been calling for since the 80's. And if we had listened then, the problem would likely be solved.
We need (needed) to raise the retirement age. When the age threshold was established, it was set to be three years past the average life expectancy! So, people were expected to prudently save enough money to live three years past what was prudent to expect to live. Then, and only then, was the government supposed to step in. It really was insurance you see...
If you tell people when they are 20 that they should expect to receive benefits in their 70's rather than their 60's then they can plan accordingly. But the AARP fought it tooth and nail - they were scared of not getting those members until 10 years later..... No one suggested yanking the rug out from under someone who was 58. You ease in. Tell 40 year olds, their qualifying age is pushed out 2 years. Tell 30 year olds, theirs is pushed out 5 years. Tell 20 year olds 10 - putting their retirement age somewhere in the mid to late 70's as it should be..
My point is simply that you need to look to where the money is actually spent, figure out how to reduce that spending, smartly, which sometimes means spending a nickel to return a dollar ala preventive health spending and food policy.
But don't whine about domestic discretionary spending as if that actually had any chance of being an actual solution to deficits.
Otherwise, you simply gotta tax those who actually have disposable income, and assets. Not cut their taxes under some misbegotten hope and prayer that it will drive greater 'revenue' ie tax collections sufficient to pay for the lost 'revenue'.
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Re: The Nation's Financial Condition
You make very good points. The only way to cut real spending is in tiny increments. Even at that any government department facing a real cut will scream like a stuck pig. In my world there would be mass rebellion at my plan. I cut everyone strait across the board. These would not be draconian cuts. They would make everybody aware the game was changing. The phrase I have heard over and over again from many corporations is you have to do more with less. It is time the government learn to employ that same philosophy. Do i think fiscal responsibility will ever return to DC. IMO not in a million years. Do do so requires discipline and intestinal fortitude not found among our leaders today. To end with a popular cliche... they can talk the talk but they can't walk the walk. That would involve having to do something that would be unpopular with a lot of people.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Fri Jul 26, 2019 1:00 pmSo...I agree.cradleandshoot wrote: ↑Fri Jul 26, 2019 12:44 pmNo problem there a Fan. The nation just has to shift gears and tax the nation all the way back to prosperity. It is such a magical formula you can make it happen without cutting one thin dime of spending. Like with Houdini and all magicians... it's just an illusion
But what would you cut in spending that would actually move the needle?
We've been through the #'s a whole bunch of times on this and predecessor threads, but there simply aren't anywhere near enough discretionary dollars, outside of defense to move the needle. You could go to zero and not get there. So, now you're back to entitlements like Medicare and Social Security...and defense.
Where you gonna cut?
And OBTW, we have massively underinvested in infrastructure...
But, hey, those corporate tax cuts sure were necessary to drive up stock market prices, buybacks, and dividends...
BTW, I do think we could adjust Social Security, and I think we could dramatically re-think healthcare spending priorities to prevention and away from end of life extraordinary care. And we could dramatically re-shape our food system to drive down obesity which is so causal in over 50% of all health care costs (chronic diseases: heart disease, diabetes, metabolic disorder, joint, some cancer, etc). Stop subsidizing corn=SUGAR production and instead subsidize fresh fruit and vegetables with free access to poor populations as 'Food is Medicine'.
Lots of 'smart' things we could do with we could stop the partisan demonization and actually focus on what really can work.
We don't make mistakes, we have happy accidents.
Bob Ross:
Bob Ross:
- MDlaxfan76
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Re: The Nation's Financial Condition
Again, you gotta go where the real money is, defense and entitlements.cradleandshoot wrote: ↑Fri Jul 26, 2019 1:31 pmYou make very good points. The only way to cut real spending is in tiny increments. Even at that any government department facing a real cut will scream like a stuck pig. In my world there would be mass rebellion at my plan. I cut everyone strait across the board. These would not be draconian cuts. They would make everybody aware the game was changing. The phrase I have heard over and over again from many corporations is you have to do more with less. It is time the government learn to employ that same philosophy. Do i think fiscal responsibility will ever return to DC. IMO not in a million years. Do do so requires discipline and intestinal fortitude not found among our leaders today. To end with a popular cliche... they can talk the talk but they can't walk the walk. That would involve having to do something that would be unpopular with a lot of people.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Fri Jul 26, 2019 1:00 pmSo...I agree.cradleandshoot wrote: ↑Fri Jul 26, 2019 12:44 pmNo problem there a Fan. The nation just has to shift gears and tax the nation all the way back to prosperity. It is such a magical formula you can make it happen without cutting one thin dime of spending. Like with Houdini and all magicians... it's just an illusion
But what would you cut in spending that would actually move the needle?
We've been through the #'s a whole bunch of times on this and predecessor threads, but there simply aren't anywhere near enough discretionary dollars, outside of defense to move the needle. You could go to zero and not get there. So, now you're back to entitlements like Medicare and Social Security...and defense.
Where you gonna cut?
And OBTW, we have massively underinvested in infrastructure...
But, hey, those corporate tax cuts sure were necessary to drive up stock market prices, buybacks, and dividends...
BTW, I do think we could adjust Social Security, and I think we could dramatically re-think healthcare spending priorities to prevention and away from end of life extraordinary care. And we could dramatically re-shape our food system to drive down obesity which is so causal in over 50% of all health care costs (chronic diseases: heart disease, diabetes, metabolic disorder, joint, some cancer, etc). Stop subsidizing corn=SUGAR production and instead subsidize fresh fruit and vegetables with free access to poor populations as 'Food is Medicine'.
Lots of 'smart' things we could do with we could stop the partisan demonization and actually focus on what really can work.
Making folks in SEC or DOE or FBI or HHS or, the Oval Office, scream like stuck pigs over 'tiny increments' simply doesn't get the job done.
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Re: The Nation's Financial Condition
What in the world is going on... we never agree this much. I could not be more on board with you on defense. 700 billion plus dollars... and growing just does not make sense. I am a huge fan of having a strong national defense. I am not and never will be a fan of whizz bang fancy equipment that costs too much and is to temperamental for heavy use to begin with.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Fri Jul 26, 2019 1:37 pmAgain, you gotta go where the real money is, defense and entitlements.cradleandshoot wrote: ↑Fri Jul 26, 2019 1:31 pmYou make very good points. The only way to cut real spending is in tiny increments. Even at that any government department facing a real cut will scream like a stuck pig. In my world there would be mass rebellion at my plan. I cut everyone strait across the board. These would not be draconian cuts. They would make everybody aware the game was changing. The phrase I have heard over and over again from many corporations is you have to do more with less. It is time the government learn to employ that same philosophy. Do i think fiscal responsibility will ever return to DC. IMO not in a million years. Do do so requires discipline and intestinal fortitude not found among our leaders today. To end with a popular cliche... they can talk the talk but they can't walk the walk. That would involve having to do something that would be unpopular with a lot of people.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Fri Jul 26, 2019 1:00 pmSo...I agree.cradleandshoot wrote: ↑Fri Jul 26, 2019 12:44 pmNo problem there a Fan. The nation just has to shift gears and tax the nation all the way back to prosperity. It is such a magical formula you can make it happen without cutting one thin dime of spending. Like with Houdini and all magicians... it's just an illusion
But what would you cut in spending that would actually move the needle?
We've been through the #'s a whole bunch of times on this and predecessor threads, but there simply aren't anywhere near enough discretionary dollars, outside of defense to move the needle. You could go to zero and not get there. So, now you're back to entitlements like Medicare and Social Security...and defense.
Where you gonna cut?
And OBTW, we have massively underinvested in infrastructure...
But, hey, those corporate tax cuts sure were necessary to drive up stock market prices, buybacks, and dividends...
BTW, I do think we could adjust Social Security, and I think we could dramatically re-think healthcare spending priorities to prevention and away from end of life extraordinary care. And we could dramatically re-shape our food system to drive down obesity which is so causal in over 50% of all health care costs (chronic diseases: heart disease, diabetes, metabolic disorder, joint, some cancer, etc). Stop subsidizing corn=SUGAR production and instead subsidize fresh fruit and vegetables with free access to poor populations as 'Food is Medicine'.
Lots of 'smart' things we could do with we could stop the partisan demonization and actually focus on what really can work.
Making folks in SEC or DOE or FBI or HHS or, the Oval Office, scream like stuck pigs over 'tiny increments' simply doesn't get the job done.
We don't make mistakes, we have happy accidents.
Bob Ross:
Bob Ross:
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Re: The Nation's Financial Condition
Tiny increments is not perfect... but if you really want to hear some screaming... take a big bite out of the budgetcradleandshoot wrote: ↑Fri Jul 26, 2019 1:52 pmWhat in the world is going on... we never agree this much. I could not be more on board with you on defense. 700 billion plus dollars... and growing just does not make sense. I am a huge fan of having a strong national defense. I am not and never will be a fan of whizz bang fancy equipment that costs too much and is to temperamental for heavy use to begin with.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Fri Jul 26, 2019 1:37 pmAgain, you gotta go where the real money is, defense and entitlements.cradleandshoot wrote: ↑Fri Jul 26, 2019 1:31 pmYou make very good points. The only way to cut real spending is in tiny increments. Even at that any government department facing a real cut will scream like a stuck pig. In my world there would be mass rebellion at my plan. I cut everyone strait across the board. These would not be draconian cuts. They would make everybody aware the game was changing. The phrase I have heard over and over again from many corporations is you have to do more with less. It is time the government learn to employ that same philosophy. Do i think fiscal responsibility will ever return to DC. IMO not in a million years. Do do so requires discipline and intestinal fortitude not found among our leaders today. To end with a popular cliche... they can talk the talk but they can't walk the walk. That would involve having to do something that would be unpopular with a lot of people.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Fri Jul 26, 2019 1:00 pmSo...I agree.cradleandshoot wrote: ↑Fri Jul 26, 2019 12:44 pmNo problem there a Fan. The nation just has to shift gears and tax the nation all the way back to prosperity. It is such a magical formula you can make it happen without cutting one thin dime of spending. Like with Houdini and all magicians... it's just an illusion
But what would you cut in spending that would actually move the needle?
We've been through the #'s a whole bunch of times on this and predecessor threads, but there simply aren't anywhere near enough discretionary dollars, outside of defense to move the needle. You could go to zero and not get there. So, now you're back to entitlements like Medicare and Social Security...and defense.
Where you gonna cut?
And OBTW, we have massively underinvested in infrastructure...
But, hey, those corporate tax cuts sure were necessary to drive up stock market prices, buybacks, and dividends...
BTW, I do think we could adjust Social Security, and I think we could dramatically re-think healthcare spending priorities to prevention and away from end of life extraordinary care. And we could dramatically re-shape our food system to drive down obesity which is so causal in over 50% of all health care costs (chronic diseases: heart disease, diabetes, metabolic disorder, joint, some cancer, etc). Stop subsidizing corn=SUGAR production and instead subsidize fresh fruit and vegetables with free access to poor populations as 'Food is Medicine'.
Lots of 'smart' things we could do with we could stop the partisan demonization and actually focus on what really can work.
Making folks in SEC or DOE or FBI or HHS or, the Oval Office, scream like stuck pigs over 'tiny increments' simply doesn't get the job done.
We don't make mistakes, we have happy accidents.
Bob Ross:
Bob Ross:
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Re: The Nation's Financial Condition
Tru dat.cradleandshoot wrote: ↑Fri Jul 26, 2019 2:04 pmTiny increments is not perfect... but if you really want to hear some screaming... take a big bite out of the budgetcradleandshoot wrote: ↑Fri Jul 26, 2019 1:52 pmWhat in the world is going on... we never agree this much. I could not be more on board with you on defense. 700 billion plus dollars... and growing just does not make sense. I am a huge fan of having a strong national defense. I am not and never will be a fan of whizz bang fancy equipment that costs too much and is to temperamental for heavy use to begin with.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Fri Jul 26, 2019 1:37 pmAgain, you gotta go where the real money is, defense and entitlements.cradleandshoot wrote: ↑Fri Jul 26, 2019 1:31 pmYou make very good points. The only way to cut real spending is in tiny increments. Even at that any government department facing a real cut will scream like a stuck pig. In my world there would be mass rebellion at my plan. I cut everyone strait across the board. These would not be draconian cuts. They would make everybody aware the game was changing. The phrase I have heard over and over again from many corporations is you have to do more with less. It is time the government learn to employ that same philosophy. Do i think fiscal responsibility will ever return to DC. IMO not in a million years. Do do so requires discipline and intestinal fortitude not found among our leaders today. To end with a popular cliche... they can talk the talk but they can't walk the walk. That would involve having to do something that would be unpopular with a lot of people.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Fri Jul 26, 2019 1:00 pmSo...I agree.cradleandshoot wrote: ↑Fri Jul 26, 2019 12:44 pmNo problem there a Fan. The nation just has to shift gears and tax the nation all the way back to prosperity. It is such a magical formula you can make it happen without cutting one thin dime of spending. Like with Houdini and all magicians... it's just an illusion
But what would you cut in spending that would actually move the needle?
We've been through the #'s a whole bunch of times on this and predecessor threads, but there simply aren't anywhere near enough discretionary dollars, outside of defense to move the needle. You could go to zero and not get there. So, now you're back to entitlements like Medicare and Social Security...and defense.
Where you gonna cut?
And OBTW, we have massively underinvested in infrastructure...
But, hey, those corporate tax cuts sure were necessary to drive up stock market prices, buybacks, and dividends...
BTW, I do think we could adjust Social Security, and I think we could dramatically re-think healthcare spending priorities to prevention and away from end of life extraordinary care. And we could dramatically re-shape our food system to drive down obesity which is so causal in over 50% of all health care costs (chronic diseases: heart disease, diabetes, metabolic disorder, joint, some cancer, etc). Stop subsidizing corn=SUGAR production and instead subsidize fresh fruit and vegetables with free access to poor populations as 'Food is Medicine'.
Lots of 'smart' things we could do with we could stop the partisan demonization and actually focus on what really can work.
Making folks in SEC or DOE or FBI or HHS or, the Oval Office, scream like stuck pigs over 'tiny increments' simply doesn't get the job done.
But if you don't actually tackle the issues that drive serious dollars (I suggested some such), you never can spend on actual long term investment, and all you're left with is taxing at higher rates wherever you can, meaning the corporations, middle-higher income and wealthy earners. You get Bernie and Warren, or even worse.
Re: The Nation's Financial Condition
the Republican created debt continues to grow:
thankfully, the debt is no longer a national problem because there's a Republican in the White House
thankfully, the debt is no longer a national problem because there's a Republican in the White House
It has been proven a hundred times that the surest way to the heart of any man, black or white, honest or dishonest, is through justice and fairness.
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Charles Francis "Socker" Coe, Esq
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Re: The Nation's Financial Condition
Now you are catching on....it does not matter who is in office.
A fraudulent intent, however carefully concealed at the outset, will generally, in the end, betray itself.
~Livy
“There are two ways to be fooled. One is to believe what isn’t true; the other is to refuse to believe what is true.” -Soren Kierkegaard
~Livy
“There are two ways to be fooled. One is to believe what isn’t true; the other is to refuse to believe what is true.” -Soren Kierkegaard
Re: The Nation's Financial Condition
Why are we cutting interest rates during boom times?
“I don’t take responsibility at all.” —Donald J Trump
Re: The Nation's Financial Condition
to pump up stocks for the wealthy and the global corporations - why does our government do anything?
STILL somewhere back in the day....
...and waiting/hoping for a tinfoil hat emoji......
...and waiting/hoping for a tinfoil hat emoji......
Re: The Nation's Financial Condition
youthathletics wrote: ↑Tue Jul 30, 2019 4:09 pmNow you are catching on....it does not matter who is in office.
Now, had there been a Dem in the White House some delusional righties might be inclined to disagree ....
It has been proven a hundred times that the surest way to the heart of any man, black or white, honest or dishonest, is through justice and fairness.
Charles Francis "Socker" Coe, Esq
Charles Francis "Socker" Coe, Esq
Re: The Nation's Financial Condition
Fed Chair Powell cited weak manufacturing and business investment data, things Trump and Republican lawmakers said the 2017 tax-cut would jump-start.
“I don’t take responsibility at all.” —Donald J Trump
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Re: The Nation's Financial Condition
A buddy in the construction related industry reported out yesterday that they are doing record business. Heavy in certain geographies. Energy savings projects are a big contributor.....
“I wish you would!”
Re: The Nation's Financial Condition
There are cranes all over S Florida and we’re sinking. Justice is gone Trump. The Fed. Next Intelligence.
“I don’t take responsibility at all.” —Donald J Trump
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Re: The Nation's Financial Condition
Not a single shot fired and the country has collapsed.
“I wish you would!”
Re: The Nation's Financial Condition
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The fact that Obama’s last 30 months outperformed Trump’s first 30 months is fact that should be in every story about the economy AND a devastating fact for the supply side dead enders who swear by tax cuts for the rich
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The fact that Obama’s last 30 months outperformed Trump’s first 30 months is fact that should be in every story about the economy AND a devastating fact for the supply side dead enders who swear by tax cuts for the rich
It has been proven a hundred times that the surest way to the heart of any man, black or white, honest or dishonest, is through justice and fairness.
Charles Francis "Socker" Coe, Esq
Charles Francis "Socker" Coe, Esq