- Joined
- Nov 5, 2011
- Messages
- 24,697
VinFast down about 40% today
Roller Coaster
Roller Coaster
Have you seen the Simpsons episode where Homer becomes the trash chief and Springfield turns into a dump, so they literally move the whole town and the last scene is people littering as they are driving the town down the highway? That’s the migration of America with politics following.The trade off going to a low tax states are, and I’ll use Texas as an example, lower rated public schools, loss of women’s rights, poor infrastructure, like the electrical grid, a nationalist agenda, racism, a gun culture and lower pay, to name a few problems. Pretty soon the 15% corporate tax will kick in for companies making over a billion dollars.
The poorest states are almost exclusively in the Deep South.
go ahead and neg me.
08:30 | USD | Core Personal Consumption Expenditures (QoQ)(Q2) PREL | 3.7% | - | 3.8% | 3.8% | ||||
08:30 | USD | Goods Trade Balance(Jul) PREL | $-91.2B | - | - | $-88.2B | ||||
08:30 | USD | Gross Domestic Product Annualized(Q2) PREL | 2.1% | - | 2.4% | 2.4% | ||||
08:30 | USD | Gross Domestic Product Price Index(Q2) PREL | 2% | -0.56 | 2.2% | 2.2% |
I don’t believe we are overtaxed. We have to keep up the strongest military in the world and we have an aging population. Every government Department should be downsized, but good luck with that. It’s funny to see red states taking credit for any act that financially helps the middle class. It’s nice to finally seeing prescription drug prices going down to the rates that Canada and Mexico pays. If you are a conservative, libertarian, or progressive, we should be against cartels.Have you seen the Simpsons episode where Homer becomes the trash chief and Springfield turns into a dump, so they literally move the whole town and the last scene is people littering as they are driving the town down the highway? That’s the migration of America with politics following.
I live in the general South, and yes, some of these policies should never have been passed or pushed and were settled law. With that said, despite all of those policies you listed, people from the west and north keep moving here. Largely tax and take home pay related. And yet, those people have come here and are now voting in the same politicians with the same policies that caused them to move in the first place.
What’s interesting locally, is that the red districts and counties have the very good public schools and the blue, not so much. Yet the higher county taxes are in the blue counties. Why is that?
Broader, if all of those things you assert are true and taken at face value, why do those states with all of those problems see a net increase in migration? And what happens if those same policies and politicians keep raising taxes or business unfriendly policies are voted into these regions?
Sure but you are conflating two points - federal taxes vs. state and local taxes.I don’t believe we are overtaxed. We have to keep up the strongest military in the world and we have an aging population. Every government Department should be downsized, but good luck with that. It’s funny to see red states taking credit for any act that financially helps the middle class. It’s nice to finally seeing prescription drug prices going down to the rates that Canada and Mexico pays. If you are a conservative, libertarian, or progressive, we should be against cartels.
unfortunately we do not have a immigration policy. That’s on both parties.
Odds of November rate hike is down. Bad news = good news.Again…good numbers for the Fed…the economy is definitely cooling off.
08:30 USD Core Personal Consumption Expenditures (QoQ)(Q2) PREL 3.7% - 3.8% 3.8% 08:30 USD Goods Trade Balance(Jul) PREL $-91.2B - - $-88.2B 08:30 USD Gross Domestic Product Annualized(Q2) PREL 2.1% - 2.4% 2.4% 08:30 USD Gross Domestic Product Price Index(Q2) PREL 2% -0.56 2.2% 2.2%
I was referring to Federal taxes…Sure but you are conflating two points - federal taxes vs. state and local taxes.
Pretty much all the "public school ratings" I've seen have Deep South States like Mississippi, Arkansas, Alabama, Louisiana -- along with Alaska and Hawaii -- bringing up the bottom of pretty much every list. There's a million ways those lists can be compiled.What’s interesting locally, is that the red districts and counties have the very good public schools and the blue, not so much. Yet the higher county taxes are in the blue counties. Why is that?
We've discussed college ratings many times, but the same arguments apply here. Nobody looks at what goes into the ratings, just the final number.Pretty much all the "public school ratings" I've seen have Deep South States like Mississippi, Arkansas, Alabama, Louisiana -- along with Alaska and Hawaii -- bringing up the bottom of pretty much every list. There's a million ways those lists can be compiled.
This was your original post that I responded to:I was referring to Federal taxes…
I’m not questioning that, but if you peel back one layer further, there is a locality to it. School systems are typically either county or city operated and even then it depends on your district within the system. That’s my sole point.Pretty much all the "public school ratings" I've seen have Deep South States like Mississippi, Arkansas, Alabama, Louisiana -- along with Alaska and Hawaii -- bringing up the bottom of pretty much every list. There's a million ways those lists can be compiled.
And you make a good point. I have a feeling the lists that rank Southern states low are based on money being spent on education. We all know that is hardly the be all and end all for good public education.I’m not questioning that, but if you peel back one layer further, there is a locality to it. School systems are typically either county or city operated and even then it depends on your district within the system. That’s my sole point.
100% in my area.I’m not questioning that, but if you peel back one layer further, there is a locality to it. School systems are typically either county or city operated and even then it depends on your district within the system. That’s my sole point.
We can all agree that the lowest income areas have lower rated schools. We also know that public schools are lacking teachers, but have too many administrators and pencil pushers.100% in my area.
My county is actually very OLD (near Richmond, VA). Areas still getting developed have new schools, driving better teachers to them, higher donations to PTAs, more family involvement with students, better-ranked schools... The areas with 100+-year-old schools have lower-income families, teachers try to transfer out when they get offers, PTAs don't have as much money, and parents are less involved... The county doesn't have the funds to demo 100-year-old schools to build new ones so the district you live in determines the quality of the education for your kids. There aren't a ton of private schools and the cost of them is similar to a public university. Thus, the overall ranking for the county schools isn't great but you have some top % schools and some bottom % all in the same county.
We can all agree that the lowest income areas have lower rated schools. We also know that public schools are lacking teachers, but have too many administrators and pencil pushers.
Now this is more like it!I don’t believe we are overtaxed. We have to keep up the strongest military in the world and we have an aging population. Every government Department should be downsized, but good luck with that. It’s funny to see red states taking credit for any act that financially helps the middle class. It’s nice to finally seeing prescription drug prices going down to the rates that Canada and Mexico pays. If you are a conservative, libertarian, or progressive, we should be against cartels.
unfortunately we do not have a immigration policy. That’s on both parties.
I would stay away from this stock.VinFast down about 40% today
Roller Coaster