Just look up the user AK Forty Seven and associated posts. Tony and AK are the same person, and I believe AK said he lived in California (though since then he might have moved).
And in ricter right?
Seek help
Just look up the user AK Forty Seven and associated posts. Tony and AK are the same person, and I believe AK said he lived in California (though since then he might have moved).
In which state do you live? What are you hiding from? Warrants?Live and born in The USA.
It sure does
California’s poverty rate is still the highest in the nation, despite state efforts
https://www.sacbee.com/news/local/health-and-medicine/article218270905.html
It sure does
California’s poverty rate is still the highest in the nation, despite state efforts
https://www.sacbee.com/news/local/health-and-medicine/article218270905.html
The current report card... (hopefully there is still room for improvement)
This infantile tantrum of his is epicJust look up the user AK Forty Seven and associated posts. Tony and AK are the same person...

Dis Hella Tru!19 percent of the fifth largest economy in the world live in Poverty.
Leftist policies cause the issues, then leftist complain about SJW issues like income disparity.
https://www.sacbee.com/news/local/health-and-medicine/article218270905.html
The Truth in Accounting report only looks at state liabilities. California Policy Center, for instance, found that California’s total state and local debt may be closer to $1.3 trillion, which puts the total per-taxpayer burden above $100,000.
....
California is known for its progressive tax rates, meaning that the wealthiest people here pay the bulk of the state’s income taxes. Gov. Jerry Brown often warns during his budget presentations that the state’s reliance on capital gains tax receipts makes the general fund vulnerable to recession. If the economy dips, revenues fall precipitously, thus leading to large deficits. He cautions the Legislature against approving permanent spending programs that can’t be sustained if the economy goes south.
Despite such progressivism, the poorest Californians are not off the hook. The governor this year signed a large increase in the gasoline tax, averaging 12 cents a gallon. He also signed an extension of the state’s cap-and-trade system, which imposes new costs on manufacturers and refiners to force them to reduce their carbon emissions. The program’s extension is predicted to add as much as 63 cents on a gallon of gasoline by 2021, according to the well-respected Legislative Analyst’s Office.
These are “regressive” taxes that fall heavily on the poor.
California also has high sales and use taxes. The standard sales-tax rate is 7.25 percent. Many cities have local add-ons that increase those taxes to as much as 10.25 percent on most purchases, which is among the highest in the nation. These, too, are regressive taxes that boost the cost of living for everyone, but harm the poor most because they eat up a larger proportional share of their budgets.
Fiscal problems also hit poor people the hardest. Some of the state’s poorest cities (Stockton, Vallejo, Richmond and San Bernardino) have struggled under burdensome pension debts. When Stockton went bankrupt, for instance, local officials responded by increasing sales taxes as part of their “work-out plan.” High-paid public employees had their full salaries and pensions protected, while low-wage residents had to pay more in sales taxes.
But the biggest poverty problem involves housing costs. Even the state Legislature has recognized the degree to which soaring housing costs have become a statewide “crisis.” Yet the housing package that passed in the waning hours of the legislative session is likely to exacerbate the “cost of living” problem.
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The housing issue by the way has been caused by the fact we have probably close to 20 million "new" people living here in the last few years. Many of whom are that 19 percent who live in poverty.
You can bring in millions of new people and expect them to be able find cheap housing. That is not how things work. But, don't try and tell that to a leftist.
I can't stress enough how little pro Trump or pro Republican talk I am hearing. Polar opposite of last election. Non political and even half democrat friends and relatives were talking Trump all the time. They really wanted to teach the SOBs in D.C. a lesson. They wanted D.C. to represent them and their goals for keeping this country great.
Trump and the liars running for Congress has let that group down in a major fashion. They are not talking so I doubt many of them will be voting.
I fear there is a 20 percent chance of a really big blowout. House and Senate going to Dems bigly is a serious risk at the moment. What has Congress given the base that was so fired up? Most already had jobs and paid taxes. So the economy improving is a benefit but not a massive motivator.