NBC News/Wall Street Journal Survey has Sanders Besting Trump, Rubio.

Well, that is their plan. Cost shift tons of money from republican voters to their leech constituents.

Sanders and his crowd believe the main problem with the economy is that the rich are hogging all the money. He believes that global warming is our biggest threat. He no doubt thinks rent control is a smart way to address a housing shortage and that a high minimum wage promotes employment. That racism is the main factor holding blacks down.

Seriously, some of you look down your noses at Sara Palin yet you think this moron is some kind of wise and trustworthy leader. A lot of you are too young to know what a hard core communist looks like. Well, they look like Bernie.
 
Do you mean to tell me the money didn't just appear out of thin air? It is just cost shifted.
cost shifting is something different than what you are referring to. It does not involve creation of "new money" nor new costs.
 
Well, that is their plan. Cost shift tons of money from republican voters to their leech constituents.

Sanders and his crowd believe the main problem with the economy is that the rich are hogging all the money. He believes that global warming is our biggest threat. He no doubt thinks rent control is a smart way to address a housing shortage and that a high minimum wage promotes employment. That racism is the main factor holding blacks down.

Seriously, some of you look down your noses at Sara Palin yet you think this moron is some kind of wise and trustworthy leader. A lot of you are too young to know what a hard core communist looks like. Well, they look like Bernie.

" A lot of you are too young to know what a hard core communist looks like. Well, they look like Bernie."

I guess that means Eisenhower looked even more like a hard core communist! :D:D:D
 
I have to admit that I was a little surprised by those poll results reported in Rolling Stone. Apparently Sanders is more than just a mosquito on Hillary's forehead waiting to be swatted away. I am intrigued by your comments. What they suggest to me is that there is some complexity to your thinking. I like that. If everyone thought beyond straight left/right wing politics, we'd generally get better candidates elected.

What I don't like about Bernie is that he has been taken in hook line and sinker by the Global warming jihadists. (I'm a scientist, so I am not easily influenced by USA Today Headlines. I want to see and evaluate the science behind them.) Therefore I don't like the idea of Sanders pressing ahead full steam on something like Cap and Trade with so much strong evidence against a CO2 connection. It could be a horrible waste of time and money; money better spent elsewhere. On the other hand, I applaud his positions re taking marijuana off the controlled substance list and the minimum wage. Fifteen per hour sounds too high to me -- we must go to $9 or $10 first -- but If the idea is that a full time worker should be able to live off their income without taxpayer subsidy, than his figure of $15/hr is correct, but it would have to be phased in over several years -- that's actually his position, I think. A tax on Wall Street speculation, i.e., trading, is going to get us all riled up. That's how he'd subsidize public university education. Bernie must be talking about making up that 30% of undergraduate cost now paid by the student via tuition and fees. That might be money well spent, but the devil would be in the details. I'd have to be convinced controls are in place to keep admission standards from slipping. If such a tax had the effect of reducing trading volume it would be counterproductive.

There are a couple of his positions that, after reading the Stone article, I am wildly enthusiastic about! One is getting rid of private, for profit prisons. What a horrible idea that was in the first place; What a horrible conflict of interests!!! The other is his push to return to additional tax brackets and raise the upper- most bracket. This is something I have been preaching around here for some time now as a way to slow the damaging income redistribution that began in the 1980s. The loss of progressivity in our tax rates, along with the compounding effect of repeatedly taxing unearned income at a lower rate than earned, has decimated the lower middle class. When I recently read Piketty's "Capital..." I discovered very good support for my position, and was pleased to learn that the future Nobel Memorial Prize winner agrees with me. I also learned that the collapse of progressivity in the tax rates may have been a prime contributor to irrational executive compensation in the U.S. Corporate world. I am more convinced now than ever that we must attend to these things if we want to restore health to our economy. I haven't heard anything like this coming from any other candidate, Republican or Democrat!

Those who are pushing for single payer healthcare are going to love Bernie's position. He wants to bring everyone under Medicare and allow medicare to negotiate drug prices...

Our tax rates are still progressive, but the confiscatory rates have been eliminated.
No one should have to pay 70% of a portion of his income. Income disparity has been more
a result of wage stagnation, over-consumption by the middle and lower middle classes and rising personal levels of debt among them. They have no foundation upon which to build wealth over the long term The banks laid out the credit card treadmill and these fools are paying 24% a year on their balances and just digging their holes deeper. I do think, however, the financial industry makes an unhealthy sum of money.

Raising taxes isn't going to address the underlying causes of wealth disparity. The worst way to get the underclasses up is to route money through the government via wealth redistribution. They should be getting higher wages, they should save more and spend less.
And eat less. They can barely pay their utility bills but they are obese.

And we should eliminate corporate welfare. And probably individual welfare. You don't work, well, you don't eat. Fuck em.
 
Can I politely ask why? What is your reasoning for voting for Bernie and a straight democratic ticket if he was the candidate?
Because he is the only one who doesn't have a plan for raising GDP which IMHO is none of the President's business and I think a new president starting out should have a supportive congress. But, I thought the same thing in 2008 and voted Obama and a straight democrat ticket and have spent the last eight years hating all of them. "Screw me once, shame on you.....but....you aren't going to fool me again..."

I've voted straight libertarian ever since, but they are wearing me out.

Like I said, Bernie I'll vote straight democrat
Trump I'll vote straight republican

(if it's close)

otherwise I may stay home

so if you are a pollster it should be obvious, If you can nominate Hillary and somebody other than Trump you shouldn't have to worry about people like me
 
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Our tax rates are still progressive, but the confiscatory rates have been eliminated.
No one should have to pay 70% of a portion of his income. Income disparity has been more
a result of wage stagnation, over-consumption by the middle and lower middle classes and rising personal levels of debt among them. They have no foundation upon which to build wealth over the long term The banks laid out the credit card treadmill and these fools are paying 24% a year on their balances and just digging their holes deeper. I do think, however, the financial industry makes an unhealthy sum of money.

Raising taxes isn't going to address the underlying causes of wealth disparity. The worst way to get the underclasses up is to route money through the government via wealth redistribution. They should be getting higher wages, they should save more and spend less.
And eat less. They can barely pay their utility bills but they are obese.

And we should eliminate corporate welfare. And probably individual welfare. You don't work, well, you don't eat. Fuck em.
You and Thomas Piketty disagree.
 
Our tax rates are still progressive, but the confiscatory rates have been eliminated.
No one should have to pay 70% of a portion of his income. Income disparity has been more
a result of wage stagnation, over-consumption by the middle and lower middle classes and rising personal levels of debt among them. They have no foundation upon which to build wealth over the long term The banks laid out the credit card treadmill and these fools are paying 24% a year on their balances and just digging their holes deeper. I do think, however, the financial industry makes an unhealthy sum of money.

Raising taxes isn't going to address the underlying causes of wealth disparity. The worst way to get the underclasses up is to route money through the government via wealth redistribution. They should be getting higher wages, they should save more and spend less.
And eat less. They can barely pay their utility bills but they are obese.

And we should eliminate corporate welfare. And probably individual welfare. You don't work, well, you don't eat. Fuck em.


Wow, I didn't know that income is determined by how much one spends. Must be that conservative logic being spewed forth again. Like vomit.
 
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