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All they need to do is put me in charge of the budget and I will have it in great shape within several weeks...maybe a few months.
I get 5% of the amount that I cut and Congress and the illegitimate occupier of the White House have to pass any legislation I need within a week or two (if procedures allow) of my asking. |
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Quoted: In the previous "shut downs", I don't recall anything exciting happening. I wish they would dig in, but they won't. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: We could cut 50% of all government workers starting now and save millions In the previous "shut downs", I don't recall anything exciting happening. I wish they would dig in, but they won't. Shutdowns have always been mostly show. During them "non-essential" personnel are furloughed for the duration. This always makes people say "Just fire them if they aren't essential", but folks fail to realize that there are things that can slide to the right if you have to. For example, the ATF may have NFA examiners be non-essential since they won't immediately fail if stamps get delayed, but I don't think any of us want them permanently deferred. The same goes with IT system upgrades, we can just delay them until we can't. |
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Quoted: Which do they cut first? Social Security and Medicare Foreign Aid Roads and bridges Defense Welfare Medicaid Aid for illegal immigrants CRT programs Climate Change Government salaries I bet Defense would be first followed by Social Security. View Quote Got to close all the National Parks first. ![]() |
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McCarthy needs to make this the most expensive debt deal the dems have ever seen. "Fuck you" negotiations. Term limits, sane energy policy, etc... attached to it, or no deal and the fed .gov gets cut by half or more.
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Quoted: Labor costs are high and driving inflation. Now is a great time to cut all federal workers and increase the pool of workers to drive labor inflation down. Not to mention it would also drive our debt down. It’s literally win/win/win, we’ll except if you are a .gov overpaid/inefficient turd. View Quote Air travel would get suddenly exciting. |
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fuck biden and all those democrats. They've been stealing our money and our children's children's money for decades.
There is PLENTY that can be cut from this bloated .gov - including the salaries and benefits of the three branches. |
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As always they’ll shut down national parks, social security and any and all welfare then blame anyone they can
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Quoted: Quoted: We could FIFY Start with congress...like the higher paying ones..... ![]() ![]() |
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Quoted: You could cut 100%, including the military, and still not close the deficit. Medicare, medicaid, and Social Security make up 2/3s of the budget. View Quote The other 3rd pretty soon is going to be interest on the debt we owe already....... ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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Quoted: A good place to start would be the entirety of the ATF. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: We could cut 50% of all government workers starting now and save millions A good place to start would be the entirety of the ATF. $1.4B in FY20. You're 0.1% to a balanced budget. |
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Quoted: Shutdowns have always been mostly show. During them "non-essential" personnel are furloughed for the duration. This always makes people say "Just fire them if they aren't essential", but folks fail to realize that there are things that can slide to the right if you have to. For example, the ATF may have NFA examiners be non-essential since they won't immediately fail if stamps get delayed, but I don't think any of us want them permanently deferred. The same goes with IT system upgrades, we can just delay them until we can't. View Quote I see you posting the suggested cuts won't really have an impact, so what is your plan? We have to start somewhere, especially when the net liability per citizen exceeds their net assets .. |
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Quoted: You are thinking too small. Get rid of the ATF, can't afford it. I see you posting the suggested cuts won't really have an impact, so what is your plan? We have to start somewhere, especially when the net liability per citizen exceeds their net assets .. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Shutdowns have always been mostly show. During them "non-essential" personnel are furloughed for the duration. This always makes people say "Just fire them if they aren't essential", but folks fail to realize that there are things that can slide to the right if you have to. For example, the ATF may have NFA examiners be non-essential since they won't immediately fail if stamps get delayed, but I don't think any of us want them permanently deferred. The same goes with IT system upgrades, we can just delay them until we can't. I see you posting the suggested cuts won't really have an impact, so what is your plan? We have to start somewhere, especially when the net liability per citizen exceeds their net assets .. I'm just pointing out that it's absurd to talk about the budget while ignoring the largest expenses. What we are doing is no different than a man with a huge spending problem considering cutting out buying a soda with lunch. |
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Cut foreign aid - we’re broke
Don’t spend a dime on changing military base names - we can’t afford it Cut any benefits to illegals at the border or elsewhere - if they don’t like it, they are welcome to go home. Not enough but at least a start. |
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Quoted: This is a good question/statement but I must ask this...Why campaign if it's all fixed/rigged anyway? I'm being serious. Why not save the money for more "crap" they want to buy or whatever. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: They can't cut spending. How would they launder money and fund campaigns? This is a good question/statement but I must ask this...Why campaign if it's all fixed/rigged anyway? I'm being serious. Why not save the money for more "crap" they want to buy or whatever. Campaigning is laundering money to the media |
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Quoted: A good place to start would be the entirety of the ATF. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: We could cut 50% of all government workers starting now and save millions A good place to start would be the entirety of the ATF. Yep, their enormous budget is what’s to blame. ![]() |
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Shut it down. Shut it ALL down.
Until the budget balances again. First thing to shutter is the so-called refugee housing/processing at the border. "Sorry, we're out of money. Come back in a month." The very very FIRST things to be shuttered SHOULD be any and all services to non-citizens, not just the refugee program, but also including suspension of all foreign aid for the duration of the shutdown. ALL of it. I mean, are we out of money or aren't we? |
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Quoted: We could stop sending money to Ukraine and save billions. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: We could cut 50% of all government workers starting now and save millions Yes they could. But the numbers are so large at this point those billions are like getting 87 cents off at the Versace store in Vegas. |
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Quoted: Shut it down. Shut it ALL down. Until the budget balances again. First thing to shutter is the so-called refugee housing/processing at the border. "Sorry, we're out of money. Come back in a month." View Quote You know what's the shit show in our federal budget? For FY22 there is $4,896B in revenue. Of that, $4,018B goes to "mandatory" programs. ![]() |
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Quoted: In the previous "shut downs", I don't recall anything exciting happening. I wish they would dig in, but they won't. View Quote In previous shut downs....they sent people home....then in "2 weeks" they were brought back and got back pay....free vacation is what it amounted to. If congress goes down this road I wouldn't be shocked to see a longer time and possibly no backpay. We have gone so far down the drain it is going to leave bunch of bruises if they are able to retrieve us from the bottom. The sooner "We bring the pain" though the better chance we have....though I believe to little to late really. |
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Quoted: In the previous "shut downs", I don't recall anything exciting happening. I wish they would dig in, but they won't. View Quote That's because it's all for show. The ONLY thing they 'shut down' are things that normal people actually see and use. They make a big show about putting up barriers at parks, when in reality, those things are a virtually microscopic expense. It's like saying you're getting rid of excess food in your pantry, and then throwing out a single grain of rice. It literally costs them more to put up the barriers than it costs them to run. |
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Quoted: Defense is about 50% of the budget so yeah, that's be a good place to start. View Quote It's about 50% of the discretionary budget. The mandatory budget, which includes social security, medicare, medicaid, interest on the national debt, etc. is about 2/3 of the overall federal budget. |
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Quoted: In previous shut downs....they sent people home....then in "2 weeks" they were brought back and got back pay....free vacation is what it amounted to. If congress goes down this road I wouldn't be shocked to see a longer time and possibly no backpay. We have gone so far down the drain it is going to leave bunch of bruises if they are able to retrieve us from the bottom. The sooner "We bring the pain" though the better chance we have....though I believe to little to late really. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: In the previous "shut downs", I don't recall anything exciting happening. I wish they would dig in, but they won't. In previous shut downs....they sent people home....then in "2 weeks" they were brought back and got back pay....free vacation is what it amounted to. If congress goes down this road I wouldn't be shocked to see a longer time and possibly no backpay. We have gone so far down the drain it is going to leave bunch of bruises if they are able to retrieve us from the bottom. The sooner "We bring the pain" though the better chance we have....though I believe to little to late really. Under current federal law, furloughed employees are required to be paid. If you want to RIF employees then do it the legal way rather than being a shitty employer. |
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Quoted: It's about 50% of the discretionary budget. The mandatory budget, which includes social security, medicare, medicaid, interest on the national debt, etc. is about 2/3 of the overall federal budget. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Defense is about 50% of the budget so yeah, that's be a good place to start. It's about 50% of the discretionary budget. The mandatory budget, which includes social security, medicare, medicaid, interest on the national debt, etc. is about 2/3 of the overall federal budget. 82% ![]() |
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Quoted: Cut foreign aid - we’re broke Don’t spend a dime on changing military base names - we can’t afford it Cut any benefits to illegals at the border or elsewhere - if they don’t like it, they are welcome to go home. Not enough but at least a start. View Quote When CA gives out "repartitions" and then the Gov gives federal dollars to CA....we all get to pay for one states "good idea fairy".... ![]() |
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Why even bother having a debt ceiling at this point? It means nothing. Every single time we run into it the answer is to Simply raise it
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They'll never stop spending or be accountable
A core part of the liberal dem mind is spending money means you're progressive and "doing something". A republican not spending means money is cut off and oppressive for some underprivledged opressed group |
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Cut the graft out of the budget. Congress gives planned parenthood money which planned parenthood then donates the money to democrats.
Make all churches pay taxes. 100% review of all SSI claims. 100% review of all VA disability claims 100% review of all SS payments. No more Obama phones No more renaming military bases Institute a VAT / sales tax Eliminate income tax Mandatory balanced budget amendment Stop spending $$$$ on pork and stupid shit. |
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Quoted: Which do they cut first? Social Security and Medicare Foreign Aid Roads and bridges Defense Welfare Medicaid Aid for illegal immigrants CRT programs Climate Change Government salaries I bet Defense would be first followed by Social Security. View Quote I think this is where it would get ugly and quick and I don’t think there’s any synchronization between congress and the Treasury department. I’m sure FJB’s cabinet henchmen/women would love to make this as painful as possible for congress, but I’m pretty sure some priorities are baked in, but that confusion will be in the details. I think priority number 1 is the interest payments to our debtors, but do we pay foreign debtors before American debtors? I think the SS, medicare/caid programs are pretty high on the priority list. Sadly, I think welfare is as well. Government agencies have their own protocol and regulatory guidance for shutdowns. Salaries suspended, keeping the lights on and essential systems/programs running with essential-only personnel, actually listed in their position description and it’s very, very few. Same goes for the military, but they all work for no salary; no non-essential travel, no new contracts, no training, basically answering phones and sweeping out motor pools. Social programs and Defense always gets hit first because it’s the biggest attention-getting cuts for political pressure. I say fuck it, including defense, every agency and department gets an 50% budget cut and those not involved in defense, get a 50% workforce cut. That will cull out a lot of the stupid, non-mission essential, CRT, climate change programs (although I think the fucking retarded pentagon actually has Climate Change as a primary national defense threat ![]() ROCK6 |
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Quoted: Under current federal law, furloughed employees are required to be paid. If you want to RIF employees then do it the legal way rather than being a shitty employer. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: In the previous "shut downs", I don't recall anything exciting happening. I wish they would dig in, but they won't. In previous shut downs....they sent people home....then in "2 weeks" they were brought back and got back pay....free vacation is what it amounted to. If congress goes down this road I wouldn't be shocked to see a longer time and possibly no backpay. We have gone so far down the drain it is going to leave bunch of bruises if they are able to retrieve us from the bottom. The sooner "We bring the pain" though the better chance we have....though I believe to little to late really. Under current federal law, furloughed employees are required to be paid. If you want to RIF employees then do it the legal way rather than being a shitty employer. Good point. Fire Half, to start with. Then, see how much you can pare it down from there. Far too many people on glorified welfare. The producers are getting tired of the burden. |
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Extraordinary actions would be quit spending like retards and pay down your debt, lol who the F am I kidding
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This seems somehow appropriate:
In the shuffling madness Of the locomotive breath Runs the all-time loser Headlong to his death He feels the piston scraping Steam breaking on his brow Old Charlie stole the handle And the train it won't stop going No way to slow down |
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Is this why WEF fizzled out?
I hope nothing passes and it all burns down. |
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Quoted: It will always be increased, otherwise the global financial system implodes. ![]() View Quote What happens when we can’t even make the interest payment? |
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Quoted: We'll get a last minute bipartisan bill, in which the entirety of congress shoves in all of their bullshit pet projects for their financial puppet masters, and then they will all clap and blow each other while screeching about how they just saved democracy. View Quote Everyone should read this and then read it again. This is exactly what’s going to happen. |
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Quoted: $38.381 trillion Lets see if the collective IQ of GD can calculate how many zeros $38.381 trillion is. TRILLION. View Quote and to think when Reagan took office we were not a trillion in debt. Everyone who voted to put us in debt for BS needs to be hung by the neck on the National Mall. Those who are already dead need to be dug up and hung. |
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Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Defense is about 50% of the budget so yeah, that's be a good place to start. It's about 50% of the discretionary budget. The mandatory budget, which includes social security, medicare, medicaid, interest on the national debt, etc. is about 2/3 of the overall federal budget. 82% ![]() Holy carp, it went way the fuck up from the last time I researched it. |
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Quoted: The number isn't as important as the fact that it towers over our rather stagnant GDP. The feds owe more money than what our entire national economy can produce. That's the frightening part. View Quote My neighbor who was a life long dem was stunned when I told him this. He did not believe it and had to look it up. He was also anti-gun but had a shotgun and sold it illegally without a required BC check. It was as set up and he was arrested. I laughed my ass off. |
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