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Gaetz for AG

20 years ago the DOD under Bush attempted to put a performance based pay system in place for Feds. It took years to develop... They started transitioning MGMT positions into the system, with the the idea that non MGMT positions would follow.. Then it was eventually scrapped and everyone returned to the GS schedule. That's the reality of reforming the federal govt. Only way it can be done is via the purse and very gradual adjustments over time.

You get a new generation of politicos in that brashly talk the same game then run into the reality that actual reform is very difficult, time consuming and requires a ton of political capital and making difficult and unpopular decisions. Not guarantees from hacks about not taxing tips or overtime or whatever other bullshit we've heard this year.
Democrats hated that new pay plan, but GWB implemented it. Obama got rid of it almost immediately and they all went back to the GS pay system.
 
Fix Social Security and Medicare. Raise the cap. All those years I got that nice bump midway through the year when the tax fell off. Why was that? Has anybody ever questioned why there is a cap? (I won’t even get into letting me control and invest what I, or anyone else, paid in.)

You make some fine points. I'll only respond to this one. SS has a cap because the benefits have a cap. Your SS benefits are directly tied to your lifetime earnings. If you remove the cap, you either have to remove the cap on benefits. Or you have to fundamentally change the system and make it pure wealth transfer system from rich to poor. That's never been the underlying structure of the system since it was created nearly a century ago.
 
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Coming from someone who hates the govt. meddling in electric vehicles, I'm not sure Musk's Tesla venture is one you'd like to refer to:

Tesla has received billions of dollars in government subsidies since 2009, including:

  • Loans
    In 2010, the U.S. Department of Energy provided Tesla with a $465 million loan to help build its first major manufacturing facility in Fremont, California.


  • Tax credits
    Tesla customers who meet federal requirements may be eligible for a tax credit of up to $7,500 when purchasing a new Tesla.


  • Regulatory credits
    Tesla has sold "regulatory credits" to other carmakers for almost $9 billion since 2018. These credits are awarded to manufacturers who meet increasingly strict emissions rules.


  • Grants and rebates
    Nevada has provided Tesla with $1.6 billion in grants and tax rebates from 2013 to 2023.


  • Research and development
    Tesla received more than $1.6 billion in research and development and federal renewable energy tax credits in 2023.
According to Good Jobs First's Subsidy Tracker, Tesla has received $2.8 billion in government subsidies since 2009, with about 88% of that coming from states.
You make my point. He did all of that w/o huge amounts spent on influence peddlers, lobbyists, and expensive consultants. Musk even revolutionized and streamlined rent seeking. Maybe we should read isacson’s musk bio for book club. I trad another one published several years ago.
 
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You make some fine points. I'll only respond to this one. SS has a cap because the benefits have a cap. Your SS benefits are directly tied to your lifetime earnings. If you remove the cap, you either have to remove the cap on benefits. Or you have to fundamentally change the system and make it pure wealth transfer system from rich to poor. That's never been the underlying structure of the system since it was created nearly a century ago.
Agreed.

The fundamental problem is lack of kids and the selfish generation of young adults who are too selfish or to afraid to have kids.
 
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You make my point. He did all of that w/o huge amounts spent on influence peddlers, lobbyists, and expensive consultants. Musk even revolutionized and streamlined rent seeking. Maybe we should read isacson’s musk bio for book club. I trad another one published several years ago.

Musk has spent plenty of money on lobbyists.
 
As for your last question, it most certainly does. Senators want to get re-elected. If there is a false promise of a solution out there, highly publicized, they will kick the can down the road and say "let's wait to see what the grand geniuses Musk and Vivek say to do. I've heard they can do solve it-Trump says so!-so let's not discuss the third rail when we don't have to."

I'm going to bet that you end up being wrong on this. The group (which, as I recall, has had input from Sens. Cassidy, King, Kaine, Rounds) has coalesced around some important frameworks that include the creation of a Sovereign Wealth Fund, raising the retirement age, raising the payroll tax cap, among some other things.

And I honestly don't think anything Musk/Vivek do or don't do will have any bearing on what they're doing and working towards.

If I'm wrong about this, you can feed me crow. But I don't think I will be.
 
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I'm going to bet that you end up being wrong on this. The group (which, as I recall, has had input from Sens. Cassidy, King, Kaine, Rounds) has coalesced around some important frameworks that include the creation of a Sovereign Wealth Fund, raising the retirement age, raising the payroll tax cap, among some other things.

And I honestly don't think anything Musk/Vivek do or don't do will have any bearing on what they're doing and working towards.

If I'm wrong about this, you can feed me crow. But I don't think I will be.
Meh. I don't care about feeding crow. We're all wrong about lots of things and predicting the future is hard to do.

For what it's worth, I hope you're right and we fix this problem in the near future. But I'd lay A LOT of money that it won't be fixed in the next 4 years.
 
Musk has spent plenty of money on lobbyists.
I don’t know about now, but he didn’t when Tesla and Space X were fledgling and just taking off. Yet he knew government contracts/ support were vital, especially for Space x.

IIRC he said he is okay with eliminating EV subsidies. Only Tesla would survive that.
 
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Fix Social Security and Medicare. Raise the cap. All those years I got that nice bump midway through the year when the tax fell off. Why was that? Has anybody ever questioned why there is a cap? (I won’t even get into letting me control and invest what I, or anyone else, paid in.)

Well, there's a cap on Social Security taxes -- because there's a corresponding cap on Social Security benefits. I honestly don't think it'll ever be in the cards to take the tax cap off while leaving the benefit cap on.

I can see them raising it and steepening the benefit formula. But I seriously doubt they'll ever just remove it altogether. Doing that would cause some seismic shifts in how high-earning people realize their income.

Also, FWIW, there is no tax cap on the Medicare portion of the FICA tax. In fact, Obamacare added a surtax. And I think it's kind of telling that, despite this, Medicare is still not only going broke...but is in a much larger actuarial hole than Social Security is.

The lesson we should take from that is that we shouldn't kid ourselves that we'll be able to raise the tax revenues needed to afford these programs as presently constituted. We've got to get cost out, one way or another.
 
I don’t know about now, but he didn’t when Tesla and Space X were fledgling and just taking off. Yet he knew government contracts/ support were vital, especially for Space x.

IIRC he said he is okay with eliminating EV subsidies. Only Tesla would survive that.

Musk, an entrepreneur whose business ventures range from electric vehicles to space exploration to implantable neurotechnology, is now heading into the social media sector. His two largest companies, Tesla and SpaceX, are both prolific political spenders — and Musk himself has a history of giving to candidates and causes on both sides of the aisle.

Aerospace company SpaceX reported spending $700,000 on federal lobbying in the first quarter of this year, disclosures filed April 20 show, the most it’s ever spent on lobbying in a single quarter and up from $580,000 in the first quarter of last year.

Last year, SpaceX spent a record amount on lobbying$2.4 million. The company’s lobbying spending has more than doubled since 2013 and multiplied even more since 2003 when it spent just $36,000.

Overall, the company has spent more than $22 million on federal lobbying since 1998.

So far this cycle, SpaceX’s PAC has given nearly $400,000 to federal candidates and committees, according to the FEC.
 
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Meh. I don't care about feeding crow. We're all wrong about lots of things and predicting the future is hard to do.

For what it's worth, I hope you're right and we fix this problem in the near future. But I'd lay A LOT of money that it won't be fixed in the next 4 years.
Oh, I agree with that. I'm not even predicting that. In fact, I'm on record that I think the bulk of the "fix" will be Congress continuing to ask the Fed to monetize the debt and protect them from having to bear the political brunt of diminishing our standard of living.

I'm just saying that I don't agree that Musk and Vivek, whatever they do or don't do, will have the unintended effect of ending any efforts in Congress to address the impending entitlement catastrophe.
 
I've posted this forever but discretionary spending is historically within range.

We run massive deficits because we can't control the mandatory side of the budget. It's a very simple math problem, but one that nobody will admit.

Quit passing out money to old people and we have no problem.

You start. Take a 25% reduction in your Medicare benefit. You are the problem

I have a 100 year old grandfather. It's great that our modern world can keep him around. He's still vibrant and can get around on his own and have great conversation. He's a WW2 vet that served in the Navy in the Pacific..

I've got two parents in their 80s and 70s that will likely live a long time too... Including an 83v year old dad that just had some colon cancer removed. And has a clean bill of health.

It's incredible how far medicine has taken us with extendeing longevity. And we all want that for ourselves and our loved ones.

But we have tax and care systems built on actuary tables from 40+ years ago. All we're doing is lying and totally fkning younger people with enormous liabilities. And it's just basic insurance. Nothing to do with overspending on normal govt operations

We spend $6T. $2T is on government..The rest is all interest and money for old people. We only bring in about $4.5T in revenue
Sounds like you need to work a little harder.

Before you turn us into Soylent Green, how about we cut out studies of the Tsi-Tsi fly's mating habits in Botswana first.

Get rid of the waste and then we can talk about screwing old people out of their promised benefits.

PS. You forgot to mention, the SS system is still in the black.
 
You make some fine points. I'll only respond to this one. SS has a cap because the benefits have a cap. Your SS benefits are directly tied to your lifetime earnings. If you remove the cap, you either have to remove the cap on benefits. Or you have to fundamentally change the system and make it pure wealth transfer system from rich to poor. That's never been the underlying structure of the system since it was created nearly a century ago.

The working group of Senators is talking about raising the cap (and, I'm sure, changing the benefit formula accordingly), but not removing it.

And, really, the problem isn't just the prospect of turning Social Security into a pure welfare plan. The problem is that removing that cap altogether would almost certainly have the effect of high earners using more tax avoidance schemes...which would not only impact OASDI revenues, but would also harm general fund revenues.

I know a lot of people hope for rich people to bail us out of this mess. But that's a pipe dream.
 
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No. She ran for President and was in a dead heat with Obama with actual people voting across 50 states. Maybe you don't remember.

She's not a likeable person, but her intellectual capacity is impressive and anyone saying otherwise is a hopeless partisan.

If you think that's equivalent to Matt Gaetz than you are a fkn idiot. Someone who came from huge money and still was a goof.
Again, you keep changing the argument to try to prove a point.

I'm not arguing the quality of either, although Gaetz's supposed transgressions are far less serious than destroying over 30,000 subpoena'd records.

Gaetz is just as 'qualified' for AG as Hillary was for SoS.
 
Two rich guys with big egos put in charge of a fake department to start inputting efficiencies over agencies they don't understand with an arbitrary end date in the middle of 2026.

Here is an A to Z index of every government agency:


They are giving themselves a year and a half to go through and make recommendations about increasing efficiency. That is maybe an couple days per agency to learn systems needs and what each agency does. What kind of quality do you think we are going to get out of those recommendations? If it is going to be large sweeping declarations (cut regulations and decrease staff) then job is already done. I don't see how they are going to be able to go through and increase efficiency through robotics and systems, that is already occurring but happens at a slow pace because of funding.

They got their name by making an acronym out of Elon's bitcoin, they set an impossibly small timeline for real reform, and one of the principal partners has taken to posting memes on his platform to get the attention he craves. Ramaswamy appears to be taking it somewhat seriously but his partner isn't so far. Frankly I could save them all time, cut the regulatory authority Vivek has mentioned, make it easier to let underperforming employees go, and dust off Simpson-Bowles. There is your start and it didn't take two rich dudes and a made up new department to do it.

@DANC to answer your question on Gaetz it is the same thing. Burning political capital to what? Troll? You don't like the pick either because Gaetz has shown to be a child who will cut off his nose to spite his face and undermine everyone he has to work with in one swoop to boost his ego. His own party hates him. That wouldn't necessarily be a bad thing if the dislike was related to him being able to force through unpopular positions that people that voted for Trump think we need. That isn't it though. They dislike him because he is a stupid dick. I don't want a stupid dick trying to clean up DOJ. You are likely to get a shitty job out of that. That is if he even makes it that far. How much political capital will Trump spend with his own party to try and get a stupid dick elected to a position he is likely to be no good at? Trump is a lame duck from day one. He has a 4 year expiration date and then his movement likely dies. I see all this Don Jr. talk and there is no way I am voting to turn this into a monarchy in 2028. Trump's first administration was bogged down because he couldn't get people to work with him. This seems like shooting himself in the foot and I don't think it was some kind of 4D chess to get Gaetz out of the house.

There is a chance to do something worthwhile here and I don't like the early returns.
I don't think Gaetz is a stupid dick. He's actually a pretty smart guy. But, as you say, he's a child, immature, and gums up the works of a Republican Party with a razor thin majority.

I don't actually think Trump is playing 4D chess. I think he has good instincts, sometimes, about things and, realistically, knows Gaetz's chances of confirmation are slim to none. He also knows he is a pita in the House for Republicans. Taken together, it's not difficult to see an ulterior motive in the selection.

The Don Jr talk is just trolling to piss off the left. No one seriously thinks he's going to run for President.
 
You cannot have swallowed enough kool aid to truly believe this. Most Trumpers I know are hoping this get shot down by reasonable Pubs.

This pick is a laughable clown show pick.

And frankly, dangerous.
More dangerous than going after political rivals? More dangerous than going after parents who speak up at school board meetings? More dangerous than going after religious groups for 'terrorism'?
 
I don't think Gaetz is a stupid dick. He's actually a pretty smart guy. But, as you say, he's a child, immature, and gums up the works of a Republican Party with a razor thin majority.

I don't actually think Trump is playing 4D chess. I think he has good instincts, sometimes, about things and, realistically, knows Gaetz's chances of confirmation are slim to none. He also knows he is a pita in the House for Republicans. Taken together, it's not difficult to see an ulterior motive in the selection.

The Don Jr talk is just trolling to piss off the left. No one seriously thinks he's going to run for President.
Gaetz will be AG. One way or another.
 
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What about their staff? What about the offices they will need for this?(I'm betting Trump properties will have nice deal for them on some space". What about the other overhead for running something like this? Musk is paying for all of that?
You are changing the goalposts again. Your original question was you wonder how much Musk is getting paid. Now it’s something different. Musk isn’t getting paid. Either is Vivek. They will cut an enormous amount fat from government expenditures. It’s insane that people are arguing against this. Stupid actually.
 
Sure if they want to go at it, I don't care. There are people who do this kind of oversight/watchdog both internal and external to govt as a full time job. There isn't any great revelation to come. Smoke and mirrors and the sheep suck it up.
lmao You obviously do care.

Yes, there are people who do this as a full time job. And they obviously suck at it.
 
Well, there's a cap on Social Security taxes -- because there's a corresponding cap on Social Security benefits. I honestly don't think it'll ever be in the cards to take the tax cap off while leaving the benefit cap on.

I can see them raising it and steepening the benefit formula. But I seriously doubt they'll ever just remove it altogether. Doing that would cause some seismic shifts in how high-earning people realize their income.

Also, FWIW, there is no tax cap on the Medicare portion of the FICA tax. In fact, Obamacare added a surtax. And I think it's kind of telling that, despite this, Medicare is still not only going broke...but is in a much larger actuarial hole than Social Security is.

The lesson we should take from that is that we shouldn't kid ourselves that we'll be able to raise the tax revenues needed to afford these programs as presently constituted. We've got to get cost out, one way or another.
There are smart people out there who can figure it out. Raise/change the benefit cap. Do it. Do something. Everybody just sits around and moans about it. The parallel to IU football is striking. Oh, woe is us, we can’t get a good coach - it will cost too much and what good coach would ever come here - so we’ll do the same ol’, same ol’ and hope some low-paid assistant can produce a miracle. Then we went out and brought in a winner and now we’ll pay him a substantial compensation package for substantial results.

So, figure out the tax/benefits caps so the program is funded. Make the benefits less straight-line if need be and progressive if that’s what it’ll take. Or, just let it go bankrupt in a decade or so. That’s a great solution.

Sit down some actuaries, doctors and accountants under Mitch and don’t come out of the room until a ten-year plan is in place to rein in healthcare costs. No reason for my two knee replacements in 2023 to cost over a combined $90,000. I paid a very small percentage of that, MediCare paid some and “denied” some so Christ Hospital charged some other poor schmuck more to make up for their super-charged costs. We get some of this crap under some kind of sanity and a lot of our financial problems can finally be addressed.

But we don’t get anywhere until we start. Money talks; bullshit walks - true as it’s ever been. We got out of the way and let Cignetti power through. Let’s let Elon and Vivek, and others eminently capable - Mitch, Mitch, Mitch - power through and kick some ass.

POTFB (Boilers AND Buckeyes)
 
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I haven’t seen any specific stated objectives. I’m not sure how hands on they will be with each dept or if, for example they may try to identify, using tools that have been effective in business, which depts can have the greatest impact & focus on those. There is a lot of pearl clutching going on about this without any real idea what will happen, but that’s what folks do now.🤷
The dupes are back in their groove after being stunned by the election results.
 
Well, there's a cap on Social Security taxes -- because there's a corresponding cap on Social Security benefits. I honestly don't think it'll ever be in the cards to take the tax cap off while leaving the benefit cap on.

I can see them raising it and steepening the benefit formula. But I seriously doubt they'll ever just remove it altogether. Doing that would cause some seismic shifts in how high-earning people realize their income.

Also, FWIW, there is no tax cap on the Medicare portion of the FICA tax. In fact, Obamacare added a surtax. And I think it's kind of telling that, despite this, Medicare is still not only going broke...but is in a much larger actuarial hole than Social Security is.

The lesson we should take from that is that we shouldn't kid ourselves that we'll be able to raise the tax revenues needed to afford these programs as presently constituted. We've got to get cost out, one way or another.

Well social security is quite easy to balance mathematically. It's a defined benefit plan. Any actuary could come up with the correct set of taxes/benefits.

Medicare not as simple in that it's basically an open ended commitment to pay for medical services. Like an all you can eat buffet. And with people living longer and longer, utilizing more advanced treatments
 
You guys are like a bunch of drunk frat guys watching MMA on a Saturday night. You have no idea of what a wrecking ball can do when placed in the wrong hands.

Read a few of Crazy's posts and try and learn. Don't be like DBM where you literally touch yourself every time Trump makes a move.
We absolutely know what a wrecking ball can do when placed in the wrong hands.

We paid attention to the last 4 years of lawfare on political opponents and woke politics and have seen how it's divided the country.
 
Sure if they want to go at it, I don't care. There are people who do this kind of oversight/watchdog both internal and external to govt as a full time job. There isn't any great revelation to come. Smoke and mirrors and the sheep suck it up.
The Government Accountability Office already does a good job of investigating issues and making recommendations. The only people that can do something about what they found are in Congress and leadership in the Executive Branch. The problem is they don't often do anything to fix the issues that are found. Musk and Ramaswamy will be duplicating efforts and if nothing is done about anything they find, there will be no change.

 
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Musk, an entrepreneur whose business ventures range from electric vehicles to space exploration to implantable neurotechnology, is now heading into the social media sector. His two largest companies, Tesla and SpaceX, are both prolific political spenders — and Musk himself has a history of giving to candidates and causes on both sides of the aisle.

Aerospace company SpaceX reported spending $700,000 on federal lobbying in the first quarter of this year, disclosures filed April 20 show, the most it’s ever spent on lobbying in a single quarter and up from $580,000 in the first quarter of last year.

Last year, SpaceX spent a record amount on lobbying$2.4 million. The company’s lobbying spending has more than doubled since 2013 and multiplied even more since 2003 when it spent just $36,000.

Overall, the company has spent more than $22 million on federal lobbying since 1998.

So far this cycle, SpaceX’s PAC has given nearly $400,000 to federal candidates and committees, according to the FEC.
The four “ lobbyists” listed are all Space x employees tasked with marketing Space x services in the government, military and civilian world. When your customer list includes the U.S. government, I guess selling meets some definition of lobbying.
 
Well social security is quite easy to balance mathematically. It's a defined benefit plan. Any actuary could come up with the correct set of taxes/benefits.

Medicare not as simple in that it's basically an open ended commitment to pay for medical services. Like an all you can eat buffet. And with people living longer and longer, utilizing more advanced treatments

I'll go to my grave saying that we missed a golden opportunity to not only repair its finances, but vastly improve it as a public pension system, in 2005. Making it into a hybrid DB/DC plan seemed pretty obvious to me as the best way forward.

But here's where we get back again to Sen. Moynihan's quote about why Democrats are so staunchly opposed to adding a wealth component to go along with the income component to Social Security:

Screenshot-2024-08-08-112348.png
 
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It's existed for as long as you've had govt bureaucracies. Not just here, but in other nations and governments as well. China's were famous for millennia. Japan's military Deep State was making the decisions in WW 2; it wasn't the emperor.

The notion that a guy like Gaetz--who might legitimately want to root it out--is hilarious. I don't think he's smart enough or knowledgeable enough to do so without severely damaging the institution.
Of course things aren't going to change overnight. But the head of an agency can set in motion changes that will gradually take effect.


The media in this country used to be much more conservative. Then the j-schools started turning out skulls full of mush and now the NTY is the equivalent of Pravda.

Assigning prosecutors and the selection of cases to prosecute play huge parts in the US justice system.
 
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The Government Accountability Office already does a good job of investigating issues and making recommendations. The only people that can do something about what they found are in Congress and leadership in the Executive Branch. The problem is they don't often do anything to fix the issues that are found. Musk and Ramaswamy will be duplicating efforts and if nothing is done about anything they find, there will be no change.


Nobody cares about reading GAO reports. But Musk will probably dust some off and rebrand them.

Sounds like they are going to be more or less an advisory role to OMB. Someone mentioned Mitch Daniels in this thread... Well, Daniels already had this job before as director of OMB 20+years ago.



Some funny quotes from Holtz-Eaken


“There’s the executive branch that might be in their way. The Congress might be in their way. The Constitution is a bit of an obstacle,” said Douglas Holtz-Eakin, president of American Action Forum.

“Other than that, clear sailing,” he told The Hill
...
“It sounds to me like an outside commission that will give OMB recommendations on what they think should be done to improve government efficiency, and as such its powers are entirely advisory,” Holtz-Eakin said.

“They don’t have any authority to do anything other than say, ‘We think this will be good,’” he said. “Evidently, Mr. Musk has a lot of free time, and if he wants to waste it, that’s fine.”
 
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Coming from someone who hates the govt. meddling in electric vehicles, I'm not sure Musk's Tesla venture is one you'd like to refer to:

Tesla has received billions of dollars in government subsidies since 2009, including:

  • Loans
    In 2010, the U.S. Department of Energy provided Tesla with a $465 million loan to help build its first major manufacturing facility in Fremont, California.


  • Tax credits
    Tesla customers who meet federal requirements may be eligible for a tax credit of up to $7,500 when purchasing a new Tesla.


  • Regulatory credits
    Tesla has sold "regulatory credits" to other carmakers for almost $9 billion since 2018. These credits are awarded to manufacturers who meet increasingly strict emissions rules.


  • Grants and rebates
    Nevada has provided Tesla with $1.6 billion in grants and tax rebates from 2013 to 2023.


  • Research and development
    Tesla received more than $1.6 billion in research and development and federal renewable energy tax credits in 2023.
According to Good Jobs First's Subsidy Tracker, Tesla has received $2.8 billion in government subsidies since 2009, with about 88% of that coming from states.
All automakers have gotten sweetheart loans and subsidies from the government. All of them.

Which one has actually increased efficiency as much as Musk has with those deals?
 
We absolutely know what a wrecking ball can do when placed in the wrong hands.

We paid attention to the last 4 years of lawfare on political opponents and woke politics and have seen how it's divided the country.
So the be clear, Trump did nothing to contribute to a divided country?
 
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So the be clear, Trump did nothing to contribute to a divided country?
The legacy media are the main culprits for the divide in the America. Spewing absolute trash (lies) to the masses about how evil Trump is at every turn. They are the lowest of the low and deserve everyone’s animosity, imo.
 
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More dangerous than going after political rivals? More dangerous than going after parents who speak up at school board meetings? More dangerous than going after religious groups for 'terrorism'?
I don’t get this reasoning.

It’s like saying “Hey, let’s hire Mike Woodson. He’s not as bad as Archie Miller. “
 
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The legacy media are the main culprits for the divide in the America. Spewing absolute trash (lies) to the masses about how evil Trump is at every turn. They are the lowest of the low and deserve everyone’s animosity, imo.
Agree there. Fox and MSNBC are the worst, with others on their heels.
 
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