Tag Archive | "stimulus"
Posted on 12 July 2009. Tags: Big Brother, civil disobedience, compensation, congress, consequences, consumers, corporate taxes, currency debasement, deficit spending, depession, domestic, Economics, effective tax burden, embedded taxes, employee, entitlements, excise taxes, fair tax, federal, federal reserve, feudalism, fixed income, foreign, freedom, frguality, gold, government spending, income taxes, inflation, inflation risk, inflation tax, international socialism, labor market, labor productivity, liberty, lifestyle, local, marginal productivity, Medicare, monetary policy, monetizing debt, money supply, net wealth transfer, payroll taxes, philosophical implications, Politics, progressive taxation, property taxes, purchasing power, recession, regulations, regulatory burden, Retirement, revolt, Rob Viglione, sales tax, Savings, securities, serfdom, shareholders, slavery, social security, socialism, southern california, speculation, state, stimulus, tariffs, taxation, transfer taxes, treasuries, Treasury, U.S. dollar, Uncle Sam, unemployment, USD, wages
This article is dedicated to the growing segment of American society that is awakening to the ideas that we are increasingly overworked and overtaxed. My goal is to determine an effective tax burden on the average middle-class American. I will leave it to the reader to judge relative severity of the burden as measured against associated “benefits” to which he is “entitled” from the system. Continue Reading
Posted in Economics, Featured, Personal Finance, Politics
Posted on 16 April 2009. Tags: Afghanistan, Al Qaeda, American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, anti-American, assault weapons, Austin, barack obama, Bill of Rights, capitalism, Civil War, Columbian, congress, Constitution, construction, court warrant, crash, democrat, Diane Feinstein, dictator, domestic communications, downturn, drug prohibition, drug violence, eavesdropping, Economics, firearms, foreclosure, free enterprise, free trade, freedom, Freedom Watch, globalization, governor, guerrillas, gun trafficking, gun trafficking treaty, guns, high-speed trains, House of Representatives, housing, housing market, Hugo Chavez, human rights violantions, identity, illegal spying, illegal trafficking, indivisible, Jim Dunnam, Justice Department, Latin America, law enforcement, liberty, Mexico, militia, mystery donors, National Security Agency, new home starts, NSA, organization, passenger rail, patriot, Politics, porkulus, President Obama, ratification, Real Estate, recession, Rick Perry, right to bear arms, Rob Viglione, secession, second amendment, Senate, Senate intelligence committee, slump, socialism, South America, stabilizing, stimulus, Taliban, Tea Party, terrorism, Texas, treaty, union, universities, Venezuela, War on Drugs, wiretapping
President Obama pushes ratification of gun trafficking treaty, housing market continues to crash-new home starts down 11% and foreclosures jumping 17%, Senate to call panel to investigate illegal NSA domestic spying, Obama unveils plan to spend another $13 billion and build high speed trains (it’s a down payment), Democrats attack Texas Gov. Perry over secession comments at tea party, Freedom Watch sues dictator Hugo Chavez for acts of terrorism and human rights violations, and a bit of good news: mystery donors give $45 million to universities… Continue Reading
Posted in Featured, Freedom Under Fire
Posted on 12 April 2009. Tags: Alex Kozinski, appropriation, Bill of Rights, blank check, checks and balances, clause, Commerce Clause, common defense, Constitution, constitutional government, controversial, courts, David Ramsay, debts, declare it void, dual sovereignty, duties, electoral retaliation, enumeration of powers, excises, federal government, Federalism, freedom, general welfare, history, impeachment, imposts, James Madison, judiciary, Judiciary branch, legal interpretation, Legislative branch, levy taxes, liberty, limited government, Lincoln, New York, Noah Webster, playing favorites, Politics, pork spending, porkulus, power, professor, protectionism, public funds, public trust, ratifying convention, Robert G. Natelson, Savannah, socialism, Spending Clause, spending programs, Steven Engel, stimulus, supreme court, tax money, taxation, Taxation clause, taxes, Treasury, united states, Virginia
Has the federal government risen above its constitutional right to tax and spend billions of dollars on pork? What argument do we have which puts a seemingly all powerful federal government back in its constitutional place and restores the principle of federalism? Continue Reading
Posted in Politics
Posted on 08 April 2009. Tags: 20/20, American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, auto suppliers, bailout, bailouts and bull, banking, banks, barack obama, Big Brother, bureaucrats, Chrysler, Detroit, Early Head Start, Economics, Education, education market, Fannie Mae, FDIC, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, federal government, federal reserve, financial industry, financing, Freddie Mac, General Motors, goverment hiring, government, guerrilla, Head Start, housing, John Stosel, life insurers, market, monetary policy, mortgage, Obamanomics, oversight, Politics, pre-K, President Obama, print money, protectionism, quantitative easing, Real Estate, regulations, Rob Viglione, SEC, secondary market, soviet union, stimulus, TARP, Tim Geithner, Treasury Department, Troubled Asset Relief Program, wall street
Big Brother set to take over pre-Kindergarten education, John Stossel points out consequences of government education, $5 billion bailout unrolled for auto suppliers, government hiring Wall Street analysts caught in financial crisis, economists predict deflation will cause mortgage rates will drop to 4.2% by end of year, and Big Brother’s favorite life insurers set to receive bailouts… Continue Reading
Posted in Featured, Freedom Under Fire
Posted on 05 April 2009. Tags: agriculture, American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, Antarctica, asset bubbles, balance sheet, barack obama, Big Brother, Bill of Rights, bond maturity, bonds, budget deficit, bureaucracy, cap and trade, capital expenditures, capitalism, commodities, congress, Constitution, consumer spending, courts, currency, cut spending, DBA, DBC, debt, deflation, democracy, dependence, diversification, dividends, dollar, DOW, Economics, elections, electricity costs, energy, equities, Fannie Mae, federal reserve, federal spending, financial industry, financial regulations, fiscal policy, fixed rate debt, FNM, FRE, Freddie Mac, free enterprise, free society, GLD, gold, GSG, Health Care, hedge, housing boom, housing bust, housing is a right, inflation, interest rates, international, Investing, irrational exuberance, join a militia, junk loans, labor laws, labor market, laws, leverage, life savings, Medicaid, Medicare, military, militia, monetary policy, money supply, mortgage, nanny state, NASDAQ, national debt, natural gas, oil, police state, Politics, portfolio, portfolio management, precious metals, President Obama, public debt, quantitative easing, question assumptions, Real Estate, regulate carbon emissions, regulations, retained earnings, right to bear arms, Rob Viglione, rolling dice, S&P500, savings rate, second amendment, short stocks, short the market, short-term debt, silver, SLV, social security, socialism, stagflation, stimulus, stock market, subprime debt, TARP, Tim Geithner, TIP, Treasury, treasury inflation protected securities, trust government, union, USD, USO, velocity of money, welfare, WIP, yields
We are moving closer towards a political economy every day. Every dollar borrowed, taxed, printed, and spent by government really comes from the private sector. Trillions of dollars of national resources are being allocated by politicians and bureaucrats towards things they claim will benefit our economy. Congress just passed a $3.6 trillion budget ($1.2 trillion in deficit), and combined the Federal Reserve and Treasury have dumped $13 trillion into the economy in the last 16 months. What we must all ask ourselves right now is whether or not we trust government with our money? Continue Reading
Posted in Economics, Investing, Politics
Posted on 04 April 2009. Tags: barack obama, Big Brother, bonds, borrow, budget, capitalism, central bank, class warfare, competition, competitive, currency, cut taxes, debt, depression, economic prosperity, Economics, expenditures, fiscal policy, free enterprise, free markets, free trade, globalization, government, government spending, growth, improving productivity, interest rates, John Key, laissez-fair, leftism, limit to what government can do, make country more productive, monetary policy, National, New Zealand, New Zealand dollar, Politics, populism, President Obama, prime minister, print money, productive, prop up growth, recession, redistribution, regulations, resources, Rob Viglione, socialism, spend, stimulus, taxation, taxes, trade, trader, transform the economy, Wall Street Journal, world leader, WSJ
New Zealand Prime Minister John Key speaks a strange language. It’s English, all right, even with an accent, but he is one of the only world leaders who is speaking of relaxing regulations, cutting taxes, spending within budget, and focusing on making his country more productive.
Rather than jumping on the tax, borrow, spend, print, populist bandwagon with nearly every other world leader, John Key’s solution to the tough times is to “use this time to transform the economy to make us stronger so that when the world starts growing again we can be running faster than other countries we compete with.”
Key’s idea is to grow the country out of recession by improving productivity, not simply catering to populist calls for wealth redistribution, stifling regulation, and growth-inhibiting class warfare taxes. He calls attempts to use debt and money printing to “prop up growth” risky, saying that saddling future generations with debt could be counterproductive. He is one of the only politicians who states “There is actually a limit to what governments can do.”
At a time when governments are growing by leaps and bounds, and everyone seems convinced that Big Brother holds the keys to economic prosperity, it is refreshing to see a world leader (actually an ex-currency trader) embrace sound economic principals.
Key admits that New Zealand will not pull the world out of recession; it’s too bad other leaders lack such humility!
Here’s a link to the Wall Street Journal interview with Key.
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Posted in Economics, Politics
Posted on 01 March 2009. Tags: auto manufacturers, automotive industry, banking, barack obama, Britain, Brussels, buy American, car industry, climate treaty, consensus against protectionism, consequences of drug prohibition, Copenhagen, democrats, drug cartels, drug prohibition, drug war, Economics, emergency summit, EU, European Commission President, european union, FDR, France, Franklin D. Roosevelt, French President, global climate deal, global economy, global New Deal, global trade war, Gordon Brown, greenhouse gas emissions, Jose Manuel Barroso, kyoto protocol, Mark Miloscia, massive spending, Mexico, new deal, Politics, President Obama, prime minister, protectionism, Rob Viglione, Robert Gates, Sarkozy, Secretary Gates, special interests, steel, stimulus, subsidies, support domestic industries, tariffs, taxing porn, UK, united kingdom, washington, worldwide scale
U.S. drug prohibition kills tens of thousands-Mexico deploys 45,000 troops, U.S. considers sending military to fight in Mexico, over 1,000 murdered since January; Obama pushing for global climate deal, big push back on politicians trying to tax porn, British PM plans Global New Deal, and EU leaders agree to fight protectionism…just the latest in your Freedom Under Fire Report! Continue Reading
Posted in Featured, Freedom Under Fire
Posted on 19 February 2009. Tags: $1 trillion plan, 1930, African-Americans, American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, attorney general Eric Holder, auto loans, banks, budget approved, buffoon, buy American, buy bonds, california, Canada, collateralized securities, Congressman, consumer debt, credit card, debt, deficit, democrats, department of justice, disaster avoided for now, DOJ, ex-patriots, financial crash, funding gap, GOP, governors reject stimulus, integrated workplace, Internal Revenue Service, IRS, IRS raids foreign banks, Jim Clyburn, nation of cowards, Obama subsidizes hedge funds, Politics, print more money, protectionism, racial divisions, racism, reciprocal trade wars, republicans, Rob Viglione, securitization market, self-segregation, slap in the face to blacks, Smoot-Hawley Tariff, spending cuts, stimulus, student loans, subsidies, Swiss bank accounts, tariffs, tax evasion, tax increasese, trade wars
Everyday our liberties and freedom come under fire. The American Republic once protected its citizens from arbitrary abuse, extortion, and deliberate social engineering. Now the very same public servants who were meant to work for us connive daily on how to control our lives. The Republic is gone and we are left to fend for ourselves, to put up resistance to every encroachment on individual self-determination. The Freedom Under Fire Report provides daily coverage of the most important issues, so that you remain informed and ready to defend yourself. Read on and pass this around to everyone you think could benefit: Continue Reading
Posted in Featured, Freedom Under Fire
Posted on 19 July 2008. Tags: Economics, fiscal policy, government intervention, Keynesian, Pelosi, recession, stimulus
On Thursday, Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi proposed an additional $50 billion economic stimulus package. Before heading down this path it would be wise to evaluate the results of the far larger $106 billion package passed earlier this year. According to an article published in the Wall Street Journal today, none of the objectives of the first package have been achieved, and we’re already seeing signs of negative consequences. Is it really time to launch a similar initiative? Continue Reading
Posted in Economics, Politics