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Monthly Archives: November 2019


If and when modern politics moves out of the realm of schoolyard antics and name-calling we may just have a Congress worthy of the title. It is a given that we have a miscreant as President, that will not change until the next election (if we are lucky). Until that time his dishonest administration aided and abetted by a self-serving GOP will continue to tread heavily on the voters of America. Many who approve or follow TOTUS and his minions fail to realize the essence of the statement” what affects one affects all”. There is no upside to this administration. We are now at a point where we have groups who have a narrow view of what is correct and use that view to inform their actions in electing representatives who follow their line to the detriment of all others. We are slowly losing the real America to single-minded entities reminiscent of the religious extremists we have fought on the Asian continent and entities, not unlike the “oligarchs” we hear about in other parts of the world. We are constantly bombarded by the tweets of an Uninformed leader whose actions and words border on the manic. These activities are supported by a political faction that uses this mania to cover their nefarious deeds in service only to themselves and their allies. In effect, we (VOTERS) are “being handled”. Some actions by this administration and its abettors are proper and correct but the execution is terrible. There is no diplomacy in this administration primarily because TOTUS has the idea that as President he is the smartest person in the room. A quick look at his actions (tweets) tells a different story. The fact that long-serving diplomats are ignored, fired or have resigned presents a different picture. Our Allies have taken a hands off attitude with TOTUS as they fully understand his propensity for rash, unreasoned actions, and outbursts via twitter. All of his actions have a long term influence which will take years to correct whether you believe it or not. It is well to remember that the truth remains the same whereas lies eternally shift.

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In the past 10 to 12 years we have seen the major parties at war over things that we (voters) did not or do not know anything about. The main objective for both sides seems to be the power of numbers. In other words who has the majority of members. These members appear to be in lockstep with the party line no matter the harm done to the voters. The current “impeachment” hearings whether correct or not should not be one-sided yet it is since each side thinks they are completely correct. There was a time when we had Congressional members who no matter their party affiliation recognized that whatever is done should be done for the voters, not the party. Since the election of President Obama, the baser elements of our country have risen to create a pre and post Civil war mentality that caters to the white majority party. These adherents to the party line no matter how wrong it is for the voters can qualify as sycophants or perhaps psychophants. The loyalty of representatives should be to the voters, not the party unless the party is following the guidance of the voters. Apparently, the so-called town hall meeting that were the  “rage” for a while were just photo ops with no real substance. The public is listening to what these representatives say but understanding what they say is different. It is clear to me that most if not all of the currently serving representatives and those aspiring to the office are blowing smoke to some degree and it is our job to take it in, “cum grano salis”*
*https://en.wiktionary.org › wiki › cum_grano_salis. Borrowed from Latin cum grānō salis. AdverbEdit. cum grano salis (not comparable). (idiomatic) With a grain of salt; with a bit of common sense and skepticism.

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How smart are we? These past 10 years in politics have given me pause about who we are as a country. This past 3 years  (if we are lucky) will show us to be smarter yet our elected officials (many of whom have been in the office much too long) keep showing us how naive we are. Since the written word began centuries ago we have been seemingly rushing backward in our thinking. We currently have a cadre of inept at the least or just criminal administrators and legislators. These folks have only their particular parties in mind at all times no matter the consequences for the voters who put them in office. It offers up the question of “how smart are we?”. Mass media has provided us with the truth as well as the lies of the world and politics but we have failed to distinguish between the two in too many cases. The lessons provided in previous administrations and in private industries have given us plain and overt messages about what our “leaders” are doing for and against our interests. As long as we are under and uninformed, the baser side of our elected officials will prevail. Rallies punctuated with “dog whistles and punch lines” do not inform they just excite and overshadow the truth. The media coverage can be decried as “fake news” as they report what comes directly from the mouths of the interviewed and covered but we have become inured to it all. We are suffering from the “folly of ignorance”

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What If You Are In A Coma - Dilbert by Scott Adams

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Apparently, Congress is using the Tax reform glitch as a bargaining tool while Gold Star families and mid to low income families are burdened with heavier taxes, Thanks TOTUS et al. MA

POLITICS
11/06/2019 03:28 pm ET Updated 6 days ago

An error in the GOP tax law has brought new attention to an old problem for military families.
By Arthur Delaney

Elizabeth Davis’ husband Matthew Davis, a Marine Corps first lieutenant, was killed by a drunk driver. The 2017 tax law wildly increased taxes on the death benefits she receives.
Republicans wrote their 2017 tax law so fast that the Senate voted at 2 a.m. on a version that still had edits hand-scribbled in the margins. They knew they would probably need to fix a few mistakes at some point later on.
Two years later, the economic boom the law was supposed to produce has failed to materialize ― but the mistakes have become very clear, and lawmakers are still trying to clean up after themselves.

Elizabeth Davis of Stafford, Virginia, is one person caught up in the mess. Davis normally owes a few hundred dollars around tax time. This year, she found herself with a nearly $10,000 bill thanks to wildly increased taxes on the death benefits she receives as a military widow.
“It was like a gut punch,” said Davis, 33, who is a full-time student working toward a communication degree.
Davis and her 11-year-old daughter have been receiving about $2,000 per month via two kinds of military survivor benefits since her husband Matthew Davis, a Marine Corps first lieutenant, was killed by a drunk driver at Camp Pendleton, California, five years ago this week.
Hers is just one of thousands of Gold Star families ― the name given to surviving relatives of deceased members of the armed services ― who got slapped with a giant tax bill because of a mistake in the law. Military families have long complained about how the government distributes death benefits, and the tax goof worsened a problem that was complicated enough to begin with.
All of us had big bills, varying from a couple grand into tens of thousands of dollars.
Elizabeth Davis
Davis said not even her tax preparer understood what had gone wrong.
“I was in complete and utter disbelief. I contacted friends who were lawyers, seeing if something had changed,” Davis said. She also reached out to certified public accountants, veterans groups like the Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors, and through social media she contacted other Gold Star widows. A pattern emerged.
“All of us had big bills, varying from a couple grand into tens of thousands of dollars,” Davis said.
As she started figuring out how to pay what she owed, Davis also wanted to make sure she wouldn’t have to do it again next year. So she’s undertaken her own lobbying effort to fix the flaw.
Here’s What Lawmakers Did Wrong
The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act simplified many parts of the tax code, resulting in both lower taxes and easier filing for a lot of people. Far fewer taxpayers now make an itemized list of deductions, for instance, opting instead for a standard deduction that is much more generous than it used to be.
Another simplification junked a complicated rule regarding unearned income for children that was originally drafted in 1986 to discourage wealthy parents from gifting large sums of money to their offspring to dodge taxes. The so-called “kiddie tax” required parents to do their kids’ taxes first, and then add the taxable portion of their children’s income to their own return.
The new, simpler arrangement lets parents file wholly separate returns for themselves and their kids, but the tax rates on even low levels of unearned income for children can near 40%. Republicans had long wanted to make this change; a stalled GOP tax reform bill had the same provision in 2014.
“It had been vetted thoroughly for years,” Rep. Kevin Brady (R-Texas) told HuffPost last month. Brady chaired the House Ways and Means Committee and was a principal author of the new tax law in 2017.
But nobody seemed to realize the change would clobber households with children who are receiving benefits because a parent died on active duty or in retirement from the military. “It’s an unintended consequence because Congress enacted it quickly without hearings,” said Mark Mazur, the Robert C. Pozen director of the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center.
The Gold Star glitch is just one of several unintended consequences of the tax law.
Soon after the bill passed, the agriculture industry noticed that a new tax deduction for certain types of businesses gave farms an absurd incentive to sell their crops to cooperatives rather than private firms. Democrats worked with Republicans to fix the so-called “grain glitch” in March 2018, just a few months after Trump had signed the bill into law.
Democrats have seemed less enthusiastic about fixing other problems. They say they want to fix the “retail glitch” ― a drafting error that has disallowed firms such as restaurants from writing off upgrades to commercial properties. Democrats have used that fix as leverage, suggesting in letters to a large casino operator that if it wants their help to deduct the cost of a recent $600 million renovation, it should be nicer to its workers.
Fixing the Gold Star glitch has also become a bit of a bargaining chip. In May, the Senate passed a standalone bill that would solve Gold Star families’ tax problem. A similar House measure has 169 Republican and Democratic co-sponsors. But rather than address the glitch directly, Democratic leadership added a fix to the SECURE Act, a package aimed at boosting retirement security that passed the House in May by a vote of 417 to 3.
Now the SECURE Act has hit a roadblock in the Senate, where a handful of Republicans have put a hold on it ― an old legislative trick that allows individual senators to stall bills.
Fixing the Gold Star glitch has become a bit of a bargaining chip in Congress.
What’s Going Wrong Now
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), one of the most vocal senators holding up the SECURE Act, actually has no beef with what’s in the bill ― he’s just mad that House Democratic leaders removed a provision that he had championed that would allow parents to use tax-advantaged 529 savings accounts for K-12 educational expenses such as tutoring and homeschooling. (For the most part, such accounts are reserved for college expenses.)
“House leadership vindictively stripped it from the bill,” Cruz said, blaming teachers unions. “I’m pressing to get it added back to expand the educational choices and options for millions of kids across the country.”
Cruz and his fellow holdouts are agitating for a chance to add amendments to the SECURE Act, including one for 529s and one to fix the retail glitch. But it’s not clear how the strategy will work since it seems most of their colleagues in the Senate favor the bill as is and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) is miserly with floor time for legislation.

Davis had a face-to-face meeting with Cruz’s office over the summer to lobby for the SECURE Act. She said Cruz’s staff expressed sympathy for her plight and said nobody had intended to hike taxes on grieving military families, but the senator wants a vote on his education thing before moving forward.
Which, to Davis, seems less important than fixing her tax problem.
“You’re holding up taxes on death benefits for orphans for the sake of an extra-curricular financial account,” she said.
(Cruz voted in favor of the Senate bill that solely addresses the taxes on death benefits, but the House has no plans to take up that legislation.)
An irony about blocking the retirement bill for education policy reasons is that military widows and widowers are not the only ones with a new kiddie tax problem. The glitch also affected recipients of scholarship grants and the children of fallen police officers and firefighters who receive benefits from state and local governments. The American Council on Education estimates the glitch has affected 1.4 million students, mostly from middle- and lower-income families.
“This is what happens when you do an enormous bill so quickly,” ACE’s government affairs director Steven Bloom said.
The SECURE Act would fix the glitch for students and first responders, but the standalone House and Senate bills would not.
Another Possible Solution
Even if the Senate never passes SECURE Act, military families could catch a break in another upcoming piece of legislation.
The House passed a defense spending bill this year that would make it unnecessary for Gold Star widows and widowers to designate children as beneficiaries of their late spouse’s death benefits ― something veterans service organizations have complained about for decades.
When a service member dies, the Department of Veterans Affairs pays most surviving spouses Dependency and Indemnity Compensation benefits averaging about $1,300 a month. The surviving spouse might also be eligible for compensation from the Survivor Benefit Plan, a Defense Department insurance policy that usually pays about $1,050 a month.
The problem is that benefits from the two agencies offset each other, meaning a dollar of the latter benefit is subtracted for every dollar of the former. The only way to avoid that scenario is for a surviving spouse to designate a child as the Survivor Benefit Plan beneficiary. The military community calls this benefit offset the “widow’s tax,” though it is not actually a tax ― it’s just a bad thing they gave a nasty name.
The underlying benefit offset affects more military families than those who got surprise tax bills. There are roughly 10,000 children receiving Survivor Benefit Plan annuities whom the tax law may have adversely affected. There are 65,000 surviving spouses paying the widow’s tax.
The House defense bill, which sets the Pentagon’s budget, would undo the benefit offset, allowing surviving spouses to receive both benefits directly without a child intermediary.
Service member advocacy groups like Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) and Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors (TAPS) have been intensely lobbying Congress to finally undo the offset. Passing the defense bill in the House is as close as lawmakers have ever come to killing the widow’s tax.
That legislation is now being merged with a Senate version of the defense bill that did not include a widow’s tax repeal. Senate Republicans are wary of the provision’s $5 billion cost, but Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.), chairman of the Armed Services Committee, suggested they might let it go.
“I think we’re pretty much decided that there’s such a strong support for that that in spite of the costs they’re going to go ahead and accept that,” Inhofe said last month.
The whole episode is a tangle of two overlapping policy issues. Different groups of lawmakers handle tax and military policy and have been pursuing their respective solutions on separate but parallel tracks. Fixing the benefit offset would resolve the tax problem that cropped up this year for widows like Davis. But attacking the tax problem itself would not fix the underlying benefit offset issue (which, remember, is called the widow’s tax even though it’s not actually a tax).
In a perverse way, the Gold Star glitch in the 2017 tax bill may have been helpful to the military community, bringing additional attention to the underlying problem of the widow’s tax.
“While everyone said, ‘Yes, the widow’s tax is bad,’ when they got hit with another round of taxes, now the message is really starting to permeate through every office in the House, every office in the Senate,” the VFW’s deputy legislative director Pat Murray said.
“There’s all these promises from a grateful nation that we’re going to take care of all these things,” Davis said of the Gold Star glitch and military widow’s tax.
Time’s Running Out For 2019
But it looks like negotiations for the defense bill are not wrapping up fast enough, and Inhofe has started talking about doing a partial defense bill that might omit even mildly controversial provisions. There are bigger disagreements, such as replacing funds that had been taken from the defense budget to pay for wall construction along the U.S.-Mexico border, but some senators involved in negotiating the final bill are still concerned about the cost of the widow’s tax repeal.
“Our biggest challenge right now is time,” said TAPS deputy policy director Ashlynne Haycock. Congress has fewer than 20 days left in session this year.
To be hit with a $10,000 bill on death benefits for the orphan of a fallen service member ― it is so absolutely horrendous.
Haycock has been lobbying on the widow’s tax since 2002, when she was 10. She accompanied her mother to Capitol Hill after her father died in an April 2002 accident at Fort Sill, Oklahoma. She wrote a September op-ed saying she had been thrilled when Inhofe, her home state senator, became chair of the Armed Services Committee, but was baffled that he omitted a widow’s tax fix from the Senate defense bill.
“I trust Senator Inhofe will keep his word to us,” Haycock wrote, exhorting the senator to honor a commitment to her mother, Nichole Haycock, a U.S. Air Force veteran who died in 2011.
For Davis, a full-time student who is now engaged to remarry and has a 1-year-old, there was not a lot of cash lying around to pay her surprise tax bill.
She had to withdraw money from an Individual Retirement Account, which was subject to a 10% early withdrawal fee ― so Davis will have to pay a tax to pay her tax. She thinks it’s all pretty stupid.
“There’s all these promises from a grateful nation that we’re going to take care of all these things,” she said. “And then to be hit with a $10,000 bill on death benefits for the orphan of a fallen service member ― it is so absolutely horrendous that that happened.”

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There apparently is no joy in Mudville as rationality has struck out! Under the uncomprehending eye of TOTUS, the administration is more floundering than administering. The members of the current administration have and are following blindly through fear and ignorance while fiercely defending the indefensible. We have a leader who has little to no knowledge of the real workings of government and the wider world. We have put our allies and troops in  danger with ill-advised and unadvised decisions. meanwhile the GOP has blindly followed TOTUS to his and their possible failure (and ultimately ours- the voters). This is not the reality show that: TOTUS has been involved in, this the future of the United States and it’s alliances in the greater world. The current events should be the clear indication that the GOP and TOTUS have no  concept (or care to have) of the harm being done to the voters in the name of party. This is not to exonerate the Scamocrats, there is enough blame to go around yet this is the state of modern politics which has no regard for the voters just for the major parties.

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COMEDY 11/11/2019 05:09 am ET
Monty Python Icon John Cleese Has Brutal Assessment Of Trump’s Fox News Fans
“I don’t know what you say to people like that.”

By Ed Mazza
Comedy legend John Cleese said there may be no point in trying to argue with Fox News viewers who support President Donald Trump.
″[T]he people who support him are basically so ignorant because they only ever get news from Fox News,” the Monty Python alum told The Daily Beast. “I don’t know what you say to people like that.”

He added:
“To me, it’s like people who go and watch professional wrestling and don’t realize that it’s fixed. If they can’t see it when it’s right under their nose, I have no idea how they’re going to realize how wrong they are.”
Cleese also called Trump “an extraordinary caricature of an asshole.”
“Every time he makes a decision, no matter how impulsive it is, it’s the one that makes him feel best about himself for the next 20 minutes,” he said.
Fellow Python alum Eric Idle delivered a similarly blunt assessment of the president.
“He’s stark raving mad. Absolutely mental,” Idle told The Daily Beast. “He’s a criminal and a con artist and a mob boss.”
Read the full interview about their time in the comedy troupe as well as what they’re up to now, here.
Both Cleese and Idle are active on Twitter and often have choice words for Trump. This weekend, Cleese mockingly claimed to have become a Republican, but with a twist:

John Cleese
✔ @JohnCleese

” A Warning “, written by a senior official in the Trump Administration, paints a picture of the President as cruel, inept, and a danger to his country

As a newly converted Banana Republican, I’d like to point out there’s nothing new here

1,610
11:54 AM – Nov 10, 2019
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235 people are talking about this

John Cleese
✔ @JohnCleese

Now That I’ve become a Banana Republican, I’m reading websites like ‘Patriot Brief’, ‘Conservative Brief’ and ‘Attention Span Brief’

They carry advertisements, many of them for Erectile Dysfunction

Could this be a result of anxiety that someone might take their guns away?

2,217
12:08 PM – Nov 10, 2019
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359 people are talking about this

John Cleese
✔ @JohnCleese

Good joke!

But the only time I see ER ads is when I am sent ‘stuff’ from Conservative websites

Of course, these Conservative ads are not all about ER by any means.

There are plenty of ads about losing belly-fat, get-rich-quick schemes and tinnitus https://twitter.com/DookgoesQuark/status/1193591600636669952

DookgoesQuark @DookgoesQuark
Replying to @JohnCleese
Don’t adverts usually follow your internet search history Mr Cleese?
192
1:30 PM – Nov 10, 2019
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43 people are talking about this

John Cleese
✔ @JohnCleese

As a Banana Republican, I am proud that although we are losing better educated voters in VA and PA, we are gaining among the less well-educated, white, rural voters

662
1:34 PM – Nov 10, 2019
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150 people are talking about this

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Illinois Has Had:

3 Presidents who were honest

several Governors who went to jail

1 city with a high crime rate (above the National average or near it)

1 city that is literally underwater

Huge pension problems due to poor management and deals with and by the legislators.

 

Now we have Congressman Rodney Davis: Apparently, Congressman Davis works for the President and the party, not the people in Illinois who elected him. I have always thought or hoped that the people elected by the people actually work for the people. Mr. Davis as he has done all along takes the side of the party and the White House resident. This recent statement regarding the impeachment hearings points out the reluctance of the elected officials to just do their jobs regardless of party. This issue is too important for politics and we ( the voters) need to hold all of them no matter the party to a higher standard of responsibility. We as a country are in the grip of an unqualified leader seeking only to raise his personage above the country. This all will be born out in these hearings. The sheer amount of resistance to Congressional subpoenas speaks volumes. If there was no wrongdoing then appearing before a panel, to tell the Truth, should not be a problem. I hope Mr. Davis (the peoples representative) will opt for the good of the people, not the party.

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TOTUS has always been pushing the “loyalty” issue. 45 has valued loyalty above honesty and truth. The political “establishment” has embraced this to further their own ends. This is similar to the oft-stated “Nero fiddles while Rome burns”. Nero (metaphorically) being the Congressional TOTUS backers. Since TOTUS’ election, the GOP largely has supported him to a fault while creating their own “shadow” government which caters to their base. TOTUS’ base is not as large as has been reported but again liars continue to lie until enough people believe it or they are found out (then its’ too late). To get to the question: ” who does your representative work for?. It is apparent that for the most part, the pecking order is: Party, President, voters. The most important element in this is the Voters, without them no one gets in office. Would you think that it is time to reassert the power of the people?

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If you didn’t notice TOTUS is sucking all of the air out of the room (so to speak) while the GOP is packing the lower courts with THEIR choice of Judges which will affect our country for years to come. The Ultra and lesser conservatives (religious and nonreligious) are working to make all of us beholden to their version of what America should be. Their version is not what the founders’ envisioned. TOTUS is so full of himself that he has no idea what is happening since he can only accommodate one coherent thought at a time and even then digest only the parts he can understand. The GOP learned early on that they can do what they want in spite of the effect on ALL Americans while TOTUS acts as a cover for them. Looking at recent events in the House, the GOP united to assail the proceedings to look supportive of  TOTUS’s rantings but are merely looking to maintain their tenuous grip on power. This is not to say that the Dems are any better but more userfriendly for the country. All of the executive orders and decisions made by the administration will possibly be rescinded or altered in the next administration should TOTUS be ousted through Impeachment or election. The next leader will have a first year of dissembling a tangled web of lies and wrongdoings with luck we will have a better Congress to assist in that effort. If you didn’t notice these are reasons to vote intelligently to get better government, just because a sound bite sounds good and reasonable does not mean it is correct.

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