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It's Trump honeymoon days.
Trump is like a bad tempered base commander.
The old base commander is gone and the new commander is a bad tempered one who has come down from the mountains.
What can the rookie soldiers do ?
Rebel and join the ... communist revolution ?
They will rather try to lick the new captain's boots.
Already world leaders other than the known standard Trumpies are queing to lick Trump's boots.
Even Greek Dora Bakoyannis. She is a dem in America. In the 2004 election invited to a television panel on results night she gave her self up when Kerry jumped momentarily infront. But now she is saying sweet things about the "monster".
How long will he last ?
Four years is the optimistic expectation and we cannot look forward to a carnations revolution, unless he declares himself a dictator.
The pessimistic expectation is twelve years like Maggie, counting Vance years,

 

Edited by cosmicway
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TRUMP AND GAY PARADES
--------------------------------

I believe Trump is going to ban gay parades in the United States.
He promised "shock and awe".
But suppose he does n't.
In such a case the opposite of a gay parade is not a "family parade".
It is a milf parade - Webster's dictionary says so.
So will Trump fix it ?

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54 minutes ago, cosmicway said:

the opposite of a gay parade is not a "family parade".
It is a milf parade - Webster's dictionary says so.

Websters dictionary

“gay parade”

''The words you've entered isn't in the dictionary'' 

“milf parade”

The word you've entered isn't in the dictionary.

So that's BS then

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37 minutes ago, Fulham Broadway said:

Websters dictionary

“gay parade”

''The words you've entered isn't in the dictionary'' 

“milf parade”

The word you've entered isn't in the dictionary.

So that's BS then

You have old edition.
But at any rate it is obvious.
Why you oppose the idea ?

Edited by cosmicway
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8 hours ago, Vesper said:

low labour supply equals higher wages, higher wages means the companies will pass most or all of that additional cost on to the consumer

IF Trump was to actually remove even half of the undocumented workers, there will be a HUGE labour shortage in the hellhole types of lowest jobs

meat production, food harvesting, etc

the type of jobs that native yanks would NEVER do for the wages the undocumented do

 

imagine one of those chubby, weak, incel, wannabe gangsta troll MAGA beta-boy keyboard commandos climbing out of mummy's basement and going and getting knee-deep in hog intestines at an Iowa meat plant for $7.25 an hour

they would not last a week, hell probably not a day

And no, it's not serious 😆 -- it's also only a single way in which the lack of supply can affect cost.

Edited by robsblubot
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1 hour ago, cosmicway said:

You have old edition.
But at any rate it is obvious.
Why you oppose the idea ?

I looked at the current online edition

Post a screenshot of your information if you are not making shit up again

...oh look hes disappeared again

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Cruise line offers four-year trip for Americans wishing to skip Trump’s second term

A cruise company is offering Americans a four-year escape from President-elect Donald Trump’s second term in the White House.

Florida-based cruise company Villa Vie Residences recently announced the launch of its Tour La Vie program, allowing passengers to spend up to four years visiting over 140 countries – all while avoiding the United States.

 

independent news

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2 hours ago, Fulham Broadway said:

I looked at the current online edition

Post a screenshot of your information if you are not making shit up again

...oh look hes disappeared again

It is in their thesaurus of modern common expressions.
Not the dictionary itself. The dictionary is only about single words.

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5 hours ago, cosmicway said:

The old base commander is gone and the new commander is a bad tempered one who has come down from the mountains.
What can the rookie soldiers do ?
Rebel and join the ... communist revolution ?
 

Why are you perma-stuck in the 1950s Cold War?

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16 minutes ago, Vesper said:

Why are you perma-stuck in the 1950s Cold War?

What I wrote is n't a perma stuck. Why is it ?
That's what they do with Trump.
Anyway the 1950s cold war is n't over by a long chalk. I have yet to meet a commie who says "it's over".
What is true about it is Russian bear no longer plays the game. Even if Putin threatens to nuke us one day, he doesn't count as cold war.
What is also true is that the Chinese are still up and running but who can speak Chinese ? 

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Just now, cosmicway said:

What I wrote is n't a perma stuck. Why is it ?
That's what they do with Trump.
Anyway the 1950s cold war is n't over by a long chalk. I have yet to meet a commie who says "it's over".
What is true about it is Russian bear no longer plays the game. Even if Putin threatens to nuke us one day, he doesn't count as cold war.
What is also true is that the Chinese are still up and running but who can speak Chinese ? 

The Chinese have morphed into an authoritarian form of oligarchic state capitalism

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Just now, Vesper said:

The Chinese have morphed into an authoritarian form of oligarchic state capitalism

I would n't know.
To tell the truth I went to a Chinese restaurant with some Chinese three years ago.
My friend's wife appeared to be a loyal Chinese, not against Xi.
She was talking about business all the time and even invited the restaurant proprietor to our table to talk about some new business idea.
But anyways I don't think you would like it there. 7 o' clock every morning gymnastics.

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3 minutes ago, cosmicway said:

I would n't know.
To tell the truth I went to a Chinese restaurant with some Chinese three years ago.
My friend's wife appeared to be a loyal Chinese, not against Xi.
She was talking about business all the time and even invited the restaurant proprietor to our table to talk about some new business idea.
But anyways I don't think you would like it there. 7 o' clock every morning gymnastics.

I have been to China multiple times

I can assure you that 07 00 gymnastics is a thing for hundreds of millions of them

and eating at a Chinese resto is irrelevant to any discussion of Chinese macro-economics other than a nice anecdotal tale

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Millions may not have health coverage if subsidies return to pre-Biden level

Patients, medical providers and insurers fear a shake-up in the Affordable Care Act marketplace unless Republicans extend the subsidy expansion slated to expire next year.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2024/11/17/marketplace-insurance-expiration-subsidy-trump/

Patients, medical providers and insurance companies fear a shake-up in the Affordable Care Act marketplace that could cause millions of people to drop their health coverage, after Republicans’ election wins made it more likely that ACA insurance plans will get more expensive.

Congress in 2021 increased federal subsidies for ACA plans, but that expansion expires at the end of 2025, and some conservative lawmakers have made clear that they oppose an extension.

“Instead of perpetuating a tax-and-spend agenda, we can and should work together to improve health-care choice, affordability and reliability,” Sen. Mike Crapo (R-Idaho), who is slated to lead the Senate Finance Committee, said at a September hearing where he expressed his desire not to continue the expanded subsidies.

But eliminating the subsidy increase poses political risks. If subsidies fall to their pre-2021 level, experts say, many new subscribers would choose not to renew their coverage — the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office predicted that 3.4 million more people would become uninsured — and many of them live in states that lean heavily Republican. Health policy research organization KFF said that if the subsidy expansion expires, premiums would more than double in 12 heavily Republican states — including Texas, West Virginia and Alaska — while rising less sharply in many blue states.

President-elect Donald Trump has not publicly taken a position on the subsidies specifically, and a spokesperson for him did not respond to an inquiry from The Washington Post on the issue. But Trump has disparaged the Affordable Care Act for years, and Republicans have said they will use their congressional majority to significantly change the decade-old health care law. The Republican Study Committee included ending the expanded subsidies in a document of their plans.Follow

The Biden-era enhanced subsidies have led to huge growth in the number of people who buy health-care coverage on the marketplace, booming from between 11.4 million and 12.7 million people each year from 2015 to 2021, to 21.4 million this year. The costs of health-care premiums are heavily subsidized for most people who buy plans on the marketplace, and more than 90 percent of those subscribers receive some level of subsidy currently.

77d4c4e1154972d28bc4289a97f3c21d.png

“Very clearly, it has made the marketplace more affordable and attractive to people who would otherwise be uninsured, and also made the marketplace more attractive to insurers,” said Cynthia Cox, who leads KFF’s research on the ACA.

Health insurance marketplace subsidies come in the form of the Premium Tax Credit that was created as part of the Affordable Care Act. Recipients get the credit up-front when they sign up for coverage, but if their income at the end of the year ends up higher or lower than expected, they must pay back a portion of what they received or claim a larger credit on their tax return.

This year, the average marketplace customer pays $888 annually in premiums and receives $6,432 in subsidies, which would drop to $5,727 after 2025 under the current law, according to an analysis by KFF.

That lower subsidy would mean an increase of 44 percent in the average customer’s premiums.

With President Joe Biden’s support, Congress first expanded ACA subsides in 2021 and later extended them through 2025. Making them permanent this year would add $335 billion to the federal deficit over the next decade, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

“It comes at a cost to the federal government and taxpayers, and it’s not cheap,” Cox said.

Greg Fann, a right-leaning health policy expert, said he would favor ending the expansion of subsidies while boosting coverage in ways he views as more cost-effective, such as making premiums less expensive for younger people. But he notes “momentum” among Republicans for keeping the subsidies at their current levels to avoid a cascade of people losing coverage in 2026.

“I have talked to people that I wouldn’t say are in favor of them, but are also not really interested in taking them away before a midterm election,” Fann said. “I think any Republican change is going to be met with suspicion — the easy thing to do is to keep things as they are.”

Letting the subsidy expansion expire could affect the marketplace as a whole, not just individual consumers. If the issue remains unresolved by the middle of next year, some insurers might leave the marketplace, expecting fewer customers next year.

“That has an impact not just on those people but on the entire system,” said Brendan Buck, a spokesman for Keep Americans Covered, an advocacy effort backed by insurance companies, doctors and health groups such as the American Cancer Society and the American Heart Association.

During a Senate hearing in September, Theo Merkel of Paragon Health Institute characterized increased subsidies as an expensive giveaway to insurers that does not control costs or improve insurance plans.

“When the government pays plans instead of people, insurers have less incentive to design plans that potential enrollees find valuable,” said Merkel, whose organization has published numerous papers criticizing various aspects of the Affordable Care Act.

People below the poverty line are much more likely to be covered by Medicaid than the marketplace, which does not offer subsidies for families in poverty. For households earning one to four times the poverty limit, the ACA guarantees some level of subsidy.

The ACA caps premiums at about 2 percent of income for households just above the poverty line, and the expanded subsidies of recent years made their premiums free. The ACA has no subsidies for families above four times the poverty level, while the Biden-era rules capped spending for those households at 8.5 percent of their household income — a massive discount for many.

In states that have not expanded Medicaid, far more people have signed up for ACA plans in the Biden years, and their premiums stand to increase more. KFF’s analysis found that less than 6 percent of residents of Northeastern and West Coast states get their health coverage through the marketplace, while more than 10 percent of people in South Carolina, Georgia, Florida and much of Texas do.

“The more modern populist Republican Party [is] probably going to be looking at — who am I helping and who am I hurting?” said Buck of Keep America Covered, a former staffer to Republicans John A. Boehner and Paul D. Ryan.

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Trump picks fracking firm CEO Chris Wright to be energy secretary

The executive has taken a defiant approach to fighting climate change by attacking policies that call for a shift from fossil fuels.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2024/11/16/energy-secretary-trump-chris-wright/

President-elect Donald Trump announced on Saturday that he has selected Chris Wright, the head of fracking company Liberty Energy and a skeptic of mainstream climate science, to lead the Department of Energy and to serve on a new National Energy Council.

In his announcement, Trump credited Wright as “one of the pioneers who helped launch the American Shale Revolution,” adding that “as Secretary of Energy, Chris will be a key leader, driving innovation, cutting red tape.”

Trump on Friday tapped North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum (R) as interior secretary and as “energy czar” to oversee the new National Energy Council he announced. The president-elect said the council will comprise all agencies and departments involved in the production, regulation and transportation of “ALL forms of American Energy.”

In Wright, Trump has chosen a skeptic of the scientific consensus on global warming who argues the “climate crisis” is a myth.

The fracking executive runs a foundation focused on dispelling the conventional wisdom on climate change and promoting expanded fossil fuel production as a solution to many of the world’s problems, an approach others say would drive dangerous levels of warming.Follow

Wright is an MIT graduate who developed new techniques for fracking — extracting natural gas by creating cracks in the Earth’s bedrock — that helped advance the shale gas revolution.

“There is no ‘climate crisis,’” Wright said in a video he posted on LinkedIn last year, adding that “the only thing resembling a crisis with respect to climate change is the regressive, opportunity-squelching policies justified in the name of climate change.”

Those assertions conflict sharply with the conclusions of the world’s leading climate scientists affiliated with the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Its latest report concluded the world is quickly running out of time to avoid catastrophic warming, and nothing short of a “quantum leap” in the energy transition would contain climate change to levels manageable by society.

Wright’s arguments that temperatures and sea levels are not rising quickly also clash with the IPCC’s findings. While other oil and gas companies acknowledge such findings and say they are working to reduce emissions, Wright is among the industry executives who take a defiant approach, attacking policies that call for shifting away from fossil fuels.

Wright has also attacked critics of the U.S. fossil fuel industry. In 2021, when North Face refused to make branded jackets for a Texas-based oil and gas firm, Wright made a YouTube video slamming the leaders of the outdoor clothing company as hypocrites, saying they rely on synthetic fabrics derived from oil and gas.

Wright emerged as a front-runner for the role of energy secretary at the behest of oil tycoon Harold Hamm, one of Trump’s closest allies. Hamm, who has been advising Trump on energy, told the publication Hart Energy that Wright is his top pick for the job and that “he is one of the most articulate people that I know of in energy and from our industry.”

Like Hamm, Wright ranked as a major donor to the Trump campaign.

After Trump asked oil industry executives to help steer $1 billion toward his campaign during an April dinner at his Mar-a-Lago Club, Wright donated more than $273,000 to pro-Trump super PACs and the Republican National Committee, according to Federal Election Commission filings. Wright and his wife also co-hosted an August fundraiser for Trump at a golf and ski resort in Big Sky, Montana.

“It is not surprising, but still appalling, that Trump's pick for Secretary of Energy is a climate-denying Big Oil executive,” Tiernan Sittenfeld, who leads government affairs at the League of Conservation Voters, said in a statement. “With the nomination of Chris Wright, Trump is following through on the $1 billion offer he made to Big Oil at a dinner this spring.”

Wright’s appointment puts a strident opponent of clean-energy subsidies in a key Cabinet post as the Trump White House will be weighing whether to rescind billions of dollars in such incentives. Trump has repeatedly called for canceling the subsidies, which are helping to fund a range of climate-friendly endeavors, from consumers purchasing electric vehicles to oil companies investing in green hydrogen.

As energy secretary, Wright would be deeply involved in the allocation of such subsidies, as well as federal loan guarantees to energy projects. He would be in charge of the nation’s nuclear weapons arsenal, and he would oversee the domestic nuclear energy industry when the sector is seeking to extend the lives of existing reactors and bring new reactor technologies to market.

Wright’s antipathy toward clean-energy subsidies and rules that penalize fossil fuel emissions contrasts with positions taken by Burgum. As governor of North Dakota, Burgum called for the state to become carbon-neutral by 2030, though he favored reaching this goal through nascent technologies, such as those designed to capture carbon dioxide and store it deep underground.

One of the biggest projects for capturing and burying greenhouse gas emissions in North Dakota is being bankrolled by Hamm. Such technologies, which environmentalists caution are not an adequate solution to climate change, rely heavily on federal subsidies.

Another big challenge Wright would confront at the Energy Department is the nation’s power crunch, as demand for electricity from data centers, the manufacturing boom and electric vehicle adoption strain the nation’s power grid. Large new power transmission and distribution projects are urgently needed but have been stymied by fights over who should pay for them, the emissions impacts of different types of power, and the rights of landowners who live in the path of proposed projects.

At the same time, the department is at the center of a major fight over exports of liquefied natural gas, or LNG. The Biden administration in January announced a “pause” on approving new LNG export facilities, warning of their major climate impacts. Wright would be tasked with lifting that pause and getting permits issued for billions of dollars worth of the carbon-intensive projects.

Other oil industry executives cheered his appointment.

“Trump is dead set on reclaiming America’s dominance, and U.S. oil is our power play. Chris Wright brings industry experience to help roll out Trump’s energy vision,” said Dan Eberhart, chief executive of the oil-field services company Canary and a Trump donor.

Mike Sommers, president and CEO of the American Petroleum Institute, the oil and gas industry’s top lobbying arm in Washington, said he hopes Wright immediately ends the pause on LNG approvals.

“We look forward to working with him once confirmed to bolster American geopolitical strength by lifting DOE’s pause on LNG export permits and ensuring the open access of American energy for our allies around the world,” Sommers said.

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11 minutes ago, Vesper said:

I have been to China multiple times

I can assure you that 07 00 gymnastics is a thing for hundreds of millions of them

and eating at a Chinese resto is irrelevant to any discussion of Chinese macro-economics other than a nice anecdotal tale

It may be irrelevant because whatever business she was doing was in Greece, rather than in China.
But she had family in China and a brother in the army.
One thing was her Greek husband (a Maoist or former Maoist) was telling me is she was receiving telephone calls in her mobile from China's secret police. They wanted her to verify her address and other typical formalities from time to time.
Then she brought a friend along, a member of the military police of China on vacation ! Very pretty girl.
The title of the ruling party is always "the communist party" of course and they want to invade Taiwan and the Solomon islands.

Edited by cosmicway
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Just now, cosmicway said:

The title of the ruling party is always "the communist party" of course and they want to invade Taiwan and the Solomon islands.

China has no claim on the Solomon Islands

where are you seeing they want to invade them?

 

6213dbbafb99e0586f148a579a097fdd.png

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