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The combined cost of these 10 corporate welfare programs is $1.539 trillion per year. The three main programs needy families depend upon — Temporary Assistance for Needy Families ($17.3 billion), food stamps ($74 billion), and the Earned Income Tax Credit ($67.2 billion) — cost just $158.5 billion in total. This means we spend ten times as much on corporate welfare and handouts to the top 1 percent than we do on welfare for working families struggling to make ends meet.
According to this, corporate welfare is ten times that for working families. What do you think?
What do you think?
What do you think?
According to this, corporate welfare is ten times that for working families. What do you think?
Virtually everyone votes themselves government goodies. The rich, the poor, conservative, liberal, everyone does it.
Bring a flat tax, eliminate deductions. The hyper-rich will pay their fair share then I guess.
Most of these 10 items aren't "corporate welfare." Oil depletion allowances for oil companies are and I think they are obsolete. They should be eliminated. It appears the people who put these lists together have a poor understanding of how things actually work. A few simple explanations.
(redacted. post too long)
So there you have it. 1 out of 10 is actually corporate welfare. Many of these these comments point out corruption in our bloated government and many of them should be curtailed or eliminated. I don't argue that. But this a nonsensical list put together by a partisan blog and has no relation to real life.
According to this, corporate welfare is ten times that for working families. What do you think?
I generally agree with most of the above. I knew when I posted this thread that the source was not exactly unbiased. That said:
Agricultural subsidies are often based not on needs, but on the strength of the lobbyists involved. The ethanol subsidy for corn, for example, benefits who else but the growers of corn? As for those "family farmers", that brings up images of a rural America that really no longer exists. Food is produced on factory farms for the most part.
Pharmaceutical companies: Why should they be able to re label a generic drug, then sell it as if they had invested millions of dollars developing it? These companies are selling medicines that often cost hundreds of dollars a month. If it is a cutting edge drug that cost a lot to develop, then it may be worth that. Often, it is not, and the money goes not into R and D, but into those annoying TV ads "shouldn't you ask your doctor"? Who else gets to have a monopoly on any product and a law that the government (who pays at least a portion of the bill) can't negotiate the price? What a deal for them, not so much for the rest of us.
The purpose of the FDIC is to prevent a run on the banks such as happened at the beginning of the great depression. Let's not do away with that one, but then, if a big bank screws up, let's let market forces take care of them.
I didn't suggest for a moment that these things didn't evolve from corruption. They did. I wasn't defending farm subsidies, I was explaining why the government defends them. If you come visit here you will be surrounded by family farms for miles and miles. I actually live on a family farm that doesn't farm anything any longer. Nevertheless, the subsidies apply to all farms and aren't corporate welfare. We should get rid of farm subsidies as I said.
I would support a law banning the advertisement of drugs to consumers. They should be marketed to doctors who prescribe them. But it isn't corporate welfare.
The banks could do what the insurance companies do. That is to create a national pool. Rather than pay fees to the FDIC, they could pay into the pool to use when a bank bites the dust. The whole thing could be and should be handled in the private sector.
Perhaps tax advantages and other perks to the wealthy would be more descriptive than "corporate welfare."
Or perhaps government corruption would be even more descriptive. The left wants to blame business for crony capitalism. They need to blame the government. Sure businesses work to get any competitive advantage they can get from government. It is natural and normal in business. It is the job of government not to allow it. And there certainly is too much money in politics.
Way too much money in politics. Unfortunately, the same people who could do something about it are the ones who benefit from it.
what is the proper amount of money in politics?
I'd vote for zero, but that's just me.
Let the people we send to represent us live on the salary we pay them and/or whatever they made before selflessly committing time to a limited term of public service.
in my ideal world, that's how it would be.
yeah, not gonna happen.... campaigns cost lots and lots of money... especially presidential campaigns that have to reach a national audience.
not that i disagree, it's just that's just not indicative of any reality we live in.
in fact, i would probably take it much further.. I'd require federal official to divest from any ventures in which they would find themselves legislating over... which is pretty much everything... citing potential and actual conflicts of interest as justification.
far too many legislators miraculously become rich at, coincidentally i'm sure, the most opportune times, simply because they have insider knowledge and the ability to manipulate so very much in whatever favor they prefer.
as for campaigns, i would never limit any legal person ( which included corporations, unions, associations, etc) from contributing any amount they would like to whatever politician they prefer... donate as much as you like, millions, billions , or trillions.
I'd simply limit valid candidates in their expenditures,set caps on specific races... and any money left over in the campaign coffers would go directly into the general fund, never to be seen again by the donor, or the politician.
that's my utopia.... and i have a feeling we will both be sorely disappointed when absolutely none of it becomes reality. :lol:
any leftover money. Did you just fall off the turnip truck?
Way too much money in politics. Unfortunately, the same people who could do something about it are the ones who benefit from it.
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