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Originally Posted by
jlisenbe
Bread, bicycles, guns, furniture, soft drinks, televisions, tires, flashlights, shoes, jackets, washing machines, windows, hats, and thousands of other items all benefit enormously from free market competition. That is not true of nearly all of the health care business.
I see your issue now. You equate stuff with good health outcomes. Not unusual for someone without a health issue. I think those that NEED health care would beg to differ. You mix apples and oranges and expect the same strategy to work. Let me ask why is there no competition in the health insurance business and whose fault is that?
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There is no such thing as a permanent tax cut for anyone. Deficit spending cannot be fixed by taxing the rich. No way, no how. You could double the taxes on the rich and still have deficits. TOO MUCH SPENDING.
Corporate tax cuts are permanent according to the bill passed by repubs. Individual tax cuts expire in 5 years.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/...=.cbb3b06782d5
And
https://slate.com/news-and-politics/...permanent.html
[QUOTEThe 20 percent corporate rate in the Tax Cut and Jobs Act will be statutorily permanent but politically provisional—and thus temporary. In refusing to court Democratic support for the process, Republicans further unravel their already dicey argument that this permanent 20 percent corporate rate will dramatically and broadly bring prosperity. If corporations really do need the certainty of permanence before acting on a 20 percent tax rate, they won’t find it here,
making the bill little more than a temporary cash transfer to stockholders.
[/QUOTE]
I guess nothing can be considered permanent when a future congress can change things So I will concede your point.