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Joseph Milan
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Some basic survey results on Healthcare Insurance

Before the Republicans dismantle the first health insurance product ever offered by the industry.
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Joseph Milan

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The most tragic yet effective trick the Koch Bros ever pulled was to convince young people that their civil liberties were best represented by the corporate sponsored Republican Party.

A fundamental challenge to the Democratic Party will be how to fix this gross misperception and appeal to the yutes.
The billionaire oil barons want you to think they're selfless libertarian ideologues following their hearts, but following the money tells a different story.
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Haters know how to fight, Bernie.

State Sen. Donna Campbell introduced an amendment for the second time that could codify anti-LGBT discrimination
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But, jebus says it's ok
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No, Bernie.

Avoidance is almost a spirituality.

No one will be fighting, except on the interwebs.

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Thanks, Kids.

That anarcho-collective-personal-freedom third party should be here real soon:

Better start planning how to wrest control from that stateless corporate mercenary army with all the killer toys.
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That can't happen.
Even in Parliamentary systems a third party is only powerful in coalition with one of the two: to form TWO sides.

A couple truths:

Time moves forward.
Cultures shift.

One side tries to accommodate these to its political benefit.

One side accommodates resistance to change and protection of status quo.

Both sides are necessary, and it's not always clear which political entity supports which force, but it has been recently We're very imbalanced towards resistance when measured across all forms of government.

The current problem is that the true political will is not being expressed because apathy, ignorance, and disengagement: hence lowest voter turnout in 72 years, (and that only because the last lowest turnout was when we were at war.)

I don't care how much money is corrupting the process. When everybody votes, progress wins. This has been shown to be true every time in the US.

Vote. No excuse.
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SCOTUS gonna protect the insurance industry from having to compete, or provide insurance.
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But.... But..... But the GOP said that premium would skyrocket and we'd have "Death Panels" and treatment rationing & nobody would buy coverage and the economy would tank and other scary crap that hasn't happened. ..
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Joseph Milan

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The Party of Stupid gets angry at being accurately called stupid.

Yes, you're too stupid to know how insurance works.
That's why the insurance industry makes billions of dollars off your stupidity.

Not as stupid as willful non-voters though.
The health-care law is once again a primary focus for Republicans, even after the party played down its zeal to repeal it in the midterm elections.
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Joseph Milan

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Not voting by choice?

Really? How brave you are


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An assessment I agree with.

New report shows that Wall Street is as ready for Hillary as it gets. Here's why that should make Democrats nervous
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Oh I'd definitely vote for her, but I'm a grown up who understands the responsibilities that come with living in a democracy.

She will support policy to keep our society progressing.

Just saying kids these days need instant gratification promises, and then feel hurt when it doesn't magically appear.
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Hurry! You can only buy 29 now.
 
Cleveland is the most affordable housing market in the nation and continues to move in the right direction. http://bit.ly/1xhj7YU
Affordable housing is not likely to emerge as a priority in the toughest markets.
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Telcos gonna take your interwebs and give it to rich people.

But, hey, stay home on voting day and bitch about the system on Facebook.

That'll help
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Forget the 1% - It's the 0.01% who are really getting ahead in America

AMONG the most controversial of Thomas Piketty’s arguments in his bestselling analysis of inequality, Capital in the Twenty-First Century, is that wealth is increasingly concentrated in the hands of the very rich. Rising wealth inequality could presage the return of an 18th century inheritance society, in which marrying an heir is a surer route to riches than starting a company.

Critics question the premise: Chris Giles, the economics editor of the Financial Times, argued earlier this year that Mr Piketty’s data were both thin and faulty. Yet a new paper suggests that, in America at least, inequality in wealth is approaching record levels.*

Earlier studies of American wealth have tended to show only small increases in inequality in recent decades. A 2004 study of estate-tax data by Wojciech Kopczuk of Columbia University and Emmanuel Saez of the University of California, Berkeley, found an almost imperceptible rise in the share of wealth held by the top 1% of families, from about 19% in 1976 to 21% in 2000. A more recent investigation of the Federal Reserve’s data on consumer finances, by Edward Wolff of New York University showed a continued but gentle increase in inequality into the 2000s. Mr Piketty’s book, which drew on this previous work, showed similarly modest rises in wealth inequality in America.

A new paper by Mr Saez and Gabriel Zucman of the London School of Economics reckons past estimates badly underestimated the share of wealth belonging to the very rich. It uses a richer variety of sources than prior studies, including detailed data on personal income taxes (which the authors mine for figures on capital income) and property tax, which they check against Fed data on aggregate wealth. The authors note that not every potential source of error can be accounted for; tax avoidance strategies, for instance, could cause either an overestimation of the wealth share of the rich (if they classify labour income as capital income in order to take advantage of lower rates) or an underestimation (if they intentionally seek out lower yielding investments for their tax advantages). Yet they believe their estimates represent an improvement over past attempts.

The results are enough to make Mr Piketty blush. The authors examine the share of total wealth held by the bottom 90% of families relative to those at the very top. Because the bottom half of all families almost always has no net wealth, the share of wealth held by the bottom 90% is an effective measure of “middle class” wealth, or that held by those from the 50th to the 90th percentile.

In the late 1920s the bottom 90% held just 16% of America’s wealth—considerably less than that held by the top 0.1%, which controlled a quarter of total wealth just before the crash of 1929. From the beginning of the Depression until the end of the second world war, the middle class’s share of total wealth rose steadily, thanks largely to collapsing wealth among richer households. Thereafter the middle class’s share grew along with national wealth thanks to broader equity ownership, middle-class income growth and rising rates of home-ownership. The expansion of tax breaks for retirement savings also helped. By the early 1980s the share of household wealth held by the middle class rose to 36%—roughly four times the share controlled by the top 0.1%.

From the early 1980s, however, these trends have reversed. The ratio of household wealth to national income has risen back toward the level of the 1920s, but the share in the hands of middle-class families has tumbled. Tepid growth in middle-class incomes is partly to blame; real incomes for the top 1% of families grew 3.4% a year from 1986-2012 while those for the bottom 90% grew 0.7%

The really, really rich get much, much richer
On the other side of the spectrum, the fortunes of the wealthy have grown, especially at the very top. The 16,000 families making up the richest 0.01%, with an average net worth of $371m, now control 11.2% of total wealth—back to the 1916 share, which is the highest on record. Those down the distribution have not done quite so well: the top 0.1% (consisting of 160,000 families worth $73m on average) hold 22% of America’s wealth, just shy of the 1929 peak—and exactly the same share as the bottom 90% of the population. Meanwhile the share of wealth held by families from the 90th to the 99th percentile has actually fallen over the last decade, though not by as much as the net worth of the bottom 90%.

The outsize fortunes of the few would not be too worrying were they largely the product of entrepreneurial activity: riches amassed by hardworking billionaires who are as likely as not to give their bounty away through philanthropy. Messrs Saez and Zucman find some evidence for this dynamic. Wealthy families are younger than they were a generation or two ago, and they earn a larger share of the country’s income from labour: 3.1% in 2012 versus less than 0.5% prior to 1970.

Yet one should not yet rule out the return of Mr Piketty’s “patrimonial capitalism”. The club of young rich includes not only Mark Zuckerbergs, the authors argue, but also Paris Hiltons: young heirs to previously accumulated fortunes. What’s more, the share of labour income earned by the top 0.1% appears to have peaked in 2000. In recent years the proportion of the wealth of the very rich held in the form of shares has leveled off, while that held in bonds has risen.

Since the fortunes of most entrepreneurs are tied up in the stock of the firms that they found, these shifts hint that America’s biggest fortunes may be starting to have less to do with building businesses, but more with amassing quickly and hoarding capital, just as Mr Piketty warned.

http://www.economist.com/news/finance-and-economics/21631129-it-001-who-are-really-getting-ahead-america-forget-1

#IncomeInequality  
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Find the time of your birth. Trace the line for the 90%. That is the typical person like you and I. If the line heads upward, we were doing better and making money we get to keep. Inflation keeps this line from crashing to zero. 

Now, look at the blue picket fence of bars. This is the grand total of all events good and bad. That is war, disaster and invention etc... in terms of what was produced by all of us...that we got to take home for keeps and not pay out in bills.

Note how the top 1%'rs line precedes the picket fence and mirrors it. That's the result of investment. If we don't invest, nothing happens. If we under invest, something happens but it doesn't make much difference. If we invest in foreign nations, only the 1%'rs benefit.

Now look at what happened about 1985. The 90% tipped over and started crashing. I would say this was about the time the corporate raiders, deregulationist, and off-shore placement specialist entered the workforce. But why did the blue fence kept going up? That could only means the quantity of money increased, not the value of what it could purchase. 

Maybe you Republican's can draw some conclusions from this... You will have to because it is relevant to your livelihood.

These are real stats, not made up for the news fabrications. Look them over for meaning. If you are not in the 1% but not part of the 90%...you are part of the 8% that we think of as criminals in our society.
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