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Calvin
My Take

Rx for 2029: Elect Silent Cal II

Calvin Coolidge became the nation’s 30th president in 1923 upon the death of Warren G. Harding. He served until 1929, having been elected once on his own but refusing to run again in 1928. He was known as Silent Cal, though that is not an entirely accurate description. Coolidge mastered the use of the radio to bring his message to the American public, and his message was one of laissez-faire capitalism. Ronald Reagan, our 40th chief executive, loved Silent Cal, who set the stage for Reagan’s tax cuts with his own round of right-sizing both the federal budget and the nation’s tax burden. Unfortunately, Coolidge has been blamed for the Great Depression, which ensued seven months after he left office. Those accusing him of causing it cite his refusal to regulate Wall Street. The causes, of course, run deeper than that. There was also a depression in 1920 equally as drastic as the Great One, but no one interfered with interest rates and social programs, and the economic turmoil subsided quickly through natural forces. My point: After being lambasted daily by Donald Trump’s incessant banter — most of it just made-up “facts” to suit his domestic and international programs —

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vbHo6
Currently...

GOP, Dems Finally Agree on Something: Housing Availability

Both Democrats and Republicans, in both the House and the Senate, have finally found common ground — the need to increase the nation’s housing stock, in hopes of thereby reducing the cost of homes in general. The House of Representatives voted 358-32 and the Senate 85-5 to pass the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act. President Trump will gladly sign it, as he had personal input into writing the legislation. The bill includes no new funding, but it seeks to streamline some federal regulations, including those for certain environmental reviews and for building manufactured homes. The measure also ties available federal funding to cities’ new housing production. In addition, the ROAD to Housing Act provides grants and incentives to convert vacant, commercial, or underutilized buildings into affordable housing. At Trump’s urging, the law also limits large institutional investors and private equity firms from purchasing single-family homes. The measure, however, is being met with some skepticism by homebuilders for a couple of reasons. One reason is that local regulations are generally the biggest hurdle to the construction of new housing. Another reason is that interest rates are still fairly high, and indications from the Federal Reserve are that federal fund rates

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Pool
My Take

Criminals and Camouflage II: The DC Reflecting Pool Coverup

In an earlier post, I wrote about President Trump’s two-part strategy for deflecting blame for his failures. One part is to create criminals, either by calling them names (“stupid,” he likes a lot) or actually going after them with federal charges. The other part is to create what I call camouflage, or you might call a smokescreen, or just utter bullshit. I mean, Trump uses these two strategies every time he answers reporters’ questions, sometimes even criminalizing the questioner by calling him or her stupid. I was particularly struck yesterday by the president’s use of these two strategies to the extreme when questioned about why the DC Reflecting Pool had turned green with algae after he had the entire pool drained and resurfaced. First, he said five people had been arrested for causing the problem by using a knife to cut a slit in the pool’s surface about 300 feet in length. He didn’t say when they did this, presumably before the pool was refilled, which begs the question: Why wasn’t it fixed when found? He said another five suspects were still on the loose. “I can’t help it if somebody goes in with a knife and starts hacking it

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image (48)
Currently...

New Song Lyric: ‘Where Have All the Missiles Gone?’

Apologies to Paula Cole and her wonderful song, “Where Have All the Flowers Gone?”, but I needed a vibrant headline, so I ripped off her lyric. The point here is that, as many of us suspected, President Trump expended so many weapons in the counterproductive Iran offensive that the warehouses are just about empty. The Wall Street Journal is reporting that a meeting of munitions manufacturers and suppliers is set for Wednesday at the White House, with Trump set to make an urgent appeal for resupplying the nation’s arsenal of offensive and defensive weapons, including Patriot interceptors and Tomahawk cruise missiles. I personally figured that the first Iranian ceasefire, back in April, was largely a response to fears that weapons were running short. I think I noted then that it would be a perfect time for China to invade Taiwan — not that I’m recommending that course of action, just expressing a huge fear for Taiwanese independence. The problem with Trump’s planned urgent request is that Congress has yet to authorize funding. No money, no guns, hon! A Pentagon spokesperson said not to worry, for the U.S. has a “deep arsenal.” Trump, however, has requested a $1.5 trillion defense budget

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ArtOfDeal
My Take

Iran Trumps Donald’s Art of the Deal

Other than his business empire and his presidencies, Donald Trump is probably best known for his TV show, “The Apprentice,” and his book, “Art of the Deal.” The latter is still used to describe Trump’s approach to matters in the political and military world since he walked down the stairs at Trump Tower in 2015. The art of the deal, as described in his ghost-written book of the same name, consists of five tactics: Think Big, Use Your Leverage, Protect the Downside, Maximize the Options, and Fight Back. When it comes to Donald 47, he is certainly thinking big by using tariffs to bring manufacturing back to the U.S. and by bombing the hell out of Iran to create a new Middle East. (The latter may be to protect and advance his and his son-in-law’s business interests in the region, but I’ll leave that discussion for another day). Forget tariffs for the moment. They appear to have failed in their goal, but Iran is a more serious matter that also seems to have failed in its goal, as defined by President Trump several different times in several different ways. Now, however, the Iran issue all comes down to opening the

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66
U.S. News

Route 66 Turns 100 on November 11

November 11 is a historic day for two purposes, one international and one strictly American. In 1918, World War I fighting ended with an armistice at 11/11/11 — November 11 at 11 a.m. In 1926, historic Route 66 was commissioned in America on November 11, stretching from Chicago (Adams Street) to Santa Monica, California, at the pier. Route 66 was the famed escape route from the Dust Bowl in Oklahoma and Texas, which lasted a decade beginning in 1930. The highway was sadly decommissioned in 1986 in favor of freeways and interstates, but celebrations are being held along the route all year long. I asked my AI friend Gemini to recount the history of Route 66, and here it is: Established on November 11, 1926, U.S. Route 66—also known as the “Will Rogers Highway,” the “Main Street of America,” or the “Mother Road”—is one of the most famous highways in American history. Originally running a total of 2,448 miles, it connected Chicago, Illinois, through Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona, before ending at Santa Monica, California. Historical Evolution The Dust Bowl Migration: During the 1930s, the highway served as the primary route for hundreds of thousands of migratory

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ogpiT
My Take

Solve Social Security Bankruptcy: Tax AI in the Workplace

Whenever I call my bank, or basically any institution bigger than Mom&Pop, AI answers the phone. He/she/it/they then grills me endlessly before connecting me to a representative, which generally involves a 20- to 30-minute wait. That got me thinking: If AI is taking over for workers (who would otherwise answer the phone and do a zillion other chores), why not treat AI mechanisms in the workplace as any other employee and tax them? I’m not a tax guy, so I’m not sure how this plan would work, but let’s look at how Social Security taxes work. Both employer and employee pay 6.2 percent of the employee’s income, capped currently at $184,500 in annual compensation, into something called the Old Age, Survivors and Disability Insurance (OASDI) trust fund. Could you tax the annual compensatory value of every AI device in your workplace at the same level as what you’d have to pay an employee to do the same work? Worth a look-see. Hey, you tax lovers, don’t stop there. You could also hit AI with a federal income tax. In that way, you could work on solving two deficits at the same time. Just a thought, but why not tax human

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