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You mostly pay for the 24/7 concierge service and show off factor.
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Well, the concierge service is only for a year, then you pay 3K annually for it. So really, it's mostly about the show off factor. Plus it complements a bulletproof Mercedes AMG G Wagon quite well.You mostly pay for the 24/7 concierge service and show off factor.
Then you'd be wrong.I don't think any of that is true.
Someone get me a priority assistance card.
You a DirecTV man?Not sure that is a club I'd want to be in.
You a DirecTV man?
You poor wretch.Fios if I could get it, I'm stuck w/ Cox Cable.
You poor wretch.
MIAMI — The Obama administration overturned a ban preventing a wealthy, politically connected Ecuadorean woman from entering the United States after her family gave tens of thousands of dollars to Democratic campaigns, according to finance records and government officials.
The woman, Estefanía Isaías, had been barred from coming to the United States after being caught fraudulently obtaining visas for her maids. But the ban was lifted at the request of the State Department under former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton so that Ms. Isaías could work for an Obama fund-raiser with close ties to the administration.
It was one of several favorable decisions the Obama administration made in recent years involving the Isaías family, which the government of Ecuador accuses of buying protection from Washington and living comfortably in Miami off the profits of a looted bank in Ecuador.
The family, which has been investigated by federal law enforcement agencies on suspicion of money laundering and immigration fraud, has made hundreds of thousands of dollars in contributions to American political campaigns in recent years. During that time, it has repeatedly received favorable treatment from the highest levels of the American government, including from New Jersey’s senior senator and the State Department.
The Obama administration has allowed the family’s patriarchs, Roberto and William Isaías, to remain in the United States, refusing to extradite them to Ecuador.
Republican presidential hopefuls are assiduously courting mega-rich elite potential donors, whose financial support is crucial in the wide-open 2016 GOP primary.
http://www.cepr.net/index.php/blogs...fused-about-the-economy-everyone-else-is-also
Sorry. Its not often I get to quote Dean Baker. I'm a fan of his Beat The Press blog.You are squashing my fun.
You mean you are a fan besides the fact he's wrong?Sorry. Its not often I get to quote Dean Baker. I'm a fan of his Beat The Press blog.
He is? Are you Robert Samuelson?You mean you are a fan besides the fact he's wrong?
He is? Are you Robert Samuelson?
I really couldn't give much of a shit either way but he seems like a pretty big putz. Almost all of the WaPo op-ed writers do. That paper's really gone to shit.Ha, no.
Samuelson is very good though. Only the die hard partisan warriors on either side would dispute that.
I really couldn't give much of a shit either way but he seems like a pretty big putz. Almost all of the WaPo op-ed writers do. That paper's really gone to shit.
Samuelson is probably the most non partisan, data driven guy out there. So invariably every partisan hates him.
And data has never been twisted to suit the narrative.
https://www.google.com/search?q=rob...obert+samuelson+site:cepr.net&tbs=qdr:y,sbd:1That's the point, he really just gives you the data and says here are the numbers. Pretty much the antithesis of Faux News.
Actual information like Robert Samuelsson uses actual information?You mean the fact you are trying to use cepr as actual information?
Actual information like Robert Samuelsson uses actual information?
That's the point, he really just gives you the data and says here are the numbers. Pretty much the antithesis of Faux News.
Seriously, go read the just the article you posted in this thread. If you can't pick out several logical errors and misrepresentations then I don't really know what to say. It's straight hack journalism drivel.
Meanwhile, government raises most of its taxes from the upper middle class and the wealthy. In 2011, the richest 1 percent of Americans paid 24 percent of all federal taxes (income, payroll and excise) and the richest 20 percent, including the top 1 percent, paid 69 percent of taxes, says the Congressional Budget Office.
It is possible to argue that, reflecting the growing inequality of market incomes, taxes on the rich and affluent should be higher or that middle-class subsidies should be more generous. It’s also possible to complain that some programs aimed at helping the poor and middle class have gone awry: College student loans, now worth about $1.1 trillion and facing 11 percent delinquency, are a current popular example. These are legitimate views, as are (of course) the opposing positions. They’re the stuff of responsible debate.
But if you accept these numbers — which I have cited many times — it is not possible to pretend that the whole superstructure of government has somehow been turned against the middle class. This is not just a distortion of reality; it is the converse of reality.
Likewise, the financial crisis and Great Recession are typically blamed on the miscalculations and greed of financial institutions and their overlords. There is much evidence for this, but it ignores the deeper cause: an intellectual, political and social climate that legitimized lax lending policies in the name of promoting middle-class well-being. This was reinforced by a parallel conceit (which now seems foolish) that our enhanced economic understanding enabled us to enjoy prolonged expansions and brief recessions.
What the middle class faces today is a crisis of faith. Being middle class is more than attaining some threshold income. It also involves embracing a set of beliefs that, unfortunately, have been severely shaken.
Middle-class Americans believe in opportunity, stability, reward for effort, a brighter future and the ability to control their lives, as sociologist Herbert Gans showed in his 1988 book “Middle American Individualism.” Big government and big companies are distrusted, because they might impose their own imperatives on individuals’ personal preferences. But government is also expected to provide economic security — a contradiction that’s widely accepted.
The individualism that Gans described endures. A 2013 poll by The Post and the Miller Center at the University of Virginia asked respondents what values define the “American Dream.” The top response (75 percent) was “to have freedom of choice in how to live one’s life,” followed closely (68 percent) by “to be rewarded for hard work.” The trouble is that these hopes seem increasingly at odds with experience.
The great middle-class fear today is that the connection between personal aspirations and societal opportunities is breaking down. Gallup periodically asks about opportunity in the United States. In 1998, 81 percent of respondents found “plenty of opportunity” and only 17 percent judged “not much.” By late 2013, the gap was 52 percent to 43 percent. In a 2014 NBC/Wall Street Journal poll, only 21 percent of respondents believed their children would live better than they have, down from 50 percent in 1990. (All these figures come from “Is the American Dream Alive?” a report recently published by the American Enterprise Institute.)
We overestimated our ability to control the economic environment. What we have learned is that outside events — here, the financial crisis and Great Recession — can overwhelm collective protections and discredit conventional beliefs. The economy is more random, unstable and insecure than we imagined. It is less susceptible to policy engineering. The fact that the upper classes can better shield themselves against its upsets naturally breeds resentment.
The middle class is thinning. Belonging is a matter of self-identity, and fewer Americans buy into its defining presumptions. Whether an improved recovery begins to reverse these attitudes and restore traditional beliefs and confidence is a crucial question for 2015. But repairing the middle class won’t be easy, because it’s a matter of psychology as much as economics.
Ok then.
Wrong article.
Maybe a bad article, but not the wrong one.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opini...d1c-11e4-a085-34e9b9f09a58_story.html?hpid=z2
That's the link you posted, and the one I dissected.
Well, Baker isn't actually a journalist. He's one of the heads of CEPR in Washington. He's as much of an economist as Samulesson. As for logical errors, he's literally pointing out logical fallacies in Samuelsson's article, so I don't exactly know how to counter a "my guy is right and your guy is wrong" statement.Seriously, go read the just the article you posted in this thread. If you can't pick out several logical errors and misrepresentations then I don't really know what to say. It's straight hack journalism drivel.
He was talking about the Dean Baker piece I linked a few posts back.Maybe a bad article, but not the wrong one.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opini...d1c-11e4-a085-34e9b9f09a58_story.html?hpid=z2
That's the link you posted, and the one I dissected.
Well, Baker isn't actually a journalist. He's one of the heads of CEPR in Washington. He's as much of an economist as Samulesson. As for logical errors, he's literally pointing out logical fallacies in Samuelsson's article, so I don't exactly know how to counter a "my guy is right and your guy is wrong" statement.
Reading comprehension. Go follow conversation again and see if you still think that's the article I am referring to.
My critical thinking hat is in the shop (excess sweat caused the brow to shrivel) at the moment so help me out here - where in the article is there a strawman argument? He is literally taking Samuelsson's talking points and shooting them down.Because if you read it critically you would see that his critique are actually the errors, and Samueson's data is correct. He's making several strawman arguments. It's hack journalism.
All that shit got posted after I started picking the one you posted apart. I edited it to include that comment you made, and it got out of context. This aside, any comment about the issues with the article you posted?