$36 taxes to food stamps
$4000 to corporate subsidies
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Bums receive a fuck ton more government money than food stamps alone.
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You can only come up with the $4k number if you're counting tax credits, deductions, etc. They're claiming that every $1 a company isn't taxed is an extra $1 tax from the pool of individual citizens. Then they count things like loan guarantees as an "implicit subsidy" to get such an inflated number.
Direct spending alone is less than a quarter of that number and even then, that's counting grants: you know, like "Clean Energy" programs that the left pushes, or public transport programs that the left pushes, or the COVID bailouts that were a result of policies the left pushed, or... Noticing a pattern yet?
Though something like half of that direct spending is USDA risk mitigation stuff. Of course, we could get rid of all that. Who needs farmers? Food comes from Doordash, right?
$36 taxes to food stamps
$4000 to corporate subsidies
-
Bums receive a fuck ton more government money than food stamps alone.
-
You can only come up with the $4k number if you're counting tax credits, deductions, etc. They're claiming that every $1 a company isn't taxed is an extra $1 tax from the pool of individual citizens. Then they count things like loan guarantees as an "implicit subsidy" to get such an inflated number.
Direct spending alone is less than a quarter of that number and even then, that's counting grants: you know, like "Clean Energy" programs that the left pushes, or public transport programs that the left pushes, or the COVID bailouts that were a result of policies the left pushed, or... Noticing a pattern yet?
Though something like half of that direct spending is USDA risk mitigation stuff. Of course, we could get rid of all that. Who needs farmers? Food comes from Doordash.
$36 taxes to food stamps
$4000 to corporate subsidies
-
Bums receive a fuck ton more government money than food stamps alone.
-
You can only come up with the $4k number if you're counting tax credits, deductions, etc. They're claiming that every $1 a company isn't taxed is an extra $1 tax from the pool of individual citizens. Then they count things like loan guarantees as an "implicit subsidy" to get such an inflated number.
Direct spending alone is less than a quarter of that number and even then, that's counting grants: you know, like "Clean Energy" programs that the left pushes, or public transport programs that the left pushes, or the COVID bailouts that were a result of policies the left pushed, or...
Noticing a pattern yet?