abandonconflict
Well-Known Member
@Padawanbater2
OK, that version was too hard for you, I'll try to simplify all the steps even more and put them all in one post, since it is so hard for you and you came up with this joke, "The federal budget can't afford it without +.24 trillion more revenue (give or take) per year".
Step one: current costs of healthcare which the government does not pay and therefore is not federal spending and therefore has no effect on taxes: 35 trillion. I'll agree to your number even though it has nothing to do with taxes since I agree the current system is fucked.
Step two: Bernie's bill costs 32.6 trillion. So yes, healthcare costs would begin to come down.
Step three: Taxpayers still have to fund 32.6 trillion dollars in addition to the current federal expenditures since we're adding that entire amount to federal expenditures since the number in step one has nothing to do with federal expenditures.
Step four: Bernie's bill includes great ideas to stick it to the rich, we should do them whether we increase federal spending or not. However, they only cover about half of the number that we agreed on in step two.
Step five: Bernie's bill therefore, if passed as is, at this time, would increase the federal deficit by 1.4 to 1.7 trillion dollars.
See my next post for step six.
OK, that version was too hard for you, I'll try to simplify all the steps even more and put them all in one post, since it is so hard for you and you came up with this joke, "The federal budget can't afford it without +.24 trillion more revenue (give or take) per year".
Step one: current costs of healthcare which the government does not pay and therefore is not federal spending and therefore has no effect on taxes: 35 trillion. I'll agree to your number even though it has nothing to do with taxes since I agree the current system is fucked.
Step two: Bernie's bill costs 32.6 trillion. So yes, healthcare costs would begin to come down.
Step three: Taxpayers still have to fund 32.6 trillion dollars in addition to the current federal expenditures since we're adding that entire amount to federal expenditures since the number in step one has nothing to do with federal expenditures.
Step four: Bernie's bill includes great ideas to stick it to the rich, we should do them whether we increase federal spending or not. However, they only cover about half of the number that we agreed on in step two.
Step five: Bernie's bill therefore, if passed as is, at this time, would increase the federal deficit by 1.4 to 1.7 trillion dollars.
See my next post for step six.