The Inevitable New The Inevitable Trump Mocking Thread

Yeah, it was terrible to dig the country out of the biggest recession since 1930.
Digging the whole deeper you mean. When you nearly double the national debt by an average of a trillion a year, you’re not digging out Spigot boy.
 
October 15, 2019
Brutal wipeout for Democrats in Louisiana, and the press trying to keep it quiet
By Monica Showalter
The last of the Louisiana state election numbers are in, and it's not pretty for the Democrats.

Not only does its moderate Democratic governor, John Bel Edwards, face a runoff, as noted here, but the state Senate has taken a supermajority. And a whole bunch of key state offices went squarely to Republicans. Funny how the press isn't covering this much.

But Guy Benson at Townhall is, and he found a Democratic Party "decimated":

Among statewide office-holders, the incumbent GOP Lieutenant Governor (68 percent), Attorney General (66 percent), Treasurer (60 percent, and Agricultural Commissioner (58 percent) were all re-elected without the need for a run-off, under the state's 'jungle primary'-style system. It also appears that the solid Republican majorities in both state legislative chambers will remain intact — with the GOP expanding its Senate advantage into super-majority territory by picking up a pair of Democratic seats:

The Hill, which also had a look, but ran an anodyne headline that didn't match the content of its three-alarm fire for Democrats, noted that this Democrat loss came in a special election, and those normally don't draw large numbers of voters, but this one did.

And not only did the Republicans take a Senate supermajority, but they almost snapped away the state House, too:

Amid record turnout for what is usually a sleepy off-year, irregular election, Louisiana Republicans locked up enough seats in the state Senate to amount to a super majority. The party came within seven seats of winning a super majority in the state House, too, with eight runoff elections to come in November.

What's more, the outlook continues to get strong for the GOP in Louisiana because the Republicans have consolidated: the GOP gubernatorial candidate third-place finisher, Ralph Abraham, endorsed the second-place finisher, Eddie Rispone.

This makes the whole thing sound like a wave election, with a big warning to the Left for 2020.

And that ought to be big news — a warning to the impeachment-obsessed Beltway Democrats that the voters aren't buying into their repeated stunts to unseat President Trump.

The lack of press coverage of what ought to be a front-page story almost seems delusional.
 
Digging the whole deeper you mean. When you nearly double the national debt by an average of a trillion a year, you’re not digging out Spigot boy.

The "whole" would be less deep if instead of "pay for themselves with 5% growth" tax giveaway to the rich, fruits of the recover had been used to stabilize debt - or at least invest in Infrastructure Week (tm).

But you wouldn't understand, because you are still looking for your house on the bank's balance sheets... Maybe I'll publish an airport book: A guide to how assets and loans work, dedicated to Huli Huli Boi... Maybe you'll read it if you see it next to an "I love LA" mug.

Maybe you can find your house on Don the Con's books? Either set...

https://www.propublica.org/article/...inconsistencies/amp?__twitter_impression=true
 
If you know how to look at the banks books you will find that banks own 3 to 7 times more life insurance than real estate.

The 1930’s was a depression not a recession. Fries U!! What a deal!

But do they own your house? Cause if they do, it ain't your house, dummy.

The lengths to which you will come up with dumb, beside the point chicken poo just to avoid the fact that everyone here long ago realized - that, despite your in-depth reading of your airport books, you don't really know dick about finance or "bank balance sheets" - is endlessly entertaining. It's like watching the worlds fattest contortionist. Jiggles and wiggles. A slow motion train wreck.
 
The "whole" would be less deep if instead of "pay for themselves with 5% growth" tax giveaway to the rich, fruits of the recover had been used to stabilize debt - or at least invest in Infrastructure Week (tm).

But you wouldn't understand, because you are still looking for your house on the bank's balance sheets... Maybe I'll publish an airport book: A guide to how assets and loans work, dedicated to Huli Huli Boi... Maybe you'll read it if you see it next to an "I love LA" mug.

Maybe you can find your house on Don the Con's books? Either set...

https://www.propublica.org/article/...inconsistencies/amp?__twitter_impression=true
Inflating and deflating assets is illegal?
 
But do they own your house? Cause if they do, it ain't your house, dummy.

The lengths to which you will come up with dumb, beside the point chicken poo just to avoid the fact that everyone here long ago realized - that, despite your in-depth reading of your airport books, you don't really know dick about finance or "bank balance sheets" - is endlessly entertaining. It's like watching the worlds fattest contortionist. Jiggles and wiggles. A slow motion train wreck.

Whoosh! The whole housing crisis right over your head. Your uncle is on pure oxygen from the rib fracturing laughter. Please stop Spigot Boy. Fries U! What a deal!
 
Whoosh! The whole housing crisis right over your head. Your uncle is on pure oxygen from the rib fracturing laughter. Please stop Spigot Boy. Fries U! What a deal!

Oh my, Huli Huli Boi, with more chicken shit and no meat...

And now even Graham has had it with Don the Con and his "suicide prevention" retreat. It's Huli Huli, Tulsi and Don the Con, huddled in the Alamo...

Every week Huli Huli gets more wrong, and doubles down. He'd bankrupt a casino quicker than the big Con-huna himself.
 
Inflating and deflating assets is illegal?

Hm, for an expert on the "housing crisis" you don't seem very aware of what some of the mortgage fraud convictions were for, are you?

Hey, maybe it's because the houses the folks making liar loans on were actually not owned by them, because they were on the bank's books!

And I know it's not covered in a lot of airport books, but there's this thing called "tax fraud" where you knowingly underreport your income.

Look into it. You might learn something...
 
Oh my, Huli Huli Boi, with more chicken shit and no meat...

And now even Graham has had it with Don the Con and his "suicide prevention" retreat. It's Huli Huli, Tulsi and Don the Con, huddled in the Alamo...

Every week Huli Huli gets more wrong, and doubles down. He'd bankrupt a casino quicker than the big Con-huna himself.
Fries U reminds of a casino. 1 out of 100 times you might learn something. What a deal.
 
Hm, for an expert on the "housing crisis" you don't seem very aware of what some of the mortgage fraud convictions were for, are you?

Hey, maybe it's because the houses the folks making liar loans on were actually not owned by them, because they were on the bank's books!

And I know it's not covered in a lot of airport books, but there's this thing called "tax fraud" where you knowingly underreport your income.

Look into it. You might learn something...
Is inflating assets illegal? If so, why did the Feds do it with 6 straight years of tax payer funded QE? Pretty simple stuff for your uncle and I. We often wonder how they chose you to man the Spigot.......Boy.
 
QUOTE="Friesland, post: 294044, member: 1715"

( A. ) Hm, for an expert on the "housing crisis" you don't seem very aware of
what some of the mortgage fraud convictions were for, are you?

( B. ) Hey, maybe it's because the houses the folks making liar loans on were actually
not owned by them, because they were on the bank's books!

( C. ) And I know it's not covered in a lot of airport books, but there's this thing
called "tax fraud" where you knowingly underreport your income.

Look into it. You might learn something...
Look Below......
14px-U%2B2193.svg.png


/QUOTE

Your Democratic " Mattress " Buddy Barney Frank can answer all of your
above inquiries....
 
Is inflating assets illegal? If so, why did the Feds do it with 6 straight years of tax payer funded QE? Pretty simple stuff for your uncle and I. We often wonder how they chose you to man the Spigot.......Boy.

Lying about the value of assets - on loans or tax docs - in order to do fraud, is illegal, dim boi.

That you think that's the same as "QE" is not surprising to anyone, but boi Huli Huli Boi, you r dum. Even the Austrians are rolling over in their lederhosen at that one!

Meanwhile, Don the Con is just full-on losing his mind today, so the rest of this stuff is immaterial. We're just looking at President Looney-Tunes, wondering when the white truck is gonna pull up.
 
Lying about the value of assets - on loans or tax docs - in order to do fraud, is illegal, dim boi.

That you think that's the same as "QE" is not surprising to anyone, but boi Huli Huli Boi, you r dum. Even the Austrians are rolling over in their lederhosen at that one!

Meanwhile, Don the Con is just full-on losing his mind today, so the rest of this stuff is immaterial. We're just looking at President Looney-Tunes, wondering when the white truck is gonna pull up.
That you donʻt think inflating the assets of the ultra rich through QE is the Con of all cons is not surprising. That is why we keep having bailouts. But never fear. The Dodd-Frank Act keeps bailouts and future asset inflation in place.

Fries Casino!! What a deal!!
 
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