Don't worry, none of your large scale, real estate development welfare is going anywhere anytime soon. Yer good, bruh.
Which portions of your real estate endeavors would you classify as corporate welfare?
Don't worry, none of your large scale, real estate development welfare is going anywhere anytime soon. Yer good, bruh.
Which portions of your real estate endeavors would you classify as corporate welfare?
This is what baffles me when people focus so much on the wealth gap. Why does wealth gap matter? Maybe it matters, but not because regular folks are starving to death while ultra wealthy people are the only people with access to proper food, shelter and clothing.
There used to be a saying 'if it's not broke don't fix it'. That has been replaced with PR/PC 'everything is broke and we need to fix it'. The unfortunate thing with education is the fix it felix crowd don't know a damn thing about child education and are the ones breaking it trying to fix it.
Nearly every tax increment involved project I would consider a welfare project, with a few exceptions.
You have a very naive view of how worldwide economics work.
Oh good grief. We have more than enough food.
But fine, lets say we eliminste some choices. We'll get rid of Honda here. Bye bye thousands of jobs for salesmen, manufacturers and mechanics. Yay for less choice! That should really help even out incomes.
While we're at it, we better eliminate organic foods as a choice. No health benefit, less efficient growing, and more expensive. Truly the food of the wealthy, and not the poor. Eliminate that choice too.
By tax increment are you referring to long term capital gains vs. ordinary income?
1031's?
Just trying to understand your definition as it's a subjective thing.
Tax Increment Financing? TIF? Municipal redevelopment areas created to generate tax increment, from local taxing entities, to incentivize real estate development, expansion and job creation. Familiar yes?
Edit: local tax incentive, not fed.
Yes.
Why do you consider it "welfare."
a very compelling argument/statement. Nothing asserts your intelligence quite like telling someone "well ur dumb!"
Speaking anecdotally, as per usual (it's the soc-con way). There are millions of Americans that do not have access to fresh produce on a consistent basis, and it leads to health disparities with potential to bankrupt your health care system. Look up the studies yourself if you don't believe me.
Another archetypical symptom of the soc-con mindset: a pure inability to think in non-binary means.
Also funny seeing how pro-choice you are all the sudden![]()
note how choice isn't all one and the same, and how simplifying and polarizing discussions is a tool for the simpletons.
Cool, you used some big buzz words, but you failed to address anything, per usual.
Explain what you're going to do about the loss of jobs that come with loss of choice.
And you and I both know the little jab about pro-choice was unnecessary and irrelevant. I'm pro-choice when it comes to jobs/business. When you consider something murder, it doesn't leave much room for choice.
Now you probably haven't experienced this yet, but my father and I constantly have to deal with beaurecrats tell us how to run our business/manage our land. They even try to make laws to "help" us. Now unfortunately most of these people don't exactly know a lot about what they think they do, and just make things more difficult and more expensive, which makes it harder to make a profit, which makes it harder to pay employees well. You see, there's a bit of a trickle effect.
As for fresh produce, I too wish that we could all eat fresh produce. Some people grow gardens to help with that, btw.
Even then, in certain places where the growing season only lasts 3 months, it's hard to get fresh produce for a decent price. Even I don't eat fresh produce year round. Anyways, our variety of choices leads to CHEAPER prices. Anyways, how do you expect to get enough fresh produce to the entire nation for a cheap price, when not that many states can grow produce year round, and one of the main states that does is having a water crisis? What is your solution Dala? Cut out the buzz words and actually try to get a logical point across, please and thank you. You're too smart to argue like this.
...Some people grow gardens!??! HALT the presses!! Howard has solved a national crisis! Let's just tell ppl in inner-city Chicago or Detroit or the Bronx or LA to grow gardens. Problem solved....
Crises can be solved with an emphasis of eating with season, and eating locally-produced fruits, vegetables, and legumes, along with subsidies shifted away from certain big-agra projects (like corn, etc.) to healthier produce. Look at that, two simple solutions. Unfortunately this doesn't address the existence of food deserts, where communities literally don't have grocers opening up in their communities, and have to rely on eating fast food and convenience store food on a daily basis. But you're right!! they should just grow some gardens on their windowsill!!
smh.
ThEm PCes complaynng abt evrythng!!! LEev US ALONE
as to the first point,there is actually a big urban farming movement in many large cities - - particularly in Detroit where there is ample vacant land to utilize in this fashion
https://www.miufi.org/
https://detroitagriculture.net/
https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/239844
https://www.huffingtonpost.com/news/detroit-urban-farming/
and many cities host Farmer's Markets during the summer/fall when growers in nearby rural areas come to sell their produce
and Detroit's Eastern Market is a well-known, long-standing institution that covers several city blocks and features fresh produce, products produced locally by small entrepreneurs and helps provide an infrastructure and assistance for networking and community involvement
https://www.easternmarket.com/
It's a step towards solving some of the problems faced by lower-income, urban residents - - many of them people of color.