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Glock-n-Load says
What’s their narrative, that illegals don’t effect GDP?
The narrative is that the economy is going to shit because of Trump.
The narrative is that the economy is going to shit because of Trump.
Is the economy going to shit? And if so, why?
Glock-n-Load says
What’s their narrative, that illegals don’t effect GDP?
The narrative is that the economy is going to shit because of Trump.
You're gonna hear some sob stories. 9 out of 10 times it was the persons fault and not the economy.
Wisconsin is booming.
Yeah, Wisconsin is faring a lot better than Illinois.
Glock-n-Load says
What’s their narrative, that illegals don’t effect GDP?
The consumer price index rose at an annual rate of 2.9 percent, the fourth-straight month of acceleration, while a less volatile gauge that excludes food and energy costs remained stuck above 3 percent, according to a Labor Department report released Thursday.
So, wages have gone up compared to the 70s.

I suspect with a 10% cap on credit card interest, many low credit score folks will see their cards cancelled. That is a good thing, actually.
I'm all for it, but how does Trump have that power over what interest rates credit cards can charge?
I'm all for it, but how does Trump have that power over what interest rates credit cards can charge?
That thousands-year-old law changed in the late 20th century, when the Supreme Court ruled that a national bank could charge customers anywhere in the country the interest rate permitted by the bank’s home state. In 1981, Delaware promptly saw the opening, became the only state to strip away its interest-rate limits, and the credit-card industry stampeded in. Overnight, one small state’s policy nullified the usury laws of 50 states, and ancient protections against predatory interest vanished without a single national vote.
Put simply, credit card companies are exploiting a legal loophole to get away with something that 49 states consider to be criminal conduct, justifying prison sentences, and which common law for thousands of years considered unethical and corrosive.
Not everyone is on board with this ancient logic. Credit card companies protest that if they’re forced to comply with usury laws, people with poor credit will lose access to credit altogether. Others reply: that’s the point. Usury laws exist precisely to protect desperate, vulnerable people from predatory interest rates— not to guarantee banks a revenue stream at any price.
I’d be satisfied with returning to the status quo ante— just put credit cards under the same usury laws that bind everyone else, with no special bankster exceptions or criminal carve-outs.
Short of that, interest rate price caps work fine. Despite my libertarian leanings.
I'm all for it, but how does Trump have that power over what interest rates credit cards can charge?
Patrick says
I'm all for it, but how does Trump have that power over what interest rates credit cards can charge?
No, it’s just an ask. Congress would have to do that.
FortWayneHatesRealtors says
Patrick says
I'm all for it, but how does Trump have that power over what interest rates credit cards can charge?
No, it’s just an ask. Congress would have to do that.
Even then the Supremes would likely rule it Unconstitutional.
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