22 September 2024

Christian Nationalists - People Who Would Like You To Think They Understand Christianity More Than Christ and Government More Than the Founding Fathers

In the four Gospels, Jesus doesn’t mention abortion or homosexuality—not once.

But in three of the four, He gives the same advice to a rich young man who wants eternal life: sell everything you have and give it to the poor. Also, in three of the four, He says it’s easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich person to enter the Kingdom of Heaven.

The Bill of Rights has 10 amendments, and the very first begins with, "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof..."

So, if you don’t want to sell all your possessions—despite the fact that Jesus explicitly taught it—the First Amendment suggests you don’t have to. And if you don’t want to lose your right to decide whether or not to have a child, not only does the Constitution forbid others from legislating their religion onto you, but the religion they want to impose on you isn’t one Christ taught anyway.

I suppose it’s possible that Christian nationalists who want to legislate their beliefs understand politics better than the Founding Fathers who gave us the First Amendment and understand Christianity better than Christ. Possible—but unlikely. Because if they did, the real Christian nationalists would be out here pushing for a 100% wealth tax. And I guarantee you, when that happens, these faux Christian nationalists will be waving the First Amendment faster than you can say, “seize the means of reproduction!”

19 September 2024

How Trump Uses Nonsense to Distract From His Nonsense

Let's talk nonsense this morning. Or, more specifically, let’s talk about why Trump talks so much nonsense. He does it to distract reasonable people from his unreasonable policies.

Let's start with some facts.
The number of children living in poverty doubled from 5 million to 10 million between 2021 and 2023. Why? Because the expanded Child Tax Credit (CTC) expired at the end of 2021.
Meanwhile, the U.S. has 800 billionaires. This morning the five richest Americans are worth a combined one trillion dollars.

Trump’s policy is simple: He sees 10 million children in poverty and believes we should cut their benefits. He sees 800 billionaires and thinks we should cut their taxes.

Trump believes that the rich and powerful should be richer and more powerful, and that the poor should be poorer.

That is nonsense.

So, how does he distract you from this nonsense? With other nonsense.

"I'm still gonna call them an illegal alien," JD Vance recently said about Haitian migrants who are in Ohio legally. This echoes Trump's rhetoric, who claimed during his one debate with Harris that immigrants were eating people’s pets —a claim that originated from a false Facebook post and has no basis in reality.

When Trump pushes this nonsense about Haitians eating pets, it does two things: First, it excites racists and fuels racial division. Second, and more importantly, it distracts voters from his agenda based on his conviction that poor children are not poor enough and the wealthy are not wealthy enough.

He spouts nonsense about immigrants eating your pets or claims that children are coming home from school to unsuspecting parents surprised to learn that their child has had transgender surgery between classes. He spouts nonsense to distract you from the fact that the combined wealth of the five richest Americans is one trillion dollars, and he plans to give these men even more tax breaks.

In short, he’s distracting you from his nonsensical policies with nonsensical lies - his hope apparently that we will be made numb, or senseless with all of his nonsense.

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Here fact checker Daniel Dale of CNN lists some of the completely fictional stories Trump has been recently telling.
https://www.cnn.com/2024/09/19/politics/fact-check-donald-trump-fictional-stories/index.html

15 September 2024

2 Reckless but Potentially Valuable Forecasts for This Week

I'm going to make a couple of reckless forecasts for this week.

On Wednesday, September 18, Fed Chair Jerome Powell will announce a 50 basis point rate cut, signaling the end of an aggressive rate-hiking cycle that began in 2022. This will be the first cut in over four years.

As a result, the NASDAQ will rise more than 1%, maybe as as high as 3% by week's end. With inflation moderating and further rate cuts probable, investors could flock back to tech stocks, pushing the index higher. The NASDAQ has historically responded positively to rate cuts, with the index rising an average of 2.4% in the month following similar announcements.