The TRUMP POTUS "Tribute" & "Tribulations" of the Politically Incorrect....!

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vreihen

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Looks like Trumble's :) audition tape for Saturday Night Live was leaked to the Australian press..... :p

https://www.bloomberg.com/politics/articles/2017-06-15/aussie-leader-lampoons-trump-in-speech-mentioning-russian-guy

Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull risks a fresh rift with Donald Trump after leaked footage showed him parodying the president and alluding to a U.S. probe into election campaign links with Russia.

In a closed-door speech Wednesday night to journalists and lawmakers at Australia’s equivalent of the White House correspondents dinner, Turnbull imitated Trump speaking about online opinion polls: “They are so easy to win. I have this Russian guy...believe me, it’s true, it’s true.”
 

vreihen

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The 20th century called. They want their catastrophe back..... :facepalm:

https://www.bloomberg.com/politics/articles/2017-06-15/trump-orders-government-to-stop-work-on-y2k-bug-17-years-later

Trump Orders Government to Stop Work on Y2K Bug, 17 Years Later


by Justin Sink
June 15, 2017, 1:03 PM EDT

* The White House is eliminating paperwork for federal agencies

* Federal workers still report on preparedness for year 2000

Seventeen years after the Year 2000 bug came and went, the federal government will finally stop preparing for it.

The Trump administration announced Thursday that it would eliminate dozens of paperwork requirements for federal agencies, including an obscure rule that requires them to continue providing updates on their preparedness for a bug that afflicted some computers at the turn of the century. As another example, the Pentagon will be freed from a requirement that it file a report every time a small business vendor is paid, a task that consumed some 1,200 man-hours every year.

“We’re looking for stuff everyone agrees is a complete waste of time,” Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney told reporters at the White House. He likened the move to the government “cleaning out our closets.”

Deregulation is a major ambition of President Donald Trump’s agenda; as one example, he has signed more laws rolling back his predecessor’s regulations than the combined total of the three previous presidents since the process was established by the 1999 Congressional Review Act.

Seven of the more than 50 paperwork requirements the White House eliminated on Thursday dealt with the Y2K bug, according to a memo OMB released. Officials at the agency estimate the changes could save tens of thousands of man-hours across the federal government.

The agency didn’t provide an estimate of how much time is currently spent on Y2K paperwork, but Linda Springer, an OMB senior adviser, acknowledged that it isn’t a lot since those requirements are already often ignored in practice.

Mulvaney said he hopes that by publicly eliminating the rules, departments and agencies will be inspired to review their own policies and procedures to reduce inefficiencies.

“Many agencies have forgotten how to deregulate,” he said. “It’s been so long since somebody asked them to look backwards.”

The effort isn’t intended to reduce the federal workforce, Mulvaney said, but should free up employees for more productive tasks. He said his agency would begin a second review of requirements imposed by presidential executive orders and by Congress, with the hope of identifying more that could be eliminated.
 

Jack@European_Parts

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Amazon Buys Whole Foods, Trump Pushes Apprenticeships and 5 Things to Know About the Economy

[url]http://www.msn.com/en-us/money/careersandeducation/amazon-buys-whole-foods-trump-pushes-apprenticeships-and-5-things-to-know-about-the-economy/ss-BBCMkBj?ocid=ientp[/URL]



President Donald Trump on Thursday signed an executive order aimed at boosting the country's apprenticeship offerings.

The order called on the Labor Department to review apprenticeship program criteria submitted by companies, trade associations and groups in the private sector and to approve industry-specific programs that provide students "earn and learn" opportunities.

Trump said from the White House Thursday that his goal was to "expand apprenticeships and vocational training to help all Americans find a rewarding career, earn a great living and support themselves and their families, and love going to work in the morning."

The order also called for the creation of an apprenticeship task force at the Department of Labor and for increased funding for the government's ApprenticeshipUSA program.

What It Means:

"This type of initiative can significantly help promote the modernization of the U.S. apprenticeship system, and close the ever-widening talent gap," Kimberly Nichols, CEO and co-founder at Franklin Apprenticeships consulting outfit, said in a statement Friday. "Bringing the right parties together, to advocate for an apprenticeship model that works for today’s workforce, can transform the way we educate and prepare our young people for successful careers."

Indeed, Trump's order is aimed at closing the so-called skills gap as American employers wrestle with a record 6 million job openings and a shortage of skilled employees to pick up the slack.

But Trump's order has been criticized in part because the president's budget proposal calls for deep cuts to the Labor Department. The executive order itself also calls on the government to review its 43 existing workforce training programs and consider some for reformatting or elimination – which ruffled feathers of those who think the president isn't going far enough in addressing skills training.

"While President Trump is signing an executive order pledging to support apprenticeship programs, the reality is that his 2018 budget will undermine our public workforce system," Rep. Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn. ,said in a statement Thursday. "President Trump cannot claim to support American workers with apprenticeships when his budget tells a different story."
 

Andy

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DV52

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Looks like Trumble's :) audition tape for Saturday Night Live was leaked to the Australian press..... :p

https://www.bloomberg.com/politics/articles/2017-06-15/aussie-leader-lampoons-trump-in-speech-mentioning-russian-guy

vreihen: I for one am happy to see that "Trumble" has gone "off-script". Shows that the ubiquitous Aussie larrakin spirit lurks even in someone with his pompous and self righteous demeanor.

And I can think of no more fitting a subject to parody than the man that appointed the man that forgot his name!!!

Don
 

Jack@European_Parts

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That nasty lady is back......just look at this mug......

Warren to Trump: 'Donald, you ain't seen nasty yet'

BBCOFfA.img


Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) has a warning for President Trump: "Donald, you ain't seen nasty yet."Warren read aloud from her new book "This Fight is Our Fight: The Battle to Save America's Middle Class" and took questions at a town hall event in New York Friday, HuffPost reported.
Warren blasted Trump for his economic policies, saying they are hurting the middle-class Americans who voted for him.
"What Donald Trump and the Republican majority in the House and the Senate want to do to us, is they want to deliver the knockout blow to the middle class," she said.
She also hit him on women's rights, saying that "women's right are not up from grabs" during the reading.
"The character of a nation is not the character of its president," Warren said. "The character of a nation is the character of its people."
 

Jack@European_Parts

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I still think certain aspects of the country are and should be socialized.

Healthcare needs to be one of them & with proper regulation of big pharmaceutical, and a defined menu of fees from hospitals or doctors.

Our automotive industry is regulated and if fees are considered overcharged here in NY.......... you can be made accountable.

CR82

Time to un-pimp the healthcare industry..........
 

Jack@European_Parts

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Art it's a matter of give and take............ I think Hans was right.

I am not saying that people shouldn't have the right to choose in the private sector but there has to be a minimum of what is provided by and for everyone, with the exception of illegal aliens getting nothing!

Not everyone can be rich or successful and not everyone is poor.

There are an awful amount of things in this country that are in fact socialized, so where is the line drawn?

I'm tired of the deck being stacked in the favor of the guys wallet size, verse what is actually right or the guy that doesn't even lawfully belong here, they can get assistance before someone that does actually belong here or must lose all before is eligible to be helped. WTF is that about?

You can't just rely on soup kitchens and the good will of a church or neighbor.

If I had the keys to the kingdom I'd dismantle a whole bunch of it............ starting with the colleges and banks or central bank.

No more subsidy for education or courses of no relevance to public policy or use......bye bye liberal arts degree and useless electives.
 

Jack@European_Parts

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IDK seems like bullshit to me because I think the media and people are more focused or deliberately pointed to Trump now more than ever.

Two years ago, they couldn’t look away. Now some Trump supporters are tuning out.

http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/polit...e-tuning-out/ar-BBCQgwv?li=BBmkt5R&ocid=ientp

June 16, 2015
Donald Trump stepped onto the golden escalator that descends into the pink-marbled food court of Trump Tower. He flashed a thumbs-up as he passed a line of supposed supporters — random tourists lured off the street with the promise of an “only in New York” experience — and inched toward the reporters seated below. In a rambling speech, he marveled at the crowd size, called Mexican immigrants “rapists,” declared that “China is killing us” and vowed to make America great once again.
Subscribe to the Post’s Today's Headlines newsletter: All the top stories of the day - local, national and global.
It was the garish start to a politics-as-reality-show that no one — whether for or against him — could stop watching. As the summer progressed, he hit No. 1 in the polls and attracted thousands to mega-rallies in cities from Mobile, Ala., to Phoenix on his unlikely journey to the White House.
But two years later, President Trump is struggling to keep his viewers engaged. Governing turns out to be less entertaining than the spectacle of a political horse race — especially when complicated by conflict-of-interest scandals, a widening criminal inquiry and a policy agenda bogged down by infighting and partisanship. A new poll last week by the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research found that 64 percent of Americans disapprove of the job Trump is doing; only 35 percent approve.
The president’s die-hard supporters — the sort who make a pilgrimage to Trump Tower to ride the golden escalator — say they tune out much of the controversy, including the stream of news about the congressional and FBI investigations into alleged ties between Trump’s campaign and Russia. And while many of them say Trump has met their expectations during his first five months in office, they also have a sinking feeling that those obstructing him will keep him from reaching his full potential as president.
“It’s very frustrating that he gets pushback on everything that he tries to do. It’s just everything. Everything,” said Debbie Maddox, 61, a retiree and Trump supporter from the Houston area who visited Trump Tower this month with her daughter and two grandchildren. “They just don’t give him a chance to do it, no matter what it is. He’s always wrong.”
Her daughter, Stacey Cotton, gently tells her mother that the president’s brash style makes it hard for many to trust him.
“He has an arrogance to him that I think sometimes makes it difficult for people to receive his message the way he wished they would receive it,” said Cotton, 43, who teaches third grade. “He’s not this polished politician.”
Cotton usually votes for Republicans, but she couldn’t bring herself to vote for Trump — or for Democrat Hillary Clinton. Now that Trump is president, Cotton said, she is willing to give him a chance to “spread his wings and see what he can do” — and she wishes others were willing to do the same.
In deep-red Texas, Cotton said, her friends, neighbors and co-workers have largely stopped talking about politics and the president; it’s just too divisive. She recently purchased an Ivanka Trump-branded blouse and then worried that wearing it might offend someone.
Cotton watches the local news in the morning, but she’s not following what’s happening in the White House as closely as she followed the campaign. Her parents watch Fox News nearly all day long, but her mother admits that she doesn’t know much about the Russia investigations.
“All of this stuff just makes you hate politics,” Maddox said. “All of it is just so negative. I don’t think I’ve heard so much junk during any other presidency.”
BBCQgwn.img
© Gareth Smit for The Washington Post Jordan Vanauken, 12, center, sits with brother Andrew, 15, and parents David and Lori at a table in the food court at Trump Tower in New York, where President Trump first announced his candidacy two years…That was a common refrain among President Trump’s supporters in the ’80s-reminiscent lobby.
“I think he’s doing a great job. I don’t have any complaints. I wish the media would back off, because they’re very negative and anything he does they want to pick apart,” said Lori Vanauken of Florida, as she and her family ate burgers and fries in the same spot where Trump announced his candidacy.
Vanauken and her husband said they wish Congress would implement some of Trump’s ideas instead of wasting time with hearings. They believe the president’s word over that of former FBI director James B. Comey and others — but added that even if Trump did tell Comey to stop investigating former national security adviser Michael Flynn, it’s no big deal.
“Okay, so something happened — get over it and move on,” said David Vanauken, an engineer. “That’s what middle-class people do every day: You have a struggle, you resolve it, and you move on. Don’t keep hanging on it.”
Phoenix
July 11, 2015
Three weeks after Trump’s hometown announcement speech, he traveled to Phoenix for a rally that suggested that something unexpected was starting to happen. Thousands requested tickets — prompting the campaign to upgrade from a hotel ballroom to the city’s convention center.
That’s when immigration rights activists in Arizona, a testing ground for controversial crackdowns on migrants, decided to take him seriously.
“For some folks, it seems like a crazy joke, but we’ve seen people like that here,” said Maria Castro, 23, a community organizer with the Puente Human Rights Movement. “We’re in Arizona. We know what this is like. If we don’t want this to spread to the rest of the country, we have to do something now and pay attention to it.”
Castro and dozens of other activists showed up to Trump’s rally — only to find themselves far outnumbered by Trump’s supporters. Amid chanting from fellow activists, Castro pulled out a cloth banner that read: “Stop the hate.”
“As soon as we put the banner up, people swarmed us,” Castro said. “We were struggling to just keep it up. And that’s when people started punching.”
Castro and the others had never experienced anything like that in Arizona — but physical violence at Trump events would quickly become the new normal.
In the angry crowd that day, the activists saw Trump’s potential. Castro thought Bernie Sanders could stop him, but when he lost the Democratic nomination in June 2016, she posted on Facebook: “Are y’all ready for a Trump President? All 50 states will look like AZ, start organizing your bases now. Hillary can’t take the Donald. #NotWithHer.” Eventually, Castro voted for the Green Party candidate, Jill Stein.
BBCQkDh.img
© Caitlin O’Hara for The Washington Post Community organizer Maria Castro, 23, at the Puente Human Rights Movement headquarters in Phoenix on Wednesday. “We couldn’t be happy fully because we knew that everything that we had been fighting for ten years was going to go national,” Castro said, a tear rolling down her cheek as she remembered election night. “I was feeling devastated.”
She doesn’t regret her vote for Stein, saying “you can’t blame it on this one night and on 1 percent of the people” who voted for the Green Party. While Castro often votes for Democrats, she doesn’t consider herself one and said the party needs to move beyond a message of “At least I’m not Trump” or “At least I’m not a Republican.”
A few months ago, Castro learned she was pregnant — and she decided it was no longer healthy to consume so much news. She still gets breaking news alerts on her phone and will still scroll through headlines and videos on Facebook, but she’s careful not to get too caught up.
“It was just weighing super heavy on me to the point where I was angry all of the time,” she said. “It was overpowering. I didn’t feel like it was healthy for me to be upset all the time. So I’ve made that conscious decision that I can’t have this in my life all day every day.”
Across town at the Phoenix Convention Center, Southern Baptist pastors gathered last week for their annual convention and passed a resolution denouncing the alt-right movement for a whites-only state, following a heated discussion over the wording. The push for the declaration came from younger and minority clergy.
Several pastors and their family members said they voted for Trump based on his positions, not him as a candidate. They were pleased to see Trump nominate Neil M. Gorsuch to the Supreme Court and hope the president will follow through on his promises related to abortion and religious liberty. But many said they are more focused on their congregations, families and issues in their own communities than on what’s happening in the White House.
BBCQkDj.img
© Caitlin O’Hara for The Washington Post Donna and John Connell of Florida stand outside a conference for Southern Baptists at the Phoenix Convention Center on Wednesday. John Connell, a 63-year-old pastor from Florida who has strongly supported Trump for more than two years, said he was not surprised that Trump won or that Democrats are fighting him — but he was surprised to see members of Trump’s own party stalling on his legislation and continuing the probe into the Russia allegations, which he calls “kindergarten trash.” Much of the criticism of Trump is overblown or exaggerated, he said.
“Hopefully with the midterm elections, we will continue to see that the nation as a whole is behind him,” said Connell, who said he only believes election results, not polls or approval ratings. “The East Coast and West Coast — the edges, the fringes — aren’t behind him, but Middle America is very pro-Trump.”
Jessica James, a photographer whose husband is a pastor in North Carolina, said the two of them voted for a third-party candidate, as they didn’t want to be associated with the negative connotations of being a Trump voter. James said that she rarely has time to follow the latest things Trump has said or done — and that it’s not vital to her busy life right now.
“There’s so much in this world that I could sit and worry about,” she said. “My hope is not in America, it is not in anything else but the Lord. . . . Whatever happens, I can’t control it, so I’m not going to worry about it. It’s all in the Lord’s hands.”
Mobile, Alabama
Aug. 21, 2015
Despite being the “joke candidate,” Trump surged through that first summer at the top of the polls. With each rally, more people tuned in to watch the Trump Show.
In late August, thousands descended on Ladd-Peebles Stadium in a working-class black neighborhood in Mobile, Ala. At the front of the line was Bill Hart and his co-worker Keith Quackenbush, who drove in from Pensacola, Fla. Behind them was a young mother from Southern California who flew to Alabama just to see Trump. Local officials estimated the crowd at 30,000, although many have argued that the number is inflated.
Hart said he didn’t understand why people were so dismissive of Trump at that point. As he watched the football stadium fill, he knew Trump would win.
“A lot of people just didn’t understand that he connected with real people,” said Hart, who is now 48. “Not D.C. people. Not the media that’s so against him still. He connected with them.”
He also watched his number of Facebook friends dwindle. Hart is gay and many of his friends couldn’t understand how he could support a Republican, let alone Trump. Soon, Hart took the Trump stickers off his car and decided against getting personalized plates reading “TRUMP45.”
“A lot of times, you have to hide your support of Trump — that’s the saddest thing. If you have Trump on your car, you have to worry: Is somebody going to key my car?” said Hart, who voted for Barack Obama in 2008 and Republican Mitt Romney in 2012. “It’s even harder now because people are just so vile about it.”
BBCQgwq.img
© Mark Wallheiser/Getty Images Then one of a slew of Republican candidates, Donald Trump speaks during a late-August rally in Mobile, Ala. He describes Democrats, protesters and journalists as “drama queens” who “just want to create drama and make themselves look good.” But Hart said he does wish Trump would “put the damn phone down,” and he was disappointed the president did not put out a statement supporting Pride month, which celebrates the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community.
“If he would have come out and made a proclamation, it would have been used against him. If he doesn’t, it’s against him. It’s a no-win,” Hart said.
Tim Wadsworth, a state representative from Winston County in rural northwestern Alabama, endorsed Trump that day, along with three other state lawmakers. Trump won 90 percent of the general-election vote in Winston, and Wadsworth said his constituents remain “100 percent behind him.”
“You just have to ignore a lot of the things they’re saying and get down to what he’s actually doing,” Wadsworth said. “People can stir things up as much as they want to . . . but in the long run, justice prevails.”
That rally in Mobile turned out to be one of the largest of Trump’s entire campaign, and the neighborhood was overwhelmed with traffic. A neo-Confederate activist passed out copies of a newspaper that included a headline about “black-on-white crime.” There was a helicopter in the sky, along with a small plane carrying a banner promoting one of Trump’s rivals. Trump’s private plane swooped past.
Stephen Wheeler Sr., 46, remembers coming home that day and finding his street shut down.
“I couldn’t go to my damn house,” Wheeler said last week, as he and his son hauled a lawn mower past the stadium. “You’re not going to stop me from going to my own house.”
Wheeler didn’t take Trump seriously then, and he doesn’t take him seriously now.
“He needs to be impeached,” said Wheeler, who voted for Clinton.
That is a common sentiment in the predominantly African American neighborhood, where residents said they’re tired of hearing the news that Trump angered another foreign ally or that there’s been another development in the Russia investigation.
They just want him gone.
“If they can impeach Bill Clinton for infidelity, then they can impeach him for unreasoning and ill manners,” said LaKela Maye, 27, who moved away from Mobile for college but recently returned when her mother was diagnosed with breast cancer.
BBCQpue.img
© Ben Depp for The Washington Post LaKela Maye in Mobile, Ala., on Wednesday. Maye, who voted for Clinton, lives close to a stadium where Trump held a rally two years ago. Maye, who voted for Clinton, said the president doesn’t seem to care about the issues that are so vital to this community — health care, education, women’s rights and unemployment.
“We take it day by day over here,” Maye said of her neighborhood. “Whether he comes or goes, we’re still going to have to live our day-to-day lives. . . . We have to move forward — whether it was Hillary in the office or Donald Trump or a man that was purple, we will still be the same way.”
 

Andy

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Top government officials, speaking on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak on the record, have informed me that any "news" story you read that only uses anonymous sources, should be assumed to be false.
 
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Mike R

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The issue about "should healthcare be socialized" is a tricky one. The same could be said for higher education. The real reason for the costs being so exorbitant primarily just comes down to profiteering. On one hand I believe it's any business owner's right to operate their business how they see fit. However this is with regards to peoples well being. With higher education many of the schools are state funded (to a degree) and they charge more just because they feel they need to make each and everything more extravagant to allure more future students as well as higher additional non teaching staff. At a private school I understand this, but it's kind of asinine for state schools to cost as much as they do. I'm rather curious as to what it costs a particular university to gives students the education they pay for without having to pay for all the extra bells and whistles. I'm not advocating "FREE COLLEGE" as the Berners would ask, but somethings gotta give here.

Healthcare matters are more corrupt in my honest opinion. It's more profitable to treat rather than cure, that's something anyone with half a brain should realize. Then you have matters like the FDA and their special interest groups/lobbyists or what have you for the tobacco and cigarette industry. It is not and will not be about the well being of the people at all, it's all for the dollar. I can't see this changing without it being forced to be changed. I remember one of Trump's big campaign soapboxes in regards to healthcare was opening up state borders when shopping for healthcare in order to promote competition and lower prices. Where are we on that one right now?
 

Jack@European_Parts

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Self righteous, know it all type, over confident bullshit artists, fail to see again that people are tired of that business model. :rolleyes:

[url]http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/republican-aligned-with-trump-wins-south-carolina-house-seat/ar-BBCWcU2?li=BBmkt5R&ocid=ientp[/URL]

Republican aligned with Trump wins South Carolina House seat

COLUMBIA, S.C. — Republican Ralph Norman won a special election Tuesday to fill the South Carolina congressional seat vacated by Mick Mulvaney, who resigned to the White House budget director.
The race has garnered far less national attention than another special election in Georgia's 6th District, the most expensive U.S. House contest to date. That race is seen as an early test for the GOP and President Donald Trump since his win over Democrat Hillary Clinton.
South Carolina's 5th District has been held solidly by Mulvaney since his 2010 victory. There, the GOP ticket defeated Clinton by more than 18 percentage points in November, giving Republicans the confidence they say will keep the seat in their party's hands.
Norman, a millionaire real estate developer, ran against Democrat Archie Parnell for Mulvaney's seat. National surrogates stumped for both. Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and former South Carolina Sen. Jim DeMint campaigned with Norman, while national Democratic Chairman Tom Perez came to town for Parnell.
Democrats had held the South Carolina seat for more than a century until Mulvaney rode a tea party wave to defeat longtime incumbent John Spratt in 2010.
As they have in other special election contests across the country this year, Democrats recruited a field of candidates to make a play for the GOP-held seat. Norman emerged from a GOP runoff with only a 200-vote victory, a slim margin on which Democrats had hoped to capitalize.
But the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee plunked only $275,000 into the South Carolina race, compared with a $5 million investment in the special election in Georgia's 6th District.
Norman, a former state lawmaker who aligns himself with Trump, said during a recent candidate forum that the November presidential election results would work in his favor in his own race.
"Trump is still very popular in our area," Norman said. "His first big decision in putting Neil Gorsuch on the Supreme Court excited the people we're coming into contact with. He proved his mettle."
David L. O'Neal, a retired Army officer and paratrooper from Tega Cay, backed Norman in the primary and said the Republican earned his general election vote in part because of his stance on veterans' issues.
"As a retired military officer, I feel Ralph is strongest on military issues, wanting a strong defense," O'Neal said Tuesday. "And I know he is 100 percent with the veterans on their issues."
 

vreihen

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The same could be said for higher education. The real reason for the costs being so exorbitant primarily just comes down to profiteering.

If only it worked that way! State and most private schools are not-for-profit. I have no idea where state school revenue surpluses go, but private schools send it all to their endowments (investment account) which is used in part to fund scholarships. (State schools have foundations for gifts and grants, at least here in New Yorkistan.) Oh, and if you think that there's a profit to be made in higher education, just take a look at how quickly the for-profit schools are folding up! The student loan crisis is mostly from the for-profit schools admitting anyone with a pulse without regard for their academic ability to finish school, and packaging them to the max with federal money/VA programs/loans that they have no hope of ever repaying.

Federal and state money in private schools comes with strings attached...like staff bloat. Schools need to hire administrators for each government funding source, and sometimes entire departments. Google "Title IX" for an example. If you don't have a dedicated staff, you risk paperwork mistakes like the one in West Virginia in the news earlier this week where a $2.00 error on a federal form cost them 100% of the funding of a successful tuition grant program.

With higher education many of the schools are state funded (to a degree) and they charge more just because they feel they need to make each and everything more extravagant to allure more future students as well as higher additional non teaching staff.

You forgot about athletic scholarships and water slides (that one school actually installed as a recruiting tool). :p

I'm rather curious as to what it costs a particular university to gives students the education they pay for without having to pay for all the extra bells and whistles.

ASCII, and ye shall receive: :)

https://budget.psu.edu/factbook/financedynamic/FinanceTableofContents.aspx

Most public/private schools publish fact books every year as a requirement of their accreditation bodies. Feel free to FOIA the details if you want more than what's in the fact book at a public school. I can't share private school figures, except to say that employee benefits are the #1 budget category expense at schools that I'm familiar with.

I'm not advocating "FREE COLLEGE" as the Berners would ask, but somethings gotta give here.

Don't forget the irony that Bernie's wife was president of a college that FAILED...and it was charging for classes!

Healthcare matters are more corrupt in my honest opinion. It's more profitable to treat rather than cure, that's something anyone with half a brain should realize. Then you have matters like the FDA and their special interest groups/lobbyists or what have you for the tobacco and cigarette industry. It is not and will not be about the well being of the people at all, it's all for the dollar.

One of my favorite office de-motivators from despair.com:

consultingdemotivator_grande.jpeg


I remember one of Trump's big campaign soapboxes in regards to healthcare was opening up state borders when shopping for healthcare in order to promote competition and lower prices. Where are we on that one right now?

He is coming to grips with the reality that a dusty old piece of parchment from 1789 probably has something to say about this.....
 

vreihen

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Another thing with private schools and their endowments is that very few students pay sticker price. Admissions offices negotiate prices based on student grades, financial needs, and other factors. The industry average is a 41% discount recently. This year, the national discount average is about 49%, which is a result of competition among private schools for students. I can name several schools that have exhausted their endowments and closed, due to not being able to function purely on tuition revenue in the 21st century. There are also several schools on probation with the various regional accreditation organizations for budget/endowment problems, and losing their accreditation makes them unable to collect financial aid or student loans (not to mention turning their diplomas into toilet paper).

I'm not saying that there are no libtards in academia, just pointing out the financial realities of the industry.....
 
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