Welcome to ECCIE, become a part of the fastest growing adult community. Take a minute & sign up!

Welcome to ECCIE - Sign up today!

Become a part of one of the fastest growing adult communities online. We have something for you, whether you’re a male member seeking out new friends or a new lady on the scene looking to take advantage of our many opportunities to network, make new friends, or connect with people. Join today & take part in lively discussions, take advantage of all the great features that attract hundreds of new daily members!

Go Premium

Go Back   ECCIE Worldwide > General Interest > The Political Forum
test
The Political Forum Discuss anything related to politics in this forum. World politics, US Politics, State and Local.

Most Favorited Images
  • Thumb
  • Thumb
  • Thumb
  • Thumb
  • Thumb
  • Thumb
  • Thumb
  • Thumb
  • Thumb
  • Thumb
  • Thumb
  • Thumb
  • Thumb
  • Thumb
  • Thumb
Most Liked Images
  • Thumb
  • Thumb
  • Thumb
  • Thumb
  • Thumb
  • Thumb
  • Thumb
  • Thumb
  • Thumb
  • Thumb
  • Thumb
  • Thumb
  • Thumb
  • Thumb
  • Thumb
Top Reviewers
cockalatte 650
MoneyManMatt 490
Jon Bon 408
Still Looking 399
samcruz 399
Harley Diablo 377
honest_abe 362
George Spelvin 320
DFW_Ladies_Man 313
Starscream66 304
Chung Tran 288
lupegarland 287
nicemusic 285
You&Me 281
sharkman29 263
Top Posters
DallasRain71398
biomed168274
Yssup Rider62981
gman4455142
LexusLover51038
offshoredrilling49560
WTF48272
pyramider46430
bambino45243
The_Waco_Kid40287
CryptKicker37409
Mokoa36512
Chung Tran36100
Still Looking35944
Dr-epg35029

Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old 08-14-2025, 08:57 AM   #46
Ducbutter
Valued Poster
 
Ducbutter's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 25, 2012
Location: Ahead of you.
Posts: 932
Encounters: 1
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Texas Contrarian View Post
Excuse me, counselor. Didn't I make it clear that Republicans of recent years haven't been remotely serious about fiscal sustainability? Why yes, I certainly did!





Indeed! That's why it was so amusing to see Tiny, of all people, called out in the thread title and blasted for supposedly supporting anything in the way of massive debt increases.

How about a realty check? We're in the perilous fiscal situation we see today because of the grotesquely irresponsible spending binges of 2021-2022, when Democrats increased the trend baseline of annual deficit spending from an already overly bloated $1 trillion (in 2019) to a run rate of $2 trillion five years later -- and for no good reason, since the covid pandemic had faded away long before. And they succeeded in baking it in so that the big increases in federal spending would be painful to reverse without deep-sixing our overly-stimulated, debt-fueled economy. Therefore, the Biden/Pelosi/Schumer triumvirate set the nation on a course to add $10 trillion to our national debt over the upcoming 10-year period, relative to what would have been the case had they acted appropriately and done very little in the way of cramming through a bunch of fattening menu items on progressives' fantasy lists. (Actually, more than that, since no one expects the deficit to do anything but climb in the absence of meaningful action by congress.)

But I'll say this in your defense, Blackman. I mistakenly thought you were an enthusiastic partisan who almost certainly voted Biden/Harris in 2020. But now I realize that cannot possibly have been so, or by the reasoning expressed in your opening posts you would be kicking yourself mercilessly for supporting the creation of $10 trillion in new debt.

And then you would surely have posted a mea culpa!

Unfortunately, it will take a lot more than something celled a "Big, Beautiful Bill" that has support of only one party to even begin to reverse course. That would require leadership (from both parties!) and bipartisan compromise such as we used to see decades ago. (Nowadays? Good luck with that!)


Snick!
Ducbutter is offline   Quote
Old 08-14-2025, 09:32 PM   #47
The_Waco_Kid
AKA ULTRA MAGA Trump Gurl
 
The_Waco_Kid's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 8, 2010
Location: The MAGA Zone
Posts: 40,287
Encounters: 1
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by 1blackman1 View Post

What I don’t buy into is the silliness that folks like Tiny seems to have swallowed whole - that republicans have ever been fiscally responsible. Well they are when they demagogue the issue when it’s democrats in charge, but that’s disingenuous at best and political theater at worst.

then you don't know the GOP. republicans were fiscally conservative till the early 70's when the true cost of Vietnam came home to pay for and the vast social programs of the Civil right Act had kicked in the GOP gave up arguing over all the spending as long as they got what mattered to them, mainly things like Military spending and anything pro business.



the Libertarian movement is in part old school GOP fiscal conservatism along with some liberal constructs.



to say Republicans never cared about spending is false
The_Waco_Kid is offline   Quote
Old Yesterday, 05:49 AM   #48
1blackman1
Lifetime Premium Access
 
Join Date: Nov 16, 2013
Location: Baton Rouge
Posts: 6,504
Encounters: 41
Default

Ok Waco, I’ll take it maybe Republicans in the 60s cared about money but that’d be before my lifetime so I’ll qualify my statement, in my lifetime Republicans haven’t been fiscally responsible.

You happy now?
1blackman1 is online now   Quote
Old Yesterday, 05:49 AM   #49
1blackman1
Lifetime Premium Access
 
Join Date: Nov 16, 2013
Location: Baton Rouge
Posts: 6,504
Encounters: 41
Default

Ok Waco, I’ll take it maybe Republicans in the 60s cared about money but that’d be before my lifetime so I’ll qualify my statement, in my lifetime Republicans haven’t been fiscally responsible.

You happy now?
1blackman1 is online now   Quote
Old Yesterday, 10:22 AM   #50
Tiny
Lifetime Premium Access
 
Join Date: Mar 4, 2010
Location: Texas
Posts: 9,458
Encounters: 2
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by 1blackman1 View Post
Ok Waco, I’ll take it maybe Republicans in the 60s cared about money but that’d be before my lifetime so I’ll qualify my statement, in my lifetime Republicans haven’t been fiscally responsible.

You happy now?
To avoid getting bogged down you may just want to read the red text below. Please note that North Dakota, Alaska, Wyoming, Utah, and Tennessee are ALL red states. 4 of the 5 don't lean Republican. Unfortunately Sam Altman's trying to train my bitch to be a progressive but I'm on it.

I can tell her to go ahead and prepare the Excel table. Just say the word. It won't be pretty for your side though.

Tiny: Please compare budget deficits and debt run by blue (Democrat) states, cities and counties to red states, cities and counties.

ChatGPT:

Here’s a clean, apples-to-apples way to think about it, plus what the best data shows right now.

How I compared “blue” vs “red”

States: I treat a state as “blue” or “red” by who won it in the 2024 presidential election (official FEC tally).
FEC.gov

What we’re comparing: (1) Annual balance (do recurring revenues cover recurring expenses?) and (2) Long-term obligations (bonded debt + pensions/OPEB on an accrual basis). States must generally balance annual budgets, so the bigger party differences show up in long-term liabilities, not in reported cash-basis “deficits.”
Tax Policy Center

States (bottom line)

Using full-accrual, audited data, Truth in Accounting’s 2024 report finds 27 states lacked enough assets to cover their bills; the top five “Sunshine” states (largest taxpayer surpluses) were North Dakota, Alaska, Wyoming, Utah, and Tennessee—4 of 5 typically Republican-leaning. The bottom five “Sinkhole” states are consistently New Jersey, Connecticut, Illinois, Massachusetts, and Hawaii—all typically Democratic-leaning.
truthinaccounting.org

Morrissey Goodale
Kiowa County Press

Credit market view: Many AAA-rated states are red (e.g., Utah, Texas, Florida, Georgia, Tennessee, Virginia, South Dakota), though some blue jurisdictions (e.g., Delaware, Washington’s Moody’s Aaa) also sit near the top—so it’s not purely partisan. Credit ratings reflect debt loads, reserves, and economic structure.
Wikipedia

Context on annual balances and cushions: Across 2008-2022, the median state took in 103.6% of expenses (surplus on average). After the post-COVID revenue boom, states are now downsizing FY25 budgets but still carry historically high rainy-day reserves. These trends are broad-based, not party-specific.
Pew Charitable Trusts
+2
Pew Charitable Trusts
+2
Higher Logic Download

What drives the pattern? The big driver of blue-state “Sinkholes” is legacy pension and retiree-health (OPEB) promises in older, union-heavy systems (e.g., IL, NJ, CT, MA, HI). Several red, resource-rich states (ND, WY, AK, UT, TN) benefit from volatile severance tax bases and comparatively reformed pension systems.
Equable
Reason Foundation

Large cities

Among the 75 biggest cities (TIA’s 2024/2025 studies), most run taxpayer burdens once pensions/OPEB are counted. Notably:

Best (“Sunshine”): Washington, DC; Irvine, CA; Plano, TX; Lincoln, NE; Oklahoma City, OK. (This list mixes Democratic and Republican governance.)

Worst (“Sinkhole”): New York City; Chicago; Honolulu; Philadelphia; Portland. (Predominantly Democratic).
truthinaccounting.org

TIA’s 2025 city update underscores pensions/OPEB as the majority of non-capital debt; at FY2023, the 75 cities had $621.7B in total obligations against $321B in available assets.
truthinaccounting.org

Counties

County data are spottier, but the Reason Foundation aggregates ACFRs for the largest counties:

Highest total unfunded retirement benefits: Los Angeles County, Cook County (Chicago), and Philadelphia—all deep-blue electorates. Several counties (often smaller or faster-growing suburban ones) report negative employee-benefit debt (surpluses).
Reason Foundation

A fair summary

States: On accrual measures that include pensions/OPEB, blue states, on average, carry higher long-term burdens; many red states show surpluses. Still, there are meaningful exceptions (e.g., blue Delaware/Washington enjoy top credit marks; some red states face pressures when commodity revenues dip).
Wikipedia
pewtrusts.org

Cities & counties: The worst burdens cluster in large, older, Democratic-run metros (NYC, Chicago, Philadelphia), consistent with legacy benefits and aging infrastructure. But there are blue exceptions in good shape (e.g., DC near the top) and red metros with burdens (e.g., several big Texas cities).
truthinaccounting.org
Governing

Annual “deficits”: Because of balanced-budget rules, year-to-year gaps are limited for both parties; the major differences show up in accrual liabilities and credit quality rather than cash-basis deficits.
Tax Policy Center

If you want the full breakdown

I can assemble a table that classifies all 50 states by 2024 result (red/blue) and lists each one’s TIA taxpayer surplus/burden, pension/OPEB share, and credit ratings, plus a second table for the 75 largest cities. Just say the word and I’ll produce it in a downloadable spreadsheet.


I actually agree with you, if you were just referring to the bozos in Washington, D.C. But a fairer statement would be the political class from both parties hasn't been fiscally responsible, except for Congressional Republicans and Clinton during his second term.
Tiny is offline   Quote
Old Yesterday, 10:23 PM   #51
Precious_b
Lifetime Premium Access
 
Precious_b's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 25, 2009
Location: sa tx usa
Posts: 15,578
Encounters: 44
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Tiny View Post
To avoid getting bogged down you may just want to read the red text below. Please note that North Dakota, Alaska, Wyoming, Utah, and Tennessee are ALL red states. 4 of the 5 don't lean Republican. Unfortunately Sam Altman's trying to train my bitch to be a progressive but I'm on it.

I can tell her to go ahead and prepare the Excel table. Just say the word. It won't be pretty for your side though.

Tiny: Please compare budget deficits and debt run by blue (Democrat) states, cities and counties to red states, cities and counties.

ChatGPT:

Here’s a clean, apples-to-apples way to think about it, plus what the best data shows right now.

How I compared “blue” vs “red”

States: I treat a state as “blue” or “red” by who won it in the 2024 presidential election (official FEC tally).
FEC.gov

What we’re comparing: (1) Annual balance (do recurring revenues cover recurring expenses?) and (2) Long-term obligations (bonded debt + pensions/OPEB on an accrual basis). States must generally balance annual budgets, so the bigger party differences show up in long-term liabilities, not in reported cash-basis “deficits.”
Tax Policy Center

States (bottom line)

Using full-accrual, audited data, Truth in Accounting’s 2024 report finds 27 states lacked enough assets to cover their bills; the top five “Sunshine” states (largest taxpayer surpluses) were North Dakota, Alaska, Wyoming, Utah, and Tennessee—4 of 5 typically Republican-leaning. The bottom five “Sinkhole” states are consistently New Jersey, Connecticut, Illinois, Massachusetts, and Hawaii—all typically Democratic-leaning.
truthinaccounting.org

Morrissey Goodale
Kiowa County Press

Credit market view: Many AAA-rated states are red (e.g., Utah, Texas, Florida, Georgia, Tennessee, Virginia, South Dakota), though some blue jurisdictions (e.g., Delaware, Washington’s Moody’s Aaa) also sit near the top—so it’s not purely partisan. Credit ratings reflect debt loads, reserves, and economic structure.
Wikipedia

Context on annual balances and cushions: Across 2008-2022, the median state took in 103.6% of expenses (surplus on average). After the post-COVID revenue boom, states are now downsizing FY25 budgets but still carry historically high rainy-day reserves. These trends are broad-based, not party-specific.
Pew Charitable Trusts
+2
Pew Charitable Trusts
+2
Higher Logic Download

What drives the pattern? The big driver of blue-state “Sinkholes” is legacy pension and retiree-health (OPEB) promises in older, union-heavy systems (e.g., IL, NJ, CT, MA, HI). Several red, resource-rich states (ND, WY, AK, UT, TN) benefit from volatile severance tax bases and comparatively reformed pension systems.
Equable
Reason Foundation

Large cities

Among the 75 biggest cities (TIA’s 2024/2025 studies), most run taxpayer burdens once pensions/OPEB are counted. Notably:

Best (“Sunshine”): Washington, DC; Irvine, CA; Plano, TX; Lincoln, NE; Oklahoma City, OK. (This list mixes Democratic and Republican governance.)

Worst (“Sinkhole”): New York City; Chicago; Honolulu; Philadelphia; Portland. (Predominantly Democratic).
truthinaccounting.org

TIA’s 2025 city update underscores pensions/OPEB as the majority of non-capital debt; at FY2023, the 75 cities had $621.7B in total obligations against $321B in available assets.
truthinaccounting.org

Counties

County data are spottier, but the Reason Foundation aggregates ACFRs for the largest counties:

Highest total unfunded retirement benefits: Los Angeles County, Cook County (Chicago), and Philadelphia—all deep-blue electorates. Several counties (often smaller or faster-growing suburban ones) report negative employee-benefit debt (surpluses).
Reason Foundation

A fair summary

States: On accrual measures that include pensions/OPEB, blue states, on average, carry higher long-term burdens; many red states show surpluses. Still, there are meaningful exceptions (e.g., blue Delaware/Washington enjoy top credit marks; some red states face pressures when commodity revenues dip).
Wikipedia
pewtrusts.org

Cities & counties: The worst burdens cluster in large, older, Democratic-run metros (NYC, Chicago, Philadelphia), consistent with legacy benefits and aging infrastructure. But there are blue exceptions in good shape (e.g., DC near the top) and red metros with burdens (e.g., several big Texas cities).
truthinaccounting.org
Governing

Annual “deficits”: Because of balanced-budget rules, year-to-year gaps are limited for both parties; the major differences show up in accrual liabilities and credit quality rather than cash-basis deficits.
Tax Policy Center

If you want the full breakdown

I can assemble a table that classifies all 50 states by 2024 result (red/blue) and lists each one’s TIA taxpayer surplus/burden, pension/OPEB share, and credit ratings, plus a second table for the 75 largest cities. Just say the word and I’ll produce it in a downloadable spreadsheet.


I actually agree with you, if you were just referring to the bozos in Washington, D.C. But a fairer statement would be the political class from both parties hasn't been fiscally responsible, except for Congressional Republicans and Clinton during his second term.
o.u.c.h.
Precious_b is offline   Quote
Reply



AMPReviews.net
Find Ladies
Hot Women

Powered by vBulletin®
Copyright © 2009 - 2016, ECCIE Worldwide, All Rights Reserved