
What to Do About Rising Prices
Like the weather, everyone is talking about “affordability”, but no one is doing anything about it. Or, what they propose to do will surely increase prices and decrease affordability.
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Like the weather, everyone is talking about “affordability”, but no one is doing anything about it. Or, what they propose to do will surely increase prices and decrease affordability.
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In years past, we have offered ideas for political issues to bring up around the dinner table that tend to unite family members on both sides of the aisle.
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The Senate has until July 18th to pass the House-passed rescissions bill that the Trump administration crafted. Inside this bill is $9.4 trillion in waste that our tax dollars have funded for decades.
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March is Women’s History Month, a time “to reflect on the often-overlooked contributions of women to U.S. history,” according to History.com.
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As we gather around the table at Thanksgiving, we may be among family and friends of different political persuasions.
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Inflation and the economy are top issues this election year. Everyone feels the strain in their wallets at the grocery store, shopping mall, car dealership, and gas station. The cost of groceries has risen 25% since January 2020.
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Today marks the second anniversary of the so-called Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 (IRA), and the critics of its costly and prescriptive Green New Deal-style energy provisions are being proven right.
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Today, presidential candidate Kamala Harris announced Minnesota’s Governor Tim Walz will be her running mate. Democrats are spinning a narrative that the largely unknown Democrat Vice Presidential pick is a moderate, but make no mistake, he is demonstrably as extreme as Harris.
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The Supreme Court handed down one of the most notable rulings in our lifetime. The 6-3 decision in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo overturned the 1984 decision in the Chevron v. National Res. Def. Council case that create the power for agencies to interpret unclear laws however they wish.
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Before leaving town for two weeks, Congress caused quite a stir. The House and Senate passed a $1.2 trillion spending package that funds six of twelve government agencies for an entire year.
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Many of us avoid talking politics around the Thanksgiving table. When family members have different political opinions, some of the most controversial topics that we are dealing with daily may need to be put aside for a peaceful meal.
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The purchasing power of the dollar bills in your wallet has declined 87.5% since 1971 (according to official government inflation measures). Basically, everything costs about eight times more.
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This month, the city of West Hollywood raised the minimum wage in its community to $19.08 per hour, which is now the highest rate in the country. Other Californian cities have also just enacted new wage increases.
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America and the rest of the world are headed for food shortages if policymakers enact laws based on climate change.
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For decades, the price of tuition at most colleges rose faster than the rate of inflation. Administrations bloated, lots of new buildings were erected, and professors taught fewer classes. University employees thought the gravy train would never end, because high school students were taught that a college degree was a necessity for life success.
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Easter celebrations are approaching, but affording eggs to dye and an Easter ham is harder this year with inflation causing prices to rise. The Left’s misguided economic policies are largely to blame for the poor post-pandemic recovery.
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For many years, our federal government has spent beyond its means. Both parties have contributed to the over $31.6 trillion debt and Americans are feeling the strain of inflation. Now that Republicans hold the majority in the House, they have an opportunity to make great strides in fiscal responsibility.
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The exhaustion that many people feel in trying to live under a constantly meddling Democrat administration is real and intentional. Those in charge of the country’s economy seem to have nothing better to do than create rules and policies that require Americans to spend more and more of their time and energy trying to navigate.
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Conservatives must not agree to send any more money to fund the Biden administration’s radical, inflationary agenda – not now, and not in a lame duck session.
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All Americans are facing record food and gas prices. Inflation hit a forty-year high in August at a rate of 8.3% and the stock market is historically low.
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America’s food security is being threatened by the forces of the Great Reset led by the World Economic Forum in Davos and under the thumb of the United Nations “sustainable development” Agenda 2030.
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Democrats can’t help but punish working Americans! Massive federal spending has contributed nearly $31 trillion to the national debt leaving taxpayers with the bill. Rising inflation costs and high gas prices have hurt low-income earners the most by causing them to pay an average of $635 more per month for basic necessities.
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Just how much waste, pork and silly spending are taxpayers subsidizing? Inflation is at a 40-year high and just crossed eight-percent on a rolling 12-month basis. Most economists agree inflation is the result of our federal government throwing trillions of dollars into pandemic relief, the federal budget, and “infrastructure.”
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If you have not noticed rising prices or if you did not expect rising prices, either you have not been paying attention to American monetary, fiscal, welfare, and pandemic policies or you have not understood basic economics.
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