Tag: donald trump
Trump's Gargantuan Pentagon Budget And The Social Security 'Shortfall'

Trump's Gargantuan Pentagon Budget And The Social Security 'Shortfall'

The release of the 2026 Social Security Trustees Report got the usual suspects (a.k.a. “very serious people”) genuflecting about the large projected shortfall. As of 2034, the program is projected to be unable to pay full benefits. This would mean a 22% cut in benefits if no additional revenue is added.

There are three points worth making here.

1) As an economic matter, the projected depletion of the trust fund and resulting shortfall in the program means nothing;

2) The main reason for the projected shortfall is the upward redistribution of income over the last half-century;

3) The projected shortfall is far less money than the increase in military spending that Donald Trump is requesting for his 2027 budget.

Trust Fund Accounting

On the first point, the spending to repay the bonds held from the trust fund in 2033 comes from the Treasury. Its impact on the economy would be the same as the spending in 2034, when the trust fund no longer holds any bonds.

There is an issue that the law gives the program a claim to the funds needed to repay the bonds it holds. Social Security does not have a claim to the money needed to pay full benefits once the last bonds are sold and the trust fund is depleted.

This is an important legal point, but from an economic standpoint, it is money from the Treasury in both cases. If the country could afford to pay full benefits in 2033 when the trust fund held bonds. It can afford to pay full benefits after it has sold all its bonds, however the law would need to be changed.

Upward Redistribution Hurt Social Security’s Finances

In 1982, the last time the program had a major overhaul, just ten percent of wage income went to high wage earners whose income escaped taxation by being over the cap (currently around $185,000) for wages subject to the 12.4 percent Social Security tax. In the last quarter century, close to 17 percent of wage income went over the cap.

This upward redistribution of wage income, coupled with the redistribution from wages to profits in the last quarter century, has substantially reduced the amount of revenue going into the trust fund. It shouldn’t be surprising that the people who engineered the upward redistribution of the last half-century, through trade policy, stronger patent and copyright protections, bank bailouts, and tech policy, now want to reduce people’s Social Security benefits.

Trump’s Increase in Military Spending is Twice the Size of the Shortfall Projected for 2034

The media seem to take pride in reporting huge budget numbers without providing any context that would make them meaningful to their audience. The projected Social Security shortfall is a great example. The usual group of budget hawks is being brought out to tell us that it is a huge program, which we can’t afford, and requires cuts.

Yet, we did not hear the same chorus in response to Donald Trump’s proposed increase in the military budget from $864 billion in the last year of the Biden presidency to $1,500 billion in 2027. Even adjusting for inflation between the two years, the increase would still be close to $590 billion. There was no rationale given for why the country suddenly needs to spend so much more on its military. Trump certainly did not propose this sort of massive increase in spending in his campaign.

The proposed increase in military spending dwarfs the shortfall projected in the Social Security program for 2034.

Adjusting for inflation (assuming 2.5 percent annually), Trump’s requested increase would be just under $700 billion in 2034 dollars. By contrast, the Social Security Trustees project that the program will face a $314 billion shortfall in its annual budget in 2034.

We can argue about what should be considered big and what should be considered small, but there is zero doubt that Trump’s proposed increase in military spending is hugely larger than the projected shortfall in Social Security. If anyone thinks that Social Security poses a big problem for the budget, they must believe that Trump’s military spending poses a much bigger problem, since it is more than twice as large.

And, as noted earlier, we are already paying the money for Social Security; it is just coming out of a different pocket. The proposed increase in military spending, at 1.6% of GDP, will be newly committed funds coming from the Treasury, which will impose substantial demands on the economy. Any honest person who says funding Social Security poses a serious budget problem must believe that Trump’s military spending poses a far bigger problem.

Trump's Latest Fox Interview On Iran Displays Perilous Propaganda 'Doom Loop'

Trump's Latest Fox Interview On Iran Displays Perilous Propaganda 'Doom Loop'

President Donald Trump called in to his old stomping ground of Fox News’ Fox & Friends on Thursday morning, using the surprise interview to denounce the “crooked” media’s coverage of the war he started with Iran, praise Fox’s own positive coverage, and listen to the program’s co-hosts urge him to escalate further by deploying U.S. ground troops on Iranian soil.

Trump watches Fox programming religiously, frequently takes action based on what he sees from its coverage through a phenomenon I’ve described as the Fox-Trump feedback loop, and treats its hosts like unpaid members of his cabinet. The network played a key role in convincing the president to launch the Iran war earlier this year.

That war has settled into a stalemate. The U.S. and Israel launched major strikes in late February and early March that decimated the Iranian military and killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. But Iran responded by closing the vital trade route of the Strait of Hormuz, and after months of alternating periods of tit-for-tat conflict and diplomacy, the Iranian regime remains intact and in control of its uranium stockpile and the strait, leading experts to describe the conflict as a strategic debacle for the U.S.

The U.S. and Iranian militaries have traded strikes this week, and on Thursday morning Trump posted on social media that the U.S. will hit Iran “VERY HARD TONIGHT,” adding, “At some point in the not too distant future, we will be taking Kharg Island, and other oil infrastructure points, and assume total control of their Oil and Gas Markets.”

Minutes after issuing that threat, Trump called in to Fox & Friends, the program on which he used to have a weekly guest slot as he built his political profile before his 2016 presidential run.

The president told the co-hosts that his “preference has always been take Kharg Island” — a tactic people on Fox have been pushing for months which would require putting boots on the ground — but that he’s unsure whether “America has the stomach for it.” He repeatedly complained over the course of the interview about what he deemed the “crooked” media’s insufficiently supportive coverage of the war, a subject that has consumed him since shortly after he launched it.

Responding to one such salvo, in which the president grouched about “Trump Derangement Syndrome,” co-host Ainsley Earhart urged Trump not to “worry about” the coverage and to go ahead and escalate the war by seizing Kharg Island, promising that Fox’s viewers would support it.



“We know that America is winning this fight, but when they destroy or they shoot down one of our Apache helicopters and we strike Iranian targets and then they fire missiles at our bases in Bahrain and Kuwait and Jordan, we have to fight back,” she said. “So, when you say you don't think America has the appetite to do what we are seeing tonight, I think we do. I think we’re ready to see this.”

Trump responded by praising her network’s “great” coverage. He name-checked evening hosts Sean Hannity, Jesse Watters, and Laura Ingraham, calling them “fantastic” and adding that “every single anchor has been great.” (Notably, Trump did not mention Mark Levin, the arch-hawk whose war commentary the president has previously touted but who has criticized negotiating with the Iranian regime even as he praised Trump himself.)

“You guys have been amazing, and Trey Yingst is a superstar,” the president continued, referring to the Fox correspondent who has been covering the war from Israel and said last month that Trump held “the cards” while the Iranians were “grasping at straws” and desperate to negotiate an agreement with the U.S..

“He just covers so accurately,” Trump added. “I don't know Trey Yingst, but, I mean, he covers it so accurately. It's so beautiful to watch. And he's got a level of excitement that's amazing. But the accuracy is so good, I just saw him on your show a little while ago, and I said that's exactly what’s happening.”

Indeed, Fox has produced near-lockstep promotion of the war, with hosts constantly lavishing the president with praise and touting the “major geopolitical win” he is supposedly achieving there. Its personalities have also regularly urged Trump to order risky escalations like seizing Iran’s refineries, claiming that victory is “two weeks” away if only he would unleash the military and “finish the job.”

Now the president, who is obsessed with Fox’s coverage and often makes decisions based on its programming, appears to be listening — and says he plans to carry out their strategy. In search of more compliments from his television, he’s trapping the U.S. in a doom loop.

On Fox, Irked Laura Ingraham Notices That Iranian Strikes Prove Trump Is Lying

On Fox, Irked Laura Ingraham Notices That Iranian Strikes Prove Trump Is Lying

Fox News host Laura Ingraham is getting bummed with President Donald Trump’s mixed messaging and embarrassing fabrications, especially when they keep producing cringe moments in the U.S. invasion of Iran, reports Mediaite.

Specifically, Ingraham was aggravated that Iranians were still able to strike U.S. targets when their military was allegedly destroyed, as Trump and his cohorts keep claiming.

Ingraham was speaking with former State Department official Nathan Sales about the U.S. strikes against Iran on Tuesday in retaliation for the downing of an Apache helicopter by an Iranian drone — after Trump vowed to respond to the Iranian attack earlier on Tuesday.

But the reason for the U.S. response was really the root of Ingraham’s ire.

“We keep hearing their military is destroyed,” Ingraham told Sales. “But if their military is destroyed, how are they continuing to hit us? I mean, an Apache helicopter costs about, what, about $46 million?”

Mediaite reports the attack on the helicopter came as a bit of a surprise to Fox because of Trump’s conflicting remarks and” the 38 times the president has claimed that the two sides were close to reaching a deal.”

Also surprised, apparently, was Ingraham.

“One thing that a lot of Americans can’t really wrap their heads about here is we keep hearing that they’ve been destroyed, decimated. The word is often used ungrammatically, but nevertheless … we hear that, and we know there’s extensive damage. Yet these drones are lethal, and they’re easy to make. They’re fairly cheap, and obviously did some damage to us last night over Oman. How can we guard against that? How can we protect against that, given the stakes here, again back home, and over there?”

Sales insisted “the Iranian military threat has been substantially degraded,” but “it hasn’t gone down to zero.”

For Ingraham, that wasn’t good enough.

“Why have we left any military structure there? … [W]e seem to have hit a number of base points tonight and are still, perhaps. We knew where those were. Why did we leave any of them standing? If we wanted to just really get this done, why are they still standing at all?” Ingraham demanded.

The explosion came a handful of weeks after musician Kid Rock scored a ride at Fort Belvoir in the same kind of Apache Helicopters when Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth gave him a trip. Kid Rock’s trip came after an earlier controversial flyover at the artist’s Nashville home prompted the Army to suspend the aircrew involved in the stunt. Hegseth swiftly reversed the suspensions.

Reprinted with permission from Alternet


'Rigged!' Trump And MAGA Furious Over Pratt's Defeat In Los Angeles Primary

'Rigged!' Trump And MAGA Furious Over Pratt's Defeat In Los Angeles Primary

President Donald Trump and his movement of MAGA Republicans are venting their rage online after Republican reality TV star Spencer Pratt lost to two Democrats, Mayor Karen Bass and Councilmember Nithya Raman, in the Los Angeles mayoral race.

Because Trump has accused all of the politicians he opposes of cheating, tracing all the way back to the 2016 Republican Iowa caucus, he naturally has accused Bass and Raman of cheating Pratt. MAGA Republicans online are taking notice.

"I'm at the rare intersection of: - Was rooting for Pratt - Thought he was good for the LA political conversation - Dislike California's election administration laws and policies - But understand how the process works,” posted an X user named Stephen Richer.

Similarly Republican pollster Frank Luntz observed "reality TV star Spencer Pratt says he ‘will be done with trying to live in LA’ if he doesn't win the mayoral election. Yesterday, he was surpassed in the Los Angeles mayoral primary for the second run-off spot in November."

Another Republican wrote going by Dr. Terry Simpson on X wrote that "I'm a Republican. Los Angeles is roughly 50% Democratic and about 10% Republican. Any candidate who wants to lead this city must win support well beyond the Republican base. Spencer Pratt didn't lose because voters didn't understand he was independent. He lost.”

Other Republicans reacted with the outrage that Trump is trying to stir up, even though there is no evidence that anything illicit is occurring in the California election.

"A 43,000-vote swing just handed Nithya Raman the edge over Spencer Pratt in LA,” an X user who goes by jay plemons posted. “The exact size of the city's homeless population. Ballot harvesting from shelters, universal mail ballots, and late drops made it happen. Coincidence?"

Similarly X user Mark Mendlovitz wrote, "The large variance of Pratt and Raman but not Bass should be setting off screaming alarm bells."

Even House Speaker Mike Johnson suggested there might be fraud in California, despite the fact that he also acknowledged there is no proof. Instead he cited the absence of evidence as being in itself suspicious.

“I'm not saying it's rigged,” Johnson told CNN’s Manu Raju on Monday. “I'm saying it stinks to high heaven. And everybody knows that. Let's remove the appearance of impropriety. Let's have, what a concept, let's have votes on an election the day of the election. That's what many states are able to do. I think California is playing around with this.”

After Raju asked Johnson if he had proof the election was improper, he admitted that “I don't — some of these efforts are so diabolical and so far upstream that it is impossible to prove. But I think everybody knows instinctively something is wrong here. And that's a concern. We need people to believe in the integrity of our election system.”

Trump, who attempted a coup after he lost the 2020 presidential election to then-Vice President Joe Biden, is reportedly falsely accusing the California election of being stolen as a preparation for denying the results of the 2026 midterms, which are also expected to swing against him.

“By baselessly framing Ms. Raman’s rise as a Democratic scam, Mr. Trump extended his long-running project to erode public faith in elections — and gave an unusually clear preview of how he could greet any disappointing results for his party in November, when control of Congress is at stake,” wrote The New York Times' Jonathan Swan and Maggie Haberman on Monday. “He has been anything but subtle about his desire to limit the ability of Democrats to vote by mail, implying, with no evidence, that simply choosing that widely used means of casting a ballot is inherently suspect.”

Swan and Haberman added, “Addressing a gathering of Republican lawmakers in March, he said the way to hold their majority was to pass a strict voter identification law cracking down on mail ballots. ‘It’ll guarantee the midterms,’ he told them, warning that failure would bring ‘big trouble.’”

Reprinted with permission from Alternet

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