Washington is where everyone tells you they wake up SUPER EARLY, work out, get a cup of coffee, then read four different foreign language newspapers, and and then you see that this couldn’t possibly be true when local coffee shops don’t open til 7, because no one is awake.
So then someone *else* says it. They like the quiet they say. They like to get a workout in—before work. It sets the tone for the day, they say. At which point you become Poirot. “Oh? Do you run?”
Yes. Of course they run.
“Where?”
All over. It’s always all over, isn’t it?
People keep saying it. You keep hearing it. It’s still not true. You become a lunatic. You want an early morning coffee, but you still can’t get one. You start waking up early just to case the alleged running routes. People have lied. LIED! And you’ll expose them.
Then you realize: You’ve started waking up early, the way someone else claims to. You’re doing the workout someone else is faking, on the route they obviously don’t run. It’s so quiet and boring that you might as well read Le Monde and El Pais to get another perspective.
Your Spanish improves. Your Urdu improves. You realize that NPR’s morning news podcasts are broadcast live and you’ve basically got the news fresh, before anyone else frantically plays them two hours later to catch up with what’s happening in the world. But it’s old news to you.
Maybe those other folks wake up earlier you say. Maybe it’s quieter then, you wonder.
They don’t.
And because of that, it is.
You’re in a meeting later in the day—much later, like 10 AM, when everyone else starts slouching in—and someone mentions getting up early.
You hesitate and mention you do too. You tell them about the early morning workout. The newspapers. The *quiet*. They nod. They know. You do it out of spite like they do.
Washington is a place where you jokingly refer to the possibility that some fudge their morning routines and indignant Internet people assert that *they* aren’t lying and you can get coffee at a chain store at 6, idiot, and you realize:
it’s true, people really do live this way
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Don’t go outside
Don’t work
Don’t hire
Don’t go to church
Don’t stand up for your kids
Don’t speak your mind or disagree
Don’t grow your savings
Don’t own a gun
Don’t call police
Don’t produce oil (we’ll get it from Russia)
Don’t do anything. Just be dependent.
Don’t listen to your doctor
Don’t live your values
Don’t protest (unless we agree)
Don’t travel
Don’t celebrate
Don’t see family
Don’t shop at the grocery store
Don’t visit the Capitol or meet your member of Congress
Don’t vote in person
Don’t vote at all
Don’t do what we do
Don’t make jokes about Joe Biden
Don’t ask what we do with your taxes
Don’t aspire to more than poverty
Don’t worry about the border
Don’t worry about crime
Don’t worry about your business
Don’t worry about inflation
Don’t worry about seniors in retirement homes dying of COVID
Fraudster set up @PayPal account in my name. Paypal reported payments to @IRSnews who then sent me bill for taxes on money I never solicited or got.
PayPal wouldn’t send me what they reported, either.
IRS hung up on me because of call volume.
This is why people hate the IRS.
It’s already problematic that PayPal requires so little verification to set up an account. They are then obliged to send forms to the IRS.
Months ago, IRS customer service (after hours of wait time) said they could clear it up if I signed a form allowing them access to accounts.
This form ironically would give the IRS greater access to information allegedly about ME than I can access independently to learn what happened/transpired.
That’s because PayPal stood by its privacy safeguards, which are stronger than its anti-fraud safeguards, natch.
In this Monmouth poll that tilts heavily towards Democrats, Americans increasingly believe that Biden has done a bad job fighting Covid, and especially worse than their state’s governor. cnbc.com/2021/12/21/ame…
It’s a tie at 46%, equal numbers bad and equal numbers good.
But that’s down from a high of 58% “good job” in January when Americans knew a vaccine was available and Biden and Harris were saying that they would be ready on day one.
They weren’t, and that has frustrated many.
“Support for requiring people to show proof of vaccination in order to work in an office or other setting where they are around people has gone from a slight majority in September (53%) to a minority now (46%).”
This stuff has gotten way too political for people to trust it.
Setting the scene for tomorrow’s vote, I want to get some points out.
Between the really misreported polling, the terribly politicized (and bad) policy, and the misunderstood history of TCJA, there’s a LOT to cover and you could be forgiven for not having all the facts.
1. No, the social spending in the Democrats’ reconciliation package is NOT, in fact, popular.
-Most Americans believe Child Tax Credit should be temporary.
-SALT cap repeal is loathed.
-Explain how paid leave/child care proposal works, voters hate it.
2. The tax hikes are the “popular” parts — but misunderstood.
-Once voters understand implications of “tax the rich” & “enforcement,” they hate it.
-Deeply opposed to 80,000 new IRS agents once they know they would be more likely to audit middle class.
Since this seems like a fairly thorough encapsulation of what Democrats think Republicans believe about taxes, worth taking these arguments one by one...
"Democrats want Americans to pay the full amount they owe in taxes. What doesn’t get enough attention is that many Republicans seem not to agree.”
Republicans believe you should pay your taxes. We also think the tax code should be simple—to make it easier for regular people.
Republican tax reform simplified the tax code by getting rid of loopholes. The result wasn’t just historic economic growth, but historic revenues, and the wealthy paying a larger share of taxes. (Because the GOP eliminated certain carveouts.)