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  • What to know about Trump’s $2,000 tariff dividend proposal

    Over the weekend, President Donald Trump promised Americans $2,000 each from the “trillions of dollars” in tariff revenue he said his administration has collected. 

    During his second term, Trump has imposed tariffs broadly on countries and on specific goods such as drugs, steel and cars.

    “People that are against Tariffs are FOOLS!,” Trump said in a Nov. 9 Truth Social post. “We are taking in Trillions of Dollars and will soon begin paying down our ENORMOUS DEBT, $37 Trillion. Record Investment in the USA, plants and factories going up all over the place. A dividend of at least $2000 a person (not including high income people!) will be paid to everyone.”

    How seriously should people take his pledge? Experts urged caution. 

    Tariffs are projected to generate well below “trillions” a year, making it harder to pay each person $2,000. And the administration already said it would use the tariff revenue to either pay for existing tax cuts or to reduce the federal debt.

    Trump’s post came days after the U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments about the legality of his tariff policy. The justices are weighing whether Trump has the power to unilaterally impose tariffs under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. If the justices rule against Trump, much of the expected future tariff revenue would not materialize.

    What Trump proposed, and who would qualify

    The administration has published no plans for the tariff dividends, and in a Nov. 9 ABC News interview, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said he hadn’t spoken to Trump about giving Americans a dividend payment. 

    Details about a potential payment have been limited to Truth Social posts. 

    Trump said “everyone” excluding “high income people” would get the money, but didn’t explain who qualifies as “high income.” He also didn’t say whether children would receive the payment. 

    In a Nov. 10 Truth Social post, Trump said his administration would first pay $2,000 to “low and middle income USA Citizens,” and then use the remaining tariff revenues to “substantially pay down national debt.”

    Trump hasn’t said what form the payments might take. Bessent said the dividend “could come in lots of forms, in lots of ways. You know, it could be just the tax decreases that we are seeing on the president’s agenda. You know, no tax on tips, no tax on overtime, no tax on Social Security, deductibility of auto loans. So, you know, those are substantial deductions.”

    Analysts said it’s a stretch to rebrand an already promised tax cut as a new dividend.

    Trump has previously discussed paying Americans with tariff revenue. 

    “We have so much money coming in, we’re thinking about a little rebate but the big thing we want to do is pay down debt,” he told reporters July 25. “We’re thinking about a rebate.”

    Days later, Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., introduced legislation that would give $600 tariff rebate checks to each American adult and child. Hawley’s bill has not advanced.

    Tariff revenue collected versus cost of a “dividend” payment

    Trump made the imposition of tariffs one of his signature 2024 campaign promises. Since taking office in January, he has enacted tariffs on a scale not seen in the U.S. in almost a century; the current overall average tariff rate is 18%, the highest since 1934, according to Yale Budget Lab.

    Through the end of October, the federal government collected $309.2 billion in tariff revenue, compared with $165.4 billion through the same point in 2024, an increase of $143.8 billion.

    The center-right Tax Foundation projects that tariff revenue will continue to increase to more than $200 billion a year if the tariffs remain in place.

    Erica York, the Tax Foundation’s vice president of federal tax policy, estimated in a Nov. 9 X post that a $2,000 tariff dividend for each person earning under $100,000 would equal 150 million adult recipients. That would cost nearly $300 billion, York calculated, or more if children qualified. That’s more than the tariffs have raised so far, she said. 

    The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget projected that Trump’s proposal could cost $600 billion, depending on how it is structured.

    The administration previously detailed other uses for tariff revenue

    The Trump administration already promised to use tariff revenue for other purposes, including reducing the country’s deficit and offsetting the cost of the GOP tax and spending bill Trump signed into law in July.

    As Trump announced new tariffs April 2, he said he would “use trillions and trillions of dollars to reduce our taxes and pay down our national debt.”

    Bessent has made the same promise, falsely saying in July that tariffs were “going to pay off our deficit.”

    Bessent said in August that he and Trump were “laser focused on paying down the debt.”

    “I think we’re going to bring down the deficit-to-GDP,” Bessent said in an Aug. 19 CNBC interview. “We’ll start paying down debt and then at a point that can be used as an offset to the American people.”

    Tariffs’ current cost to Americans 

    Tariffs are already costing Americans money, analysts say. Independent estimates range from about $1,600 to $2,600 a year per household. Given the similarity of these amounts to Trump’s proposed dividend, York said it would be more efficient to remove the tariffs.

    Joseph Rosenberg, Urban Institute-Brookings Institution Tax Policy Center senior fellow, said a $2,000 dividend in the form of a check would require congressional approval — and lawmakers have already declined to act on that idea once.

    When members of Congress approved the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, “They had the ability to include a tariff dividend, but they didn’t,” Rosenberg said.

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  • hurt rested modern

    hurt rested modern

    Thor is associated with Offbrand Games, publisher of Rivals 2. As Thor confirmed on stream Rivals 2 will be an always-online live-service game. Stop Killing Games is a conflict of interest for him. That’s it. That is the real reason he is so against it. And sure, he will try to act all high and mighty, but still it’s just ******** he made up, while the true reason is this: he left Blizzard, but Blizzard didn’t leave him. He is a corporate shill and the mask is off.

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  • Delisted

    Delisted

    Sony has delisted Helldivers 2 in more than 170 countries that don’t have dedicated regions in PSN, which was the main argument against the change. These countries no longer have the ability to buy the game or activate a retail key.
    Steam is refunding the game even with more than 100hrs of playtime.

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  • Funeral for NY National Guard member killed in border helicopter crash

    Funeral for NY National Guard member killed in border helicopter crash

    SCHUYLERVILLE, N.Y. (NEWS10) — Friday was a full day of events that culminated in mourners saying goodbye to Chief Warrant Officer 2 Casey Frankoski at Saratoga National Cemetery in Schuylerville. Frankoski was killed in a helicopter crash on March 8 in Texas.

    The day started with a funeral mass at Saint John the Evangelist and Saint Joseph’s Church in Rensselaer. More remembrance took place at the cemetery with a 21-gun salute, a policeman playing taps on trumpet, and a helicopter flyover.

    Frankoski had many ties to the Capital Region. She was born in Albany. She graduated from Columbia High School in 2013 and earned her associate degree in social science from SUNY Schenectady.

    Frankoski enlisted in the Army National Guard in 2016. She became a Chief Warrant Officer in 2019. The same year, she was deployed to Kuwait. And then in 2021, she was promoted to Chief Warrant Officer 2.

    In lieu of flowers, the departed’s family is requesting donations to a scholarship fund in her name. 

    A second New York Guardsman, John Grassia, of Schenectady, was also killed in the crash. A third member, Jacob Pratt, was severely injured and continues to recover in a Texas hospital. The cause for the crash remains under investigation.

    Zion Decoteau

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  • 7 days sober

    7 days sober

    I know it’s not really a big feat but I’ve not gone a full week without drinking in about 2 months. I’m shooting to stay sober all of January, and maybe February too. So far, so good. Will see how it goes but I kinda wanted to tell someone because I’m proud of myself

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  • 2,500 marijuana plants destroyed in Wasco area – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    2,500 marijuana plants destroyed in Wasco area – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (KGET) — Authorities destroyed about 2,500 marijuana plants that were grown illegally near Wasco, according to a court filing.

    The plants were eradicated earlier this month after being discovered during a surveillance patrol, according to a warrant filed by California Department of Fish and Wildlife.

    The rural property contained nine greenhouse structures surrounded by metal sheeting, a mobile home and travel trailer, the warrant says. The property was previously raided in May, when officials found about 1,200 marijuana plants and 630 pounds of processed cannabis.

    Original Author Link click here to read complete story..

    MMP News Author

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  • Austin Pets Alive! | A Picture of Transport Success: Tonto

    Austin Pets Alive! | A Picture of Transport Success: Tonto

    Aug 29, 2023

    For 10 months, Tonto sat overlooked in a crowded shelter in an isolated part of West Texas, where the human population counts at 9,000 and the nearest vet is 90 miles away.  The longer he sat, and the more crowded the shelter got and the greater risk there was of Tonto facing euthanasia.  But Tonto’s fate changed when APA!’s transport team, the Texas shelter, and Underground Dog, a local rescue, teamed up.

    Together we got Tonto on a flight up to Boise Bully Rescue in Boise, Idaho, where Tonto was quickly adopted by a wonderful family. Tonto is one of 2,460 pets whose lives were saved through our transport program in 2022. Fun fact: Tonto’s tongue permanently sticks out for a constant “blep” look

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  • 2,400-year-old flush toilet discovered in China could be one of the oldest ever

    2,400-year-old flush toilet discovered in China could be one of the oldest ever

    Archeologists in China have found the remains of what may be the world’s oldest known flush toilet.

    Broken parts of the 2,400-year-old lavatory, as well as a bent flush pipe, were unearthed last summer by a research team among ancient palace ruins in the Yueyang archaeological site in the central city of Xi’an, according to Chinese state media.

    Details of the find were released last week, sparking widespread interest in China and offering a rare insight into the privileged and competitively advanced world of the country’s ancient ruling elite.

    Described by researchers as a “luxury object,” the toilet was thought to have been located inside the palace, with a pipe leading to an outdoor pit, according to state-owned China Daily.

    Liu Rui, a researcher at the Institute of Archeology at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, who was part of the excavation team, told state media the toilet would have likely been reserved for high-ranking officials during the Warring States Period (475-221 BC) and the later Han Dynasty (206 BC-AD 220). He added that servants would likely have poured water into the toilet bowl every time it was used.

    “The flush toilet is concrete proof of the importance the ancient Chinese attached to sanitation,” Liu said, adding that there were very few records of indoor toilets in ancient times.

    Access to clean, flush toilets remain an issue in parts of modern China. Early in his tenure, Chinese leader Xi Jinping promised to “revolutionize” the country’s restrooms, as part of efforts to improve rural hygiene.

    “The toilet issue is no small thing, it’s an important aspect of building civilized cities and countryside,” Xi said in an article in the state-owned People’s Daily in 2018. “This work should be advanced as a specific task of rural revitalization and such shortcomings that affect the quality of people’s life should be filled with great efforts.”

    Prior to the newly announced discovery, the invention of the first flush toilet was widely credited to English courtier John Harington, who supposedly installed one for Queen Elizabeth in the 16th century, though 4,000-year-old drainage systems that might have been connected with toilets have been found in northwest India.

    The ruins from Yueyang, the former capital of Qin State and later the first capital of the Han Dynasty, were discovered in the 1980s. The recent find is part of a broader effort to understand ancient Chinese dynasties, including how people lived and how their cities were constructed, the Institute said in a statement announcing the discoveries.

    Archaeologists are now analyzing soil samples collected from the toilet in hopes of finding out what people ate during that time, according to China Daily.

    Top image caption: The unearthed flush lavatory, which is comprised of a toilet bowl and sewage system, excavated from the Yueyang site in Xi’an, China. Credit: Xinhua/Shutterstock

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