Well, I’d lax SOME of these things because some of them are useless now, but a lot of these things being destroyed just leads to disgustingly inhumane and unethical conditions, practically creating barely paid slave labor. I’d take out the unions for a little bit to get some progress done, but the moment they become big again, we’re riding these types of regulations right back in. With our current minds and access to knowledge, we’d recreate our previous circumstances extremely fast regardless. The factories that create the parts for more factories don’t have to require what is practically slave labor to get us back to where we are now. Honestly though, I can’t name many times that the workers were treated like “royalty” by any means, even jn the modern world. We should’ve had more regulations by that time, government imposed rather than purely union, while using government aid (what little was there at the time) to help make the industry grow faster. If we had a do over, we’d recover faster than you think, maybe this take much better. Also, ask yourself again, who do these regulations benefit? You. Who does massive tax cuts benefit? The rich. We’re not tied to the success of the rich, that’s been proven, but they ARE tied to our success.
@Patriot-#1776Constitution4mos4MO
For the ten thousandth time, tax cuts benefit ALL so-called "classes" precisely because when the rich have more money, they expand their businesses, create more jobs, innovate, invest, in many cases, like the Ford Motor COmpany in the 1900s, pioneer new employee benefits to competitively garner necessary workers, and they invest in stocks, bonds, real estate, ad infinitum, all of which create jobs and employment for the middle & lower classes on top of moving the economy forward and creating new technologies. Regulations on private business are often ludicrous, and contribute… Read more
@9CJ6CB64mos4MO
Yet somehow tax cuts on the rich have zero correlation to our growth, and actually impair it drastically due to the deficit being increased as a nation makes less overall revenue from losing the tax revenue. Our productivity has never been higher, improving by over 60% within less than 50 years, while wages have increased a revoltingly small quantity of 17% in return. We’re exhausted, and it’s time that the money the rich gained largely from us comes full circle back, because this money hasn’t been used to help us, nor has it ever been guaranteed to. Ford did that as a rare… Read more
@Patriot-#1776Constitution4mos4MO
How do you explain, then, the shocking turnaround from post-war recession in the early 1920s to an economic boom just a year after Warren Harding slashed taxes in half and Coolidge quartered them? How do you explain, then, the economic revival that happened when Reagan rescinded federal regulations and slashed taxes by massive amounts? Or the realtively good economy after the Trump tax cuts?