How many times has Trump made false claims as a felon? Is it passed 100k already? Look at the spending of the new bill, no need to dive into the past, and compare with the promises and miracles today: The so-called "Big Beautiful Bill" (BBB), the flagship legislative package of the second Trump administration, presents itself as a sweeping economic revitalization effort promising to stimulate growth, reward labor, and restore fiscal responsibility. But beneath the political branding lies a bill that starkly transfers wealth from the poor to the rich, from younger to older generations, and from future taxpayers to present beneficiaries. According to nonpartisan budget analysts, the BBB adds an estimated $4–5 trillion to the national debt over the next decade—largely due to the extension of Trump-era tax cuts and the introduction of new, regressive reductions that overwhelmingly favor high-income households. Roughly two-thirds of the bill’s total tax cut value benefits the top 20% of earners, and a quarter flows directly to the top 1%, even as the bill simultaneously phases out subsidies for healthcare and nutrition programs such as Medicaid, SNAP, and ACA premium assistance.
At the same time, the administration markets the legislation as a broad-based tax relief package. In the short term, most Americans will see a modest tax cut—not because their burden is meaningfully lowered, but because the bill prevents scheduled tax increases set to take place if prior provisions expired. This accounting sleight of hand allows the bill to claim “savings” and wide distributional gains while in practice consolidating wealth upward. Furthermore, the BBB sharply undermines America’s clean energy transition by slashing wind, solar, nuclear, and electric vehicle tax credits—industries already vulnerable to Chinese competition. The contradiction at the heart of the bill is especially glaring on trade and debt: while intensifying tariffs that raise consumer prices and strain global supply chains, the administration simultaneously claims the mantle of fiscal prudence, despite a plan that dramatically increases borrowing and places long-term stress on debt servicing, already the second-largest federal expenditure.
Beneath the noise of populist rhetoric and performative governance, the BBB’s true commitments become clear. It doubles down on costly tax cuts for corporations and the wealthy while dramatically increasing funding for ICE detention facilities and deportation operations—signaling a turn away from welfare toward enforcement. Small populist gestures, such as eliminating taxes on tips or social security, are heavily skewed to benefit higher-income households who can game the system or were already tax-exempt under current rules. While working-class voters were courted with promises of affordability and security, many will lose healthcare access, food assistance, and face steeper costs for basic goods. The BBB does not so much reflect a vision for economic rebirth as it does a cynical recalibration of government priorities: rewarding loyalty to Trump’s political brand while mortgaging the nation’s fiscal, social, and environmental future.
As Klein puts it:
"So when you think about this bill, you should think about risk. This is a bill that increases our risk of a fiscal crisis. What if all these other countries we’re alienating and all these investors we’re scaring stop buying our debt — even as we are creating trillions more in debt we need them to buy?
This bill increases the risk any of us face if we can’t afford health care or food for our families. It guts the safety net that millions of us would have relied on for help if Trump’s tariffs were to cause a recession. It pumps tens of billions of dollars into ICE detention facilities and deportation capacity, so it raises risks faced by immigrants — or anyone else — caught up in the administration’s mass deportation and detention operations.
I’ve been a policy journalist for more than 20 years. I’ve covered more bills than I can count. I cannot remember a more cruel or irresponsible piece of domestic legislation that has been seriously proposed.
And its sins are compounded by its size. If the Republicans’ Big Budget Bomb goes off, we are all in the blast radius."
Nobody here expects you to engage with any of this, Mitch. Let's assume you are correct in proving the evil jewish lib woke conspiracy orchestrated all this evil that also lab leaked the virus in Wuhan that never existed. And that you know enough math to bring manufacturing back the US.
When will this and the miracles be accomplished? Where is your hydro car? What date is the second coming? And when will all the loyalists own private hydrogen jets and the Jesus in chief perform the miracles? I'm pumped! We're chilling, relaxed, and waiting to see all this perfection emerge with heaven on earth. Poor Jesus has to suffer all this evil hate by the woke? Was the bible Jesus this much of a whiny, sensitive bitch? Seems to me he didn't need to silence anybody, as he just showed the doubters his wounds and let them poke the holes. The Klein would have to stfu, as he'd see for himself that no mortal could survive that loss of blood. Why argue at all? It's a woke thing that demonstrates lack of faith. Do you lack faith in "your side", Mitch? Because that's not a good sign.