#343776
Via the GWPF: Recent research by Professor Valentina Zharkova (Northumbria University) and colleagues has shed new light on the inner workings of the Sun. If correct, this new discovery means that …
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#343777
Video: Robert Spencer on Obama's treasonous dealings with Iran Islamic State promises jihad massacre at Rio Olympics
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#343778
Michael Ledeen on “The Field of Fight” — on The Glazov Gang In the face of jihadist threats, young Americans worry about racism
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#343779
Nothing in the penal code comes close to codifying the affirmative-consent standard.
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#343780
Male student was essentially found guilty of rape because he submitted his text messages in the wrong order.
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#343781

Listening to Trump Voters

Submitted 8 years ago by ActRight Community

The commentariat spends a lot of time talking about Donald Trump—time that might be better spent listening to the people who are voting for him.
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#343782
Since the Democratic National Committee emails were leaked a few weeks ago, three people associated with the DNC have all been found dead under what could be questionable circumstances.
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#343783
Dead Family (An Anti-LGBT Short Film)
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#343784

Old lies return this election year

Submitted 8 years ago by ActRight Community

We expect to hear a lot of lies during an election year, and this year is certainly no exception. What is surprising is how old some of these lies are, and how often they have been shown to be lies, years ago or even decades ago.
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#343785
No one denies climate exists, and they don't deny that it changes over time. But Clinton and the Democrats want to criminalize any dissent of liberal dogma.
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#343786

Trump’s Big Tax Hike

Submitted 8 years ago by ActRight Community

Donald Trump is proposing a couple of big tax hikes. The first one is trivial: It’s the tax hike in Trump Tax Plan 2.0 over the original version. Earlier, Trump had talked about cutting the tax code down to three brackets, at 10 percent, 20 percent, and 25 percent. The new version is 12 percent, 25 percent, and 33 percent: That’s a 20 percent marginal rate hike on the bottom third, another 20 percent hike on the middle, and 32 percent increase on the fat cats at the top. It’s also more realistic for the long term, meaning that somebody or something must have gotten to Trump — maybe the Illuminati, maybe math. The big, ugly, stupid tax hike he’s planning is on Silicon Valley and its imitators around the country, the economic ecosystem of startup companies and the venture capitalists who put up the cash to turn their big ideas into viable products, dopey computer games, social-media annoyances, and companies that employ hundreds of thousands of people at very high wages. Which is to say, he wants to punish the part of the U.S. economy that works, for the crime of working. The so-called carried-interest loophole, which isn’t a loophole, drives progressives batty — Donald Trump, Hillary Rodham Clinton, and Elizabeth Warren all get their Underoos over their heads about it. You’ll hear a lot from Trump and others about “hedge-fund guys” who exploit this so-called loophole to beat Uncle Stupid out of a few gazillion dollars in taxes, but it in fact has very little to do with hedge funds. Here’s how it works: Because the U.S. government wants to encourage investment and because corporations (and, hence, their shareholders) already pay the corporate-income tax, profits from certain long-term investments are taxed at a lower rate than is a salary. This is called the long-term capital-gains tax rate, and for a long time, it was 15 percent for most everybody; a provision of the grievously misnamed American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 made it 20 percent for households with incomes in the middle six figures and up, but that’s still about half of what you’d pay if it were taxed the way a salary is taxed — but a salary is guaranteed, whereas investments involve higher levels of risk. To pay the long-term rate, you generally have to hold an investment for a year or more, and that is why it doesn’t much matter to hedge funds, which rarely hold anything that long. It matters a great deal to two related kinds of investors: private-equity investors (that’s what Mitt Romney used to do at Bain) and venture-capital investors (that’s what the guys who put up the money to develop Facebook do). If you’re a startup that needs money, you can’t really borrow it, or much of it: The failure rate of new businesses is high, meaning that interest rates on such loans would be high, too; Mom and Dad might kick in, but the banks aren’t going to. And they aren’t going to do that if you’re an established but struggling company that needs to restructure itself or a small business with a big idea looking to become a very big business. If you’re the cash-strapped startup, you go to venture capitalists; if you’re the established business, you go to a private-equity group. In both cases, the deal looks pretty similar: You get cash to do what you need to do, and the investor, rather than lending you money at a high interest rate, takes a piece of your company as recompense (for distressed companies being reorganized by private-equity firms, that’s usually 100 percent of the firm) on the theory that this will be worth more — preferably much more – than the money they put into your business. Eventually, the investor sells its stake in the company and pays the capital-gains tax on its capital gain. Trump wants to punish the part of the U.S. economy that works, for the crime of working. The success stories are famous. When retired supermarket executive Thomas Stemberg couldn’t find a printer ribbon one day, he decided that there was an opening in the market for an office-supplies supermarket. Nobody thought this was a very good idea except for Mitt Romney and Bain Capital, which not only put up the money to open the first Staples store but also — here’s the critical part — lent the fledging business their management and financial expertise to help ensure its long-term success. (Federal antitrust regulators currently are doing their best to ensure Staples’s failure.) It isn’t just about writing a check. Similarly, when PayPal cofounder Peter Thiel put $500,000 into Facebook, his investment came with a great deal more than a jolt of liquidity. The same thing happens at a smaller scale when workers ranging from secretaries to programmers come to startup companies that cannot afford to pay them very much in cash but reward them with equity instead. That process is sometimes called “sweat equity.” Redmond and Austin are full of people who had unglamorous jobs in the early days of Microsoft and Dell and were rewarded — sometimes spectacularly — for the risk they took and the cash-money pay they forwent. As Bobby Franklin of the National Venture Capital Association puts it, “Far from being a so-called ‘loophole,’ the carried interest venture investors receive is similar to stock awards received by the founders of a startup in that both the venture investors and founders commit the time, energy, and creativity against huge risks to build new startups into successful companies.” #share#The lower capital-gains tax rate is not what drives venture-capital investing in the main. Thiel is said to have made something like $400 million on his $500,000 initial Facebook investment, which is a good deal at a 15 percent, 20 percent, or 40 percent tax rate. It is the promise of outsized returns that drives the venture-capital model, along with, in many cases, a nerdy sense of adventure. Elon Musk knows he’s not going to make money on every big idea he has. That being said, tax rates on investment do matter, at least at the margins — and they will matter much more in the relatively near future. As the technology sector matures, it becomes more like any other established industry, including in its attitude toward startups. Not every investment is going to make 1,000 percent returns or 10,000 percent returns — not in the long run. In the long run, the margins are going to be smaller, which means that doubling taxes on sweat-equity investments will have a relatively larger effect. Having every election result in radical changes to the tax code imposes costs of its own that are far from obvious. Donald Trump does not understand this, because he isn’t a real businessman — he’s a Potemkin businessman, a New York City real-estate heir with his name on a lot of buildings he doesn’t own and didn’t build and whose real business is peddling celebrity and its by-products. He’s a lot more like Paris Hilton than he is like Henry Ford or Steve Jobs. Miss Hilton sells perfumes and the promise of glamour, Trump sells ugly neckties and the promise of glamour. By Trump’s own reckoning, his brand — meaning the cloud of celebrity that hangs around him — is worth more than his actual assets, which ought to tell you something about the nature of his business model, i.e., that it’s show business. Not that there’s anything wrong with show business, but unless you’re talking about ten square miles in Southern California, it’s not much of a foundation for an economy. Technology leaders from Steve Wozniak to Jimmy Wales have predicted in a group statement that a Trump presidency would constitute “a disaster for innovation.” #related#There are aspects of the U.S. tax code that are in need of reform, to be sure, but the nation is not struggling for want of sufficiently rapacious taxation of long-term investments. And even though changes are warranted, having every election result in radical changes to the tax code imposes costs of its own that are far from obvious: There is real economic value in continuity and predictability. Continuity and predictability are especially valuable in sectors that are already working pretty well, which our venture-capital and private-equity industries are. The old wisdom is: “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.” The new wisdom is, “If it ain’t broke, we’ll see what we can do about that.” There’s a lot that doesn’t work well in these United States: the schools, the State Department, the immigration system, Baltimore, Detroit, Philadelphia . . . Silicon Valley works just fine. Let’s don’t mess that up. — Kevin D. Williamson is National Review’s roving correspondent.
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#343787
The parents of two men killed in Benghazi, Libya nearly four years ago are suing former Secretary of State and current presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, saying the attack resulted from her “reckless” handling of classified information.
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#343788
North Carolina schools have begun bypassing state laws in order to capitulate to President Obama’s transgender edict issued in May, which compels all publicly-funded schools to adhere to the left's transgender ideology at the threat of revoked funding and lawsuits. 
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#343789
Feminism has gone too far. The International Conference on Men's Issues, and the movement it represents, aims to challenge that.
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#343790
In light of the Rolling Stone-University of Virginia libel lawsuit and other rape hoaxes across the U.S., The Women Against VAWA Excess (known as WAVE) issued a brief directed towards Democratic Se…
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#343791

Will Smith slams Trump

Submitted 8 years ago by ActRight Community

At a Dubai press conference for his latest film, "Suicide Squad," Will Smith discusses Donald Trump, Islamophobia and negative reviews. (Aug. 8) Subscribe fo...
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#343792
Obama to Clinton: Passing the Torch of Treachery By Jeremiah Johnson The Obama Administration has been characterized by not only a lack of transparency on issues that surface, but a deliberate obfu…
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#343793
Guerilla filmmaker James O'Keefe has video evidence of poll workers offering ballots to people who aren't who they claim to be.
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#343794
1791L - Your source for common sense political discourse. » This segment is from Winged Politics. ✖ Follow Winged Politics on Twitter https://twitter.com/WIN...
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#343795

Alan Keyes on religious liberty

Submitted 8 years ago by ActRight Community

SIGN THE PLEDGE FOR AMERICA'S REVIVAL!! www.americasrevival.com/pledge.php On April 1, 2004, an interview with Alan Keyes and Betty and James Robison was air...
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#343796
Hillary Clinton spoke to a crowd in Kissimee, just south of Orlando. She started the speech off paying tribute to those affected by the Pulse Nightclub shooting. During her remarks, the father of the Orlando shooter sat just behind her.
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#343797
His big economic speech Monday was no exception.
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#343798
If someone falsely accuses another person of a crime, like child abuse or sexual assault, then the false accuser needs to be punished harshly. Too often, false accusers are given just slaps on the wrist — and receive nowhere near the punishment someone actually guilty of the accused crime would receive. This diminishes the harm that false accusations do to the people they are lodged against, who are often branded in the media as some of the worst criminals imaginable: child abuser or rapist. Case in point: Taylier Tibbetts accused the father of her child of abusing the boy, and even went so far as to alter photos of her son to make him appear bruised. After she made the false accusation to police, she opened a GoFundMe account to raise money for herself and her son using the false claim.
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#343799
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump will propose tax breaks for working families and for corporations as he outlines his economic plans on Monday in an effort to regain momentum lost during a damaging spate of controversies.
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#343800
Yes, that 'Talk Islam'. Thoroughly exposing the number one Islam propaganda Youtube channel and t's backers for what it really is. Hint: it involves terroris...
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