I got muscles on my body that look good.
My name is Vernon & I approved this blog.
The online location for Vernon J
Where Vernon J BREAKS his news
I got muscles on my body that look good.
My name is Vernon & I approved this blog.
I have come to believe the best person to start a rumor, is the one involved in a rumor.
ie Vernon J is in LOVE.
Well its the FNP. Let’s see who we can get into, oops I mean what we can get into.
Mike R of Omaha has a Birthday Party tonight.
Melinda Brown’s Birthday is also tonight.
No game tonight or tomorrow.
Gonna study for a test.
Enjoy YOUR FNP!
A Daily Digest of my tweets
My name is Vernon J & I’m nosy.
@aplusk – go ahead and retweet that for me buddy ole pal #
Vernon Davis
422 N. 40th St.
Omaha, NE 68131
516-4401
Don’t worry about it.
I took the bottle to the area and filled it up.
BUT you just go ahead and keep being el cheap/el lazo and feel the bottle with water.
I listened to two more songs.
A Daily Digest of my tweets
TURN YOUR #RINGER OFF OR VIBRATE ON. Do I have to teach you how to do it? #
Vernon Davis
422 N. 40th St.
Omaha, NE 68131
516-4401
Thursday, Oct. 29, 2009
“You know, Paul, Reagan proved deficits don’t matter,” Vice President Dick Cheney famously told George W. Bush’s first Treasury Secretary, Paul O’Neill. Cheney, who rarely allows facts to get in the way of a good ideology, was retailing a myth. Ronald Reagan is remembered for the massive tax cuts passed during his first year in office. But since deficits do matter — and since Reagan’s so-called supply-side cuts blasted an enormous hole in the budget — the President had to come back in 1982 with the largest peacetime tax increase in American history: the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act, which raised $37.5 billion, or 1% of gross domestic product (GDP), per year. He also signed a $3.3 billion gasoline-tax increase. The next year, he signed another whopping tax hike, designed to save Social Security.
A second prevailing myth of the Reagan Administration, quietly peddled by budget director David Stockman, went like this: O.K., supply-side economics is a phony, but we can use the growth of budget deficits as an argument for limiting the growth of government. That didn’t work out so well either. The public demanded its entitlement programs — deficits be damned — and a strong defense, and loved having politicians who secured funding for a Yo-Yo Hall of Fame in their district. Deficits grew until the combined actions of George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton caused the deficits to stop growing. How, you might ask, did they manage that? They raised taxes. Somehow the economy not only survived, it prospered. (See pictures of tea-party tax protests.) Continue reading “Why Taxes Are Necessary to Pay for Health Care Reform – TIME”