Until we get a candidate that supports
1. Get rid of the income tax and don't replace it with anything;
2. Get rid of 90% of domestic business regulation;
3. Get rid of ALL victimless prosecution;
4. Repeal all laws that make anything that we do on our own private residence illegal as long as it doesn't clearly harm someone;
5. Open up 90% of government lands to homesteading.
voting isn't worth the time it takes to register.
I'd like to see the electoral college abolished, you ever seen the bullshit that happened with
Perot? Look at how many electoral votes he won. LMAO
If you want to abolish the income tax, would you want to keep the other taxes in place? Obviously taxes outright cannot be eliminated. My ideal candidate would support these things:
- Abolish the entire tax code and replace it with a 10% flat personal consumption tax. No gift tax, no inheritance tax, no capital gains taxes, no corporation taxes.
- Stop punishing those who commit victimless 'crimes'. End the war on drugs.
- End all welfare programs, social safety nets, etc. Gradually phase out social security.
- Non-interventionism. Stay the fuck out of the middle east unless a country poses a direct threat to the United States.
- Pure Laissez-faire. No tariffs, no subsidies.
- Ending foreign aid to all countries.
- Presidential pardons for Manning, Snowden, and Assange
Btw, I'm really surprised Trump is winning, Thought for sure it would be Rand Paul on here
Main reasons I don't like Trump:
Wants to further involvement in middle eastern affairs.
Doesn't support Laissez-faire economics.
Wants to raise taxes on the wealthy
Changes his stances based on popular opinion
In 1990, Trump called for legalizing all drugs. “We’re losing badly the war on drugs. You have to legalize drugs to win that war,” he said. “You have to take the profit away from these drug czars… What I’d like to do maybe by bringing it up is cause enough controversy that you get into a dialogue on the issue of drugs so people will start to realize that this is the only answer; there is no other answer.”
But at the 2015 Conservative Political Action Conference, Trump stated that he’s against the legalization of marijuana. “I think it’s bad, and I feel strongly about that,” he said. “They’ve got a lot of problems going on right now in Colorado, some big problems.”