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Growth Try

Do Repubs try to make the top earners the foundation for growth, while Dems focus on lower and mid earners?
Repubs try to make the top earners the foundation for growth (trickle down). Dems concentrate on making the bottom and mid income earners the foundation (bottom up).
Am I wrong with this hypothesis?
I agree. Tax breaks for the rich doesn't make sense to most but it isnt all based on cronyism. Many believe that top earners are actually smarter with their usage of money, and that the choices they commonly make are better for the economy than what middle class earners do. This has often proven to be false as many top earners are more concerned with capital appreciation and therefore make investment decisions that keep the majority of their income outside the cash flow of the economy. Fact is the middle class spends most of its money and that is what drives and keeps the economy healthy. The rich stay rich and get richer because of their lack of involvement in the economy.
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| | Grétry and the Growth of Opéra-comique $35.34 No Synopsis Available |
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| | Try $10.83 Try is the story of Ziggy, the adopted son of two sexually abusive fathers. He runs from both of these men to his uncle, who sells porographic videos on the black market, and to his best friend, a junkie whose own vulnerability inspires in Ziggy a fierce and awkward devotion. |
| | Try Me One More Time $17.97 Had David Bromberg been making new recordings all along, then Try Me One More Time would be a welcome addition to his catalog. An all-acoustic, solo set of blues and folk tunes -- one original, several traditional and the rest by established writers such as Bob Dylan, Rev. Gary Davis and Robert Johnson -- the album feels intimate, honest and earthy, and of course the guitar playing is never less than masterful. But Bromberg hadn't released a new album in a long 17 years when Try Me One More Time hit, and because of that it's an underwhelming return. There is no denying that Bromberg, who basically gave up the road and the studio at the dawn of the '90s in order to become a violin maker, possesses an innate love for the roots Americana that populates his comeback album. And on its own merits, it's a satisfying enough listen -- he sounds perfectly comfortable within the familiar domain of this material. But therein lies the disappointment: he's too comfortable. Bromberg's interpretations show little imagination or ingenuity, and after such a lengthy sabbatical, fans would be right to expect something that displays growth and movement in an artist. Try Me One More Time doesn't. Bromberg's Delta-style guitar work is, as always, note-perfect (the two instrumentals are a treat and his slide playing is sweet), but fans already know he can do that with his eyes closed. And while Bromberg, never much of a singer -- the voice is a bit more gravelly these days but otherwise unchanged -- is well-suited for the minimalist renditions of tracks like Dylan's "It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry," Elizabeth Cotten's "Shake Sugaree" and Davis' "Trying to Get Home," there are no real surprises in how he handles those chestnuts. It's not that anyone expected David Bromberg to come back and make a hip-hop record or something equally out of character, but while he undoubtedly enjoyed cutting these songs that have always been dear to his heart, there are few clues here as to what he's been up to for the nearly two decades he spent out of earshot. ~ Jeff Tamarkin, Rovi |
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IGS: CANNA COCO Tutorial: Part 1
Am I too OLD to try growth hormones?
They taste good. Try them.







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