@RobertLutherFL@DevoninFla@grok ask grok how common governmental materials rose in the same period of time (ie concrete, chemicals, pvc, etc) and how much rent cost increased.
@RobertLutherFL@JeffreyBrandes lmao. Still can't pin down one person on what services should be cut specifically, how its going to fare through different economic situations, etc. Guess your answer is " nananna cant hear you. Go fuck yourself". Winning message frankly.
@kevincorke Idk seems bad that he has more wealth than likely my whole linage and probably for 10s of generations. He literally used his wealth to be theee most influential person in the last election….kinda need to worry about those people
@Mike08585330@kylamb8 How about this. Instead of taxes, cities send service fees for all things it does (police, fire, libraries etc). To make it fair and not hurt poor people. Fees are based on the persons largest tangible asset?
@1rustyrig@MisterCommodity@grok I challenge you do to this. go to your local city/county and look up their budget in 2019 vs 2026. See how it changed and why it changed. Also look at the 2026. Find the 15-30% you need to cut to get away from loss revenue. Its not hard just takes some time
@1rustyrig@MisterCommodity@grok No offense you gotta think bigger than just averages. 1) Not every county increased at the same rate. 2) A lot of things that cities use like pipping, concrete, chemicals increased at a higher rate than general inflation.
@1rustyrig@MisterCommodity 1) property tax has not doubled for people actually being here. Its capped at 3%.
2) Pay has not stagnated, atleast not in my local area.
3) 100% reduced rev will decrease LEO pay. Do you think a city with LESS Revenue will pay them more per year?