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WSJ's profile
The Wall Street Journal
The Wall Street Journal
The Wall Street Journal
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The Wall Street JournalVerified account

@WSJ

Breaking news and features from the WSJ.

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Joined April 2007

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    The Wall Street Journal‏Verified account @WSJ Feb 17

    In Germany’s upside-down world, the government has too much money but won’t cut taxeshttp://on.wsj.com/2Ey1OgN 

    5:00 AM - 17 Feb 2018
    • 83 Retweets
    • 123 Likes
    • Brayden Kenny Indy Samra austin Aída Martínez Oñate Hkun Sai Marcio Phillips Andrew McGee Abiel C. Carmen Rodriguez
    37 replies 83 retweets 123 likes
      1. New conversation
      2. Eric Karl Schmidt‏ @EricKarlSchmid4 Feb 17
        Replying to @WSJ

        That's why they have free health care, no homeless, no poverty, no military, no problem.

        2 replies 0 retweets 3 likes
      3. eric‏ @thamesdrifter Feb 17
        Replying to @EricKarlSchmid4 @WSJ

        And, they took in hundreds of thousands refugees recently.

        1 reply 1 retweet 1 like
      4. Eric Karl Schmidt‏ @EricKarlSchmid4 Feb 17
        Replying to @thamesdrifter @WSJ

        Free refugee housing.

        3 replies 0 retweets 1 like
      5. eric‏ @thamesdrifter Feb 17
        Replying to @EricKarlSchmid4 @WSJ

        Really, Germany is setting an example how government should operate. Competition for business through taxation rates, will cost the general populations of the lower cost countries at the end of the day. One only has to look at how the poor actually live where rates are low.

        0 replies 1 retweet 2 likes
      6. End of conversation
      1. New conversation
      2. Updesh  🖖🏽‏ @Updesh Feb 17
        Replying to @WSJ

        That can’t be. WSJ and GOP tell us that the “socialistS” of Germany are failing and need to cut taxes now so they can avoid a deficit and to grow the economy. Who knew that a government might be interested in looking after all citizens not just millionaires and billionaires

        1 reply 0 retweets 6 likes
      3. Arturo_2600‏ @sonofromney Feb 17
        Replying to @Updesh @WSJ

        Amazing. Isn’t it?

        0 replies 0 retweets 1 like
      4. End of conversation
      1. New conversation
      2. Jana‏ @janac82 Feb 17
        Replying to @WSJ

        Upside down? I think that’s pretty smart. You know what would be upside down? Huge tax cuts for corporations when already facing a huge deficit. Only an idiot would support that very upside down way of doing things. #BADDEAL

        1 reply 1 retweet 3 likes
      3. 1 more reply
      1. New conversation
      2. Robert Woodford‏ @robertwfr Feb 17
        Replying to @WSJ @Artmoves1

        Remember the reunification, they bought every East German deutchmark at 1 for 1 when it was only worth about 3 cents. Not to mention rebuilding the infrastructure. They literally paid for a whole country. Looks like it paid off.

        1 reply 1 retweet 1 like
      3. Art Moves‏ @Artmoves1 Feb 17
        Replying to @robertwfr @WSJ

        Germany is headed down Communist row..

        1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
      4. Robert Woodford‏ @robertwfr Feb 17
        Replying to @Artmoves1 @WSJ

        Perhaps. On the one hand the Germans love their freedom, on the other they live by their procedures. They know first hand what communism did to East Germany so I don't see them rushing that way. What they love is stability.

        2 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
      5. Art Moves‏ @Artmoves1 Feb 17
        Replying to @robertwfr @WSJ

        China is Rockefeller's model for 21 century communism.pic.twitter.com/l2H5ccYYKP

        3 replies 0 retweets 1 like
      6. Art Moves‏ @Artmoves1 Feb 17
        Replying to @Artmoves1 @robertwfr @WSJ

        Rockefeller's progressives of the New World Order established American manufacturing in China throwing American manufacturing workers under the bus.

        1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
      7. Robert Woodford‏ @robertwfr Feb 17
        Replying to @Artmoves1 @WSJ

        It was all about the money.

        1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
      8. Art Moves‏ @Artmoves1 Feb 17
        Replying to @robertwfr @WSJ

        It's about accumulating power in the new international system.

        2 replies 0 retweets 1 like
      9. Art Moves‏ @Artmoves1 Feb 17
        Replying to @Artmoves1 @robertwfr @WSJ

        DAVID ROCKEFELLER FELLOWS http://trilateral.org/page/21/david-rockefeller-fellows …pic.twitter.com/AMS9W2XP4U

        0 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
      10. End of conversation
      1. Jason Whitney‏ @jason_whitney Feb 17
        Replying to @WSJ

        Maybe they can use it to spend their NATO required threshold of 2% of GDP on defense? (They are 1.2%)

        0 replies 0 retweets 2 likes
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      1.  🌹The IPPC Report  👻 🌎 🔥‏ @Dispatchula Feb 17
        Replying to @WSJ

        Jesus, imagine that! They’ve actually got the cash on hand to provide for their people.

        0 replies 0 retweets 2 likes
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      1. New conversation
      2. i. r.‏ @izzy100 Feb 17
        Replying to @WSJ

        THAT IS THE SOCIALIST'S DREAM, HAVE THEIR PEOPLE'S MONEY, SO THEY CONTROL WHAT PEOPLE HAVE, WHEN AND HOW MUCH. WORKS WELL IN VENEZUELA, CUBA AND BEST OF ALL........ NORTH KOREA

        1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
      3. Swerbtastic  🇺🇸‏ @swerbapalooza23 Feb 17
        Replying to @izzy100 @WSJ

        Yea really. Who needs good healthcare, an infrastructure that isn't crumbling, and general public welfare. That's just crazy.

        0 replies 0 retweets 2 likes
      4. End of conversation

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