no
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Replying to @occupytheport @EskSF
it was certainly pt of it, but it started happening in the early 1960s.pic.twitter.com/znHHY4ooG5
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Replying to @occupytheport @EskSF
federal support for the lower-income pt of the housing mkt is impt, but de-institutionalization in CA happened earlier
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Replying to @kimmaicutler @EskSF
complex to be sure. No doubt a sound and equitable housing policy can correct some of this.
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Replying to @occupytheport @EskSF
are anti-poverty like expanding EITC, child care tax credits should come out progressive income taxation
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Replying to @kimmaicutler @EskSF
tax credits are fine, but they are really just a band-aid and don't do enough to eliminate poverty and inequality.
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Replying to @occupytheport @EskSF
of course but they are an effective and politically feasible tool http://www.cbpp.org/archives/311eitc.htm …
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Replying to @kimmaicutler @EskSF
keep them, but they won't solve the problem. Automation increases under/unemployment, we need more radical actions
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Replying to @occupytheport @EskSF
the top 1% pay for half of CA's $80b in income tax revenue. Top 10% account for 90%
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Kim-Mai Cutler Retweeted John Myers
but current structure does not provide any stability whatsoeverhttps://twitter.com/johnmyers/status/731191553301975040 …
Kim-Mai Cutler added,
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Replying to @kimmaicutler
and the US rates on capital gains are pretty low, right?
@EskSF@johnmyers@JerryBrownGov0 replies 0 retweets 0 likesThanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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