Anonymous wrote:That hissing sound you hear is the sound of the air coming out of Wes Moore’s presidential ambitions. Right now he is trailing Ehrlich as the worst Maryland governor since Agnew. He literally spent all of the money on extravagances the moment he was elected and now we are broke.
Anonymous wrote:Cut regulations! Except for the regulations that make it harder to build housing. Let's add more of those to keep out the poors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t think this is as dire as the report headline makes it sound. A lot has to do with the “blueprint” education funding ending, which probably has to do with Covid budgets freeing up some state money, and included some appropriate surges that can wind down. It’s also hard to predict growth or things like Medicare that far out. Clearly Maryland faces tough decisions, like everywhere else, but the sky is not falling.
Did you even read the article? MD is projected to be able to only meet 84% of its financial obligations. By 2030. To put that in perspective, MD was able to meet 87% of its financial obligations during the huge 2008 economic recession. MD is on track to be in worse financial shape than the 2008 financial crisis. It IS bad.
Anonymous wrote:MD needs to get out of its own damn way. Cut regulations. Cut corporate taxes. Make MD the best state on the entire east coast to start a business or move one to. You cannot tax your way out of this problem. Dems need to grow the damn economy instead of making a state where everyone relies on the govt for jobs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MD needs to get out of its own damn way. Cut regulations. Cut corporate taxes. Make MD the best state on the entire east coast to start a business or move one to. You cannot tax your way out of this problem. Dems need to grow the damn economy instead of making a state where everyone relies on the govt for jobs.
It’s so sad they don’t just ask you, the man with all the easy answers.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t think this is as dire as the report headline makes it sound. A lot has to do with the “blueprint” education funding ending, which probably has to do with Covid budgets freeing up some state money, and included some appropriate surges that can wind down. It’s also hard to predict growth or things like Medicare that far out. Clearly Maryland faces tough decisions, like everywhere else, but the sky is not falling.
Anonymous wrote:MD needs to get out of its own damn way. Cut regulations. Cut corporate taxes. Make MD the best state on the entire east coast to start a business or move one to. You cannot tax your way out of this problem. Dems need to grow the damn economy instead of making a state where everyone relies on the govt for jobs.