President Donald Trump has promised to use tariff revenue to fund at least five major initiatives: a $12 billion farmer bailout, $2,000 direct payments to Americans, expanded child care assistance, $3 trillion in tax cut offsets, and paying down the $37 trillion national debt. The problem is mathematical impossibility. Even the most optimistic projections show tariffs will generate $2.3 trillion over ten years—far short of the $10+ trillion in cumulative promises. This investigation reveals how the same revenue stream has been pledged multiple times over, while Trump’s repeated claims that “foreign nations” pay tariffs contradicts economic evidence showing American consumers and businesses bear the costs through higher prices. Budget experts describe it as an “over-allocation problem” where every dollar has been promised three or four times, making it arithmetically impossible for any of the commitments to be fully kept.
View More Trump’s Tariff Revenue Has Been Pledged Multiple Times Over on Money Not Yet CollectedTag: Congressional Budget Office
The Very People Who Once Condemned Obamacare Now Beg for It
More than half of Americans enrolled in Affordable Care Act marketplace plans live in congressional districts represented by Republicans—the very politicians working to dismantle the program. As enhanced premium subsidies expire at the end of 2025, millions of Americans face insurance rate increases between 80 and 100 percent, with some states seeing premiums more than double. This investigative analysis documents how misinformation and partisan identity have led voters to oppose policies that protect them, drawing parallels to Reagan’s deinstitutionalization of mental health facilities that contributed to today’s homelessness crisis. Through comprehensive data on medical bankruptcy (530,000 annually), hospital consolidation driving 20-60 percent price increases, and state-by-state premium projections, the article reveals the impossible choices facing families who must decide between food, housing, and healthcare. With the 2026 midterms approaching just weeks after open enrollment, voters will confront the direct consequences of legislative decisions on their household budgets and survival.
View More The Very People Who Once Condemned Obamacare Now Beg for It