An intelligent caller admonished a MAGA caller and urged all not to get distracted by Trump flooding the zone. The bill is worse than advertised. It’s not just Medicaid and SNAP, but all bad.
The danger is much more than Medicaid & SNAP.
Watch Politics Done Right T.V. here.
Podcasts (Video — Audio)
Summary
The caller warns that obsessing over Medicaid and SNAP cuts obscures how the “One Big Beautiful Bill” reshapes the entire economy and erodes civil liberties, from taxing Main-Street entrepreneurs to overriding state AI safeguards and fast-tracking deportations—all while super-charging fossil-fuel interests and enriching the wealthy.
- Slashes $864 billion from Medicaid and $267 billion from SNAP—the largest reductions in U.S. history.
- Permanently weakens pass-through deductions for S-corporations and LLCs, raising effective taxes on small businesses while expanding corporate loopholes.
- Pre-empts state AI regulation for a decade, handing tech giants a deregulatory blank check.
- Super-charges expedited deportations and family detention, gutting due-process protections for immigrants and mixed-status families.
- Cancels clean-energy credits, kneecapping wind and solar, just as climate disasters intensify.
This sprawling package quietly advances an authoritarian, plutocratic agenda; progressives must expose every buried clause and mobilize across movements to kill the bill.
Premium Content (Complimentary)
The KPFT caller’s intervention slices through beltway chatter to reveal an inconvenient truth: the “One Big Beautiful Bill” is not a routine budget measure but a Trojan horse that hollows out the public sphere and redirects power upward. The Congressional Budget Office confirms that its deepest cuts target Medicaid—$864 billion—while shrinking SNAP by another $267 billion, ejecting millions of seniors, children, and low-wage workers from basic coverage and nutrition support. These provisions alone would reverse the post-COVID gains in health and food security, widen racial health gaps, and saddle state budgets with impossible choices.
Yet health programs are just the opening act. The bill rewrites tax rules to reward multinational capital while penalizing Main Street enterprises. Skadden’s initial analysis notes that the measure pares back the Section 199A deduction and layers on new compliance hurdles for S corporations and LLCs, even as it preserves generous corporate depreciation and overseas profit shields. For the caller, this is not abstract policy; it is a direct hit on the entrepreneurial ecosystem that conservatives claim to champion.
Corporate power grows even stronger in the technology arena. Section 43201(c) prohibits states from enforcing “any law or regulation” on artificial intelligence for ten years, a pre-emption so sweeping that Lawfare warns it may violate the Byrd rule. The timing is no accident: as Politico reports, AI firms from OpenAI to Nvidia are ramping up lobbying to ensure light-touch federal rules and lucrative contracts. By stripping states of their traditional consumer-protection role, Congress hands algorithmic accountability to an industry that profits from opacity.
Meanwhile, the bill weaponizes immigration enforcement, amplifying the due-process crisis. A LULAC analysis documents how Section 70123 radically expands expedited removal, allowing deportations without court hearings for long-time residents alleged to have criminal ties, while Section 70101 funds indefinite family detention and revives “Remain in Mexico.” These measures echo the caller’s fear of “Gestapos on the streets,” converting local police into federal enforcers and chilling immigrant communities’ trust in public services.
The environmental stakes are equally dire. Scientific American brands the package a “clean-energy nightmare” because it guts production and investment tax credits just as the Inflation Reduction Act was jump-starting green projects nationwide. By accelerating fossil-fuel lock-in, the bill undermines the climate resilience of frontline communities, which are already battered by storms and heatwaves.
Taken together, these disparate sections advance a single ideological vision: maximize short-term profits for the donor class, entrench corporate and state surveillance, and shrink democratic space. The Medicaid and SNAP cuts create economic precarity; the tax shifts funnel savings to shareholders; the AI and immigration provisions erode accountability and due process; the climate rollbacks mortgage the planet.
Progressives must therefore reject the “piecemeal” framing that focuses only on SNAP work requirements or Medicare eligibility. A winning coalition will connect the dots: nurses fighting Medicaid cuts, small-business owners alarmed by new pass-through taxes, privacy advocates resisting AI deregulation, immigrant-rights groups defending due process, and climate activists demanding a just transition.
Concrete actions include: (1) state-level resistance—blue and purple legislatures can pass firewall laws mirroring GDPR-style AI protections and expanding Medicaid with state funding; (2) targeted pressure on Senate moderates whose constituents stand to lose health coverage and green jobs; (3) mass public-comment campaigns to expose hidden clauses before reconciliation’s “Byrd bath”; and (4) cross-movement storytelling—radio hosts, TikTok creators, and local papers translating section-by-section jargon into kitchen-table impacts.
The caller is correct: as Trump and Musk flood the zone with culture-war theatrics, the real battle is procedural, buried in legislative text. Defeating the “Big Beautiful Bill” requires relentless focus, coalition-building, and moral clarity. It is not merely about saving benefits; it is about preserving the democratic promise that public policy should serve people, not billionaires. If progressives stay on message and mobilize at every level, this bill’s ugliness can be its undoing.
Viewers are encouraged to subscribe and join the conversation for more insightful commentary and to support progressive messages. Together, we can populate the internet with progressive messages that represent the true aspirations of most Americans.
Leave a Reply