Personally, I imagine something along the line of a modernized 50's culture. Traditional Christian culture, morals, and standards. No more gay/trans agenda (I firmly believe all non standard sexual orientations are the result of a neurological abnormality, so this is probably one of the multitude of cures Q talks about). Everyone can afford to live a middle class lifestyle off of one basic income. I'm not delusional enough to say there won't be ANY more government corruption, but it will hopefully be at an absolute minimum and never allowed to propagate again. No more cancer, diabetes, aids, etc. Since we now have cures for them.
Honestly, I don't expect things to be perfect or some Heaven on Earth scenario. I just expect things to be infinitely better than they currently are, and to be able to live a life similar to, or better than if I play my cards right and invest my earnings successfully, to what my grandparents generation lived (I'm a zoomer, grandparents are baby boomers.).
What about you guys? What's your vision for the post cabal future?
No more property or income tax.
Income tax I can understand. However I think a lot of people need to get over this weird "no taxes period" mentality. We have to have SOME tax, if for nothing else to pay for roads and actual infrastructure. The key is making sure the taxes are actually used the way they're supposed to be and not laundered away into various peoples pockets.
Flat tax.
I'll take an income tax over a property tax any day of the week if being forced to choose. Property taxes should be abolished.
As far as the Federal government is concerned, it shouldn't need much to run after all of this is over (respectively). I'd hope that any fed taxes are tiny so that what happened never happens again. Nobody can control an unfathomable amount of cash.
States and.localities will choose their own system (so long as property taxes are abolished nationwide, I'm willing to listen to any plans).
Hmm personally I think it should be replaced with what I call a "commercial property tax". Personal property, such as you main residence and non rental personal use vacation homes for example, are exempt from tax. But rental properties, commercial real estate, etc. would still be taxed. So long as it's not a ridiculous rate on par with current income tax rates, that would even things out a bit more along with a progressive "vat style" sales tax. With his, and maybe one or two other taxes, like an excise tax that Texas, Florida, and Tennessee have, I think we'd be able to fund most infrastructure projects so long as the money actually goes where it's supposed to.
The roads and infrastructure are built. Once they are built, maintenance costs should be very minor. And yet this is not what seems to happen. We pave roads, and then somehow those roads just keep requiring more and more money? That doesn’t make sense. We build the sewers, and then have to pay more and more money for them? Nothing else in the world works like this. That’s how you know it’s all a scam. Remember when legalizing weed was going to be a huge tax boon that reduced the cost of everything? Weed is being legalized states across America and in all of Canada and taxes still keep going up. Has there ever been a politician (besides Trump) who got into office and said, “Hey look, I found a way to save you money.”
Well there's actually a really simple answer for that. As someone who lives in the sticks where there's essentially no corruption since everyone knows everyone and when someone farts in the local walmart it makes headline news in the local news paper, I can tell you, the maintenance isn't so simple for things like roads, bridges, etc. The problem lies with the materials we use being easily degradable. Just having the raw elements hit the roads and bridges on an annual basis causes warpage and defects that quickly evolve into cracks, gaps, sinkholes, potholes, etc.
Heck, the town government just paved the road near my house last year. It's already showing signs of cracks forming. So the only way to reduce annual maintenance of the infrastructure would be to gradually rip it up/out and rebuild it with some newer, better technology and material that I'm not sure exists at the moment. (At least publicly)
That being said, a lot of it IS wasteful and obvious money laundering when you get into big cities where they allocate millions of dollars for a few streets to be paved, and then they're never paved, and rarely patched.
I remember reading about this years ago about the fact our roads were so poor had much to do with the materials used. The comparison was Sweden whose roads face harsh winters but were in nowhere near the state of decline of American roads.