Blog Elements
You can display blog posts in various ways with the “Blog Post” element/shortcode. You can see one example here and even more at the blog main menu item of this demo.
https://www.hgsss.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/Copy-of-Image-Square-Resize-20.png
1080
1080
hgsss_kuba
https://www.hgsss.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/HGS-New-Logo_2019_siteheader-300x77.png
hgsss_kuba2023-08-21 15:56:552023-12-05 12:14:37Theodore Roosevelt: A Conflicted Legacy
https://www.hgsss.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/Copy-of-Image-Square-Resize-19.png
1080
1080
hgsss_kuba
https://www.hgsss.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/HGS-New-Logo_2019_siteheader-300x77.png
hgsss_kuba2023-08-10 16:55:172023-09-27 15:08:43Almost $80 Billion Needed for Repairs to New York City’s Public Housing
https://www.hgsss.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/Copy-of-Image-Square-Resize-13.png
1080
1080
hgsss_kuba
https://www.hgsss.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/HGS-New-Logo_2019_siteheader-300x77.png
hgsss_kuba2023-08-04 14:35:442023-08-10 16:47:38Andrew Bailey vs the renters?
Basic Income Guarantee – Why it Would Work Better With a Land Tax
A widening wealth gap, a marginalized middle class
and growing concerns about robots and artificial
intelligence (AI) displacing millions of workers is
fueling intense debates on the adequacy of social
safety nets in advanced capitalist economies. These
concerns have only become more conspicuous in the
aftermath of the Covid 19 pandemic; with mandatory
lockdowns and ensuing disruptions in labor markets.
https://www.hgsss.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Copy-of-Image-Square-Resize-16.png
1080
1080
hgsss_kuba
https://www.hgsss.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/HGS-New-Logo_2019_siteheader-300x77.png
hgsss_kuba2023-07-12 14:04:432023-08-04 14:23:17I Pledged $1 Million to Plant New Trees. My Money Could Have Been Better Spent.
The U.S. Has No (And Never Could Have A) Debt Crisis
/
0 Comments
There is total confusion on both sides of the aisle (or perhaps willful obscuration) about the reality of public credit and public debt, and the absence of a need to borrow any money for a supposed budget shortfall, as evidenced by an article published earlier this year in the New York Times (Baker and Tankersley 2023). The compromise to extend the Congressional bipartisan budget and debt talks until 2025 has not changed anything.


