Let's Go Inside the Home of the New Orleans Terrorist
Did You Catch AllState's Horrific Commercial About the Nola Terror Attack During the...
FBI Decides to Punch Itself in the Face Again With This Update on...
Everyone Is Going Nuts and Committing Acts of Mayhem Before Trump Takes Office
Did Anyone Catch What Was Odd About Liz Cheney Getting a Presidential Medal?
Germany's New Morgenthau Plan
Bourbon Street Massacre Is What 'Globalize the Intifada' Looks Like
Biden Makes Bald Eagle America’s National Bird
You Can't Catch What You're Not Looking For
Blood on the News Media’s Hands
Medicare Advantage Deserves a Hard Look From Musk and Ramaswamy
Lax Enforcement of Rules, Misplaced Sympathy Plague Poor School Children
New Year, Same as the Old Year
Despite What the Liberal Media Tells You, Joe Biden Emboldened Terrorist Attacks on...
Joe Biden’s Radical ATF Director Resigns Before Trump Had the Chance to Fire...
Tipsheet
Premium

Rob Gronkowski and Elon Musk Agree on This Issue

AP Photo/Steven Senne

It's incredible what an election can do. Donald Trump wins the 2024 race, and nations will start their loud overtures about prosperous and peaceful ways of working together again after four years of incompetence from the nursing home-like antics of Biden’s failed presidency. The future has never been brighter for America now that Democrats have been defeated soundly. We have the dream team assembled; Elon Musk, an Andrew Yang Democrat, is now ours and maybe one of the greatest tight ends in football. Rob Gronkowski agrees with Musk that our tax policy is out of whack.

I’m not a New England Patriots fan, but I’m all for Rob wanting to ‘Gronk Spike’ the tax code. He agreed with Mr. Musk about simplifying this behemoth in domestic policy, tweeting, “Drastic simplification now!!! Gronk simple, Gronk wants simple Tax codes, and so does everyone else” (via The Hill): 

Former NFL star Rob Gronkowski publicly backed tech billionaire Elon Musk over his idea to simplify the tax code. 

[…]

Musk posted on X, the social platform he owns, calling for a “drastic simplification” of the tax code. He was responding to a post that showed the 2012 tax code was nearly 74,000 pages long. 

Gronkowski, a former tight end for the New England Patriots and Tampa Bay Buccaneers nicknamed “Gronk,” posted in support of the idea. 

“Gronk simple, Gronk wants simple Tax codes and so does everyone else,” he wrote. 

Earlier this year, the Treasury Department said it was proposing new rules on the corporate alternative minimum tax, a powerful, yet complicated portion of the tax code.

We all want a simpler code, but with the number of bureaucrats it supports regarding enforcement and whatnot, it will take a lot to chop it up. It’s still the right thing to do, however. 

We’re just getting everyone to our side on the issues. Democrats have become aliens.

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement