Grant Cardone's 11 Ideas to 'Improve America' Includes Prohibiting Elected Officials From Trading and 'Flat or Zero Taxes'

Start generating passive income through real estate.

Own a piece of your favorite cities through diversified real estate investments in the country's top markets

*Terms and conditions apply. Visit Nada's website for more details.

In a recent post on X, real estate titan Grant Cardone provided 11 ideas to improve America, including restricting elected officials from investing in stocks and flat or zero taxes.

Here’s Cardone’s full list of ideas:

  • Flat or Zero tax
  • Stop Funding Wars
  • Debts are Not Forgiven
  • Stop Illegal Immigration
  • Two Gender Only Society
  • Schools Stick to Education
  • Enforce the Laws of the Land
  • Reverse Big Pharma Immunity
  • Colleges Responsible for Debt
  • Incentive Intelligent Immigration
  • Congress Prohibited from Trading

Here’s the link to his post on X:

@GrantCardone on X

Cardone, a vocal supporter of Donald Trump for the upcoming election, goes after many topics where President Joe Biden has faced scrutiny during his tenure, including illegal immigration, the billions of dollars in student loan forgiveness, and America’s role in funding wars around the globe.

Prohibiting elected officials from trading has been one of the hottest topics across social media in recent years, but the Stocks Act, which was introduced in 2012, has failed to gain any traction.

Another recent post by Cardone supports mandatory drug testing for the upcoming Presidential debate. He notes that major sports, including the UFC, NBA, NFL, and MLB, require drug tests, concluding that “our president should be drug free.”

We will likely hear plenty more from Cardone leading up to and following Thursday’s debate.

Keep Reading:

Image Source: YouTube

Market News and Data brought to you by Benzinga APIs
Comments
Loading...
Posted In:
Benzinga simplifies the market for smarter investing

Trade confidently with insights and alerts from analyst ratings, free reports and breaking news that affects the stocks you care about.

Join Now: Free!