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Yonivore
10-29-2007, 11:31 AM
Funny how Saddam's little turn of phrase has outlasted Saddam by a sizable margin.

Here it is (http://www.examiner.com/a-1015816%7ERep__John_Boehner__Pelosi_Rangel_really_ is__mother_of_all_tax_hikes_.html). Read it and, instead of weeping, vote anything but Democrat next year.

boutons_
10-29-2007, 11:43 AM
Yoni, have you sent dubya your $7K+ check to pay your part of the your much-beloved Iraqi war?

If you really had to pay $7K for your Iraqi war, would you still support invading and occupying Iraq for decades?

$7K is only the first installment. Multiply it many times to cover many decades.

ChumpDumper
10-29-2007, 11:57 AM
Iraq and Afghanistan are projected to total $2.4 trillion over the next decade.

How does Boner propose to pay for it?

George Gervin's Afro
10-29-2007, 12:21 PM
so what's the problem?

Yonivore
10-29-2007, 12:31 PM
so what's the problem?
Democrats don't understand economics.

ChumpDumper
10-29-2007, 12:43 PM
They seem to understand that debts have to be paid somehow. I don't agree with every tax as listed (though I believe Boner as far as I throw him -- ok even less than that), but that's a pretty big bill we're running up.

George Gervin's Afro
10-29-2007, 12:46 PM
They seem to understand that debts have to be paid somehow. I don't agree with every tax as listed (though I believe Boner as far as I throw him -- ok even less than that), but that's a pretty big bill we're running up.


i thought deficit spending was good thing?

No actuallu bush did a smart thing. he pushed paying for the war on a future generation. when the bill comes due yoni will blame the resident dem congress. see that is what i am tlking about!

Yonivore
10-29-2007, 12:59 PM
i thought deficit spending was good thing?
You would.

Four irrefutable points.

1) The Bush Tax Cuts have increased federal revenues tremendously.

2) It's the spending, not the tax cut (which, see #1 above, resulted in increased federal revenues) that has resulted in deficit spending.

3) The deficit is shrinking not because Congress is spending less but, because the tax cuts have -- let's say it again -- resulted in increased federal revenues.

4) If you take more money from the rich, they'll buy fewer luxuries -- made by the decidedly not wealthy, fewer service -- provided by the decidedly not wealthy; they'll hire fewer decidedly not wealthy people to work in their businesses, and they invest fewer dollars in businesses owned by the decidedly not wealthy.

Here's a few debatable points.

The cost of the war has been more than covered by the increased revenues resulting from the Bush Tax Cuts.

If Congress -- Republicans and Democrats alike -- would quit spending like drunken sailors (apologies to drunken sailors everywhere) the deficit would shrink even faster and we'd enjoy a surplus -- even while prosecuting a war.

It's the spending, stupid.


No actuallu bush did a smart thing. he pushed paying for the war on a future generation.
If Congress would quit spending, it could be paid for by 2010.


when the bill comes due yoni will blame the resident dem congress. see that is what i am tlking about!
I'll blame Congress.

ChumpDumper
10-29-2007, 01:03 PM
So, if we hadn't gone to war in Iraq, we'd be swimming in money.

And acting like Congress passes the spending but not the tax cuts is stupid.

Why hasn't Bush vetoed all those spending bills?

George Gervin's Afro
10-29-2007, 01:05 PM
So, if we hadn't gone to war in Iraq, we'd be swimming in money.

And acting like Congress passes the spending but not the tax cuts is stupid.

Why hasn't Bush vetoed all those spending bills?


he did silly. SCHIPS ..

ChumpDumper
10-29-2007, 01:14 PM
Yeah, scaring us with $80k/per year households that actually didn't qualify for SCHIP under that bill. We need to cover all the missing funds and guns in Iraq.

smeagol
10-29-2007, 01:36 PM
American's favorite passtime is buying on credit.

Why would you government do otherwise?

boutons_
10-29-2007, 02:33 PM
"The Bush Tax Cuts have increased federal revenues tremendously.'

Absolute lie. Show at least one non-political economic proof that tax cuts pay for themselves.

Holt's Cat
10-29-2007, 03:36 PM
Of course it's not Bush's fault that the federal government is spending itself (and us) into oblivion. After all, he didn't push for the largest entitlement program expansion since the 60s and drag us into a very expensive invasion and occupation of Iraq.

Oh, wait...

boutons_
10-29-2007, 03:43 PM
"it's not Bush's fault that the federal government is spending itself (and us) into oblivion"

absolute lie. dubya started the bogus war in Iraq, and approved every fucking spending bill for 6 years given to him by a Repug Congress.

The fed govt into oblivion, "drowned in a bathtube" is exactly where the Repugs and neo-cunts want it. And of course, that spending is going to Repugs/neo-cunts/corps/super-rich.

Consider yourself slapped, bitch.

Holt's Cat
10-29-2007, 03:59 PM
Yes, American education has failed many.

ChumpDumper
10-29-2007, 04:11 PM
:lol

I love it when folks are so worked up, they don't realize someone just agreed with them.

Wild Cobra
10-29-2007, 04:16 PM
You guys just watch. If Hillary gets elected, we will have a serious recession later, I'd say two to four years later, depending on when they raise taxes. Even if a republican is elected, and the tax reductions are allowed to expire, they will have a negative effect.

Raising taxes will decrease revenue. Sure, the immediate first year will show gains, but as the economy shrinks and the rich shelter their money in cheaper governments, we will lose jobs, wages, then revenues.

smeagol
10-29-2007, 04:22 PM
Yes, American education has failed many.

Not sure boutons desease can be fixed with education . . .

Wild Cobra
10-29-2007, 04:26 PM
"The Bush Tax Cuts have increased federal revenues tremendously.'

Absolute lie. Show at least one non-political economic proof that tax cuts pay for themselves.
The Laffer Curve (http://www.yorktownuniversity.com/documents/The_Laffer_Curve_Past_Present_and_Future.pdf) is a proven concept, and the Bush tax cuts have raised revenues. If we increase taxes again, we will reduce revenues.

Yonivore
10-29-2007, 04:29 PM
http://taxprof.typepad.com/./photos/uncategorized/revenue20growth.jpg

Holt's Cat
10-29-2007, 04:30 PM
Where are the curves for the twin deficits?

smeagol
10-29-2007, 04:31 PM
You guys should get taxed on your assets, like we do. Or better still, on every credit or debit on your checking account.

ChumpDumper
10-29-2007, 04:31 PM
Eh, I'd be surprised if there wasn't a recession in the next year or two once the real pigs of the war costs and the housing bust stop being covered by interest rate change lipstick.

Yonivore
10-29-2007, 04:55 PM
Where are the curves for the twin deficits?
Hold on. Can we first agree that in 2003, the President's income tax relief was put in place and that federal revenues from income taxes rose to the highest level ever?

Can we agree on that one simple fact?

Everyone's effective tax rate is lower than it was in 2002 -- everyone's.

Federal revenues from INCOME TAXES is WAY, WAY, UP!

Explain it.

Yonivore
10-29-2007, 04:55 PM
You guys should get taxed on your assets, like we do. Or better still, on every credit or debit on your checking account.
The Fair Tax plan is the answer.

smeagol
10-29-2007, 05:01 PM
The Fair Tax plan is the answer.

You think your Tax Code is complicated, you should spend a couple of summers in the land of the Pampas.

Yonivore
10-29-2007, 06:59 PM
You think your Tax Code is complicated, you should spend a couple of summers in the land of the Pampas.
I don't think it's complicated as much as it's a complex and unfair result of decades of pandering.

101A
10-30-2007, 10:36 AM
All of you in favor of this hike:

How much is enough?

Rangel proposes a top income tax rate of 44%

Social Security Tax is 7.65% for EACH employee and Employer; meaning that rate is: 15.3%, and most Democratic presidential hopefuls want to do away with the income threshold on that tax (but I assume the people paying the additional won't get any more - if any, out of the "trust fund")

The top State income tax rate comes from Vermont: 9.5%

MEANING, a high income earner in Vermont will pay nearly 69 cents of every additional dollar they EARN in income taxes (not counting any municipality or school district income taxes that are quite likely usurped also).

Is that enough for you. Has that guy payed "His fair share"? Just wondering, how much is enough? Cause 31 cents more and you are officially supporting PURO Socialism/Communism.

101A
10-30-2007, 10:39 AM
All of you in favor of this hike:

How much is enough?

Rangel proposes a top income tax rate of 44%

Social Security Tax is 7.65% for EACH employee and Employer; meaning that rate is: 15.3%, and most Democratic presidential hopefuls want to do away with the income threshold on that tax (but I assume the people paying the additional won't get any more - if any, out of the "trust fund")

The top State income tax rate comes from Vermont: 9.5%

MEANING, a high income earner in Vermont will pay nearly 69 cents of every additional dollar they EARN in income taxes (not counting any municipality or school district income taxes that are quite likely usurped also).

Is that enough for you. Has that guy payed "His fair share"? Just wondering, how much is enough? Cause 31 cents more and you are officially supporting PURO Socialism/Communism.
Also, after paying all those taxes, if this taxpayer IS able to amass any fortune; Rangel wants to roll back the death tax, and tax anything over $600K @ 60% as well. Is that enough. Will you finally leave the "Rich" alone, and stop being jealous of them after that - so that they won't have the brunt of the NEXT tax increase the government doles out?

I'm thinking not.

DarkReign
10-30-2007, 12:46 PM
101A makes a compelling argument. $0.69, relatively speaking, is much too much.

IMO, $0.40 is much too much. $0.69 is reason for revolt.

101A
10-30-2007, 01:12 PM
IMO, $0.40 is much too much.Thanks DR.

But damn.

A single guy with taxable income of only $30,650 (25% bracket PLUS SS/Medicare) is already above 40%!!

IN TEXAS WITH NO STATE INCOME TAX!!!!

boutons_
10-31-2007, 10:35 AM
"Federal revenues from INCOME TAXES is WAY, WAY, UP!'

The total federal tax take at %of GDP is pretty constant, 18%.

=======================

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October 31, 2007
Economic Scene

Plain Truth About Taxes and Cuts

By DAVID LEONHARDT (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/l/david_leonhardt/index.html?inline=nyt-per)
You’re going to hear a lot about taxes over the next two years. Some of the things you hear will be true. Others will be less true. The goal here today is distinguish between the two.

Last week, Charles B. Rangel (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/r/charles_b_rangel/index.html?inline=nyt-per), the Democrat who heads the House Ways and Means Committee, introduced a bill (http://waysandmeans.house.gov/news.asp?formmode=release&id=575) to overhaul the tax code. Above all, it would raise taxes on the affluent to pay for the elimination of the alternative minimum tax, which is hitting more and more upper-middle-class families. The bill has no chance of becoming law anytime soon.

Yet Republicans immediately and gleefully seized on the proposal as a preview of what a Democratic president would do. Vice President Dick Cheney (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/c/dick_cheney/index.html?inline=nyt-per) called (http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2007/10/20071026-5.html) it “a bad proposal” filled with “terrible ideas” that would do “an awful lot of damage” to the economy. Most Democrats are less eager to talk about the Rangel proposal, but it’s clear that they also think a fight over taxes can work to their advantage in 2008 and beyond. Tax policy, as they see it, is one way to soothe the middle class’s economic anxiety.

There are big philosophical questions about taxes that facts alone can’t answer. How important is it to let people keep the money that they earn? Will higher tax rates cause more cheating? How important is it to ensure that take-home pay is rising for every group of Americans?

But there are also some basic facts that ideology can’t change.

If you keep these five in mind, you will have an easier time keeping up with the debate:

As a group, the rich pay a greater share of taxes than in the past.

The top 1 percent of taxpayers — those with adjustable gross income of at least $267,000 in 2004 — paid more than 25 percent of all federal taxes that year, according to (http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/77xx/doc7718/EffectiveTaxRates.pdf) the Congressional Budget Office (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/c/congressional_budget_office/index.html?inline=nyt-org). That was up from 15 percent in 1979.

People sometimes pick nits with these statistics, and the numbers are indeed imperfect. They don’t include state and local taxes, which hit the middle class and the poor harder than federal taxes. On the other hand, the numbers ignore money that the government sends back to taxpayers, like Social Security, which mostly goes to the poor and middle class.

But don’t get bogged down in all this. The big picture is clear enough. The main reason for the trend is also clear.

The affluent are paying more of the taxes because they’re making so much more money.

Tax cut advocates like to argue that taxes on the affluent have entered the realm of Robin Hood. This year, Ari Fleischer (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/f/ari_fleischer/index.html?inline=nyt-per), Mr. Bush’s former press secretary, wrote (http://online.wsj.com/article/SB117668220910270761.html?mod=opinion_main_comment aries) an op-ed piece for The Wall Street Journal suggesting that a small slice of taxpayers was being asked to foot almost the entire bill for the federal government. “The problem is that there is a tipping point after which piling taxes onto the rich will leave the government unable to meet its obligations,” Mr. Fleischer wrote.

Reading that, you would probably assume that the tax rates on high-income families have soared over the last generation. But they haven’t.

A family in that top 1 percent of earners paid a total federal tax rate — including everything from payroll taxes to income taxes to capital gains taxes — of 30 percent in 2004. That was down from 41 percent a decade before. Since the 1950s, tax rates on high-income families have generally been falling (http://elsa.berkeley.edu/%7Esaez/piketty-saezJEP07taxprog.pdf).

The top earners pay a bigger share of the government tab than in the past because their incomes have risen so sharply — even more sharply than their tax bills. (Mr. Fleischer was able to claim the opposite by looking only at income taxes.)

The affluent, in short, are paying less in taxes on every dollar they earn but earning many more dollars.

http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2007/10/31/business/leonhardtlarge.jpg


( much higher revenues and lower taxes. That's how the the Masters of the Universe rig the game against the lower 98%)


Corporate taxes have dropped significantly in recent decades.

There are two strange facts about corporate taxes. Everyone from Mr. Rangel on the left to Fred Thompson (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/t/fred_thompson/index.html?inline=nyt-per) on the right is saying that high corporate taxes are hurting American companies. But the effective corporate tax rate isn’t any higher than it has been on average over the last 25 years, and it’s far lower than it was in the 1960s and ’70s.

“A dirty little secret is that the corporate income tax used to raise a fair amount of revenue,” says Richard Clarida (http://www.columbia.edu/%7Erhc2/), a Columbia University (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/c/columbia_university/index.html?inline=nyt-org) economist and former Treasury Department official under Mr. Bush.

What’s going on here? This country really does have a high corporate tax rate, but it also has so many loopholes that companies can often avoid paying the tax. A much smarter policy, economists say, would include a lower rate with fewer loopholes. “Both the incentive and the ability to avoid the tax would then be smaller,” says Leonard Burman (http://www.urban.org/about/LeonardBurman.cfm), director of the Tax Policy Center in Washington.

The nation’s total tax bill hasn’t changed much over the years.

Put it all together — less corporate tax collection and lower individual tax rates, combined with more income for the people who face the highest tax rates — and the trends mostly cancel each other out. The taxes that the federal government took in last year equaled 18.4 percent of the gross domestic product, almost exactly the average since 1980. The overall tax burden rose in the 1990s, fell during Mr. Bush’s first term and has drifted up in the last few years as corporate profits and upper-end incomes surged.

The obvious conclusion is that moderate shifts in taxes don’t dictate economic growth. Mr. Bush’s father and Bill Clinton (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/c/bill_clinton/index.html?inline=nyt-per) raised taxes — and the economy grew for almost the entire decade of the 1990s. The current administration has cut taxes — and the economy has grown for almost all of this decade.

So if short-term economic growth were the only thing to worry about, you could make a good argument either for cutting taxes or for raising them. Unfortunately, there is another problem out there.

The budget deficit is worse than either party says it is.

Mr. Bush has predicted (http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9B02E1D7133FF935A35751C0A9619C8B 63&sec=health&spon=&pagewanted=all) that the deficit will disappear by 2012. But that prediction depends on the fiction that the alternative minimum tax will be allowed to grow ever larger in coming years. The Democratic presidential candidates, meanwhile, are promising to pay for their new programs in part by getting rid of some of Mr. Bush’s tax cuts. But those tax cuts are already scheduled to expire under current law. The official budget numbers have already taken their demise into account.

White House officials are absolutely correct when they note that the current budget deficit isn’t especially large. But it will soar in coming years, as baby boomers stop working (and stop paying very much in taxes) and instead move onto the Social Security and Medicare (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/health/diseasesconditionsandhealthtopics/medicare/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier) rolls If nothing changes over the next couple of decades, the United States will build up a debt burden to resemble Argentina’s, as Mr. Burman points out.

There are several ways to prevent that. Taxes could be raised across the board, or they could be raised on the affluent. Or the Medicare budget — a much bigger problem than Social Security — could be held in check if the government figured out how to say no to some expensive medical procedures. Or all of the above could happen. But something has to give. No amount of clever argument can pay the bills.

E-mail: [email protected]

101A
10-31-2007, 10:41 AM
Great Boutons.

Now could you answer the question?

Are you for a top marginal tax rate of 69%?

Also, if we raise taxes to pay for existing and future government spending to get the deficit under control...won't future politicians continue to come up with new (expensive) plans to take care of ills in the future to get themselves elected?

101A
10-31-2007, 10:51 AM
Also, with inflation, and tax rates/brackets staying constant...the top 20% will creep into the higher brackets, but have no more spending power: insidious.

boutons_
10-31-2007, 03:44 PM
"Are you for a top marginal tax rate of 69%?"

It depends on where it kicks in, and to how much of the total revenue it applies to.

"won't future politicians continue.."

Past, present, and future for-profit health providers will continue to inflate their bills at least 5% per year ad infinitum. No right-wing dumbfucks object to that, nor do they support driving down gouging, extortionate health care costs and useless drugs.

I'm 100% for no-profit, government run health as an option for everybody, paid for with payroll taxes, just like all. Forcing down the cost of health care, including letting people get govt health insurance and go to pro-health providers, rather than for-profit providers.

We need to settle the costs of the Iraq war and health care crises before I bother about sticking the rich with higher tax rates.

101A
10-31-2007, 04:04 PM
You see no difference between the government taxing and private industry (in this case healthcare) charging for their services?

To me it is a pretty marked difference.

One is at gunpoint.