Post #345,293
7/28/11 2:04:18 PM
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well..
your quote was something along the lines of "fuck'em."
And I paid 12k in prop taxes in southern NJ for the house you visited.
I drove 2 hours to work because I couldn't afford to live in northern new jersey...where home prices were 5x and prop taxes were 2x minimum.
paid higher than average sales taxes. Paid about 25% of car insurance to the state fund (that was 3.5k/yr bill).
Additive, even with a net effective fed tax rate of only 10-15% depending on the year, when I tallied my total tax burden in NJ it was around 50%.
And I wasn't, and still am not, making 225k/year...nor will I likely ever make that amount.
However, moving to FL has changed my tax and c.o.l. substantially.
Want to talk about $1M and up as rich/jet set..ok...but given the cost of living in the areas where these 100-200k jobs are, for the most part...these folks are NOT rich. They're not poor, not uncomfortable, but they are not rich.
Raising taxes on "rich people" would get much harder to object to, even by tea partiers, if you up that total...and with that you could up the marginal to make up that difference.
Sure, understanding today's complex world of the future is a little like having bees live in your head. But...there they are.
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Post #345,296
7/28/11 3:25:06 PM
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How many people making $250k have their own jets?
Tea Partiers had no problem objecting to that. They've been, if nothing else, refreshingly up-front about the fact that they will oppose any tax, of any amount, on anything and anybody.
--
Drew
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Post #345,297
7/28/11 4:20:46 PM
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Re: How many people making $250k have their own jets?
duh. T(axed) E(nough) A(lready)...that's their entire point for being. Good thing there's a majority of people that aren't members, isn't it?
And Obama equally as guilty for talking about his tax plan as if those that own their own jets would be the only ones to pay in recent and past speeches.
And your dismissing of the point I made entirely is indeed telling...you act as if those 200kers are living high off the hog, not paying their fair share...and they are paying 80k (35%) in cumulative taxes. They are NOT the people that are being used to portray the "evil rich" in these speeches...they are mostly better than average educated folks that worked their ass off to get a bit ahead of the pack...and the government is spinning everyone into a frenzy to pull them back into the pack with everyone else.
Sorry, that's not what this country is supposed to be about.
As I said, if you talk about the fund manager making 500 million...that's another story...one that is MUCH easier to sell...and one that will CLEARLY alienate the majority from the tea partiers.
But that's where the plan departs from the rhetoric, now isn't it?
Sure, understanding today's complex world of the future is a little like having bees live in your head. But...there they are.
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Post #345,300
7/28/11 4:36:30 PM
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The problem with that argument
It sounds entirely reasonable. "Okay, maybe the rich should be paying a bit more. But people making $250k aren't rich, they're people who busted their asses to get where they are."
Yup, that may be true. But if anyone concedes that point and says, "Sure, let's start at a million," then you know as well as I do the TP-ers will say that those people are hard working small business owners. And if you move it to 10 million then those people will be "job creators".
TP-ers don't want to compromise. Take one step in their direction and they back up two more steps.
At this point the president should just shoot for rolling back the Bush tax cuts entirely. If that means people making $200k and above take a hit, so be it.
--
Drew
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Post #345,332
7/29/11 9:10:43 AM
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the tpers can't drive the bus
there aren't enough of them.
And you take EVERYONE ELSE, general republicans included, and marginalize them.
Rolling back the bush tax cuts entirely hits EVERYBODY, not just those making over 200k. Might not be a horrible idea...but try and get that through ;-)
Hell, with the dems offering plans that cut next to nothing and voting in block against the repo plan which isn't much better...maybe by this time next week we'll be bankrupt and sell ourselves to the Chinese for pennies on the dollar.
Sure, understanding today's complex world of the future is a little like having bees live in your head. But...there they are.
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Post #345,353
7/29/11 1:40:58 PM
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That explains why Boehner got the bill passed last night
--
Drew
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Post #345,355
7/29/11 1:54:34 PM
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getting zero dems helps that cause along quite well.
Sure, understanding today's complex world of the future is a little like having bees live in your head. But...there they are.
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Post #345,358
7/29/11 2:01:26 PM
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Having the majority is rough, isn't it?
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Post #345,361
7/29/11 3:22:59 PM
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not particularly.
but I notice no uproar any longer about block no voting by a single party, do I?
Bueller?
Sure, understanding today's complex world of the future is a little like having bees live in your head. But...there they are.
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Post #345,362
7/29/11 3:31:49 PM
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[sigh] There *is* a difference
When the majority says openly that their #1 priority is making Obama a one-term president, and their action confirm they don't give a shit what they blow up or who gets hurt along the way, then yeah, I have no problem with opposing that.
--
Drew
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Post #345,366
7/29/11 4:31:47 PM
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no there is not
except in your head.
Sure, understanding today's complex world of the future is a little like having bees live in your head. But...there they are.
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Post #345,367
7/29/11 4:37:10 PM
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You're actually a 'bot, aren't you. <sigh>
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Post #345,369
7/29/11 4:47:26 PM
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well...
...maybe on this one instance of a vote I'll forgive. problem is, though, it's been happening pretty much since the change. Silence.
This time, they're fighting the good fight for their beliefs.
Also convenient that y'all like this side better than the others.
As church lady says...isn't that >convenient<
Sure, understanding today's complex world of the future is a little like having bees live in your head. But...there they are.
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Post #345,394
7/30/11 1:38:34 AM
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So you're saying
that the Democrats are using the same tactics as Republicans?
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Post #345,409
7/30/11 12:42:02 PM
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Of course he is
that way he can easily rationalize the false equality of responsibility for the debt crisis. RepubliCANTS are totally responsible for this false crisis that they have manufactured to give them the opportunity to shove their ideology down the throats of Americans, who would never let such crap occur if they tried this under a different political scenario.
"Chicago to my mind was the only place to be. ... I above all liked the city because it was filled with people all a-bustle, and the clatter of hooves and carriages, and with delivery wagons and drays and peddlers and the boom and clank of freight trains. And when those black clouds came sailing in from the west, pouring thunderstorms upon us so that you couldn't hear the cries or curses of humankind, I liked that best of all. Chicago could stand up to the worst God had to offer. I understood why it was built--a place for trade, of course, with railroads and ships and so on, but mostly to give all of us a magnitude of defiance that is not provided by one house on the plains. And the plains is where those storms come from."
-- E.L. Doctorow
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Post #345,565
8/2/11 8:10:53 AM
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About T.E.A.
http://www.nytimes.c...s/02teaparty.html
When Tea Party supporters were asked if the debt-ceiling agreement should include only tax increases, only spending cuts, or a combination of both, the majority  53 percent  said that it should include a combination. Forty-five percent preferred only spending cuts.
More than half of the teabaggers wanted taxes increased as part of the plan.
And 100 - 53 - 45 = 2% wanted only tax increases.
Hmmm.
;-)
Cheers,
Scott.
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