Charade
<font color=royalblue>I'm the one on the LEFT side
- Joined
- Jan 2, 2005
- Messages
- 26,074
I think he said something about a scalpel. He's going to end up with a surplus, remember?
Must be a really BIG one.
I think he said something about a scalpel. He's going to end up with a surplus, remember?
Must be a really BIG one.
I hope soIf he can pull this off, especially with Pelosi and Reid helping out, I will be amazed.
Indeed. A trillion dollars in new spending, "scalpeled" cuts in spending, tax cuts for 95 percent (plus the handouts and credits) with a tax increase in taxes of the top 2 percent is going to NET $700B?
Really???
Talk is cheap.
Remember that the $700B gains the American people equity stake in banks. The last time the US Government did something like that, they made back all the money they put in, within seven years, plus a little extra. Not a great investment, in terms of APY, but still all the money was paid back.
You're talking about the bailout $700B. I'm talking about the $700B that one poster has put up (numerous times) comparing the Obama tax plan to the McCain tax plan. She stated that Obama's plan will be a net gain of $700B while McCain's will a net loss of $600B.
I find it remarkable that nobody has ever thought to go over the federal budget with a scalpel before.
I think a lot of us would like to see spending cuts, but we disagree about which cuts should be made, and with regard to what spending should be increased to fulfill society's obligation to its people. The fact that eight years of Republican Presidents, including two where they had majorities in both houses of Congress, didn't lead to across-the-board spending cuts shows that there simply isn't the will in either the Republican or Democratic Party to seriously reduce government spending. History shows that the Democrats who claim they're for massive cuts in overall government spending (are there any such people?) aren't in synch with their party, and the Republicans who claim they're for massive cuts in overall government spending are simply lying to you.
I sympathize... Having done it once before, myself, I can imagine how wearying it could be supporting the lesser candidate.
You know what I don't understand? How raising the taxes on the top 2 percent of earners 4 percent and lowering the taxes on the bottom 95 percent (plus all the handouts) is going to bring in $700 billion. IMO, the math doesn't work out. According to taxfoundation.org (from IRS data), in 2006 the total tax (income) collected was about 1 trillion dollars. Does anyone really think that their is $700 billion on the table to collect (on top of the 1 trillion already collected from all taxpayers) from the top 2 percent of earners if he increases their tax rate by 4 percent? Another reason it doesn't work is because the 4 percent is a raw number. It's highly unlikely that the full 4 percent will be collected. In the data I got from taxfoundation.org, the average income tax rate is 22 percent for the top 1 percent of earners. So that 4 percent may only actually yield 2 or 3 at most.
So (and I've asked several times) where is that $700B coming from? Hiding under the rabbit in his hat?
http://www.taxfoundation.org/research/show/250.html
It's been attempted but struck down by the Supreme Court.
http://www.cnn.com/ALLPOLITICS/1998/06/25/scotus.lineitem/
So the question is do you want McCain coming after you, as a middle-income family, with higher taxes right-off, or would you prefer to have Obama make the taxing as progressive as possible, thereby sparing you at least some measure of taxation?
And irrelevant. No one is suggesting anything that would "destroy" the rich.
Another red herring desperation appeal.