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Dum & Evil
The NY Times may not be perfect but it is clearly the best newspaper in the USA and perhaps the world.
When you talk about a biased rag you have to compare the Times to the Wall St. Journal or the Moonie run Washington Times. In a study done by Harvard University comparing these papers, the results showed that the WSJ & the Moonie Times were invariably critical of Dems and rarely, if ever, critical of Bush or the Republicans. The NY Times they found was far more balanced in criticizing both parties and not having nearly as much bias.
I would also point out that the NY Times actually published rightwing ideologues on a regular basis such as William Safire and David Brooks. No such platform is given to Liberals by the WSJ or the Moonie Times.
Those are the facts D&E and we know how much you hate facts!!!!
posted by
spyinthesky
on
February 5, 2004
at
5:57 AM
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NYTimes?
"NYTimes reporter and Urban Institute fellow, David Cay Johnston"
NYT is a bias RAG!
Spy, I think you'd better find yourself someone without a massively bias attitude, who actually relays facts instead of innuendo and emotional ploys. You've been conditioned by the liberals who only want to suck the money away from all taxpayers and create stupid, wasteful social programs that don't do jack squat for anyone, but are in constant need of repair and more money. Cut the stupid emotions... and THINK!
Is Kerry your guy? What a massive hypocrite that dude is.... read this...
Kerry Blocked Law
posted by
DEMSareEVIL
on
February 4, 2004
at
8:54 PM
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Dum & Evil
As usual, you haven't a clue as to what you are talking about.
Bush's tax plan will eventually free the rich from paying taxes on anything but their salaries (which they will keep as low as possible and take their compensation in stock options and dividends). That means that the tax burden will fall most on working people who earn wages as wages will be the last thing left to tax.
For those who truly want the facts about the injustice and the financial recklessness of Bush's obscene tax cut plan there is a book written by NYTimes reporter and Urban Institute fellow, David Cay Johnston, it is called, "Perfectly Legal," and it describes how the laws in America are RIGGED for the super rich, while wage earners are required to report any bit of income they receive.
Bush is a disgrace and has shown nothing but depraved indifference to the lives of our soldiers and the welfare of the working people of America. And only the rightwing brainwashed don't know that.
posted by
spyinthesky
on
February 4, 2004
at
5:54 AM
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Myths About the President's Tax Plan
The President's tax plan has many strengths, but one overriding virtue is this: it moves the federal tax system inexorably toward a single flat rate consumption tax system. Eliminating the double tax on dividends, abolishing the death tax, lowering income tax rates, and expanding tax free savings accounts are all big steps toward the promised land of a flat rate tax system that ends doubled taxation of saving and investment—the building blocks of a rapidly growing economy. Whatever modifications or additions to the Bush tax cut that Congress enacts should be consistent with the principles of a tax system that taxes all income at the same rate, once, and only once.
Myths About the President's Tax Plan1. The Bush tax cut "benefits only the rich."
The media continues to report, as The New York Times has, that "90% of Americans…will get little or nothing from the dividend tax cut."
Wrong. The Tax Foundation's recent examination of IRS tax return data finds just the opposite. Fully 34 million American tax filers reported some dividend income in 2000 and these returns represent 71 million people. That is a whole lot more than 10% of the population who will directly benefit.
The income tax cuts are even more widely distributed. Anyone who pays income taxes and dreads the coming of April 15th will get an income tax cut under the Bush plan. The typical working family with 2 incomes and an income of $60,000—and I suspect very few of these households regard themselves as "rich"—would get a $1,200 a year tax cut from the Bush plan. If the income is $40,000 the family gets a $600 tax cut —and not just for one year, as under the Democratic alternative plan, but forever.
Proportionately, the rich get a smaller share of the Bush tax cut pie, not a bigger slice than the middle class. For example, the Treasury Department reports that for Americans who make more than $100,000 a year, the share of all federal income taxes paid would rise from 72% to 73%. For those who make less than a six-figure income a year, their overall share of the tax load goes down.
2. The Bush tax cut will blow a hole in the deficit.
The Bush tax cut provides $670 billion in tax relief for Americans over the next 10 years. This will hardly bankrupt the federal treasury. Over the next ten years the IRS will collect some $25 trillion in taxes from Americans. So the tax cut comes to less than 3 cents on the dollar, hardly a massive giveaway.
Nor is it accurate to say that the national debt will rise by the amount of the tax cut, unless one believes that tax cuts result in absolutely zero change in economic behavior. The truth is that for every action in the economy, as in physics, there is a reaction. If we cut income tax rates and eliminate the double tax on dividends, surely workers, and businesses, and investors will behave differently. If the tax on work and hiring goes down, surely we will get more of both. If the tax on investment goes down and the after-tax rate of return goes up, surely we will get more of that too. If the tax on dividends is eliminated and the capital gains tax falls as well, surely we will get more business investment and higher stock values.
Opponents of the tax cut continue to tout the results of economic models that have a perfect batting record of being wrong in predicting the future. For example, in 1997, when the capital gains tax rate was cut from 28% to 20%, the crystal ball gazers inside and outside government predicted a multi-billion dollar "cost" to the Treasury. In fact, the capital gains receipts doubled in 4 years. These are precisely the same defective models that are now telling us the Bush tax cut will lead the nation into bankruptcy.
Bill Beach, the economist and forecaster at the Heritage Foundation, reports that the dividend tax cut alone is such potent medication for the economy that the Treasury Department should recapture about 50 to 70% of the supposed tax revenue loss from the tax cut. Beach finds that the real world cost to the government of the Bush tax cut is probably at most half the reported "cost." I'd put my money on Beach's estimates, which have a far more accurate track record of accuracy.
But let us assume the worst-case scenario: no economic response from the Bush tax cut whatsoever. We could still have the Bush tax cuts and a balanced budget. If Congress were to modestly control its appetite for new spending, the tax plan could be implemented fully and the budget returned to balance by 2006. In a study for the Cato Institute I found that if overall federal spending were restrained to 2% annual growth over the next four years (which shouldn't be too difficult in this era of almost no inflation), the federal government would start running surpluses by 2006 even if we assume that the Bush tax cut incited no economic feedback and we include the costs of the war. If the tax cuts do generate growth, the budget would be balanced by 2006 or sooner.
Another reason to suspect that the Bush tax cut will not run up the deficit is that if the taxes aren't cut, it is much more likely that Congress will spend the money than save it. In other words, taxes cause spending, and the lack of taxes impose at least some spending discipline. Ohio University economist Richard Vedder has documented this relationship between tax revenues and spending and has found that each additional dollar of taxes available for Congress to spend leads to nearly a dollar of added spending. Nobel prize winner Milton Friedman notes that one of the strongest arguments for the Bush tax cut is that it will discourage a stampede of congressional spending over the next several years.
3. The Bush tax cut won't stimulate economic growth or jobs.
All we can really rely upon to judge the economic value of tax rate reductions is the economic reaction to tax cuts in the past. Fortunately, Bush has history firmly on his side. The 1964 Kennedy income tax rate reductions spurred a bull market expansion and budgets in near balance through the 1960s. The 1981 Reagan tax cuts ushered in 7 consecutive years of prosperity and 15 million new jobs. The 1997 capital gains cut corresponded with a bull market rally in the stock market and a surge of investment spending and venture capital funding for new businesses.
The critics argue that the 2001 Bush tax cut has failed to provide any juice for the economy. But there's a good reason for that. Seventy percent of the tax cuts haven't taken effect yet. All the more compelling reason to speed up the tax cuts so they can provide immediate economic aid. Especially critical is to chop the highest and most economically punitive tax rates. Roughly two-of-every-three Americans who pay the top income tax rate are business owners or sole proprietors. If you want jobs, you need financially healthy and confident employers with dollars to invest.
The dividend tax cut will have the same salutary effect on larger businesses. For example, John Rutledge, a respected Wall Street economist, has estimated that ending the double tax on dividends increases stock values by roughly 10% or an $800 billion increase in wealth, reduces businesses cost of raising investment capital by 25%, and helps stimulate a recovery in the battered high technology and telecom industries most. Many stock analysts, including economist John Rutledge of Kudlow and Co., believe that passing the dividend tax exemption and the acceleration of income tax rate reductions could add another 5 - 10% or so to equity values. That's the equivalent of a $500 billion to $1 trillion instant boost in wealth.
Clearly, even Americans who do own stocks that do not pay dividends or who own stocks in tax free 401k plans or IRAs will benefit from the dividend tax cut because of the increase in the valuation of stocks.
The Case for Growing the Bush Tax Cut
To maximize the positive job and wealth-creating impact of the Bush tax plan, it should not be shrunk, as some in the House suggest, it should be expanded to perhaps twice the size that the White House has recommended. I am pleased that Rep.s Paul Ryan of Wisconsin and Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania have teamed up to craft such a plan.
President Bush's plan will incentivize supply side growth by eliminating the dividend tax elimination and speeding up income tax rate cuts. But it omits tax policy changes that would improve the tax code, help the economy immediately, and cost the Treasury little or nothing in terms of lost revenues. This strategy would lift the tax drag that is still impeding growth and hasten the economy's recovery to the 4% to 5% real GDP growth that the United States is uniquely capable of achieving. It is worth reminding the members of the Committee that even in the first year of the plan, the tax cut amounts to less than 1% of the entire GDP. The Reagan tax cuts of 1981 and the John F. Kennedy tax cuts of 1964 were about 3 to 4 times larger in size than what President Bush has proposed.
Growth is the key to balancing the budget. A balanced budget will require at least a 3% to 4% economic growth rate to generate the revenues to pay for expected federal spending over the next decade. Every 1 percentage point increase in sustained economic growth generates an extra $1 trillion of tax receipts over ten years. The best way to produce tax receipts is to put people back to work; to get the stock market growing again; and to return American businesses to robust profitability. Tax cuts aren't then only way to make higher growth achievable, but history repeatedly shows they can sure help.
As such, here are the additions to the Bush tax plan that are worth consideration:
1) Consolidate the income tax rates down to three: 10, 20, and 30. Getting the top tax rate down to 35% is good, but 30% would be even better. For those who argue that this would lower the top tax rate too much, we would remind critics that in the late 1990s Reagan got the top tax rate down to 28%. Lowering the top income tax rate back down to 30% would help attract trillions of dollars of foreign investment capital back to the U.S. and would help reverse the decline in the dollar. Also, because 2 of every 3 taxpayers in the highest tax bracket today is a sole proprietor of a small business, lower tax rates will mean more business expansion and more jobs.
2) Cut the capital gains tax to 10% on all new investment. The last capital gains tax cit in 1997 increased stock values, increased business investment and venture capital funding, and helped spur a huge stock market rally. That has been the economic reaction to virtually every capital gains tax cut over the past 40 years. The capital gains tax cut is the goose that lays the golden eggs. Keep cutting until we eventually get down to zero.
3) Expand tax free IRAs and 401k super-saver accounts. This will help create larger individual pools of household savings and wealth accumulation. The latest Fed report shows that 52% of households now own stock and that this mass democratization of the U.S stock market has caused impressive increases in average household wealth in the U.S. - from $50,000 on average in the mid 1980s to almost $75,000 today (adjusted for inflation). IRAs and 401ks help build financial self-sufficiency and less reliance on the government programs. Moreover, we should stop double-taxing Americans' savings. IRAs and 401k's should be dramatically liberalized by raising limits by $5,000 per year. The goal should be to eventually create unlimited supersaver IRAs, where any money that is saved out of income is not taxed, until the funds are taken out of the savings account to be spent. The income limits for IRAs should be repealed too.
One last, but crucial point. Republicans need to adopt dynamic, real-world scoring of tax policy changes. Stop using a tax referee that is biased against the President's program and that consistently produces discredited predictions of the future. For 30 years economic models in Washington have over-estimate the revenue gains from tax hikes, and overstated the tax losses from tax rate cuts.
President Bush deserves great credit for proposing a tax plan that has the potential to increase economic growth and create jobs. The economy needs a jolt of tax cut adrenaline given the recent discouraging financial numbers that have been released. The fact that we are on the eve of war, is an argument for revving up our economic engine of industrial might, not hindering its productive capacity with a dysfunctional tax system.
posted by
DEMSareEVIL
on
February 3, 2004
at
11:56 PM
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I just saw a sobering statistic: today, in 2004, the top 1% of Americans (in terms of wealth) now control more than 95% of this country's wealth. We are, sadly, now becoming a Third World Nation.
God Bless America.
Shawn
posted by
ShawnMichel
on
February 3, 2004
at
9:14 PM
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freerain.
Your analysis of the decline of the working class starting with Reagan's tax cuts for the rich is correct.
There never has been such a transfer of wealth from the poor and middleclass to the rich as has been schemed by the Republicans of Reagan, Bush I and Bush II administrations. The American people may not wake up until the Republican house of greed has totally collapsed on them as it did in the Great Depression. If we had a media that told the ugly truth about the current administration they might catch on faster.
Thank you for your compliment. I appreciate it.
posted by
spyinthesky
on
February 3, 2004
at
12:26 PM
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History repeats itself
as long as we keep doing the SAME OLD THING. When Regan was in office, he ran up a huge deficit giving tax breaks to the corporations and rich, cut social programs and the interest rate was depressed. Bush Sr. took over and we went to war--the defecit increased and the gap between the wealthy and lower class expanded. What happened next? Carter was elected, interest rates went sky high, we saw a damaging recession. Workers lost their homes, bankruptcies increased, middle management was diminished, Americans worked harder, two parent incomes became the "must" do to survive. Poverty, violence and deterioration of the standard of living made the democratic presidency and the political climate unstable.
Bush isn't done yet with the chopping block. Anything not associated with military might and corporate profits are going to be cut. Government jobs will be reduced as well and we will face increased interest rates. All those folks who refinanced their homes on a variable interest rate will soon find they can't keep their homes. Bankruptcies will be huge. For those who have money, this will be a boom time and increase Bush's appeal. For those who live pay-check-to-pay-check will find life unbearable, since their income will decrease and discretionary spending will be reduced. Businesses (small, local) will suffer and find themselves bankrupting or being bought out by corporations. Social services and public services will be reduced. Bush is treating the American people the same way our Government treats other thrid world countries--take their resources and leave them impoverished. How long will the people suffer this rape and abuse? When all that the people have left is anger, resentment and time on their hands (no job) dissent turns to action--violence against each other instead of directed to the institution which created this abyss produces anarchy. When this happens, we'll cry for more police protection and become more and more a police state.
It's time to stop this abuse. If we have the courage, stop subscribing to corporations--turn off the cable, radio, buy a small local paper if you have one--tighten buying impulses--go to thrift stores--stay away from big purchases and cut up the credit cards. Poor people in America live on minimum wage, see what minimum wage you can live on and stick to it.
I love your posts Spy--you are my hero
FR
posted by
freerain
on
February 3, 2004
at
8:51 AM
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