Friday, August 5, 2011

10 Things I Learned Today

  1. Even though the internet told me Staples had 12 sheets of magnetic paper for $15.99, it lied.  They only had 4 sheets for $9.99.
  2. 4 sheets of magnetic paper was not worth the 2 1/2 hrs it took to go to 5 different places to find it.  People, carry what I need!
  3. When putting a dry wall anchor in the wall, I will find the stud every time.
  4. Some people will complain no matter how much you do for them.
  5. My mother's guilt trips do not work on me any more  :)
  6. You can have a remarkable amount of energy on 2 hrs of sleep.
  7. An imaging technician can love to tell you 25 reasons her female co-workers are "fucking lazy bitches" while she is doing a procedure.  Norma, thanks for cracking me up while you crammed that ultrasound looking into my blocked vein.  She took the time to show me the screen and explain as she went along.  This was sure to piss off the "fucking lazy bitches since they kept calling her on the phone she never answered while she was doing a procedure.
  8. There are still some places where you can fill out paperwork for one doctor, have blood drawn and get a doppler, and still be out of there in less than an hour.
  9. You son spilling your Aragan oil can make for a really slippery floor.
  10. 11 yr olds can still have really bad aim
And , yes, I am still fucking awsome  :)

Thursday, August 4, 2011

And Now For Something Completely Different ....

Therapy can be a great thing.   Finally figured out why I really suck at relationships. Nope, not going out to find one.  Going to sit with this for awhile and work it out.  I just got back the biggest part of my sanity, I'd like to keep it.  lol

I am fucking awesome  :)

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

The People You Meet (A Politics Free Post)

The last couple of days I have been thinking about all the people I have met online, and the diversity in cultures and personalities.  If you met them outside the computer, would they be the same?  Would you?  Would they be what you expected?    Would we all focus on what we had in common, or would we focus on our differences?  If you really thought about those questions, would you know the answers?


Do you treat people the same online as you would if they were in front of you?  I know I used to be able to say I did.  Its not an easy thing to admit, but I know over the last year or so when I have been sick, stressed out and lost in my own head, I lost sight of that question.  I treated some people more harshly than they deserved.  Sometimes they did deserve it, but I didn't handle it as well as I would have if they were in front of me.  Sometimes I have failed to pay enough attention to what was said, or more importantly to what wasn't.  You learn to 'read' the people you know well, and there were times when I was totally oblivious to their need to be heard.  Some have understood, and some haven't.  Either way I have learned from it.


Funny thing about relationships online, all relationships,  is that unless you use a cam you miss the subtleties of talking to someone in person.  You can't look them in the eye, you can't look at their face and see if they are taking what you say the way you meant it, or if you are understanding what they say the way they meant.  You miss the inflections in their voice that tell you those things, too.   Sometimes you misunderstand people, and they misunderstand you.


But, for the most part, we navigate our way through it.  We meet people we wouldn't otherwise meet, or given a chance if we met them on the street.  We have more in common, than not.  We learn about, and from each other.  If you are going through something, chances are someone you know has been through it, too.  People who are eager to share information.  They share in the successes, and when something goes terribly wrong, you find you have friends who will hold you up when you can't stand on your own two feet, and they are happy to do it.  There but for the grace of God, and all that.  


For every bad thing that can happen on the internet, there is something good to balance it out. For people who can't get out of their homes, there is a whole internet of communities so they don't have to feel so alone. The communities we create online can be as important, or more important than the ones we have away from the computer.  If we're lucky, we meet people who change our lives.  I know I have.  If you are really smart,  you tell them.  Trust me, you don't want the regret of not recognizing it until it is too late.


This is for all my online friends, especially  the one I didn't appreciate as much as I should have.

Sunday, July 31, 2011

And, For Those Who Think I Don't Do My Research Before I Post

April 13th, 2011 DAVID CAY JOHNSTON | Cover Story
 

9 Things The Rich Don't Want You To Know About Taxes

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Related to:Taxes
For three decades we have conducted a massive economic experiment, testing a theory known as supply-side economics. The theory goes like this: Lower tax rates will encourage more investment, which in turn will mean more jobs and greater prosperity—so much so that tax revenues will go up, despite lower rates. The late Milton Friedman, the libertarian economist who wanted to shut down public parks because he considered them socialism, promoted this strategy. Ronald Reagan embraced Friedman’s ideas and made them into policy when he was elected president in 1980.
For the past decade, we have doubled down on this theory of supply-side economics with the tax cuts sponsored by President George W. Bush in 2001 and 2003, which President Obama has agreed to continue for two years.
You would think that whether this grand experiment worked would be settled after three decades. You would think the practitioners of the dismal science of economics would look at their demand curves and the data on incomes and taxes and pronounce a verdict, the way Galileo and Copernicus did when they showed that geocentrism was a fantasy because Earth revolves around the sun (known as heliocentrism). But economics is not like that. It is not like physics with its laws and arithmetic with its absolute values. 
Tax policy is something the framers left to politics. And in politics, the facts often matter less than who has the biggest bullhorn.
The Mad Men who once ran campaigns featuring doctors extolling the health benefits of smoking are now busy marketing the dogma that tax cuts mean broad prosperity, no matter what the facts show. 
As millions of Americans prepare to file their annual taxes, they do so in an environment of media-perpetuated tax myths. Here are a few points about taxes and the economy that you may not know, to consider as you prepare to file your taxes. (All figures are inflation-adjusted.)

Credits: WW CHART — SOURCE: AUTHOR ANALYSIS OF SAEZ & PIKETTY TABLE A6; 2008 DOLLARS



1. Poor Americans do pay taxes.
Gretchen Carlson, the Fox News host, said last year “47 percent of Americans don’t pay any taxes.” John McCain and Sarah Palin both said similar things during the 2008 campaign about the bottom half of Americans.
Ari Fleischer, the former Bush White House spokesman, once said “50 percent of the country gets benefits without paying for them.”
Actually, they pay lots of taxes—just not lots of federal income taxes.
Data from the Tax Foundation show that in 2008, the average income for the bottom half of taxpayers was $15,300.
This year the first $9,350 of income is exempt from taxes for singles and $18,700 for married couples, just slightly more than in 2008. That means millions of the poor do not make enough to owe income taxes.
But they still pay plenty of other taxes, including federal payroll taxes. Between gas taxes, sales taxes, utility taxes and other taxes, no one lives tax-free in America.
When it comes to state and local taxes, the poor bear a heavier burden than the rich in every state except Vermont, the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy calculated from official data. In Alabama, for example, the burden on the poor is more than twice that of the top 1 percent. The one-fifth of Alabama families making less than $13,000 pay almost 11 percent of their income in state and local taxes, compared with less than 4 percent for those who make $229,000 or more.

Credits: WW CHART — SOURCE: MEDICARE TAX DATABASE; CENSUS


2. The wealthiest Americans don’t carry the burden.
This is one of those oft-used canards. Sen. Rand Paul, the tea party favorite from Kentucky, told David Letterman recently that “the wealthy do pay most of the taxes in this country.”
The Internet is awash with statements that the top 1 percent pays, depending on the year, 38 percent or more than 40 percent of taxes.
It’s true that the top 1 percent of wage earners paid 38 percent of the federal income taxes in 2008 (the most recent year for which data is available). But people forget that the income tax is less than half of federal taxes and only one-fifth of taxes at all levels of government.
Social Security, Medicare and unemployment insurance taxes (known as payroll taxes) are paid mostly by the bottom 90 percent of wage earners.  That’s because, once you reach $106,800 of income, you pay no more for Social Security, though the much smaller Medicare tax applies to all wages. Warren Buffett pays the exact same amount of Social Security taxes as someone who earns $106,800.

Credits: WW CHART — SOURCE: SOCIAL SECURITY MEDICARE TAX DATABASE

3. In fact, the wealthy are paying less taxes.
The Internal Revenue Service issues an annual report on the 400 highest income-tax payers. In 1961, there were 398 taxpayers who made $1 million or more, so I compared their income tax burdens from that year to 2007.
Despite skyrocketing incomes, the federal tax burden on the richest 400 has been slashed, thanks to a variety of loopholes, allowable deductions and other tools. The actual share of their income paid in taxes, according to the IRS, is 16.6 percent. Adding payroll taxes barely nudges that number.
Compare that to the vast majority of Americans, whose share of their income going to federal taxes increased from 13.1 percent in 1961 to 22.5 percent in 2007.
(By the way, during seven of the eight George W. Bush years, the IRS report on the top 400 taxpayers was labeled a state secret, a policy that the Obama administration overturned almost instantly after his inauguration.)

Credits: WW CHART — SOURCE: AUTHOR CALCULATIONS FROM IRS

4. Many of the very richest pay no current income taxes at all.
John Paulson, the most successful hedge-fund manager of all, bet against the mortgage market one year and then bet with Glenn Beck in the gold market the next. Paulson made himself $9 billion in fees in just two years. His current tax bill on that $9 billion? Zero.
Congress lets hedge-fund managers earn all they can now and pay their taxes years from now.
In 2007, Congress debated whether hedge-fund managers should pay the top tax rate that applies to wages, bonuses and other compensation for their labors, which is 35 percent. That tax rate starts at about $300,000 of taxable income—not even pocket change to Paulson, but almost 12 years of gross pay to the median-wage worker.
The Republicans and a key Democrat, Sen. Charles Schumer of New York, fought to keep the tax rate on hedge-fund managers at 15 percent, arguing that the profits from hedge funds should be considered capital gains, not ordinary income, which got a lot of attention in the news.
What the news media missed is that hedge-fund managers don’t even pay 15 percent. At least, not currently. So long as they leave their money, known as “carried interest,” in the hedge fund, their taxes are deferred. They only pay taxes when they cash out, which could be decades from now for younger managers. How do these hedge-fund managers get money in the meantime? By borrowing against the carried interest, often at absurdly low rates—currently about 2 percent.
Lots of other people live tax-free, too. I have Donald Trump’s tax records for four years early in his career. He paid no taxes for two of those years. Big real-estate investors enjoy tax-free living under a 1993 law President Clinton signed. It lets “professional” real-estate investors use paper losses like depreciation on their buildings against any cash income, even if they end up with negative incomes like Trump.
Frank and Jamie McCourt, who own the Los Angeles Dodgers, have not paid any income taxes since at least 2004, their divorce case revealed. Yet they spent $45 million one year alone. How? They just borrowed against Dodger ticket revenue and other assets. To the IRS, they look like paupers. 
In Wisconsin, Terrence Wall, who unsuccessfully sought the Republican nomination for U.S. Senate in 2010, paid no income taxes on as much as $14 million of recent income, his disclosure forms showed. Asked about his living tax-free while working people pay taxes, he had a simple response: Everyone should pay less.

Credits: WW CHART — SOURCE: AUTHOR CALCULATIONS FROM IRS

5. And (surprise!) since Reagan, only the wealthy have gained significant income.
The Heritage Foundation, the Cato Institute and similar conservative marketing organizations tell us relentlessly that lower tax rates will make us all better off.
“When tax rates are reduced, the economy’s growth rate improves and living standards increase,” according to Daniel J. Mitchell, an economist at Heritage until he joined Cato. He says that supply-side economics is “the simple notion that lower tax rates will boost work, saving, investment and entrepreneurship.”
When Reagan was elected president, the top marginal tax rate (the tax rate paid on the last dollar of income earned) was 70 percent. He cut it to 50 percent and then 28 percent starting in 1987. It was raised by George H.W. Bush and Clinton, and then cut by George W. Bush. The top rate is now 35 percent. 
Since 1980, when Reagan won the presidency promising prosperity through tax cuts, the average income of the vast majority—the bottom 90 percent of Americans—has increased a meager $303, or 1 percent. Put another way, for each dollar people in the vast majority made in 1980, in 2008 their income was up to $1.01.
Those at the top did better. The top 1 percent’s average income more than doubled to $1.1 million, according to an analysis of tax data by economists Thomas Piketty and Emmanuel Saez. The really rich, the top one-tenth of 1 percent, each enjoyed almost $4 in 2008 for each dollar in 1980.  
The top 300,000 Americans now enjoy almost as much income as the bottom 150 million, the data show.

Credits: WW CHART — SOURCE: MARTIN SULLIVAN, TAX ANALYSTS ECONOMIST, FROM DATA AT BEA.GOV

6. When it comes to corporations, the story is much the same—less taxes.
Corporate profits in 2008, the latest year for which data are available, were $1,830 billion, up almost 12 percent from $1,638.7 billion in 2000. Yet, even though corporate tax rates have not been cut, corporate income-tax revenues fell to $230 billion from $249 billion—an 8 percent decline, thanks to a number of loopholes. The official 2010 profit numbers are not added up and released by the government, but the amount paid in corporate taxes is: In 2010 they fell further, to $191 billion—a decline of more than 23 percent compared with 2000.

Credits: WW CHART — SOURCE: IRS

7. Some corporate tax breaks destroy jobs.
Despite all the noise that America has the world’s second-highest corporate tax rate, the actual taxes paid by corporations are falling because of the growing number of loopholes and companies shifting profits to tax havens like the Cayman Islands.
And right now America’s corporations are sitting on close to $2 trillion in cash that is not being used to build factories, create jobs or anything else, but acts as an insurance policy for managers unwilling to take the risk of actually building the businesses they are paid so well to run. That cash hoard, by the way, works out to nearly $13,000 per taxpaying household.
A corporate tax rate that is too low actually destroys jobs. That’s because a higher tax rate encourages businesses (who don’t want to pay taxes) to keep the profits in the business and reinvest, rather than pull them out as profits and have to pay high taxes.
The 2004 American Jobs Creation Act, which passed with bipartisan support, allowed more than 800 companies to bring profits that were untaxed but overseas back to the United States. Instead of paying the usual 35 percent tax, the companies paid just 5.25 percent.
The companies said bringing the money home—“repatriating” it, they called it—would mean lots of jobs. Sen. John Ensign, the Nevada Republican, put the figure at 660,000 new jobs. 
Pfizer, the drug company, was the biggest beneficiary. It brought home $37 billion, saving $11 billion in taxes. Almost immediately it started firing people. Since the law took effect, Pfizer has let 40,000 workers go. In all, it appears that at least 100,000 jobs were destroyed.
Now Congressional Republicans and some Democrats are gearing up again to pass another tax holiday, promoting a new Jobs Creation Act. It would affect 10 times as much money as the 2004 law. 

Credits: WW CHART — SOURCE: IRS TABLE 1.4 IN 2008 DOLLARS

8. Republicans like taxes too.
President Reagan signed into law 11 tax increases, targeted at people down the income ladder. His administration and the Washington press corps called the increases “revenue enhancers.” Reagan raised Social Security taxes so high that by the end of 2008, the government had collected more than $2 trillion in surplus tax.
George W. Bush signed a tax increase, too, in 2006, despite his written ironclad pledge never to raise taxes on anyone. It raised taxes on teenagers by requiring kids up to age 17, who earned money, to pay taxes at their parents’ tax rate, which would almost always be higher than the rate they would otherwise pay. It was a story that ran buried inside The New York Times one Sunday, but nowhere else.
In fact, thanks to Republicans, one in three Americans will pay higher taxes this year than they did last year.
First, some history. In 2009, President Obama pushed his own tax cut—for the working class. He persuaded Congress to enact the Making Work Pay Tax Credit. Over the two years 2009 and 2010, it saved single workers up to $800 and married heterosexual couples up to $1,600, even if only one spouse worked. The top 5 percent or so of taxpayers were denied this tax break.
The Obama administration called it “the biggest middle-class tax cut” ever. Yet last December the Republicans, poised to regain control of the House of Representatives, killed Obama’s Making Work Pay Credit while extending the Bush tax cuts for two more years—a policy Obama agreed to. 
By doing so, Congressional Republican leaders increased taxes on a third of Americans, virtually all of them the working poor, this year.
As a result, of the 155 million households in the tax system, 51 million will pay an average of $129 more this year. That is $6.6 billion in higher taxes for the working poor, the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center estimated. 
In addition, the Republicans changed the rate of workers’ FICA contributions, which finances half of Social Security. The result:
If you are single and make less than $20,000, or married and less than $40,000, you lose under this plan. But the top 5 percent, people who make more than $106,800, will save $2,136 ($4,272 for two-career couples).

Credits: WW CHART — SOURCE: MEDICARE TAX DATABASE; CENSUS.GOV

9. Other countries do it better. 
We measure our economic progress, and our elected leaders debate tax policy, in terms of a crude measure known as gross domestic product. The way the official statistics are put together, each dollar spent buying solar energy equipment counts the same as each dollar spent investigating murders.
We do not give any measure of value to time spent rearing children or growing our own vegetables or to time off for leisure and community service. 
And we do not measure the economic damage done by shocks, such as losing a job, which means not only loss of income and depletion of savings, but loss of health insurance, which a Harvard Medical School study found results in 45,000 unnecessary deaths each year.
Compare this to Germany, one of many countries with a smarter tax system and smarter spending policies.
Germans work less, make more per hour and get much better parental leave than Americans, many of whom get no fringe benefits such as health care, pensions or even a retirement savings plan. By many measures the vast majority live better in Germany than in America.
To achieve this, unmarried Germans on average pay 52 percent of their income in taxes. Americans average 30 percent, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. 
At first blush the German tax burden seems horrendous. But in Germany (as well as in Britain, France, Scandinavia, Canada, Australia and Japan), tax-supported institutions provide many of the things Americans pay for with after-tax dollars. Buying wholesale rather than retail saves money. 
A proper comparison would take the 30 percent average tax on American workers and add their out-of-pocket spending on health care, college tuition and fees for services, and compare that with taxes that the average German pays. Add it all up and the combination of tax and personal spending is roughly equal in both countries, but with a large risk of catastrophic loss in America, and a tiny risk in Germany. 
Americans take on $85 billion of debt each year for higher education, while college is financed by taxes in Germany and tuition is cheap to free in other modern countries. While soaring medical costs are a key reason that since 1980 bankruptcy in America has increased 15 times faster than population growth, no one in Germany or the rest of the modern world goes broke because of accident or illness. And child poverty in America is the highest among modern countries—almost twice the rate in Germany, which is close to the average of modern countries.
On the corporate tax side, the Germans encourage reinvestment at home and the outsourcing of low-value work, like auto assembly, and German rules tightly control accounting so that profits earned at home cannot be made to appear as profits earned in tax havens. 
Adopting the German system is not the answer for America. But crafting a tax system that benefits the vast majority, reduces risks, provides universal health care and focuses on diplomacy rather than militarism abroad (and at home) would be a lot smarter than what we have now.
Here is a question to ask yourself: We started down this road with Reagan’s election in 1980 and upped the ante in this century with George W. Bush. 
How long does it take to conclude that a policy has failed to fulfill its promises? And as you think of that, keep in mind George Washington. When he fell ill his doctors followed the common wisdom of the era. They cut him and bled him to remove bad blood. As Washington’s condition grew worse, they bled him more. And like the mantra of tax cuts for the rich, they kept applying the same treatment until they killed him.
Luckily we don’t bleed the sick anymore, but we are bleeding our government to death.


Credits: WW CHART — SOURCES: OMB; CENSUS.GOV; BEA.GOV; CALCULATIONS BY AUTHOR



David Cay Johnston is a columnist for tax.com and teaches the tax, property and regulatory law of the ancient world at Syracuse University College of Law and Whitman School of Management. He has also been called the “de facto chief tax enforcement officer of the United States” because his reporting in The New York Times shut down many tax dodges and schemes, just two of them valued by Congress at $260 billion. Johnston received a 2001 Pulitzer Prize for exposing tax loopholes and inequities. He wrote two bestsellers on taxes, Perfectly Legal and Free Lunch. Later this year, Johnston will be out with a new book, The Fine Print, revealing how big business, with help from politicians, abuses plain English to rob you blind. 
 

Ezra Klein in Forbes on The Bush Tax Cuts and Why They No Longer Make Sense

BUSINESS

Does Anyone Still Remember Why We Have The Bush Tax Cuts?

Jul. 12 2011 - 4:56 pm | 4,236 views | 2 recommendations | 58 comments
In today’s Washington Post, Ezra Klein reminds us of the circumstances that brought the Bush tax cuts into being – and why they no longer make any sense.
The Bush tax cuts were not supposed to last forever. Alan Greenspan, whose oracular endorsement was perhaps the single most decisive event in their passage, made it very clear that they were a temporary solution to a temporary surplus. “Recent data significantly raise the probability that sufficient resources will be available to undertake both debt reduction and surplus-lowering policy initiatives,” Greenspan said in 2001.
While things may not have worked out the way it was envisioned back in 2001, one can certainly appreciate a philosophy suggesting that a government that is racking up large, annual surpluses might be indicative of a population that is being taxed too highly.
Of course, there were no shortage of voices at the time arguing that the surplus should be committed to the public benefit – like investing to repair our collapsing infrastructure and improving on the basics so as to keep America competitive in the 21st century.  Indeed, had the Senate not invoked the procedural device of reconciliation, the tax cut would have gone down to a filibuster as the final vote was 58-33.
I can recall my own reaction to the tax changes those many years ago.
While I wondered if we should not be more focused on putting money aside for that inevitable rainy day, I could certainly understand a policy that would allow more dollars to stay in the pockets of Americans if the government did not actually need the cash.  I also didn’t mind that my own pockets would be a little heavier thanks to the legislation.
Further, if the estimates of the day were correct, the revenue that would come into the national coffers following the tax break would still be adequate to meet the nation’s needs.
As things turned out, the surplus that gave life to the initial Bush tax cuts had all but disappeared by the end of 2001 as the economy slowed unexpectedly.
Where the CBO had once predicted a $125 billion budget surplus for 2001, just thirteen months later that same CBO estimate had turned into a $9 billion deficit.
It happens.
By all rights, a responsible President would have made the necessary adjustments once the surplus turned into a deficit. Of course, the politics of such a move would have been extremely unpleasant for the administration and one could hardly blame them for not wanting to take back the gift they had just recently bestowed on the public.
Then came 9-11, Iraq and Afghanistan.
I remember watching the television screen as the bombs began to fall on Baghdad, thinking that one of those bombs had my tax cut tattooed on its side. Surely, unless this war turned out to be as brief and inexpensive as the invasion of Granada many years before, our tax cut would explode into dust just as the target that bomb had set its sights upon was pulverized into ashes.
Nothing eats up a federal budget like a war, let alone two wars.
Imagine my surprise when President Bush not only failed to make the expected speech wherein he would suspend the 2001 cuts as they were no longer in the best interest of a nation during a time of war, but actually elected, less than thirty days after the commencement of “shock and awe”, to move ahead with his plans to provide further cuts via The Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003 – the law which reduced taxes on dividends and cut the capital gains tax rate.
If you thought the 2001 cuts were tough to get through the Congress, consider that, even with the use of reconciliation once again to avoid a filibuster, President Bush only managed to get passage in the Senate by a vote of 51-50 with Vice-President Cheney casting the deciding vote to break the tie.
While the 2003 cuts were intended to be permanent – or permanent until another Congress came along to change them – the 2001 Bush cuts werenot so intended. And that is no small point.
Indeed, the law came complete with a sunset provision that would bring the tax cut to an end in 2010 if Congress decided to return to the rates of the Clinton era should circumstances so require.
The expectation of the 2001 Congress was that government, with the benefit of knowing how things turned out over the ten years following initial passage, would make wise decisions as to whether or not the cuts were still judicious in light of the current circumstances.
What the 2001 Congress could not foresee was that, in just ten short years, their intentions would be perverted to the point where Members would stand fast against meeting the intent of the very law they voted to pass – even in the face of a serious, nation-threatening budget crisis.
I have no doubt that the Congresses that passed both the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts would have viewed our current situation as one demanding serious cuts in federal programs, including entitlements, just as our current Congress is also demanding.
But I also have little doubt that the 2001 GOP would not have imagined that their leadership in the year 2011 would be so irresponsible as to lead their party- and the nation- into a scenario whereby they would so much as consider allowing the United States to default on debts created by that very Congress -and the many that preceded and would follow them.
Late in 2010, as the tax cuts were ready to expire, President Obama sought to persuade the legislative branch that the very concerns that gave rise to the sunset provision in the law had more than come to pass.
We all know how that turned out. In an effort to protect the unemployment insurance that stood as the sole support for the families of millions of unemployed Americans who were the victims of the Great Recession, the President was forced to cave in to the GOP and allow the Bush cuts to continue despite the escalating crisis of our national debt.
Was that really the intent of the 2001 Congress?
I don’t think so.
The history of the 2001 tax bill is known all too well to the current crop of Republican leaders as they were there when it came into being and, to a man, voted for the legislation that included the sunset provision.
These men know what the Congress intended– and they couldn’t care less.
With all their talk about responsible government, the GOP refusal to acknowledge that the circumstances that gave rise to the Bush tax cuts could not be further from where we now find ourselves, is the clearest indicator of the perversion of government that is the GOP led Congress.
If you support lower taxes, fine. If you believe that oil companies should continue to receive hundreds of millions in government subsidies despite their extraordinary profits, that is your given right as an American.
And if you think that the GOP’s refusal to deal honestly with the debt solution by remembering why the Bush tax cuts exist and showing some willingness to make the adjustments contemplated in 2001 – even if just for the most wealthy among us – is the right way to go, then vote as you will.
But do yourself a favor.
Stop pretending that this behavior is, in some bizarre way, the actions of those who seek to benefit and protect the national interest. Even the 2001 Congress (with a GOP majority in the House) realized that the tax cuts might turn out to be counterproductive in the future- and they had the good sense to plan for this despite doing so during a time when we not only had surpluses but believed that we would continue to be in the money for many years to come.
Things change – and responsible leaders change with the times.
Thus, if you believe that the Bush tax cuts were the right thing to do, then you should also acknowledge that there was a plan that came with it and that plan should be honored.
Does anyone really believe that this is what is happening?
People like Eric Cantor and Grover Norquist know the intent of the law that created the Bush tax cuts. Eric Cantor voted for it.
Yet they ignore it – leaving Mr. Cantor to play hardball with a bat he was never intended to have- not even by Eric Cantor himself.
How is that not just plain wrong?

contact Rick at thepolicypage@gmail.com
Twitter @rickungar