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4-25-2008 9:50 AM342 views
sahara says:
The IRS has become a subsidy system for super-wealthy Americans IRS winks at rich deadbeats.

Because the news media focus on what politicians say about the tax system, rather than how it actually operates, few Americans realize that:
-- Corporate income tax laws reward companies that move jobs offshore, allowing them to earn untaxed profits as long as the money stays offshore.
-- Widespread cuts in health insurance and pensions for the rank-and- file are driven by a special law that lets top executives defer paying taxes for years, in a way that adds 35 percent to the cost of their bloated pay.
-- The 2001 Bush tax cuts included a stealth tax increase on the middle class and upper-middle class that will cost them a half trillion dollars in the first 10 years and, for 35 million families, wiping out part or all of their Bush tax cuts.
-- The stealth tax boost on people making $30,000 to $500,000 was explicitly used to make sure that the super rich would get their entire Bush tax
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4-25-2008 9:52 AM
sahara
-- A California couple who make $75,000 to $100,000 and have two children face a 97 percent chance of losing part of their Bush tax cuts to this stealth tax increase and overall will lose 42 percent of their Bush tax cuts by next year.

-- If your child becomes seriously ill, Congress, under this same law, will raise your income taxes if you spend more than 7.5 percent of your income trying to keep your child alive.

-- Since 1983, under a plan devised by Alan Greenspan, Americans have paid $1.8 trillion more in Social Security taxes than have been paid out in benefits, money that is used to finance tax cuts for the super rich while robbing the middle class of their capacity to save.
-- A fa...
4-25-2008 10:06 AM
sahara
That means that the real incomes of the super rich are much larger than the IRS data show and their tax burden is even lighter.
IRS data, adjusted for inflation, show that the poor are really getting poorer and the super rich are getting fabulously richer, a trend enhanced by their falling tax burden. In 1970, the poorest third of Americans had more than 10 times as much income as the super rich, the top 1/100th of one percent. Back then the poor had more than 10 percent of all income and the super rich had one percent.
By 2000 the two groups were equal -- the 28,000 Americans at the top had as much income as the 96 million at the bottom. The poor's share of income fell by half while...
4-26-2008 12:07 AM
masbury
Excellent clip! Important! All the blather about not wanting to penalize the wealthy in the tax code completely ignores the fact that the super rich, by the nature of their income sources, pay tax at a far lower rate than do the rest of us. They're the ones that get big government welfare, not the poor.
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