About Me

Name: Article I,...
Email: res1ch4p@verizon.net Biography
Loading...

Create Your Own Blog Find Other Townhall Blogs

Comments

Blog Roll

 

California Out of Control........

 A question for Democrats and RINO Governors from California:  How do increases in sales tax, gas tax, vehicle registration fees, and future taxes to pay for ever increasing debt, help the poor?  Regressive taxes take money otherwise used for food or shelter.  The resulting reduction in spending means reduced corporate income, forcing more layoffs.  So, the crisis continues.

There is hope if the people understand:  The record clearly shows that Republicans fought these tax increases hitting the poorest of the poor; the Democrats authored and ruthlessly defended those provisions.  There is no spinning or hiding those simple facts.  True champions of the poor, like Audra and Tony Strickland, understand that California has one of the highest per capita tax burdens in the country; that tax increases like those just passed hit the poor disproportionately.

 

Last summer the Republicans told Democrats and the Governor that the budget would not work. It didn’t then, it doesn’t now.  The crisis is merely postponed, again.  The Democrats and Governor will soon return when the current “solution” fails under the weight of its inconsistencies.  Then they, and the MSM, will vilify Republicans at every step.

Cut this out and tack it to the wall.  Remember, those who brought this crisis are they who only tax and spend; who will not attack bureaucratic waste in education and other departments of government.  The "Main Stream" Media won’t report it, Democrats won’t admit it, and Republicans are ignored when stating that the education budget, and the entire budget, grew in every year of Schwarzenegger’s governorship prior to legislation last week; California is in the top ten states in per capita taxes; cuts enacted by the bureaucracies since last week’s budget are born of the same spirit as past rhetoric about budget “cuts” while the budget was in fact growing faster than inflation.  There is enough money to serve the people’s needs, when we focus on that instead of protecting fiefdoms.

The question stands:  How do tax increases help the poor?  I’ll be watching for spin masters to take on that question.
 
NOTE:  Since this was published in our local paper, it's been disclosed that previous budget "projections" were found to be too low.  Who would have thought?
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Taxes Sponsored By The Democrats Hurt the Poor

 Our combined family income should yield a comfortable living.  It doesn’t. 

Our single largest family expense is taxes.  For 2008:  Federal Income Tax: 12.2%; Social Security and Medicare: 7.65%; California Income Tax: 4.3%; Disability Insurance: 0.9%.  Total: 25.05%. 

This excludes our employer’s payment on our behalf of more than 7.65%. Further, it excludes property tax, gas tax, and sales tax. 

Critically, it also excludes taxes hidden in the cost of goods and services.  An example: When you buy a loaf of bread, the price includes part of the taxes paid by the farmer’s employees and the farmer, the fertilizer company and its’ employees, the bakery and its’ employees, and the grocery store and its’ employees.  Total hidden taxes are set by some at 20% of prices.   That is just for federal taxes.  The hidden cascade into consumer prices is also true of state taxes. 

Half of our income, or more, is confiscated by force. 

Our daughter is in college and our son is fighting autism.   Taxes take more than college (10.2%) and autism (21.4%) combined.   (We receive no government help for either expense.)  1998 was our last full year “before autism” and we gave nearly 4% of our gross income to charity.  2008 contributions to charity were 0.6%.  Did spending on autism (21.4%) or taxes (more than 50%) crowd charity out of our budget?  It was taxes.

Taxes hurt our family, but we are blessed.  The poor are hit hardest by these facts.   They spend almost all of their income to live.  As outlined above, 20% of their income is confiscated by hidden taxes.  Even if they pay no income tax, they pay Social Security and Medicare taxes (our most regressive taxes) of 7.65%. That is 27.65% of their income.  Their employers match their Social Security “contribution” for another 7.65%.    That is a lot of food or rent. 

New taxes in California, “cap and trade”, “universal healthcare”, and massive federal and state deficits must increase taxes, direct and hidden, substantially.  New taxes hurt my family but, undeniably, hit the poor the hardest. 

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive
« Previous1Next »