I have a piece up at PJM today on the ongoing misleading (if not mendacious) discussion of taxes.
6 thoughts on “Lies, Damned Lies, And Tax Cuts”
Comments are closed.
I have a piece up at PJM today on the ongoing misleading (if not mendacious) discussion of taxes.
Comments are closed.
I’ve started doing my taxes. Do you think if I wrote “registered Democrat” on the front, they’ll ignore that I’m making up most of the expenses and donations, not including any interest or rental income and forgetting to pay my self-employment taxes?
Or are those deductions only available to Dem Congresscritters and ex-Congresscritters?
I really liked the comment about “leftists think that those of us who took the calculus didn’t leave any for them.”
In addition to “tax cuts” being a misnomer, giving a tax credit for some action is not a “tax cut”, it is a subsidy. A tax cut is where I get to decide how to spend my money. If the government is deciding that – regardless of whether they take possession of the money or not – they have taxed me.
Comment about “community service” is interesting. From Obama’s website
I have a great idea. How about I create a non-profit whose sole (unwritten, of course) purpose is to sign off undergrads on their community service requirements? It’d be a straightforward transaction. You donate $500 to the noble cause and in turn I say that you worked 100 hours. Win-win for everyone. Taxpayers get their money spent, economy keeps moving, schools get their squeeze, bureaucrats are happy, students don’t have to work, and I get $500 per student. I think we ought to go forward with this.
At my school (UC Davis) there are somewhere around 25,000 students. If they paid me $500 each, I could save them 2.5 million man-hours, that’s around 1.25 man-millennia. That’s a big boost for the economy, saving students from that much extra work. I get a bit over 12 million dollars before taxes. And taxpayers get to spend another 100 million on students.
Maybe I should pass this by some venture capitalists. I’m pretty sure with sufficient funding we could cover the entire state of California within two years. Then the entire US within four. Hell, with the right website, a small group of entrepreneurs could probably automate the paperwork for the entire student population of the US. I’m not sure how many billions that would be, but it’s pretty good return on investment.
Mr. S, I understand your argument when you say that a President isn’t “cutting taxes” if we decide to work less (to stay out of the outright-confiscatory brackets)… but that line of reasoning sparked a new question. Does Obama count that reduced prosperity and output as his “95% get a tax cut?” I ask because he sure has been quiet about the matter since getting elected (nevermind taking the Oaths).
Rand, that was a really inspired article, and a brilliant point to make. If I had a hat, I’d take it off to you.