Richest 10% pays 70% of income taxes

Quote from TGregg:

Like Hollywood actors who rake in the cash. Special tax loopholes just for them, courtesy of the democrats.

What loopholes for actors passed by who? Aren't actors income taxed as regular income?
 
Quote from PHOENIX TRADING:

I remember smashing your balls like I was playing whack a mole over romney and his IRA.:D :D :D

You've never smashed or crushed anyone online. It's just your ego needing a boost that makes you think that way.
 
Quote from PiggyBank:

I don't think BA is a bad guy, but he must be one lazy dude. he jumps into topics and throws out one liners that are dead ass wrong.. just like in this thread.

fractally wrong: http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Fractal_wrongness

I'd say that a lot of these posters that are just closed to reason are simply agitating for something and they don't care for truth at all, just the result. Intellectually speaking they are trash to the rest of us, just litter along the sidwalks of life essentially.
 
Quote from Fractals 'R Us:

fractally wrong: http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Fractal_wrongness

I'd say that a lot of these posters that are just closed to reason are simply agitating for something and they don't care for truth at all, just the result. Intellectually speaking they are trash to the rest of us, just litter along the sidwalks of life essentially.
lucrum should submit rcg's picture as an example of fractal wrongness.
 
Quote from Ricter:

No large modern society practices this, for a very basic economic reason (already mentioned): marginal utility.

I can't believe what I just saw, a marxist talking marginal utility.

LOL, you don't even know the contradiction do you? what a tool
 
Quote from bigarrow:

What loopholes for actors passed by who? Aren't actors income taxed as regular income?

The loopholes are for hollywood fatcats who donate heavily to democrats, therefore that loophole is seen as virtuous.



Democratic politicians and liberal groups, including unions, often rail against corporate-tax loopholes as unjustified raids on the public treasury — as they should.

Loopholes are particularly troublesome during periods such as this one, when California state and local budgets are leaking red ink and basic public services are being slashed.

But one multimillion-dollar loophole draws vocal support from those who usually oppose corporate tax breaks — one that happens to benefit a heavily unionized industry whose top executives are overwhelmingly Democrats and contribute lavishly to the party’s candidates and causes.

That would be Southern California’s movie and television production community.

Two years ago, Arnold Schwarzenegger signed a tax credit for in-state film production. This year, Assemblyman Felipe Fuentes, D-Sylmar, introduced legislation to extend the $100 million-per-year subsidy for five additional years.

Assembly Bill 1069 sailed through the Assembly on a 77-1 vote, and then through the Senate Governance and Finance Committee unanimously.

It hit the Senate Appropriations Committee on Monday and was universally praised by committee members and lobbyists for the film industry and its unions.

As supporters told it, the tax credit makes California more competitive with rival states, has had a beneficial impact on stemming “runaway production,” and saves thousands of jobs that otherwise would vanish.

But has it?

Disinterested analysts, including the Legislature’s own budget adviser, have raised serious doubts about the credit’s supposed benefits, in part because it’s impossible to quantify how much of the subsidy goes to production that would have taken place in California without the tax credit.

A lengthy analysis by the Senate Governance and Finance Committee catalogued the doubts, noted that film companies can claim the credit on top of other state tax breaks, and suggested that before it’s extended for five more years, more objective study of its economic impacts is needed.

That’s true of all “tax expenditures,” as the loopholes are officially known. There are literally tens of billions of dollars a year in income, sales and property tax breaks on the books, some of which enjoy broad acceptance as well as others that, like the film production credit, are drawn to benefit a very narrow segment of society.

Closing unjustified loopholes should be the first choice when politicians are looking for additional revenue.


Read more at the San Francisco Examiner: http://www.sfexaminer.com/opinion/o...ze-hollywood-tax-break-loophole#ixzz2NP38fIIy
 
Quote from Lucrum:

IOW Romney is a fucking saint compared to Obama, gotcha.

Agreed.Theres no way Romney would ever support stuff like Obamacare,abortion,gun restrictions etc...oh wait
 
Quote from bigarrow:

You've never smashed or crushed anyone online....

Actually he has, many times in fact. Do try to keep up if you're going to comment.
 
Quote from AK Forty Seven:

Agreed.Theres no way Romney would ever support stuff like Obamacare,abortion,gun restrictions etc...oh wait

Your lack of logic is mind numbing kid.
 
I wonder... so, somebody pays for all the living expenses of ghettoland... after awhile wouldn't you feel like you owned the people there, like a Lord of the Manor in the middle ages? Wouldn't you start wanting them to do some agriculture and pony up some of it? If things economic unwind and they are really starving, it would be a plan to keep food on their tables and it would restore the natural order of things, no? Smart people on top of the food chain and all that... Just 'sayin
 
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