http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.c ... 13F1VG.DTL
Nothing like using first graders to promote an agenda. Big thumbs up to the Mayor who officiated it.
Moderators: Bill_Abner, ScoopBrady

Should say "I and Acorn approve this message".pk500 wrote:Members of the GOP should not play Burnout Paradise on XBL unless they want to spontaneously combust:
http://gigaom.com/2008/10/13/confirmed- ... -xbox-360/
Take care,
PK
I never made the claim that the lower income tax brackets are essentially going to be welfare states. Rob implied that. And there is debate because he's not going to offer a welfare state. If he is then post evidence to the contrary. I'm not making the claim therefore I don't have to defend it. It's simple debate logic.FatPitcher wrote: You're so right. Judging candidates by what they say they are going to do is a horrible idea. Instead, we should support whichever one makes us feel warm and fuzzy inside.
And your failure to find any credible evidence that people who pay no taxes will get refunds is simply a failure on your part to find information or to understand it. The dispute is not over whether that is the nature of Obama's plan, but whether it's a good idea.
Simple because I know what a candidate says and what can get enacted sometimes are drastically separate things. I know for a fact that Obama will not be able to do everything he wants to do. It's just the nature of being President. Even if the numbers in the house and senate favor Democrats overwhelmingly, it still doesn't give Obama a mandate to enact verbatim his policies.matthewk wrote:I think it's welfare for the poor, not the middle class. The middle class pay taxes, and upon further examination, people like me who are middle class will be paying more taxes, not less. The ones getting the welfare are those that pay little or no taxes and are going to reap the benefits of Obama's plan.JRod wrote:I don't think any of his supporters believe that there's going to be welfare for the middle class as Rob makes it out.
Nothing has been enacted...so everything said by John McCain and Obama is just words. I don't really know why you get upset over that. Being elected and having your agenda passed is two different things.
I'm not upset over anything. I just think it is irresponsible to brush things like this aside as "just a plan". Why are you voting for Obama (or McCain)? Isn't it laregely based on what they say they are planning to do?
WTF, John? Are you being purposefully obtuse now? The facts are clear and they aren't terribly complex.JRod wrote: Then Rob says people are going to be going to basically get free checks from the government without posting any evidence supporting his claim.
Fact:A $500 tax credit ($1,000 a couple) to "make work pay" that phases out at income of $75,000 for individuals and $150,000 per couple.
- A $4,000 tax credit for college tuition.
- A 10% mortgage interest tax credit (on top of the existing mortgage interest deduction and other housing subsidies).
- A "savings" tax credit of 50% up to $1,000.
- An expansion of the earned-income tax credit that would allow single workers to receive as much as $555 a year, up from $175 now, and give these workers up to $1,110 if they are paying child support.
- A child care credit of 50% up to $6,000 of expenses a year.
- A "clean car" tax credit of up to $7,000 on the purchase of certain vehicles.
Fact:...more than a third of all Americans already pay no income taxes at all
Fact:The Tax Foundation estimates that under the Obama plan 63 million Americans, or 44% of all tax filers, would have no income tax liability and most of those would get a check from the IRS each year.
Fact:"Senator Obama's new and expanded tax credits for low-income taxpayers will certainly cut taxes for low-income people," explains Robert Carroll, Ph.D. of the Tax Foundation, "but the credits are mostly recaptured from middle-income taxpayers. During this phase-out range, marginal tax rates shoot up, causing economically damaging side effects. As a result, for example, a family of four in the $30,000-to-$43,000 range would discover that for every additional dollar they earn, they pay more than 50 cents in income tax."
Ideally this would be kindling to derail the Obama campaign, to borrow your mixed metaphor.The political left defends "refundability" on grounds that these payments help to offset the payroll tax. And that was at least plausible when the only major refundable credit was the earned-income tax credit. Taken together, however, these tax credit payments would exceed payroll levies for most low-income workers.
Exactly what sort of proof would satisfy you? I think it's unlikely that Obama is going to start campaigning with George McGovern, so you may have to apply some deductive reasoning here.JRod wrote:]Sorry but until I see some proof this is just class fear mongering.
(Sigh)JRod wrote:I'm solely talking about the comment of the welfare tax state, not that Obama tax plan will discontinue some tax credits.
Straight from the source... it also shows Obama's and McCain's tax policy.
http://www.taxfoundation.org/publicatio ... 23724.html
If I read it write,
That is quite a factual departure from "I will cut taxes for 95% of working families." Maybe he's just bad at math, but I suspect otherwise.To the surprise of some, even though Senator Obama's tax plan lowers taxes for the bottom four quintiles, marginal tax rates would fall only for the very lowest-income couples. Taking both income and payroll taxes into account, those at the very bottom of the income distribution would see their effective marginal tax rates fall from 27.4 percent to minus 58.6 percent due to proposed changes to the earned income tax credit and Senator Obama's new "Making Work Pay" credit.
Most low- and moderate-income couples would see their effective marginal tax rates rise, in some cases, significantly. Indeed, some low- and moderate-income taxpayers will see their marginal rates rise to more than 50 percent.
That is welfare. It disincentivizes work, as this footnote to the study notes:Because these very low-income taxpayers have no taxable income or other income tax, the credit takes the form of a payment from the government—a negative income tax—and their effective marginal tax rates are negative (i.e., taxpayers with incomes below about $19,200 in Figure 1A).
Senator Obama also proposes to reduce the rate at which the EITC is phased out, presumably to mitigate the harmful effects of the higher EITC credit on marginal tax rates. This aspect of his proposal seems to be a recognition of the balance between the policy objective of promoting work amongst the very low-income and avoiding the harmful effects of punitive marginal tax rates for those a bit further up the income scale.
Two-day ban. I am totally serious about enforcing the no personal attacks rule. If you can't post without attacking someone else, then don't post on these forums.matthewk wrote:I think he's purposefully being a d&*k. Yep. I said it, Defcon be damned.RobVarak wrote: WTF, John? Are you being purposefully obtuse now?
RobVarak wrote:Because these very low-income taxpayers have no taxable income or other income tax, the credit takes the form of a payment from the government—a negative income tax—and their effective marginal tax rates are negative[\b] (i.e., taxpayers with incomes below about $19,200 in Figure 1A).
LMAO Unlike many, I was more than happy to see Krugman win the Nobel.Brando70 wrote:
*emphasis added for Rob's benefit
The TF piece probably didn't get much notice, and the WSJ editorial is pretty new.RobVarak wrote:
I've been surprised by the lack of egghead counterattack from Obama's camp on either the TF piece or the WSJ piece, particularly given that the former is almost a week old.
Well it's clear that McCain's plans will be difficult to implement given the composition of Congress. Obama, if he were to win with the numbers that the polls have him at now, will be able to do damn near anything he wants.Brando70 wrote:The TF piece probably didn't get much notice, and the WSJ editorial is pretty new.RobVarak wrote:
I've been surprised by the lack of egghead counterattack from Obama's camp on either the TF piece or the WSJ piece, particularly given that the former is almost a week old.
My guess is they probably won't do much to address it unless McCain makes an issue of it.
The other thing is, I am completely skeptical of both candidate's tax plans at this point. The current economic climate and the very recent addition of a lot of debt make both of their plans very fluid. As I've said before, I think taxes will go up no matter who wins. The national debt is reaching a level where it can be an economic drag, and is large enough that it can't be remedied with spending cuts alone. There will probably have to be a combination of cuts and tax increases, at least in the near future.
Windows into their souls? The whole thing about redistribution of wealth is a lie.RobVarak wrote: And like I said to JRod, their policies are windows into their souls (to the extent that as politicians they have souls).McCain's is center-right with all sorts of odd permutations and sell outs to both sides that matches his pragmatic background. Obama's is a classic leftist redistribution of wealth couched in terms that make him appear to be a DLC-sanctioned centrist. These are the men on the ballot in their undiluted forms...for better or worse.

Yes - we get that too !!greggsand wrote:Don't forget legal internet gambling!Brando70 wrote:
And cheer up: if we do become a socialist nation, Cuban cigars should become legal.
*emphasis added for Rob's benefit
Socialist play football with their feet. Capitalists with their hands. That's why we are superior.davet010 wrote:Yes - we get that too !!greggsand wrote:Don't forget legal internet gambling!Brando70 wrote:
And cheer up: if we do become a socialist nation, Cuban cigars should become legal.
*emphasis added for Rob's benefit
So many benefits...follow us on a path to the Socialist Utopia !!
And we've even shown your dimwit Treasury guy how to save the world economy !! Just one more thing for you to thank the Socialist Workers Paradise for.
I'm getting desperately tired of repeating myself but it's become a sort of perverse game to see if you'll ever accept reality.JRod wrote:
Where you get stuck on is the premise that he's taxing the rich to make-up for the lower income tax cuts. That's how he would pay for it. That's different from taxing the rich and giving it to the poor. Their tax liability would be less.
Taxing the rich to give to the poor is not how he'll pay for it. He's taxing the middle class to give to the poor as well. The same middle class for whom he's allegedly cutting taxes.Senator Obama's new and expanded tax credits for low-income taxpayers will certainly cut taxes for low-income people," explains Robert Carroll, Ph.D. of the Tax Foundation, "but the credits are mostly recaptured from middle-income taxpayers. During this phase-out range, marginal tax rates shoot up, causing economically damaging side effects. As a result, for example, a family of four in the $30,000-to-$43,000 range would discover that for every additional dollar they earn, they pay more than 50 cents in income tax."
RobVarak wrote:
Exactly what sort of proof would satisfy you?