You don't think that there are many small business owners that fall into the category of "little guys"?
You are quite mistaken if this is the case.
In your example, the little guy is paying the gasoline sales taxes.
Weren't these taxes a very large amount, according to your previous posts?
obviously, a fair talk about fair share would look at all taxes and all gov' subsidies, numbnuts
I agree with you on your Bloomberg example.
I don't think that most of the people arguing with me are really so far apart from me in philosophy , so much as differing in perception of the facts. That is why seeing 20 years of Romney and Bain tax returns would be so useful in moving the discussion from myths to reality.
However, yes, if someone is worth a billion dollars, and manages to pay no taxes except for a few thousand dollars in gasoline taxes, I would say that person is getting off easy. Super easy.
You all have exhausted me, so I give up.
but I am still right.
exhaust, get it? har har...
I would say it's equally hilarious to see most of the people saying, "His tax returns are legal, and he's not legally obligated to release them, so leave him alone," were also saying "The ground zero mosque is totally legal but should not be allowed."
I didn't hear a single person say that about the mosque. So I think "most" might be an exaggeration.
candrew said:He has said on many occasions that the rich are over-taxed.
colton said:OK, please show us some quotes where Romney has said that the rich are over taxed. I'd like to see what the exact context of his words were.
You didn't hear a single person say that about that mosque? Are you being serious or just trying to argue? Because I saw lots of protests with people saying they didn't want that mosque to be allowed. And I can assure you that most of them were people who are now planning to vote Romney.
The left was generally in the "allow the mosque" camp.
https://articles.cnn.com/2010-06-06..._american-muslims-ground-zero-mosque?_s=PM:US
Protest organizer Pamela Geller, a conservative blogger, and her group, "Stop the Islamicization of America," planned the event because, according to the group's website, "Building the Ground Zero mosque is not an issue of religious freedom, but of resisting an effort to insult the victims of 9/11 and to establish a beachhead for political Islam and Islamic supremacism in New York... Ground Zero is a war memorial, a burial ground. Respect it."
So, in other words, some right wing nutjob group agreed that the mosque is legal, but still did not want to allow it.
What we have here is someone that thinks they know it all and anyone that thinks differently than they do must be naive an out of touch. Yes the charitable giving part would be nice and is not likely to happen in today's world. As to your naive comment, that is a bunch of crap. I am spot on with it, and you are foolish and blind to think otherwise, but it was a nice effort on your part to try to discredit that part of my post.
It is not about bloated and unnecessary national (not state) programs in the past only. There have been in the past, and there are now. The state does not have as much of an obligation as you seem to imply. It should not be a government burden to support members of society that cannot support themselves. It should not come from tax dollars. There are less programs that the government must take care of than are currently being handled. The bottom line is, if you do not have the money, you do not spend the money... no matter the situation. To do so is what leads us to our current debt situation, and an undue burden being placed on the citizens.
I expect the lame undercutting comments from you NAOS, I get it... we disagree and you want to look smart. Go ahead, but I will continue to call you out on your stupid comments where you try to look smart at the expense of someone else.
If I find myself out of touch with you, I think I'm fine with that and should find myself in good company.
I would say that reducing taxes on the rich has been the number one goal of the Republican party for the last 30 years, and Romney clearly is in sympathy with his base on this point. I could find quotes, but surely you can't be cereal, it is just not worth the time to prove to you that sky is blue.
More important than words is to look at the actual actions that Republicans have taken in our government on tax policy.
Colton, I would say that reducing taxes on the rich has been the number one goal* of the Republican party for the last 30 years, and Romney clearly is in sympathy with his base on this point. I could find quotes, but surely you can't be cereal, it is just not worth the time to prove to you that sky is blue.
More important than words is to look at the actual actions that Republicans have taken.
(* well, aside from being elected or re-elected)
It was a poor choice of words on my part. What I was trying to say was "most of the people who were against building that mosque agreed that it was totally legal to build, and most of those same people are Romney supporters right now."From your link: "Geller recently told CNN's Joy Behar that no one's telling the mosque's planners they can't build it, but "We're asking them not to.""
That's what I heard people say...which is very different than not wanting to allow it. Or maybe I'm just interpreting "allow" differently than you are. "Not wanting to allow it", to me, would mean trying to get the city leaders to make building the mosque illegal, which is what I didn't hear anyone try to do.
Anyway, it seems from your fourth sentence above you're changing your statement from "Most Romney supporters didn't want the mosque to be built" to "Most people who didn't want the mosque to be build are Romney supporters". The second one I can readily agree with; the first one is what I sincerely doubt is accurate.
Damn the rich for not wanting to pay a higher % than those that earn less. Right?
If the tax rate were, say, 10%. I have no problem with the following;
Earn $20,000 per year, pay $2,000 in taxes
Earn $100,000 per year, pay $10,000 in taxes
Earn $100,000,000 per year, pay $10,000,000 in taxes
I just don't get the concept that the guy that fought, clawed, and risked everything to become a $100,0000,000 earner should be penalized for doing so by paying a higher percentage. Never have .. even when I earned only a little.