Moderator: Andrew

Seven Wishes wrote:Dan, the semantics of that poll are why it's been proven time and again that Rasmussen, as I've provided links to prove before, is the least realiable polling service on a national level.
Seven Wishes wrote:Every other poll, which asks more direct and simple questions, puts the percentage of people who favor letting the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy expire in the 70's.

lights1961 wrote:if you agree with the taxation pies out there... the wealthy make up of about 85%-90% of the tax payouts EVERY YEAR... the middle class makes up the rest...the poor who get the govt assistance pays nothing? hmmm. he who lives off govt assistance should pay something... just saying...
just as I am happy that in WI now the teachers have to pay something to their retirment plans...to help pay for their retirment, just like the rest of us... if you really want fair... that should be how it is...
Rick


Seven Wishes wrote:Both parties are responsible for outsourcing and the stagnation of the average middle class income. Combine that with high oil and commodity prices, and you're in a situation where there IS no economy without incentivizing the middle class with lower taxation. If the middle class, which constitutes about 80% of the American population, has no purchasing power, whether you're a demand- or supply-sider, the recipe is disaster. There's just not enough money to be made for a lot of people to increase their rate of taxation.
Besides, the average millionaire winds up paying just 18%.
Saint John wrote:lights1961 wrote:just as I am happy that in WI now the teachers have to pay something to their retirment plans...to help pay for their retirment, just like the rest of us... if you really want fair... that should be how it is...
Rick
Agreed!
."This is a disaster," Mark Miller, the Wisconsin Senate Democratic leader, said in February after Republican Gov. Scott Walker proposed a budget bill that would curtail the collective-bargaining powers of some public employees. Miller predicted catastrophe if the bill were to become law -- a charge repeated thousands of times by his fellow Democrats, union officials and protesters in the streets.
Now the bill is law, and we have some early evidence of how it is working. And for one beleaguered Wisconsin school district, it's a godsend, not a disaster.
The Kaukauna Area School District, in the Fox River Valley of Wisconsin near Appleton, has about 4,200 students and about 400 employees. It has struggled in recent times and this year faced a deficit of $400,000. But after the law went into effect at 12:01 a.m. June 29, school officials put in place new policies they estimate will turn that $400,000 deficit into a $1.5 million surplus. And it's all because of the very provisions that union leaders predicted would be disastrous.
In the past, teachers and other staff at Kaukauna were required to pay 10 percent of the cost of their health-insurance coverage and none of their pension costs. Now they'll pay 12.6 percent of the cost of their coverage (still well below rates in much of the private sector) and contribute 5.8 percent of salary to their pensions. The changes will save the school board an estimated $1.2 million this year, according to board president Todd Arnoldussen.
Of course, Wisconsin unions had offered to make benefit concessions during the budget fight. Wouldn't Kaukauna's money problems have been solved if Walker had just accepted those concessions and not demanded cutbacks in collective-bargaining powers?
"The monetary part of it is not the entire issue," says Arnoldussen, a political independent who won a spot on the board in a nonpartisan election. Indeed, some of the most important improvements in Kaukauna's outlook are because of the new limits on collective bargaining.
In the past, Kaukauna's agreement with the teachers union required the school district to purchase health-insurance coverage from something called WEA Trust -- a company created by the Wisconsin teachers union. "It was in the collective-bargaining agreement that we could negotiate only with them," says Arnoldussen. "Well, you know what happens when you can negotiate with only one vendor." This year, WEA Trust told Kaukauna that it would face a significant increase in premiums
Seven Wishes wrote:"Abysmal? He's the most proactive President since Clinton, and he's bringing much-needed change for the better to a nation that has been tyrannized by the worst President since Hoover."- 7 Wishes on Pres. Obama

lights1961 wrote:Seven Wishes wrote:Both parties are responsible for outsourcing and the stagnation of the average middle class income. Combine that with high oil and commodity prices, and you're in a situation where there IS no economy without incentivizing the middle class with lower taxation. If the middle class, which constitutes about 80% of the American population, has no purchasing power, whether you're a demand- or supply-sider, the recipe is disaster. There's just not enough money to be made for a lot of people to increase their rate of taxation.
Besides, the average millionaire winds up paying just 18%.
I love his generalazation... are you a millionaire 7? or just a jealous thousandaire... how do you know how much the millionaire pays...have you asked him, or just read and heard about it on NPR and read it in the national liberal media guide book (called text books) ... just saying...
R



Seven Wishes wrote:Wow. The proverbial goose of the GOP is cooked:
Complete, unadulterated, irrefutable FACTS. Cold, hard FACTS.
Keep in mind the conservatives on this board have cited the CBO continually as a 100% viable source for the past six years.
Based on the figures from the CBO, Bush spent $5.07 trillion on new expenditures from fiscal years 2002-2009. Obama will have spent only $1.44 trillion through 2017, including saving $126 billion through spending cuts.
According to the chart of costs based on new policies:
Bush’s tax cuts amounted to $1.812 trillion, compared to Obama’s stimulus tax cuts amounting to a projected $425 billion.
Bush spent $1.469 trillion on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and other defense costs. Based on estimates published on the chart, Obama will have saved $126 billion in defense spending.
The Medicare drug benefits supported by Bush cost $180 billion. Obama’s health reform plan will have cost $152 billion, and will benefit more Americans.
Bush’s stimulus plan and other changes resulted in a $773 billion price tag. Obama’s stimulus spending was about $62 billion less at $711 billion.
So, neo-cons. Let's have a go at it, shall we? Further proof that the Obama "spendthrift" myth is just that.


Seven Wishes wrote:Revenues DECREASED under Bush and ARE included in the graph:
From FactCheck:
In a letter to Senator Kent Conrad, CBO Director Peter R. Orszag said that overall receipts increased by 1.9 percentage points as a share of GDP and that the increase “disproportionately” comes from a rise in corporate income tax revenues.
Orszag attributes two-thirds of the bump in corporate taxes to an increase in corporate profits. The rest he pins to tax policy. For instance, when provisions allowing partial expensing of investment in equipment expired, tax revenue increased. In other words, revenue declined when the provisions were enacted and bumped up again when they expired.
Orszag says there was growth in capital gains realizations in individual tax receipts, but measures such as lower rates on dividends and an increase in the child tax credit, as well as a drop in job wages, caused a reduction in revenues. A CBO chart in Orszag's letter shows that legislation (not counting an impact on capital gains) had a total negative effect on revenue growth.

Seven Wishes wrote:Further proof:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/Historicals/
Receipts Outlays Surplus or Deficit (-) Receipts Outlays Surplus or Deficit (-) Receipts Outlays Surplus or Deficit (-)
1993 1,154.3 1,409.4 (255.1) 1,511.5 1,845.5 (334.0) 0.7637 17.5 21.4 (3.9)
1994 1,258.6 1,461.8 (203.2) 1,617.7 1,878.9 (261.2) 0.7780 18.0 21.0 (2.9)
1995 1,351.8 1,515.7 (164.0) 1,691.4 1,896.6 (205.1) 0.7992 18.4 20.6 (2.2)
1996 1,453.1 1,560.5 (107.4) 1,775.5 1,906.7 (131.3) 0.8184 18.8 20.2 (1.4)
1997 1,579.2 1,601.1 (21.9) 1,889.9 1,916.1 (26.2) 0.8356 19.2 19.5 (0.3)
1998 1,721.7 1,652.5 69.3 2,040.9 1,958.8 82.1 0.8436 19.9 19.1 0.8
1999 1,827.5 1,701.8 125.6 2,136.4 1,989.5 146.8 0.8554 19.8 18.5 1.4
2000 2,025.2 1,789.0 236.2 2,310.0 2,040.5 269.5 0.8767 20.6 18.2 2.4
2001 1,991.1 1,862.8 128.2 2,215.3 2,072.6 142.7 0.8988 19.5 18.2 1.3
2002 1,853.1 2,010.9 (157.2,028.6 2,201.3 (172.7) 0.9135 17.6 19.1 (1.5)
2003 1,782.3 2,159.9 (377.6) 1,901.1 2,303.9 (402.0.9375 16.2 19.7 (3.4)
2004 1,880.1 2,292.8 (412.7) 1,949.5 2,377.5 (428.0) 0.9644 16.1 19.6 (3.5)
2005 2,153.6 2,472.0 (318.3) 2,153.6 2,472.0 (318.3) 1.0000 17.3 19.9 (2.6)
2006 2,406.9 2,655.0 (248.2) 2,324.1 2,563.8 (239.6) 1.0356 18.2 20.1 (1.9)
2007 2,568.0 2,728.7 (160.7) 2,411.9 2,562.9 (150.9) 1.0647 18.5 19.6 (1.2)
2008 2,524.0 2,982.5 (458.6) 2,286.8 2,702.3 (415.5) 1.1037 17.5 20.7 (3.2)
2009 2,105.0 3,517.7 (1,412.7) 1,898.3 3,172.2 (1,274.0) 1.1089 14.9 25.0 (10.0)
2010 2,162.7 3,456.2 (1,293.5) 1,919.0 3,066.7 (1,147.7) 1.1270 14.9 23.8 (8.9)
2011 estimate 2,173.7 3,818.8 (1,645.1) 1,901.9 3,341.3 (1,439.4) 1.1429 14.4 25.3 (10.9)
2012 estimate 2,627.4 3,728.7 (1,101.2) 2,261.5 3,209.4 (947.9) 1.1618 16.6 23.6 (7.0)
2013 estimate 3,003.3 3,770.9 (767.5) 2,541.3 3,190.8 (649.5) 1.1818 17.9 22.5 (4.6)
2014 estimate 3,332.6 3,977.1 (644.6) 2,768.4 3,303.8 (535.4) 1.2038 18.7 22.4 (3.6)
2015 estimate 3,583.0 4,189.8 (606.7) 2,920.4 3,414.9 (494.5) 1.2269 19.1 22.3 (3.2)
2016 estimate 3,819.1 4,467.8 (648.7) 3,054.5 3,573.4 (518.1.2503 19.3 22.6 (3.3)

Seven Wishes wrote:Anything in parentheses denotes a NEGATIVE number...
Memorex wrote:Seven Wishes wrote:Further proof:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/Historicals/
Receipts Outlays Surplus or Deficit (-) Receipts Outlays Surplus or Deficit (-) Receipts Outlays Surplus or Deficit (-)
1993 1,154.3 1,409.4 (255.1) 1,511.5 1,845.5 (334.0) 0.7637 17.5 21.4 (3.9)
1994 1,258.6 1,461.8 (203.2) 1,617.7 1,878.9 (261.2) 0.7780 18.0 21.0 (2.9)
1995 1,351.8 1,515.7 (164.0) 1,691.4 1,896.6 (205.1) 0.7992 18.4 20.6 (2.2)
1996 1,453.1 1,560.5 (107.4) 1,775.5 1,906.7 (131.3) 0.8184 18.8 20.2 (1.4)
1997 1,579.2 1,601.1 (21.9) 1,889.9 1,916.1 (26.2) 0.8356 19.2 19.5 (0.3)
1998 1,721.7 1,652.5 69.3 2,040.9 1,958.8 82.1 0.8436 19.9 19.1 0.8
1999 1,827.5 1,701.8 125.6 2,136.4 1,989.5 146.8 0.8554 19.8 18.5 1.4
2000 2,025.2 1,789.0 236.2 2,310.0 2,040.5 269.5 0.8767 20.6 18.2 2.4
2001 1,991.1 1,862.8 128.2 2,215.3 2,072.6 142.7 0.8988 19.5 18.2 1.3
2002 1,853.1 2,010.9 (157.2,028.6 2,201.3 (172.7) 0.9135 17.6 19.1 (1.5)
2003 1,782.3 2,159.9 (377.6) 1,901.1 2,303.9 (402.0.9375 16.2 19.7 (3.4)
2004 1,880.1 2,292.8 (412.7) 1,949.5 2,377.5 (428.0) 0.9644 16.1 19.6 (3.5)
2005 2,153.6 2,472.0 (318.3) 2,153.6 2,472.0 (318.3) 1.0000 17.3 19.9 (2.6)
2006 2,406.9 2,655.0 (248.2) 2,324.1 2,563.8 (239.6) 1.0356 18.2 20.1 (1.9)
2007 2,568.0 2,728.7 (160.7) 2,411.9 2,562.9 (150.9) 1.0647 18.5 19.6 (1.2)
2008 2,524.0 2,982.5 (458.6) 2,286.8 2,702.3 (415.5) 1.1037 17.5 20.7 (3.2)
2009 2,105.0 3,517.7 (1,412.7) 1,898.3 3,172.2 (1,274.0) 1.1089 14.9 25.0 (10.0)
2010 2,162.7 3,456.2 (1,293.5) 1,919.0 3,066.7 (1,147.7) 1.1270 14.9 23.8 (8.9)
2011 estimate 2,173.7 3,818.8 (1,645.1) 1,901.9 3,341.3 (1,439.4) 1.1429 14.4 25.3 (10.9)
2012 estimate 2,627.4 3,728.7 (1,101.2) 2,261.5 3,209.4 (947.9) 1.1618 16.6 23.6 (7.0)
2013 estimate 3,003.3 3,770.9 (767.5) 2,541.3 3,190.8 (649.5) 1.1818 17.9 22.5 (4.6)
2014 estimate 3,332.6 3,977.1 (644.6) 2,768.4 3,303.8 (535.4) 1.2038 18.7 22.4 (3.6)
2015 estimate 3,583.0 4,189.8 (606.7) 2,920.4 3,414.9 (494.5) 1.2269 19.1 22.3 (3.2)
2016 estimate 3,819.1 4,467.8 (648.7) 3,054.5 3,573.4 (518.1.2503 19.3 22.6 (3.3)
Proof of what? Spike in revenue in 2005? Not sure what you are showing.



Seven Wishes wrote:Well, if you choose to extrapolate the information using your own methodologies, you're missing the underlying point. That is, it's BEYOND EXTREMELY HYPOCRITICAL for GOP Senators and Representatives who are currently backing the "no-compromise" Tea Bagger stance on the debt ceiling and the deficit, since they pretty much unanimously voted for increases in the ceiling that nearly tripled the deficit under Bush. It shows Republicans are so obsessed with defeating Obama and every single one of his initiatives, that they are willing to forfeit the future of this country and bring on a second Great Depression instead of nudging just SLIGHTLY to the left (still massively right of center overall).
And before you mention it, don't forget the one debt ceiling vote SOME Democrats (Obama included) voted AGAINST was purely symbolic, as it was a protest against the omission of Bush's wars from the budget, and the GOP had the votes to pass it regardless.
So all these Republicans prattling on and on about "spending cuts" when they have no idea how revenue stimulates economic growth, and "stand behind" this New Raw Deal the GOP is pimping, it makes me sick.
And I included that table to show how net receipts prove just how much better things were under the Clinton Administration, when spending was reigned in to reasonable levels and those poor multi-millionaires had to pay (gasp) 3 percent higher a tax rate on every dollar they made past $250,000.
Bush's initiatives (including the wars) included six "projects" with outlays in excess of a total of $6 TRILLION that were COMPLETELY unpaid for, and the GOP hackneys went merrily along with it. Suddenly now, those same "spend whatever you want, Cowboy George" Republicans are about to send America into default...by not doing something Boner and McConnell themselves did a total of NINETEEN TIMES combined in the past 10 years.
Seven Wishes wrote: it's BEYOND EXTREMELY HYPOCRITICAL for GOP Senators and Representatives who are currently backing the "no-compromise" Tea Bagger stance on the debt ceiling and the deficit, since they pretty much unanimously voted for increases in the ceiling that nearly tripled the deficit under Bush.


Saint John wrote:Seven Wishes wrote: it's BEYOND EXTREMELY HYPOCRITICAL for GOP Senators and Representatives who are currently backing the "no-compromise" Tea Bagger stance on the debt ceiling and the deficit, since they pretty much unanimously voted for increases in the ceiling that nearly tripled the deficit under Bush.
You do realize that are 63 new members to the House and 6 to the Senate, right? Those are both relatively huge numbers, and I think the vote you're now seeing stems from these newly elected officials voting in the very same manner that they promised the constituents that voted them they would. You're sort of comparing apple peels to foreskins here.

Seven Wishes wrote:
And I included that table to show how net receipts prove just how much better things were under the Clinton Administration, when spending was reigned in to reasonable levels and those poor multi-millionaires had to pay (gasp) 3 percent higher a tax rate on every dollar they made past $250,000.
.

Obama 2006 vs. Obama January 2011 vs. Obama April 2011 on the Debt Ceiling
April 11, 2011 3:12 PM
In March 2006, then-Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., found the notion of raising the debt ceiling quite distasteful.
“The fact that we are here today to debate raising America’s debt limit is a sign of leadership failure,” he said. “It is a sign that the U.S. Government can’t pay its own bills. It is a sign that we now depend on ongoing financial assistance from foreign countries to finance our Government’s reckless fiscal policies. … Leadership means that ‘the buck stops here.’ Instead, Washington is shifting the burden of bad choices today onto the backs of our children and grandchildren. America has a debt and a failure of leadership. Americans deserve better. I therefore intend to oppose the effort to increase America’s debt limit.”
He did. It passed narrowly – by a vote of 52-48.
In January, I asked then-White House press secretary Robert Gibbs about those comments and that vote, given the president’s belief that the debt ceiling needs to be raised in May.
Gibbs said it was OK for then-Senator Obama to have cast that vote, since the outcome was guaranteed.
“Based on the outcome of that vote…the full faith and credit was not in doubt,” Gibbs said. Then-Sen. Obama used the vote “to make a point about needing to get serious about fiscal discipline….His vote was not necessarily needed on that.”
On Sunday, senior White House adviser David Plouffe revised that explanation.
“He believes that vote was a mistake,” Plouffe told Fox News Sunday.
And today White House press secretary Jay Carney said that “the president, as David Plouffe said yesterday, regrets that vote and thinks it was a mistake. He realizes now that raising the debt ceiling is so
important to the health of this economy and the global economy that it is not a vote that, even when you are protesting an administration's policies, you can play around with, and you need to take very seriously the need to raise the debt limit so that the full faith and credit of the United States government is maintained around the globe.”
Referencing Gibbs’s response three months ago, AP reporter Ben Feller asked Carney, “When did the president come to the realization this was a mistake?”
“Well, we asked him, and he made clear that he now believes it was a mistake,” Carney said. “And he understands that when you're in the legislature, when you're in the Senate, you want to make clear your position if you don't agree with the policies of the administration.”
-Jake Tapper

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