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	<title>Conservative Blog: Right Commentary &#187; kayday</title>
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		<title>Marginal sins of taxation</title>
		<link>http://www.rightcommentary.com/2008/06/26/marginal-sins-of-taxation/</link>
		<comments>http://www.rightcommentary.com/2008/06/26/marginal-sins-of-taxation/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 26 Jun 2008 20:16:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kayday</dc:creator>
		
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.rightcommentary.com/?p=1348</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
Sen. John McCain and Sen. Barack Obama have put forth their tax plans, with specifics falling in line with party ideology. As election season progresses, we’ve also seen an infusion of religion—Obama’s firebrand pastor, McCain’s issues with far right evangelicals and an anti-Clinton priest who would be right at home alongside the fruitcake on your Christmas [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<!-- sphereit start --><p><a href="http://www.rightcommentary.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/taxpiechart.jpg"><img class="alignleft alignnone size-medium wp-image-1349" style="margin: 5px; float: left;" title="taxpiechart" src="http://www.rightcommentary.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/taxpiechart.jpg" alt="" width="267" height="298" /></a></p>
<p>Sen. John McCain and Sen. Barack Obama have put forth their tax plans, with specifics falling in line with party ideology. As election season progresses, we’ve also seen an infusion of religion—Obama’s firebrand pastor, McCain’s issues with far right evangelicals and an anti-Clinton priest who would be right at home alongside the fruitcake on your Christmas table. I thought it would be interesting to take a look at the US tax system through the lens of religion.</p>
<p>For starters, consider the marriage penalty. McCain wants to keep the Bush tax adjustments; Obama wants to nix them. Note my use of the term “adjustment.” Bush didn’t so much cut taxes. A major adjustment in what many call tax cuts rested on the marriage penalty. According to <a title="calculations" href="http://coveringflorida.blogspot.com/2008/06/rep-crenshaw-crunches-federal-tax.html">calculations</a> by Rep. Ander Crenshaw (R-Fla.), this penalty cost each couple $3,000. I find it hard to believe the government prefers I live with a man and bear children without benefit of marriage. Ergo, the marriage penalty is a significant marginal tax sin. Obama’s plan could reinstate it, at the least on a selective income basis, because details on his plan are a little vague at present, if you compare his and McCain’s plans at <strong>The Tax Foundation</strong> website.</p>
<p>Marginal sin No. 2 relates to accountability which I loosely and creatively perhaps even whimsically relate to theft. If a politician happened to be a person of faith (pick one, this is the U.S.), and happened to truly believe in conscience, he would agree with me. Our tax dollars are often squandered. That is one declaration politicians from both parties frequently agree upon. The government does not keep promises made about our money. Rather than list pages of justification for that statement, I’ll make it easy. Enter at your leisure the following terms in your search bar: “medicare fraud,” “social security fraud,” “food stamp fraud,” and if you really want to have a field day, “Oil for Food.” You will come to realize defrauding the US government is an active livelihood for some. Many.</p>
<p>So I have this crazy idea that absolutely no tax increases should occur until the government accepts responsibility for the tax dollar authorities we have vested. My basis for this marginal sin is actually one of the commandments—the ‘shalt not steal’ rule because if you take money and apply it unethically or in a manner not agreed upon, well, you come fairly close to theft. The ‘bear false witness’ might also apply, because of all those earmarks politicians love to sneak in.  Even if you don’t agree with my statement, there’s still a stink about things like $90,000  in US cash accumulating freezer ice in a congressman’s home. I confess this isn’t a perfect analogy.</p>
<p>Adding to the confusion over taxes is the emergence of what some call class warfare. Rob the rich; give to the poor. Hollywood celebs love this concept—Robin Hood returns wearing Oakleys, khakis and a white dress shirt scored by just the right amount of wrinkles. Our modern day RH has jetted to some gathering or rally, fresh from the waters of maybe Miami or Maui, to enlighten us and imbue us with The Spirit.  I have often in a rather heathen frame of mind asked the Lord to save us from such do-gooders. I have a parable to offer.</p>
<p>Imagine this: you’re standing by a woman in the grocery store. She takes out her wallet to pay and you snatch a $20 bill from her hands. That of course is against the law which is exactly my point. I am the woman about to pay and the politicians are doing the snatching.</p>
<p>In the US I grew up in, everyone wanted to make more money; few people would admit they didn’t want to earn enough to be comfortable. Many of us didn’t want rich so much as security, having personally known more than our share of rich miserable people via our business dealings in the advertising world. [Disclosure: I have also known some cash-strapped miserable people.]</p>
<p>But today there seems to be a great deal of covetousness going on. That was one of my favorite commandments because my mother thumped it into our skulls every chance she got. Almost literally. Anyway, just because you want to rob the rich and give to the poor doesn’t make it ethical. Furthermore, when you say the word, ‘poor,’ you assume no one elects to be poor. Based on my own family experiences, I can assure you that is not the case. Having begun my adulthood with nothing, I am an expert on poor. My grandfather, for instance. He sometimes quit a job if it was a good day to fish, a habit that employers frowned upon even during those more tolerant times. What’s missing from all the sermons on poverty and related matters? The near-pagan tale of the Little Red Hen.</p>
<p>Here’s a factoid from <a title="The Tax Foundation" href="http://taxfoundation.org">The Tax Foundation</a>: <em>With the nation&#8217;s tax burden now so concentrated at the top—the top 20 percent of taxpayers pay about 86 percent of all the income taxes—any tax reform plan is caught in a rhetorical Catch 22; tax reform equals &#8220;tax cuts for the rich.&#8221; </em> A couple more tax increases and you will have 1/5 of taxpayers bearing almost 100 percent of the burden for the rest of the country—an amazingly undemocratic approach.</p>
<p>Consider this. We are taxed on our income. We are taxed on the interest our savings earns. We are taxed if we purchase a house we can actually afford, thereby decreasing the amount of home mortgage interest available for itemizing. Then consider state and local sales taxes and property taxes, cell phone taxes, gasoline taxes and taxes on other items as well. In the 1980s, Congress succeeded in passing one of the largest unremarked-upon tax increases of all time by eliminating credit card interest as a tax deduction. If I were as feisty as my ancestor, I’d be gathering up tea and heading to Boston right now.</p>
<p>At the moment, both presidential candidates are suggesting changes in taxation will only affect upper incomes negatively. I’ve got 3 words for you that’ll turn your smile upside down. Alternative Minimum Tax. McCain’s plan would repeal it. Obama doesn’t have a plan which sort of constitutes a plan. The government is like a junkie, and right now it is hooked on all that revenue the AMT brings in with increasing amounts coming from the middle class courtesy of inflation.  Like I said both candidates’ plans run alongside ideology.</p>
<p>Yet it astounds me that neither candidate (and none preceding the presumed nominees during primaries) has tallied up the impact of all those taxes on the economy. The economy is front and center in the news and campaign rhetoric right now. By increasing the amount of money we shuttle to the federal government, we have no guarantees that money will benefit our own economy. It would be a brave politician who would raise a red pen to the federal budget. I find it very hard to believe our forefathers envisioned a central government dominating this country as our present situation presents.</p>
<p>Being an idealist, what I’m hoping is that our next president and our congress (some members could stand a serious confessional right now if you know what I mean) will see the error in the ways of marginal sin, repent and return some of what is Caesar’s to his loyal subjects. And praises could possibly be heard throughout the land.</p>
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		<title>Gender and race are hot buttons, but age baiting draws no controversy</title>
		<link>http://www.rightcommentary.com/2008/04/16/gender-and-race-are-hot-buttons-but-age-baiting-draws-no-controversy/</link>
		<comments>http://www.rightcommentary.com/2008/04/16/gender-and-race-are-hot-buttons-but-age-baiting-draws-no-controversy/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 16 Apr 2008 21:46:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kayday</dc:creator>
		
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://rightcommentary.com/?p=189</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Jacksonville, FL (Righcommentary.com):  I wasn’t surprised when my April 21 issue of Time arrived with Sen. Barack Obama on the cover. The photo shows the senator as a toddler in his mother’s arms. You know, the mom no one talks about very often, the white mom. Nor was I surprised when I read a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<!-- sphereit start --><p>Jacksonville, FL (Righcommentary.com):  I wasn’t surprised when my April 21 issue of <em>Time</em> arrived with Sen. Barack Obama on the cover. The photo shows the senator as a toddler in his mother’s arms. You know, the mom no one talks about very often, the white mom. Nor was I surprised when I read a rally-the-feministas article expounding on Sen. Hillary Clinton’s legacy in the April 21 issue of <em>New York</em>. It was the <em>New York</em> cover that blew my mind. An inside featurette in <em>Time</em> did the same.</p>
<p>On the cover of the Big Apple’s unofficial glossy, there’s a bulls-eye with Sen. John McCain in the photo. Directly beneath the photo, copy bites use the term ‘Geezer.’ Within the slick pages of <em>Time</em>, there’s a photo comparison of McCain’s peers atop a photo gallery of Obama’s peers. McCain is shown alongside singer Roy Orbison and Rep. Barbara Jordan. Obama’s image rests beside actor Scott Baio and singer Toby Keith.</p>
<p>It’s tempting at this point to veer towards an exploration of the terms propaganda or mobilization of bias, but that would be pointless. The political leanings of both magazines are readily apparent and widely known.</p>
<p>What’s more productive is what wasn’t used for either feature. There are three candidate issues here, and media as well as political strategists have made much of them. Obama rhetoric is most frequently parsed in racial terms with emphasis on the African-American experience. Clinton’s gender is the hot button for females, many of whom have asked me, “How can you NOT vote for her?” Note I do not routinely announce who I vote for, other than to talk about it with my family. We have had many heated debates over candidates in years past and current.</p>
<p>The way I would’ve laid out McCain’s page would veer differently from <em>Time</em>. I might have placed the senator alongside Sen. Ted Kennedy had I not checked his bio. Kennedy, at 76,  is older than McCain. More likely I’d have opted for Sen. Harry Reid who, at 69, is closer to McCain. Or maybe Rep. James Clyburn who was elected House Majority Whip in 2006 at the age of 66 and appears to still be going strong. If I wanted to go to an entertainment motif, Mick Jagger would’ve been a natural pick. He still cavorts and emphasizes those infamous lips at 65. If I wanted to choose a business magnate, maybe I’d have opted for Ted Turner who is 70, and whose pursuits with women were emphasized when a woman far younger than he is left her Pulitzer Prize winning husband last year because of Turner. A literary scandal ensued, confirmed by the Pulitzer winner himself.</p>
<p>Conspicuously absent from a discussion some might normally be up in arms about is the AARP, the organization dedicated to preserving rights, respect and dignity for seniors.</p>
<p>It’s been my privilege to know a few seniors. A few years ago I interviewed an 83-year-old writer who’d just published her first book. I ran into her recently at a book festival. I seriously had trouble keeping up with her. “Sorry I’m walking so fast,” she said. Then there was my own grandmother. I recall her running at the age of 84. A rooster had escaped the yard. Then there’s a friend of mine who went to Africa last year to help establish a library. She was at least 82, though I can’t remember her exact age. She’s as spry as I am.</p>
<p>My own genes lean towards longevity and health—all my father’s sisters and brothers lived to ripe old ages and stayed active. Tina Fey’s feminist declaration “Bitch is the new black” has morphed to chestnut status. Someone might tell the strategists, 70 is the new 50. Get over that, get over the race card, accept that we women are driven, career-wise, with abilities equal to males, and get down to the real issue of who has the strength, brains and experience to run the country. Maybe that way we voters could get a little of that <em>Satisfaction</em> those Rolling Stones in their mid-sixties still rock to onstage.</p>
<p><em>Kay B. Day is a Florida journalist who has provided content to wire services, daily newspapers, websites and magazines.  The author of two books and contributor to many others, she also edits the site </em><a title="The US Report" href="http://theusreport.com" target="_blank"><em>The US Report</em></a><em>. In her other life, Day is a poet. </em><em>Rightcommentary.com is proud to have her submissions to the weblog as a special contributor and looks forward to regular contributions.<br />
</em></p>
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