Monday, April 18, 2011

Tax Congress!


Tax Congress!
By John Ransom
4/18/2011

Barack Obama, Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid want you to know that the rich are out of control.

After thinking about it for a few years, they have finally figured out that our economic problems have a very simple explanation: There are too many rich people.

Too many rich people are causing a jobless “recovery.” Having too many rich people caused the Fukushima nuclear reactor to meltdown. The rich are probably responsible for the next ice age too.

Rich people, it’s seems, run up huge budget deficits on silly things like entitlement spending and road projects that benefit the Illinois Asphalt Contractors Association.

Rich people demand trillions in stimulus spending, huge mortgage entitlements for people who can’t make house payments and bloated pension programs for public workers.

Rich people get special treatment from banks that they are supposed to be regulating; they encourage the Federal Reserve Bank to print more money and they borrow gigantic sums from the Chinese.

The rich people are out of control, they tell us.

In order to get them back under control, they have to be taxed.

Obama and his friends want to tax impose a super-tax on the 4 million household making more than $250,000 per year.

Former Clinton administration Labor Secretary Robert Reich writes: “From the 1940s until 1980, the top income-tax rate on the highest earners in America was at least 70 percent. In the 1950s, it was 91 percent. Now it's 35 percent. Even if you include deductions and credits, the rich are paying a far lower share of their incomes in taxes than at any time since World War II.”

And that’s just not fair.

“Fair” is also known as the Obama Doctrine.

The Obama Doctrine says that we have to tax the rich in the interest of fairness. We’d all have less money, for sure. We’d all get to wait in line for rationed toilet paper and rationed healthcare but fairness would rule the land.

Sure, the whole Land of Opportunity thing worked for 300 years, but what about the next 300 years?

Maybe instead America can be the Yeah, We’re the Land of Opportunity, But Don’t Get Carried Away With It, O.K.?

If those darn rich people would just stop being rich, then we’d have no budget problems at all.

Some of the rich are guiltily admitting as much. They’ve banded together into United for a Fair Economy. They’ve signed a pledge pleading with the government to tax the rich more.

“Seattle-based Judy Pigott, one of the heirs to her grandfather’s company that builds Peterbilt trucks and other heavy equipment, was one of the first people to sign the Pledge,” says a press release from the organization.

“’If we even kept what was in place from the end of the Reagan years and into those of Bush I,’” says Pigott, “’I suspect we’d not be in a budget crisis now. Let’s do what it takes to support all of us, since it takes all of us to keep this nation going.’”

You see, it takes a village to tax the rich.

Of course, Ms. Pigott is probably relying on her considerable economic experience as an heiress to come to that conclusion.

Economists and historians disagree with Ms. Pigott: “The historical evidence suggests that capital gains tax reductions tend to increase tax revenue,’ says Shahira ElBogdady Knight an economist with the Congressional Joint Economic Study Committee.

“When capital gains tax rates were lowered in 1978 and again in 1981, revenue climbed steadily. Conversely, when the tax rate was increased in 1987, revenue began declining despite forecasters predictions it would increase. For instance, capital gains tax revenue in 1985 equaled $36.4 billion after adjusting for inflation, yet $36.2 billion was collected in 1994 under a higher tax rate. In other words, tax revenue in 1994 was slightly less than it was in 1985 even though the economy was larger, the tax rate was higher, and the stock market was stronger in 1994.”

But what about fairness?

Well, in the interest of fairness, there is only one group of people that need to be taxed.

Tax the rich? No.

Tax Congress instead.
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To read another article by John Ransom, click here.

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