Standing, or should i say squatting, hell if i know, I'm good but not that good, to hit one hoppin.....lol Originally Posted by seedman55
this day in age, optics take the skill out of long range shooting
Ending the last decade's tax cuts for all income groups, not just the affluent, would raise several times the amount of revenue that can be realized by restricting tax increases to higher income households.At the time of the Bush tax cuts my ex-husband and myself gave ourselves small paycheck. It netted out to $545 each a week. I remember when the tax cuts went through. All we saved was about $6 per week. Big whoopie do. That's a household saving of less than $50 per month. (I'm not sure what the tax difference is now because I take my paycheck out of my company now at a gross of $500 per week.) That's literally nothing, but if you add $50 per month over the entire middle class, that's a ton of money weekly the federal government could use. I thought the Bush tax cuts were stupid then, and I still do now.
But, of course, that's not exactly a political winner! Originally Posted by CaptainMidnight
The bills were written that way because the Republicans had only the slimmest of Senate majorities — in fact, Vice President Dick Cheney had to cast a tie-breaking vote to pass the 2003 bill. To avoid a Democratic filibuster, the cuts were rolled into a so-called budget reconciliation measure, which cannot be filibustered. (It is the mechanism President Obama and the Democrats used to pass health care reform.)There you go again clouding the issue with facts....
But under Senate rules, reconciliation cannot be used for any bill that would add to the federal deficit after 10 years. The “sunset’' provision that called for the measures to expire in 2010 meant that the deficit was calculated as if the higher tax rates were back in place for succeeding years, a step Democrats criticized as camouflaging the bill’s true cost.
you loook up reconciliation measure, then look up compromise
then kiss my Texas ass !
Originally Posted by CJ7
At the time of the Bush tax cuts .....a household saving of less than $50 per month. Originally Posted by OliviaHowardIf I recall the cuts were "pitched" at about a $100 a month, but when spread over millions it was intended to make a difference by recycling those funds .. folks spending. The upcoming changes will result in a double whammy ... increased revenue taxes and reduced reductions ... at the same time.
Got nothin', as usual. Originally Posted by CuteOldGuy