philippe
FYI, I chase trains.
Stopping some secret army projects....

Originally posted by Richard III
on the dividend tax proposal, long overdue.
Originally posted by JollyRoger
If the rich reallocate their stock holdings to take advantage of the tax cut, money will flow from smaller cap stocks (the growth companies that need to do well if the economy is going to do well) to blue chip stocks. Prices for growth stocks will fall and these companies will have a more difficult time arranging their financial structure to succeed. Another pimping out of the entreprenurial and working classes to the idle rich and big business elite. Maybe the worst possible tax cut for the given situation, if you assume tax cuts are going to turn the economy around.
yeah, they critize Bush's tax plan and say it should be for all Americans, but would they do it if they were in office? Probably not.Originally posted by Alcibiaties of Athenae
The Dems have NO PLAN to give relief where it's MOST needed, to stimulate buisness, just more class warfare about the rich getting cuts.
Originally posted by Obssesed Nuker
Is it just me or did his talk bout Iraq take the last 15 minutes of the speech?
Also: So nice that he is focusing on FORIEGN AIDs problem rather than the outbreak ON THE COUNTRY HE (not really)RULES!(my dad is working on the AIDs epidemic... come to think of it AIDs would be a good bio chemical weapon..OOPS dont want too give Saddam ideas, after all with his "nuckulear weapons" we have enough problems alread) reminds me of a funny audio I listened too.
Originally posted by JollyRoger
For the working class, the tax cuts beyond the $300 that has already been given (did you notice that most of the 15% marginal tax bracket stayed intact and was not lowered). All other tax cuts aimed at the working class pretty much encourage excessive population growth (child tax credits, etc.).
I am for some of the tax cuts in Bush's proposal as I think they offer some benefit to small businesses, but the dividend tax cut is not the way to go. If you claim it is double taxation (and I can make at least five arguments that it is not), then the appropriate way to solve it is to make dividend payouts deductible to the corporation.
If we are cutting out double taxation, why am I paying income taxes on "income" that is confiscated from my paycheck in the form of social security and medicare taxes? Shouldn't that amount be deducted from my taxable income for federal income tax purposes?
Originally posted by JollyRoger
As for the five reasons, I think that I have gone as far on the tax issues in this thread as I dare. I might open a thread on the dividend tax cut not being double taxation. Don't have time right at this moment and I've been reluctant to open such a thread as I'm sure it has probably been done before. Just as a little preview, however, a corporation is a separate legal entity from its shareholders. It is taxed on its net income. That income, before it is distributed to shareholders, is now an asset of the corporation subject to potential liabilities of the corporation (think creditors and litigants). Once it is distributed to shareholders, the shareholders are now enjoying that income free from claims from the creitors and litigants. It has been converted from an asset of the corporation to personal income to the shareholders. If a business owner (in this case shareholders) want to avoid the so-calle "double taxation", then he should choose a pass-through entity (such as sole proprietorship or partnership) where distributions are taxed at only one level but personal responsibility for debts and litigation is spread to both levels.
This one is a bogus arguement. No one has children based on the piffle a a tax break you get for them. Thats like buying a house so that you can pay $10,000 interset to save yourself $1,000 in taxes. They tax credits you get for children don't even come close to the expenses.Originally posted by JollyRoger
........ All other tax cuts aimed at the working class pretty much encourage excessive population growth (child tax credits, etc.).
I actually agree with this one. We have all forms of double, triple and even more taxation, why this one. The one plausible reason is to encourage corporations to give more dividends. It would do this by having the investors yell for more of them. It isn't any incentive for the company to actually give them. If youturn it around and give the company the tax break for the dividends then they would be more likely to pay them out. But even that isn't a real given.Originally posted by JollyRoger
.......... but the dividend tax cut is not the way to go. If you claim it is double taxation (and I can make at least five arguments that it is not), then the appropriate way to solve it is to make dividend payouts deductible to the corporation.
These are actually jsupposed to be insurance and retirement accounts not taxes. They are supposed to have seperate funds. Congress and the President (not just the current versions but all the way back) have never been able to leave them only.Originally posted by JollyRoger
.......If we are cutting out double taxation, why am I paying income taxes on "income" that is confiscated from my paycheck in the form of social security and medicare taxes? Shouldn't that amount be deducted from my taxable income for federal income tax purposes?