I created nothing. I stated fact. It's you and your boyfriend Craig who can't seem to let your hearts bleed enough to care for them, or even admit that blanket expiration of the Bush tax cuts WILL hurt the lower and middle classes as well.
What the hell? I think very well of Jhhnn's posts - you have some mental disorder that you need to add gratuitous crap for two people you may not be agreeing with with an anti-gay "boyfriend" attack?
Holding up the 98% rate of people who disagree misrepresenting my position when they try to put words in my mouth, you get it wrong.
I haven't even responded to your position that I recall. Yes, in some way, possible relatively very small, the end of the Bush tax cuts could increase taxes on the less well off.
I don't recall if I asked you to post the breakdown of capital gain income by wealth - I'd meant to if I didn't. It would add a lot to the issue beyond your fixation.
Now, I'm not necessarily hostile to your position. I'm in agreement with the support for higher taxes for the top, and for the concern about impact on those below.
Because the last 30 years have been such a shift upwards in wealth, I'm very happy to take care of those not rich and help restore some balance, including protecting them from the repeal of the Bush tax cuts.
Now, there's a lot more to the issue. Should we merely define a line below which the tax cuts remain in place? Should we use a progressive tax rate to do this? Should we give them credits elsewhere to offset?
I don't much care - I'm mostly in agreement with what you seem to be saying for all your attacking tone.
I see more bickering than disagreeing going on.
For example, when Jhhnn pointed out the LTCG rate increase vastly affected the rich the most, you said he doesn't care because he isn't affected; he corrected you he is affected but willing to pay it.
I haven't seen you acnowledge his point - to make up numbers, if 98% of the LTCG increase affects the rich and 2% the middle, that's worth noting. I'm with you - let's protect that 2% - but if the only choice were to repaeal it all or none at all, a case could be made easily to repeal it all. There's some concern that your position can be used to say 'repeal none of it. including the 98% for the rich, in the name of protecting the middle class' - a disengenuous argument.
I'm not saying you are doing that, I'm saying it'd happen. As I said I dn't really disagree with you, if you can stop the gratuitous animosity - I'm cautiously please looking at your position.
If not your abrasiveness in discussing some aspects of the issue. Good for you in sticking up for the middle class.
I've done none of those things.
Low to middle class earners WILL see their LTCG taxes increase dramatically, period. That's what we DO know.
If the Dems -- the party in complete power -- let the tax cuts expire in their entirety, then yes, it will be their fault when it negatively affects the lower and middle classes as well. That's how it works.
Here's another way it can work. The tax cuts are expiring. There's a question whether to renew them.
Progressives support what you say - let them expire for the rich, but protect the middle class.
Then, politicians who serve the rich - nearly all Republicans, many corporatist Dems - make a big deal out of 'fairness', the 'socialism' of 'unequal treatment' to protect the middle class, using it as cover to demand the borrowed tax cuts be extended for everyone, and they vote 'no' to the progressive's plan. Then, the only choice is, 'repeal them for everyone' or 'extend them for everyone'.
That's when Jhhnn's point becomes very relevant - if the borrowed tax cuts are giving 98% ofd their benefit to the rich, is it worth the middle class paying more losing their 2% to get the rich paying more with 98%?
It can be easily argued it is - in the interest of the middle class in the larger picture, even though we'd rather not only protect the middle but help them even more than just protecting this cut.
The revenue helps reduce the deficit reducing the public burden, and helps reduce the massive shift of wealth to the top.
Please specify at what threshold you begin to care about raising taxes on low and middle class earners.
There is nothing "theoretical" about the dramatically increased LTCG taxes that 15-percenters will soon have to pay once Obama lets the Bush tax cuts expire in their entirety.
I'm honestly surprised that you would even argue the need to remedy this specific situation. Again, how many affected persons are required for you to begin to care?
Or, rather, does your heart only bleed when it's politically convenient?