Paul Newman has outlived his days.
I don’t have the least bit of respect for him or his damn gawd awful tasting Spaghetti Sauce.
It damn sure isn’t Newman's Best unless your thinking Alfred E. Newman. LOL
I’m not in the same economic sphere as Newman either but my stocks are doing just fine, thank you.
As a matter of fact, I’m one of the “rich” people that Hillary wants to raise taxes on. I have an income that doesn’t come from the government dole.
I watched Melissa Ethridge during Live Earth claim that we almost lost "democracy" right before she introduced Al Borebbels, the master propagandist.
He is a moron but at the same time his Newman’s Own has provided hundreds of thousands of dollars for Fisher House, a charity which exclusively helps the military. I am sure he is not the one deciding where the profits from the sales go I will continue to buy the products for this single reason alone. Other than that Newman is history. I feel the same about Redford and really, it’s such a shame such an actor can be so narrow minded and not see the truht, he is such a an awesome actor. This proves, again, that acting talent does not equal intelligence.
J.C. Bump
BINGO!
Paul Newman is immune to any alterations in the tax code, as he has, by now, accumulated a sizable amount of wealth, far more than he shall ever spend in the rest of his life.
He does not care about “inheritance” taxes, or more properly, death taxes, as his estate will take care of that contingency, and it shall not be his personal responsibility. Whether his current income is taxed at 35% o4 10%, is a matter of indifference, except that less would be showered on various charities or pet projects at the higher rate as compared to the lower rate. He will not miss any opportunities of diversion or self-satisfaction as a result.
But for the rest of us, a difference in tax rates between 10% and 15%, or 25%, or 60%, makes a HUGE difference. Most of us have not gone far into accumulation of wealth, and of those who have, the wealth, while it exists as a cushion, was never the end in itself. You only sell one thing in this world, your time, and you only buy one thing, satisfaction. When you cannot buy satisfaction, it is because: a) you are underpaid; or b) you are overtaxed.
Most of us, by any objective standard, are not underpaid. Yet many of us are dissatisfied, which may be attributed almost entirely to the perception that we are overtaxed. Not in the sense that we are paying, in real terms, a truly onerous levy, but that the system by which various taxes are assessed is not equitable. Or worse, that we have no voice in how the “equitability” is determined.
With the complex tax codes we have, even negotiating the rule book in an effort to pay the minimum taxes allowable under the law becomes an exercise in futility, or worse, exposes the taxpayer to some penalty hidden in an obscure clause created for the specific purpose of protecting one class of individuals or corporations from declaring certain revenues, but only if some very carefully defined conditions are met. This was designed for a very real reason, that tax lawyers may charge high fees to reveal these arcane provisions to the select few. And trap anybody else unwary enough to stumble into this maze, if they do not also hire the high-priced counsel.
Even the most carefully prepared tax return may contain errors for which the taxpayer may be prosecuted (or persecuted, in some intances). But only when specific targeted individuals make the errors, are these provisions brought into play. The personal income tax exists, not for revenue, but for social control.
The current tax code is unfair, not only because of inequities built into the structure of the code, but also because of the very capricious application of its provisions.
“The sky is falling” global warming (due to a hot sun, but blaming it on Republicans) alarmism is not “fear mongering”, but having your capital US Military Headquarters attacked and several prominent financial center buildings destroyed and going after the criminals is “fear mongering”?
Matthew 11: 16-17
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“To what shall I compare this generation? 11 It is like children who sit in marketplaces and call to one another,
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‘We played the flute for you, but you did not dance, we sang a dirge but you did not mourn.’
It seems that the political forum is the market place and children in it demonstrate just how much power they really lack. Why have we given ourselves over to such a slave trade to shackle so much of our free will to so much secular nonsense?
Everyime I see one of these professional pretenders spout off about something they know nothing about, it only solidifies my observation about actors in general. First of all, they are actors, period. Their whole life becomes consumed in their self adorational myopic world that they soon really beleive they are the roles they are playing. They are so totally consumed in “being” who they are acting that they soon forget who the hell they really are. This is further engrained with the isolated lives they must live while trying to recapture the smallest tid bit of normalcy of being a real person. The echo chamber they have forced themselves to live in must be deafening.
I agree that the tax cuts have had a strong affect on the economy. But to say that the cuts are exclusively responsible for the current economic climate is a bit much. Not that I’m complaining :)
“If you think health care is costly now, wait until you get it for free. The taxes you’ll be paying will really make you sick.”
Gotta remember that one. Great line. And oh so true!
The President Bush recovery is one of the longest recoveries in our histoir! As opposed to the co-clinton recession he inherited.
Pray for W and Our Troops