The Asian Badger

Every Time You Think No One Can Be That Stupid, A Liberal Proves You Wrong

Posts Tagged ‘Grand Theft Taxes’

Bad News

Posted by The Asian Badger on November 29, 2008

Well it looks like the Dems in Madistan are going to revert to their age-old tradition of raising taxes. According to an article in the MJS today, the greedy little pigs are looking to end sales tax exemptions on any number of goods and services including prescription drugs, legal services, tax prep services and others listed in the article.

I have a question for you assnozzles: Have you ever heard of CUTTING SPENDING?

One thing I found particularly funny was the consideration by the Dems to tax legal services. Ooops!! The shysters don’t like that at all.

Every organized group that gets a tax break will fight hard to keep it.

For example, State Bar of Wisconsin President Diane S. Diel said adding the 5% sales tax to the work of lawyers and law firms would hurt “Wisconsin’s most vulnerable citizens.”

The Revenue Department report estimates that the repealing the exemption would cost law-firm clients about $119 million a year.

That “would be a tax on consumers of legal services, including the elderly addressing their personal and financial needs, young families buying their first home, and entrepreneurs incorporating a new business,” Diel said in a statement.

Ms. Diel proves again that law school can’t be that hard.

Now, there is at least one lawmaker who gets it;

Republican legislators will fight moves to repeal sales tax exemptions, said Assembly Republican Leader Jeff Fitzgerald of Horicon.

“No matter the technique, pulling more money from the private economy to send to Madison is a tax increase,” Fitzgerald said in a statement.

Well, the majority of voters of Wisconsin put the libtards in charge of both houses and the governor’s office. You got the government you deserve. Nice job. Hope you like paying for it; I don’t.

Posted in Democrats Suck, Doyle Sucks, Grand Theft Taxes, You Voted For 'Em You Got 'Em | Tagged: | 3 Comments »

Obama and Small Business Taxes

Posted by The Asian Badger on October 21, 2008

From today’s Wall Street Journal

Barack Obama declared last week that his economic plan begins with “one word that’s on everyone’s mind and it’s spelled J-O-B-S.” This raises the stubborn question that Senator Obama has never satisfactorily answered: How do you create more jobs when you want to levy higher tax rates on the small business owners who are the nation’s primary employers?

Loyal Democrats have howled over the claim that small businesses will get soaked by the Obama tax plan, so we thought we would seek an authority they might trust on the issue: Democratic Senate Finance Chairman Max Baucus of Montana. Here is what Mr. Baucus wrote in a joint press release with Iowa Republican Charles Grassley on August 20, 2001, when they supported the income tax rate cuts that Mr. Obama wants to repeal:

“. . . when the new tax relief law is fully phased in, entrepreneurs and small businesses — owners of sole proprietorships, partnerships, S corporations, and farms — will receive 80 percent of the tax relief associated with reducing the top income tax rates of 36 percent to 33 percent and 39.6 percent to 35 percent.”

Then they continued with a useful economics tutorial:

“Experts agree that lower taxes increase a business’ cash flow, which helps with liquidity constraints during an economic slowdown and could increase the demand for investment and labor.”

Twelve Senate Democrats voted for those same tax cuts. And just to be clear on one point: An increase in “the demand for investment and labor” translates into an increase in J-O-B-S. So if lowering these tax rates creates jobs, then it stands to reason that raising these taxes will mean fewer jobs. From 2003 to 2007 with the lower tax rates in place, the U.S. economy added eight million jobs, or about 125,000 per month. The Small Business Administration says small business wrote the paychecks for up to 80% of new jobs in 2005, for example.

Mr. Obama’s tax increase would hit the bottom line of small businesses in three direct ways. First, because 85% of small business owners are taxed at the personal income tax rate, any moderately successful business with an income above as little as $165,000 a year could face a higher tax liability. That’s the income level at which the 33% income tax bracket now phases in for individuals, and Mr. Obama would raise that tax rate for those businesses to 36%.

Second, the Obama plan phases out tax deductions (the so-called PEP and Pease provisions), thus raising tax rates imposed on this group by another 1.5 percentage points. Finally, Mr. Obama would require many small business owners to pay as much as a four-percentage-point payroll tax surcharge on net income above $250,000. All of this would bring the federal marginal small business tax rate up to nearly 45%, while big business would continue to pay the 35% corporate tax rate.

Mr. Obama responds that more than nine of 10 small businesses would not pay these higher taxes. Last Thursday he scoffed in response to the debate over Joe the Plumber, saying that not too many plumbers “make more than $250,000 a year.” He’s right that most of the 35 million small businesses in America have a net income of less than $250,000, hire only a few workers, and stay in business for less than four years.

However, the point is that it is the most successful small- and medium-sized businesses that create most of the new jobs in our dynamic society. And they are precisely the businesses that will be slammed by Mr. Obama’s tax increase. Joe the Plumber would get hit if he expanded his business and hired 10 to 15 other plumbers. An analysis by the Senate Finance Committee found that of the filers in the highest two tax brackets, three out of four are small business owners. A typical firm with a net income of $500,000 would see its tax burden rise to $166,000 a year under the Obama plan from $146,000 today.

According to a Gallup survey conducted for the National Federation of Independent Business last December and January, only 10% of all businesses that hire between one and nine employees would pay the Obama tax. But 19.5% of employers with 10 to 19 employees would be socked by the tax. And 50% of businesses with 20 to 249 workers would pay the tax. The Obama plan is an incentive to hire fewer workers.

For many months Mr. Obama and his band of economists have claimed that taxes don’t matter much to growth or job creation. But only last week Mr. Obama effectively admitted that even he doesn’t believe this. His latest “stimulus” proposal includes a $3,000 refundable tax credit for businesses that hire new workers in 2009 or 2010.

So what sense does it make to offer targeted and temporary tax relief for some small businesses, while raising taxes by far more and permanently on others? Raising marginal tax rates on farmers, ranchers, sole proprietors and small business owners is no way to stimulate the economy — and it’s certainly no way to create J-O-B-S.

Yup, the NOBama economic plan to “spread it around” will do only one thing. Spread unemployment. Now, the libs say “well, in the above example, taxes “only” go up about $20,000. $20,000 can do a lot of things. It can provide more to a profit sharing plan. It could finance a new machine which would increase productivity thereby increasing profits for the firm, leading to raises for the workers or new jobs to operate the machine. But none of that will happen under Barry’s tax plan. The $20,000 will disappear down the rathole called government spending.

Posted in 2008 Race, General Stupidity, Grand Theft Taxes | Tagged: | 5 Comments »

We Have Everything It Takes To Take Everything You Have

Posted by The Asian Badger on August 15, 2008

The Maximum Leader over at Naked Villainy has a post about a new tax that’s being implemented in Virginia.

Called the Business, Professional and Occupancy License tax or BPOL the tax is calculated on the GROSS RECEIPTS of a business after a $200,000 exemption. As the ML explains:

What is the BPOL a tax on? It is a tax on gross receipts at a fixed rate. Regardless of a company’s profitability, they would be taxed. To give you an example. Let us say that you own a small business. Your company has gross receipts of $500,000. In Stafford the first $200,000 of gross receipts are exempted from tax, and the remainder is taxed at $.16/per dollar. So, your hypothetical company would owe $48,000 in tax. Of course, the tax doesn’t look at your expenses. So it is possible that your hypothetical company has $500,000 in gross reciepts and $450,000 of expenses. In this scenario, your company profit would be reduced from $50,000 to $2,000. Isn’t that fun!

This is nothing short of armed robbery.

I wonder how long it will be until Pol Pot Doyle, and other dipshit leftards decide this is a good idea for Wisconsin businesses.

Posted in Business and Economy, Dumb Ideas, General Stupidity, Grand Theft Taxes | Tagged: , | 1 Comment »