Are they still calling for a military coup against Obama?Newsmax. No wonder you're so ignorant and misinformed.

Are they still calling for a military coup against Obama?Newsmax. No wonder you're so ignorant and misinformed.
That was funny.rstrong wrote:Are they still calling for a military coup against Obama?Newsmax. No wonder you're so ignorant and misinformed.
Vrede wrote:That's not the only funny thing about it.O Really wrote:I notice that a goal of Republicans has been met - George W Bush no longer exists, at least according to the Wall Street Journal.... funny... http://nymag.com/daily/intel/2012/11/ge ... picks=trueClinton, who raised taxes, saw the economy outperform Reagan's, who cut taxes, 5 years out of 8 with 1 tie. So, even if they remove Shrub to deceptively make a point, they still don't make the point.The Wall Street Journal editorial page today, having previously recognized the hopeless lack of leverage in budget negotiations, takes to pleading with President Obama not to raise taxes because it will harm growth. The editorial is accompanied by this helpful chart showing what the Journal editorial considers some important historical lessons of recent two-term presidents. Look at the chart very closely:
No George W. Bush! Possibly there wasn't enough room. Or possibly the lesson of the most recent former president, whose tax cuts are set to expire and who presided over poor economic growth, might not offer the lesson the Journal editorial page is seeking to convey.![]()
Not that facts, even from Murdoch's WSJ, will ever sway cons from their dogma.
One other thing, the chart commits a fallacy that we've discussed here often. The first year of a presidency by rights should be credited more towards the predecessor. Policy takes awhile to have an effect. I'm not sure what this would do for Bill and Reagan, but the WSJ's obvious intent is to blame Obama for Shrub's impact.
No, the dot com bubble did that. Cling to your rightwing mythology, though.Colonel Taylor wrote:Was it the tax relief that improved revenue after the lousy outcome of the 1993 tax hikes that made the Clinton economy successful. Lowering the capitol gains taxes caused investment to triple by 98 and double by 99. This was caused by TAX CUTS.
He already knows what a steady stream of falsehoods you utter. The NSA keeps him informed.Reality wrote:"..that lying is so common, so reflexive, that we are literally unaware of the steady stream of falsehoods we utter."
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/pamela-me ... d%3D240280
I sent this to Obama but haven't got a response.
That's true, it ain't rocket surgery. Rates go down, revenues go up:Bungalow Bill wrote:Clinton raised the top income tax rates and revenue went up. It ain't rocket surgery.
He only raised the top income tax rates by a small, token amount. They were still MUCH LOWER than they were under Reagan. And that was offset by tax cuts for lower-income families and small businesses.Bungalow Bill wrote:Clinton raised the top income tax rates and revenue went up.
1%-ers pay more because they're the only ones making more.Wneglia wrote: That's true, it ain't rocket surgery. Rates go down, revenues go up:
Link
and we 1%'ers pay more.
er, No.Wneglia wrote:and we 1%'ers pay more.
Let's add some context here. The top tax rate when Reagan entered the White House was 70%, down from 90% a little over a decade earlier. Bumping it from 31% back up only to 36%/39.6% is indeed a token amount.Bungalow Bill wrote:Not exactly. The lowest top tax rate under Reagan was 28%, which is obviously lower than 39.6%.
Some more context: Before and under Reagan, there were so many legal tax shelters available that virtually nobody paid the highest marginal rate. I remember one year back then when my taxable income was reduced by almost 90% through tax shelters, and even though those extremely high marginal rates existed, I paid almost no income tax. Reagan did away with those loopholes and dropped the marginal rates, and revenues went up.rstrong wrote:Let's add some context here. The top tax rate when Reagan entered the White House was 70%, down from 90% a little over a decade earlier. Bumping it from 31% back up only to 36%/39.6% is indeed a token amount.Bungalow Bill wrote:Not exactly. The lowest top tax rate under Reagan was 28%, which is obviously lower than 39.6%.
So, Reagan raised taxes -- I believe his words were "everyone pays their fair share" -- and revenues went up.Wneglia wrote:Some more context: Before and under Reagan, there were so many legal tax shelters available that virtually nobody paid the highest marginal rate. I remember one year back then when my taxable income was reduced by almost 90% through tax shelters, and even though those extremely high marginal rates existed, I paid almost no income tax. Reagan did away with those loopholes and dropped the marginal rates, and revenues went up.rstrong wrote:Let's add some context here. The top tax rate when Reagan entered the White House was 70%, down from 90% a little over a decade earlier. Bumping it from 31% back up only to 36%/39.6% is indeed a token amount.Bungalow Bill wrote:Not exactly. The lowest top tax rate under Reagan was 28%, which is obviously lower than 39.6%.