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He's a big government statist after you scratch the surface. He's not fiscally conservative at all.
Where would you say that Huckabee veers the most sharply away from Tea Party economics?
He's a big government statist after you scratch the surface. He's not fiscally conservative at all.
Where would you say that Huckabee veers the most sharply away from Tea Party economics?
Republicans aren't offering tax breaks for the middle class, though. I posted this in another thread, but it illustrates the point:
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And if you recall the 2012 presidential campaign, the GOP's plan was to raise taxes on the middle class in order to pay for big tax cuts for the rich.
Generally speaking, also, full employment is beneficial for the middle class and potentially not beneficial to the rich (it increases the labor share of the economy/decreases the share that goes to owners of capital, but it also grows the overall economy which may or may not offset the distributional loss to the rich). Democrats have been pushing full-employment policy, while the GOP has been opposing it--that's one of the biggest current differences between the parties, actually. Environmental problems also fall heavily on both the poor and middle class, while not necessarily hurting the rich, and the cost for preventing it does fall more heavily on the rich. Finally, the ACA is highly beneficial to both the poor and the middle class, while increasing the costs to the rich and only providing abstract benefits to the rich in return (a lowering of overall healthcare costs).
am i misunderstanding what taxes we are talking about? Texas doesn't have a state income tax... for anyone?
As for the 2012 election, pretty sure romney was offering a flat 20% tax break for everyone with a limit on deductions (though he wouldn't reveal which deductions).
Texas doesn't have an *income* tax, but you don't think that they fund their govt with bake sales, do you?
And you're wrong about Romney's proposal.
Republicans aren't getting voted in for a longtime at least not until the first woman president gets 8 years and then the first gay president gets 8 years, and the the first transgendered president gets 8 years, and finally the first immigrant president gets 8 years.
obviously higher sales tax and property taxes in general. which is the whole point, and the logic is to tax according to spending (which would be more frivolous among the rich since they would have more money to spend). regardless, texas's sales taxes are lower than that of california. And while texas's property tax in relation to property of house value is much higher than Cali, they property tax as a % of income is roughly the same (3.59% vs 3.65%). All this meas is that a higher % of ones income goes into their mortgage loan in Cali than it does in Texas. A lower middle class person in texas can get much more for their income in texas than they can in cali. The only reason the property taxes appear lower is due to the value of the houses in cali (which of course, there is something to be said for).
No, you're missing the point. CA collects about 11% of GDP in taxes, while Texas is at about 8%, but CA actually collects less from most people (and about the same for another large percentage). The difference is that Texas collects so little from the rich that it lowers the average. And that's generally what the GOP offers--not low taxes for everyone; higher taxes for some or most and much lower taxes for the rich. That was part of the general point that the GOP platform offers nothing for the middle class or poor, while the Democrat platform might *primarily* benefit high earners, but it generally benefits everyone.
Remember this?:
"Generally speaking, also, full employment is beneficial for the middle class and potentially not beneficial to the rich (it increases the labor share of the economy/decreases the share that goes to owners of capital, but it also grows the overall economy which may or may not offset the distributional loss to the rich). Democrats have been pushing full-employment policy, while the GOP has been opposing it--that's one of the biggest current differences between the parties, actually. Environmental problems also fall heavily on both the poor and middle class, while not necessarily hurting the rich, and the cost for preventing it does fall more heavily on the rich. Finally, the ACA is highly beneficial to both the poor and the middle class, while increasing the costs to the rich and only providing abstract benefits to the rich in return (a lowering of overall healthcare costs)."
cool, I can repeat myself also.
Please tell me how the math works. lets say a person makes 60k a year in both cali and texas. Leave aside cost of living (you can get a much nicer house for the same price in texas than in cali) and look at just taxes a person pays.
also, i must have missed your rebuttal to how i was wrong about romney offering 20% cuts across the board. I'll be waiting.
What the heck is "Tea Party economics"? Nothing consistent and definable, as far as I can see. Or, even, worse, Austrian bullshit.
cool, I can repeat myself also. Please tell me how the math works. .
Hey, but he
He's a big government statist after you scratch the surface. He's not fiscally conservative at all. He's basically GWB with more Jesus Juice.
Hey, but he’s got a pretty graph; it must be true….
a graph from mother jones of all places, one of the most left wing "news" orgs out there. When I ask him to apply logic and tell me how they got to those numbers (something I did to show exactly how much more of one's income they would have), he has nothing. Its cool though, JVS probably doesn't have the fundemental math or economic understanding to prove his point anyway. Still don't know why I bother wasting my time lol
You hacks react to facts like a vampire reacts to the sun.
You're wasting time by trying to cover up facts that are not favorable to your "side" and ducking points. It wouldn't be a waste if you were honest and you actually addressed points.