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hErDIng sQUirReLs
26Jul/11Off

Class warfare?

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My stomach is churning. My blood is boiling. This whole situation with the national debt ceiling has me seething.

My mind skips over Utah Senator Orrin Hatch’s plea from the Senate floor, that the rich pay enough, poor should pay more. Actually, “the Republican Senator argued that top income earners pay too much in taxes while the bottom 51% of Americans don't pay enough.”

And while I don’t disagree with the assertion that “everyone should have some skin in the game” and pay something, I would like the Senator to take a look at some statistics released by the Internal Revenue Service released this past April, an outrageous bit of evidence which is recalled in Bloomberg’s Business Week:

“For the 400 U.S. taxpayers with the highest adjusted gross income, the effective federal income tax rate—what they actually pay—fell from almost 30 percent in 1995 to just under 17 percent in 2007, according to the IRS. And for the approximately 1.4 million people who make up the top 1 percent of taxpayers, the effective federal income tax rate dropped from 29 percent to 23 percent in 2008. It may seem too fantastic to be true, but the top 400 end up paying a lower rate than the next 1,399,600 or so.”

Here’s my issue: how is it that I ended up paying more in taxes than the top 400 taxpayers with the largest adjusted gross income? How did you end up paying more? Because chances are, if in 2007 you made over $31,800—you paid more in taxes than they did. Nearly 10% more.

Chew on that as the Congress continues to hold our good credit hostage.

Let me leave you with this, from the same Bloomburg article:

“The true effective rate for multimillionaires is actually far lower than that indicated by official government statistics. That's because those figures fail to include the additional income that's generated by many sophisticated tax-avoidance strategies. Several of those techniques involve some variation of complicated borrowings that never get repaid, netting the beneficiaries hundreds of millions in tax-free cash.”

I get the poor not being able to pay more; that's a no brainer. What I take issue with is the very wealthy paying far less than-- and profiting from-- what is left of the middle class.

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8Jul/11Off

Greetings from a Super Villain

As a young lass, I never wanted the “typical” dream of growing up and getting married and having 2.5 kids and settling down into the 3-bed, 2-bath home with the picked fence. Partial lie—I wanted the picked fence, but mostly I just wanted my parents to build a picked fence around our army green, ranch-style tract home. (Talk about curb appeal.)

No. I dreamed of growing up, living a metropolis and becoming a superhero. I seriously thought it was achievable because a) they promised the future would have jet packs and b) with all the advances modern science has made since the 1970s, you’d think they would have made *some progress* on an invisibility suit. Also I was pretty much a boy until I hit 6th grade, but my feminine side really dug the lycra bodysuit idea. And a cape. Capes are magical.

Flash forward to what the future has revealed: I’m not only a married, but a *remarried* mother of seven kids living in a nice, somewhat customized tract home in the suburbs. Still no picked fence. Still no jet pack.

And instead of being a superhero, however, in my little world I am the bad guy. It’s sort of a twist, really, on Clark Kent. By day I go to work disguised as just a mild-mannered gal who works at the local newspaper; but at night and without foreknowledge or planning, I become an evil villain known as Mean Mom.

To wit:
Upon my return home from a long, utterly grueling day at work wherein I was forced to EARN my pay, my smiling, somewhat relieved self heads into the laundry room to find—duhn, duhn, duuhhhnnnn—the load of clean laundry I’d done the night before unceremoniously dumped on the floor, so as to make room for a teen’s work uniform. This large load, now mixed back in with unclean items, was left there for me to pick up. I call said teen and leave an angry cell phone message—privileges revoked! You must redo this laundry, fold it and put it away! I work too hard to have to blahblah blah blah. I tune myself out. It’s the usual bad guy monologue, complete with whispered threats of social life annihilation. Yes. Mean Mom strikes again.

Off the phone, when the heated moment passes, I feel like a troll. That’s part of being Mean Mom, too, I suppose. Honestly, I seriously doubt Lex Luthor liked himself very much after he lashed out. And I bet The Joker had a softer side, as well.

Focusing on the positive, I begin making dinner: green beans, grilled asparagus, steamed brown rice with pulled-pork loin. I notice my youngest has become somber, literally morose. Apparently I have ruined her LIFE. The discovery that the rice is not white has caused paroxysms of grief. And not only did I MAKE the wrong rice, I put it on her plate, and it TOUCHED the other food. Oh, the look that one gave me. And like a true villain I smile inwardly, knowing that only I have the power to make her eat. Three. Whole. Bites. Mwahahahahahaaa!

*sigh.* The fact of the matter is I hate being the bad guy. But my mom swears this naggy phase will pass and when the kids are older they will come to appreciate my mothering. In like 15 years. So while right now I feel like a big jerky larva, I’m actually in the chrysalis phase and someday I really will emerge as a beautiful, real-life superhero. And I shall be known as Grammy.

Filed under: Being Awesome No Comments