Class warfare?

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.
Take it outside
“Can he come over later?” our 17-year-old daughter asks, hopeful that six o’clock is not too late for her boyfriend to swing by. He is a nice boy, a dedicated son to a single mom, a good older brother to two younger sisters; overall, a very positive influence in my daughter’s life.
“Sure,” I mutter as the younger girls (who have massive crushes on their sister’s boyfriend) squeal with glee. Giddy, the 17-year-old’s thumbs maniacally tap out the good news on her cell phone’s keypad. The deal is done. He’s on his way.
Like my parents before me, and their parents before them, I answer her next, age-old, query with, “Ask me if I like him later, after you graduate from college and get your first real job.” Translation: Until those goals are achieved, I’m not getting excited about anybody.
…But I do like the guy, even if this week’s ambition is to be a cage fighter. (Ugh, such a headache I get from the eye rolling over that one.) He’s nice. He’s very respectful.
Mostly. Case in Point:
An hour later Niceboy greets my daughter with a hug and a kiss. Then the two play with the younger kids for a bit, until they can escape the adoration of the younger two girls. They come and chat with my husband and I , occasionally gazing into each other’s eyes. They kiss again. They hold hands. She sits on his lap as they make conversation. They smooch again.
I want to vomit. They decide to “go to the park” before I snap past my dumbstruck nature.
I want to scream, “Hey, NICEBOY! Don’t kiss my daughter in front of me!” I want to demand that she leap off his lap, that they take their puppy love out of the line of sight of the impressionable youngsters. (aka, ME.)
Later I complain to my husband about this kissing business. This… this constant public display of affection nonsense. Whatever happened to just holding hands? My husband laughs and pretends to scold the teens. “That’s right! Don’t make everyone watch you kiss! Only your mother and I can kiss in front of everyone!”
I start to agree and then pause with a disgusted look on my face.
I am trying to think of a witty comeback, something that makes complete sense.
Nothing does. He has a point. We do hug and peck in front of the kids. We hold hands. We snuggle on the couch. We kiss—NOT MAKE OUT—but kiss. Lovingly. The kids sometimes heckle us with “Oh baruther”s and “Get a room”s and whatnot.
But we are the PARENTS in this family equation. We are the bill payers and the adults and we have earned the right to hug in front of our very own kids. These… these TEENAGERS have earned no such right. They are brazen, what with their kindness and niceness and puppy lovingness.
I feel old as the stink eye settles in upon my gaze whenever I look at the two of them. A line needs to be drawn. The rules need to be set forth.
… a message best delivered by my husband, I think, while I make “tsk”ing noises and “that’s right” affirmations as I stand directly behind him. Then, as if to prove my point, I’ll kiss him swiftly on the cheek.
In your FACE, teenagers!
Making Type A a good thing

“What do you think about heading for the beach this weekend?” he asks, basking in the glow of possible adventure.
It's summer, after all, and summer is for travel. It's for sun. And swimming, and barbecues and camping. So why is it when my husband makes this grand overture, why am I not swayed by its glamour, but rather, overcome with dread?
Maybe it's the four-foot high pile of laundry and stinky bathrooms staring at me. Maybe it's the unmopped, unvacuumed floors, sticky from juice and covered in dusty footprints, stretching out endlessly before me. Maybe it's the knowledge that if I go, this is what I will return to: a cluttered, dusty, hot mess waiting to usher in my new week. Now with flies!
I can't stand it.
I love adventure. I love getting out of town, seeing the world, even if that world is just the little town one stop over. But I hate, HATE written loudly and proudly in all capital letters, mess. Disorganization. Slobbery.
No, I’m neither a neat freak nor a particularly clean person. I am not Type A, unless A stands for Awesome. Or Asleep.
Rather, I have this need to have things organized before I head out of town. And before I start my new work week. And looking around my house, I am suddenly very Type A: AGGRAVATED.
And the answer, dear reader, to your wisely-unasked question is I DON'T KNOW HOW I ENDED UP WITH SEVEN KIDS!! It's not like we're hyper breeders or planned on having an overloud, overlarge family. Which I love having and I’m not complaining…
…but my gawd they are slobs. And I hear you—I really do: One gets the behavior one tolerates. Thus, I should not tolerate such slobbery. To which I say: Even I am sick of my own constant nagging.
Enter daughter number two, listening to her iPod while texting a friend. “Would you be sure to vacuum today?” I ask with some trepidation.
“I just vacuumed like four days ago,” she says, thumbs typing furiously. I look at the stale popcorn on the floor—the popcorn the dog just stepped over.
“Ok. Well it’s time again,” I say. What kind of lazy dog doesn’t eat popcorn? It’s RIGHT THERE. I pause. What kind of lazy household depends on the dog to clean their floors? Apparently our household.
Frustrated, I head upstairs. Not a single bed made. The tween walks past me and over some discarded wrappers that decorate the floor around his feet. “Would you pick up that trash, please?” I ask.
The tween looks at me like I’m crazy. “What trash?”
I want to scream.
Back downstairs I see the six-year-old has built a fort in the front room. And furnished it with Barbies and Legos. In the kitchen, the garbage bin is overflowing. The sink is full of dishes. And in the family room, I see the cat has just thrown up. On the carpet.
My eye begins to twitch. I have morphed into Type AwR: Apoplectic with Rage. My husband sees my frenzied state, and carefully guides me out of the house, shutting the door behind me. I hear clatter. His voice shakes the closed front door. Moments later he reappears with two glasses of wine.
He kisses my cheek, handing me a glass. We walk. I decompress. He holds my hand.
Upon our return an hour later, the house is magically presentable. The floor vacuumed and swept and de-vomited; the laundry in early stages of folding; the fort has disappeared. The TV has even been turned off. He hugs me from behind and kisses me.
“So, the beach this weekend?” he asks again, hopefully.
I’m starting to feel Type A, for Appreciated. And that perhaps his Type A, for Adventure, might actually be a good idea.
A battle of wills and lizards
After a weekend of sun and swim, last night my 6-year-old, Sydney, succumbed to an overwhelming case of exhaustion: crocodile tears over small issues, accompanied by the ardent wailing, “I’m not tired!” at the merest suggestion otherwise.
Naturally I reached into my mommy arsenal and pulled out the trump card for curing exhaustion: what she needed was a good snuggle on the couch. I rubbed her back and tried to dry her tears, but my cure-all was slow to work its magic. Her wailing persisted.
We were in for desperate measures.
Cue older brother Harry. It pains the 13-year-old to see his baby sister cry, ever, and said wailing compelled him to reach into his own, handcrafted Big Brother Arsenal to cheer her up.
That smart boy trumped me reptile style.
“Sydney! Come see what I caught!”
Curiosity quickly got the better of the tears as the 6-year-old followed her brother to the front yard. There, in phosphorescent glow of the streetlamp, Harry unveiled a blue-bellied lizard.
It was about 5-inches long; its mottled skin was beautiful. I couldn’t remember the last time we’d seen a lizard up close and personal. He was very friendly. We named him “Stan.”
Sydney was tentative yet fascinated. Her big brother described how soft it was and how safe Stan was and showed off every one the lizard’s extra-fine features. And believe me, the salesmanship of that 13-year-old could make just about anything on that little creature shine through as extra-fine. Sydney was highly interested. And completely amazed. And absolutely unwilling to touch it.
The gauntlet was down.
My second most stubborn child was determined to change the mind of my MOST stubborn child.
Nodding suggestively and smiling broadly, Harry proceeded to follow Sydney across the front yard, using all his wiles of manipulation to encourage his baby sister to touch the lizard. “Just feel it. C’mon, just a light finger touch. Look at how gentle it is, Sydney. See how it sits calmly in my hand? Look at its blue belly and its tiny eyes. It is very, very smooth.”
As Sydney took a step closer, Harry began working his charms in earnest. Stan was soft. Stan was docile. Just extend one finger, just one light touch. While Sydney and I looked at the reptile resting on his finger, Harry applied his best talking-to-a-child voice, pointing out how Stan’s tail had fallen off and grown back (Syd was just telling us how she’d learned about that in school) and pointed out Stan’s variegated markings.
With the skill of a used-car salesman, Harry carefully focused on what he perceived to be Syd’s fears—or rather, how they were moot. “I’m holding it, Sydney. I’ll keep you safe.” She looked at him nervously. “I promise,” he said.
This swayed her.
Syd first looked at me, then over at Stan resting on her brother’s index finger, half asleep. Harry pet Stan. I pet Stan. Syd raised a finger.
We paused.
…and in that pause and with the speed of a cheetah, Stan the speed-demon lizard sprung off Harry’s hand and dove straight onto Sydney’s face.
“WAAAHAAAHHHHHHHHH!!!!”
That stupid lizard couldn’t have chosen a more strategic place to go. Syd screamed, I screeched, Harry shouted, and Syd swatted at her face and hair but Stan was already scurrying across the porch. Harry scrambled after the lizard as I hugged a wailing Syd. She then ran into the house.
When she turned to me, I saw that her tears had turned into peals of hysterical laughter. We were all so shocked and stunned that we proceeded to laugh for the next ten minutes. A comic routine ensued, with the 6-year-old declaring in her best adult voice, “OHmygawd, OHMYgawd, no way, no WAAAAYYY, keep that thing AWAY from me!”
Lizard be damned: Good, hard, over-tired belly laughs are so much nicer than the wails of exhaustion.
Perpetually anxious/simultaneously exhausted mom of a blended family of 7 kids & 2 pets. Writer about same. Wife to one amazingly patient husband. Drinker of wine. 




