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Obama wants to end $4B oil industry tax breaks.
http://money.cnn.com/2011/04/26/news...n=money_latest
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oh yeah...higher gas prices and an even higher unemployment rate, go obama.
is it that hard to understand if you tax the shit out of rich people it screws the economy? wealthy people are the one who make jobs, higher the small business man, and keep the economy running. |
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I mean get real.........Giving a tax break intended for manufacturers to the oil industry? A dumb idea from the beginning. Oh, and such a coincidence that it happened in 2004 when Texan Bush was in charge. |
Yeah, giving tax breaks to the rich has really helped our economy...
Oh wait... Dumbass. |
And how are the oil companies going to make up the profit??? Stupid idea to begin with, yes... Even dumber to consider killing it at this point in time.
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exactly, only thing youre going to do is piss them off, and you know who suffers? thats right the working man. |
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I don't really care if the tax breaks are kept or removed. I do realize though that the impetus of "screwing those dastardly oil companies" or "getting money from the rich company instead of the working man" are completely removed from reality. The money to pay for it will have to come from somewhere and it is a safe bet it won't come out of their profits. Any increase in tax liability will be passed directly on to consumers at the pump.
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This just in: We're fucked regardless. The rich oil companies (reporting record profits again) will continue to get richer, and they'll do it by taking your money, either as tax breaks or at the pump.
How exactly would you like your fucking, sir? |
Give it to me at the pump, please. At least it's a more honest-feeling screwing.
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Buy a more fuel-efficient car. Great, so now I have to spend several thousand dollars so that I can get 40 mpg instead of 33 mpg. No thanks. Motorcycle has the same limitations as walking or riding a bicycle, so that doesn't help (although I ride it when possible). There are no real alternative sources of energy and frankly, there is no REAL reason for gas to be $4 a gallon. But the oil companies have finally figured out there isn't shit we can do about it, so they keep finding ways to cause a "shortage." Fuckers. |
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First, "short ram" is a dumb riceboy term. While the word "short" is indeed correct, there is absolutely no "ramming" going on with those things. Just call it a cone filter on a pipe and be done with it. Second, I've never gained any MPG from those things. All they do is add noise and a bit of power. |
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One is by sticking an intake in the wind. The other is by using a column of air/fuel and the effects of gravity, as in "tunnel ram". |
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All they do is suck in warm underhood air. And those "heat shields" they sell don't help much. In my day, we'd use a longer pipe that stretched almost all the way to the ground. Or tunneled it into a hole in the front spoiler. |
Actually, there's another place you can grab air. At the high pressure area at the center of the cowl (but this is known, not surprisingly, as cowl-induction).
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Therefore, you are both right...and you are both wrong. |
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I think what alot of you aren't seeing is that while yes, a side effect of tax breaks is putting more money in the pockets of the people who control business, but that also enables those people to build plants and factories, create more opportunities for research, and, I know, what a novel idea, CREATE JOBS. While alot of you don't care and probably haven't researched this at all or even have an idea, the oil companies do put money into renewable energy. While they may be the big bag dog on the block, we put them there, as we have an uncontrollable urge for big trucks, gas guzzling vehicles, and an administration that is in no way, shape, or form interested in allowing us to tap into our OWN natural resources. Drill in Alaska? Sure, let's use the existing oil fields. Ever hear of directional drilling? Look it up. Drill in the Gulf? Sure. Nothing is without risk. I'm tired of hearing the activists complain about a lack of renewable energy, resources, or fuel prices when they know very little about what's going on. Idiots protest for the sake of jumping on the protest bandwagon without knowing the full story. The more you know............now wake up. |
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Further, the way I see things going... that money will NEVER make it to the middle class, because all it's going to do is fund programs for the poorest folks... again, while us in the middle get fucked. Consumption tax is the only real viable solution I see... Eliminate federal income taxes completely, and add a federal sales tax on everything except food. That generates revenue without outright stealing from people. |
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We aren't just talking about 'the rich' here, but primarily about large corporations that frequently pay anything from piss-all, to no tax at all. If you count the corporate welfare that some of them receive the government might well be paying them, to make massive profits. |
Trickle down economics is a fairy tale.
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Again, simplify the system... flat tax businesses at a reasonable rate, cut out all the bullshit, and let the market determine who sinks/swims. Granted, they'll try to pass the buck to their employees and the consumer, but the market will eventually correct that. Quote:
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I promise! :skep: Trickle down economics STILL doesn't work, STILL makes the rich even RICHER, and the poor even POORER. Guess what? You're not rich. Guess what else? The likelihood you will be is better on getting hit by lightning. Stop drinking the fucking Koolaid, and then telling people what you think they DON'T KNOW. Fact is, YOU'RE the gullible one who's indulging a fucking financial fantasy fairytale; swallowed hook, line, and sinker, and yet you have the audacity to phrase things like you're educating OTHERS? I'd keep more quiet, I'd hide the stupidity, if I were you. It's not becoming. Actually, it is. It's becoming the undoing of this nation... |
Getting back to the point of this article, so far no one has provided a justification for why an oil company should be treated like a manufacturing company for tax break purposes.
Other than powerful lobbying, of course. |
"Trickle-Down" (AKA "VooDoo") economics:
An American term, for how the rich piss on your head, and tell you it's raining. |
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Too bad most rich people don't employ anyone. Rather, they get a salary (as a CEO, athlete, entertainer, investment banker, etc.).
The % of rich people who actually started their own business and hired a bunch of people is low. Most get hired to do a specific job, then they last for about 18-36 months before bailing on a golden parachute. And all the while, they are hiring accountants to figure out ways to lower their effective tax rate to that of a middle-class person (or even lower). Furthermore, many of them hide their investments overseas. I used to be like you some of you guys.......I worshipped Reagan, thought he was cool, until I realized that the only reason I did so was because I wanted to "align" myself with "clean-cut upper-crust preppies", rather than what I perceived to be "burnouts" (hippie Democrats). |
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Show your work 'slice. Your thoughts are so erratic it is hard to counter them all. CEO's don't have employees? Athletes and entertainers have golden parachutes? Show me a person earning a 7, 8 or 9 figure income and paying a 4.7% effective rate and I'll show you a person the IRS is looking for. Quote:
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I'm not sure why I need to show my work. I'm "middle class", or maybe "upper middle", and I paid what, 28-29% or whatever the heck my bracket is? I forgot.
I'm not a family, and I didn't have anything worth deducting this year, so my ability to reduce that is practically nill. Not sure where they're getting 4.7% from. And do you deny my claim that rich people are more likely to 1) use an accountant, 2) identify & make use of creative deductions, and 3) shelter money overseas? |
By the way, yes CEO's have tons of subordinates, but in most cases they already existed before he came onboard.
ONLY if he successfully GROWS the business can he lay claim to helping create jobs. |
Yeah, I think the misstep in logic is assuming that if you tax rich folks, you affect jobs. The personal taxation of a CEO isn't likely to affect the number of jobs available in their company. Taxing the company would have a bigger effect. Unless someone can prove a link between high-income income tax and job growth.
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When you use words like "most" and "the % of..." you should post numbers. The quote tells you EXACTLY where they got the 4.7% figure from. A single person with a decent income gets hit the hardest on taxes. That same person with children, mortgage interest, education expenses, etc. can have an effective taxe rate of 0% (just ask Paul). I don't disagree that the rich use accountants and deductions not used by Joe average $50k/year. However, if you think that a ball player, actor, business owner or hot shot banker, attorney or plastic surgeon earning $5mil a year has some magical offshore bank account into which their earnings are paid and not taxed, you are off your rocker. |
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And my point was, plenty of "rich" people could easily bring their effective rate down below mine, by using creative deductions. The more assets you own, and the more business endeavors you're involved in, the more likely you or your accountant will be able to dream up "creative" deductions. Quote:
Bottom line is, I don't feel sorry for rich people. They have more freedom & opportunity to GET rich in this country than practically any other. |
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To get below the 28% bracket, your AGI would have to be below $82,400 (Single, year 2010). Deductions, creative accounting, etc., your average $1mil plus earner is not paying taxes on $82k or less of income. Quote:
Same goes for poor people. Ain't this country great? :pat: |
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For me, it comes down to this... it's unfair to FORCE people to pay more, just because they have more. Asking is one thing... Stealing is another. |
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http://www.truthandpolitics.org/top-rates.php |
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What's your point? Just like you didn't pay 28% on your entire income. |
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The government shouldn't have the ability to enforce current tax laws (however unfair they may seem)? Because that seems to be all that's happening. Don't like the laws? Work to change them. |
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The somewhat more relevant number is your effective tax rate, the percentage of taxes you paid out of your taxable income, and that isn't perfect either. Compare two people with the same family situation and income. Dude 1 (D1) contributes nothing to his 401k while Dude 2 (D2) contributes 10% of his pre-tax income. D1 will have a higher effective tax rate due to his own decision. Say D1 also rents while D2 bought real estate through a mortgage. D1 can't deduct anything while D2 can deduct the interest, property tax, and some other expenses he pays. Those to factors alone, and there are a ton of them, can affect the taxable income between the two by $10,000, $20,0000, or even more despite their gross income being the same. Additionally that money will be taxed in the top one or two brackets they are subjected to, meaning it will make the largest difference in their effective tax rates. In the above scenario D1 isn't getting screwed by the government. He can end up with significantly more tax liability than D2 and has nothing to blame other than his own decisions. |
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The idea that someone should buy a home just because of the deduction opportunities is rather lacking (although I doubt that's what you actually think). I see your point about 401k's though. Those contributions, along with the standard deduction and personal deduction, are going to be a much bigger benefit to a middle class person than they would to a rich person. |
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I don't like the laws and I will continue to vote for folks who I feel will provide the best opportunity to change them... Income taxes, by definition is theft. You take something that isn't yours, without permission... actually by force... that's the definition of stealing. Laws or no laws. |
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I also don't care about whether "the rich" own homes or not. I was simply trying to point out the futility of judging the tax system through "I paid this much in taxes" anecdotes. |
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I don't see them being handed money... They are more clever in filing their taxes so they can keep more of the money they earned, maybe. The whole thing boils down to a simple principle for me... does someone have a right to what I've earned, more than me? I don't mind chipping in some money to run things, but it's completely out of control. There's never a realistic plan for how to pay for a bunch of this shit that we don't need, but we keep spending anyway... At the end of the day, rather than really sitting down and making responsible budgeting decisions, the answer is more debt and more taxes. Regardless of which side of the fence you are on... it boils down to that simple principle... is it OK for your money to be arbitrarily taken from you, without you having any say in the matter? In that case, I think I'll come over to your house and raid your fridge, because the guy next door is hungry... and you can't do shit about it other than bicker about how I should have taken it from someone with a bigger fridge. |
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Thrilling Thread. You guys should all be correspondents on Fox news.
Lets face facts, NOTHING you do say or feel will change a goddamn thing this country or any country in the world will operate. If gas goes up to 20 Dollars a gallon, People will still buy it. as an entire population, the vast majority are sheep being herded into there untimely demise. The only thing that can control the price of anything is regulation, and our government would rather worry about Illegal MP3 Files than trying to control the price of gas. I've given up on society...The world is fucked...and no politician or world leader is going to convince me otherwise. You really wanna stick it to the man? Buy a brand new pair of Nike's or a Huffy and stop relying on gas as a source of transportation. But as Captain already posted...in some cases thats not entirely possible and thats where the oil tycoons and world leaders know they have us by the balls. |
Ride more motorcycles, save gas! Do your part!
LOL... |
Honestly, My bike personally isnt THAT great on gas. Its better than my truck but in terms of good fuel economy...I'd be better off on a 250 or 500 that doesnt rev as high.
bc lets face it, when im on my bike it pains me to putter around town and ride it like its a scooter. |
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There's no such thing as a product with perfectly inelastic demand. People just need to man up. You don't NEED to drive to 5 different grocery stores, when 1 will do. You don't NEED to drive alone, when carpooling would work. You don't NEED a big home in the suburbs, when an urban condo would work. |
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So what do i do to get there? Drive or Ride. sure i could find a new job...but its not as easy as saying it. we dont NEED 400 dollar smartphones and 800 Dollar Flat screen TV's...but there nice to have...would you sell less gas if it was 20 dollars a gallon? Sure...but the point is people would still buy it. If theres a gas station on one side of the road and a gas staton on the other side and one had gas for 3 dollars and another had it for 3.25 the guy selling it for 3.25 would still get buisness...Why? bc people who are to lazy to make the left or right into the cheaper gas station bc its not on there side of the road and the 3.25 station is "easier" to get to...Trust me I've seen it many times. |
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I do agree with what youre saying to an extent. Gas prices are rising but most peoples incomes are not, so now more will be spent on fuel which means less will be spent/saved elsewhere. Businesses will eventualy feel that pinch too and start raising their prices too so it all has a snowball effect. We started seeing some of that in 08 with all the fuel surcharges as gas prices skyrocketed. |
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http://greenecon.net/dramatic-drop-i...economics.html |
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And I seem to recall a lot of people here and on CF who claimed that higher gas prices would never affect anyone's decision-making. Now all of a sudden you see many of those same people with more fuel-efficient vehicles. Hmm. |
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Those guys don't post anymore, their computers have all been repossessed. :lol: |
:lol There was a guy like that on our local forum. Always bragging about his success as a flipper (with a track record of 2 flips). This was back in 2006. Haven't seen him around anymore. :lol:
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And if they cant afford it, then they steal it. Working at a gas station, i had to deal with it on a hourly basis from day to day...people claim they only said ten and yet they watched the gas pump fill there escalade all the way up till it was 80 dollars...yet they only have ten dollars on them...Right...And I'm the fucking tooth fairy on my days off. I'd love to carpool, Hell Id love to walk to work or ride a bike...but I cant. So i buy gas because I have no other choice at the moment. |
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Remember...NJ We pump the gas for you...so its a little different in our situation. People do it ALL the time and as a company...they just want us to eat it and let the customer go...It's Bullshit bc it will happen more often the higher the price goes. And Yes, again...i choose to drive my Dodge ram...why? Bc I can...You dont really see me bitching anywhere in here about it. I love my truck. Im fully aware of what i pay when i put gas in it...But i also have the chance to drive a Hyundai elantra at time if need be...and my bike. So really its not as big an issue as one would think. |
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Demand wont ever go down far enough for it to matter. the oil companies will still make billions.
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very easy to say I messed up and put the wrong amount in your car and that all you "have" is 10 dollars. Trust me it happens...All day many times...in the state on NJ, and Most likely Oregon. And I'm sure there are self serve places while not many but im sure SOME still exist where you can get the gas into your car before paying for it. |
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The oil companies know how far to push the limits of peoples wallets. They wont push it to far to reduce the demand, thats not smart business. They didnt get rich by accident. |
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If oil companies could control it why would they let it drop to $40 per barrel and below in the winter of 09? Why would they have let oil stay below $20 per barrel for practically an entire decade in the 90s? The closest any organization comes to having control over prices is OPEC and even what they can do is limited. There just isn't any nefarious group able to exercise an invisible hand to set oil prices. If there were that group would have had to have been pretty damn dumb to keep prices as low as they did up until a few years ago. A few of the facts affecting oil prices are that oil production is static or shrinking, that doesn't look like it will change anytime soon, demand for oil is increasing, that doesn't look like it will change anytime soon either, some of the places a lot of oil comes from aren't exactly stable so neither is their supply, the dollar is crapping out which makes buying oil with dollars more expensive, and inflation is occurring while interest rates are effectively nothing which drives investors to commodities. That is a hell of a run on sentence but what it means is there is nothing, outside of the possibility of the American economy tanking again soon, that really justifies price decreases. Look at price changes over the last year for gold, silver, and copper. You can throw in corn, soybeans, wheat, and coffee too. Most commodities cost much more in dollars than they did 12 months ago. If the oil companies were controlling oil prices they are doing a hell of a job on that other stuff too. |
At street level, oil companies seem to have a fair bit of control over retail price. A couple of weeks back, on my first trip of the season to the track, I found that gas was fully CAN$0.10/L (US$0.40/US gal) more expensive in the city, than it was at the highway-side clip joints that usually charge $0.05/L MORE.
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That doesn't mean there aren't anomalies though. There is a station over in Orlando that was charging over $5.50 per gallon while the average in Florida is around $4 per gallon. They didn't set that price because an oil company told them to, they did it because they are the closest gas station to the airport and wanted to screw people who had to return rental cars with full tanks. Each retail gas station controls the price they want to charge, they are controlling the price of gas not oil, and they are not told what to charge by oil companies. |
Unless the oil company owns the gas station.
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I spoke to a station owner the other day and asked him how the higher prices affect his business from a margin perspective.
I didn't realize it until he said it but the higher the prices go, the more he has to charge just to keep the margins the same. I realize that he is not an "oil company" but your average customer thinks that at $4/gal the guy at the local Mobil is raking it in vs. $3/gal when in reality, the opposite is true. |
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