Thursday, August 2, 2012

Serfdom or Indentured Servitude?

How a U.S. voter could vote for Mr. Romney is a total mystery to me, since he has come to be the poster child for every negative, regressive agenda imaginable. If elected, Mr. Romney will doubtlessly never rest until every American is reduced to serfdom and his buddies have all the gold safe in their basements. They all will still own homes, too, while the rest of us will have lost ours to the too-big-to-fail banks.

Do I exaggerate? Perhaps. But, just a tiny, tiny, little bitty bit. Maybe serfdom is the wrong word. He might just rather see the entire U.S. labor force reduced to indentured servitude.

Do you require proof?

Well, while I’m not much of an Eliot Spitzer fan, the former Gov. of New York recently posted an outstanding comparison of Pres. Obama’s tax plan position with Gov. Romney’s position. Based upon a recent Brookings Institution and Tax Policy Center analysis, here is what Spitzer wrote in his article, “Romney’s Tax Plan Would Lower Taxes on the Rich, and Raise Them for Everyone Else”, Slate, Eliot Spitzer, 1 Aug 2012:

Compared to what?
That is the question Rep. Barney Frank wisely suggests we ask when evaluating different pieces of legislation, or for that matter any public policy proposal. That question seems especially appropriate today, when tax issues are back on the table before Congress. House Republicans today voted down the tax proposal passed by the Senate to extend tax cuts for individuals with incomes under $200,000 and couples with incomes under $250,000, to let marginal rates on incomes above that level revert to Clinton-era levels, a boost of about 4 percent. 
At the same time, we now know more about the proposal Republicans will support—the proposal from Mitt Romney—thanks to an analysis done by the Brookings Institution and the Tax Policy Center. These two eminent and reliable outfits, not ideologues of either side, conclude that the Romney plan would raise taxes by a total of $86 billion on the 95 percent of Americans with incomes below $200,000. That's a tax increase of about $500 per household. In contrast, Romney would lower taxes for the 5 percent of Americans with incomes above $200,000 by about $86 billion. This is the Republican plan.
So now we know the answer to Barney Frank's question: compared to what? The Republicans oppose a plan that lowers taxes for 95 percent of the population and raises taxes a small bit for those with income above $200,000, yet support a plan that lowers taxes for the top 5 percent and raises them on everybody else!
Think about the lack of logic of that. As an economic matter, they have it backward. We need desperately to drive consumption up, so the best thing to do is get funds to the middle class, whose consumption will be triggered, not to raise their taxes and give more money to the wealthiest—so-called "job creators" who clearly haven't been creating jobs and who will most likely put the new-found cash into savings.
The choice the Republicans make is one they are free to make—if they want the increasing divide between the wealthy and the less wealthy to get even broader!
As a matter of politics—and it is not for me to give them advice on this score—polls show that the public favors the Democratic plan by about a 3-1 margin, which is one of the reasons Romney is trailing in key swing states of Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Florida.
The Republican vote today and the new analysis of the Romney plan help clarify the choice we are facing. This election isn't about awkwardness at the Olympics or a rude press secretary: It is about economic growth and economic justice. These are the choices that matter.

For me the choice is obvious. But, then again, it’s just me. After all, in the way long ago, a few of my ancestors came to the colonies looking for a better deal and to escape serfdom. Their great, great, great, great, really much later, grandson is not looking to reprise serfdom. So, he’ll be voting for Pres. Obama. Go here for the Slate article:

http://www.slate.com/blogs/spitzer/2012/08/01/romney_s_tax_plan_would_lower_taxes_on_the_rich_and_raise_them_for_everyone_else_.html

4 comments:

gold price said...

A recent Tax Policy Center (Urban Institute and Brookings Institution) study examines Romney's tax plan, its tradeoffs among revenues, progressivity and tax rates in tax reform, and concludes that, under certain assumptions, any revenue-neutral plan along the lines Governor Romney has outlined would reduce taxes for high-income households, thus requiring higher taxes on others, even if the plan’s financing is as progressive as possible, given the available tax expendituresClick on the link below to read the study.

gold account said...

The founder and former CEO of Sun Microsystems explains how high taxes stifle innovation and put America at a competitive disadvantage.

ron1976 said...

Thank you for your post and additional information. Your comments pre-date the DNC speeches by more than a month pointing out how right you were then and are now.

ron1976 said...

Thank you for your post and comments!