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The Ohio Project

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What is your share of Government Costs?

We at the Ohio Free Press stumbled upon this great website that allows you to insert your education level, age, average salary and will show you what your share of government costs will tally over your lifetime. Even better yet is that it shows you what would have been YOUR money had it not been used for all that “necessary” government spending.

Visit www.mygovcost.org to see how much you will end up paying for your government.

Makes you really wonder why we need such a HUGE government.

The Debt Ceiling Flip-Flop

Empty Pocket Flip Flop on Budget Deficit

It would seem that President Obama has more political flip-flops than he wore on his recent Hawaii vacation.

From the Republican Policy Committee website we see where Obama stood on the debt ceiling in 2006.

March 20, 2006: This was the last stand-alone debt limit vote on which then-Senator Obama voted.  He was one of 48 members to vote against the increase, which passed with 52 votes.  He said: “The fact that we are here today to debate raising America’s debt limit is a sign of leadership failure. It is a sign that the U.S. Government can’t pay its own bills. It is a sign that we now depend on ongoing financial assistance from foreign countries to finance our Government’s reckless fiscal policies. …  Increasing America’s debt weakens us domestically and internationally.  Leadership means that ‘the buck stops here.  Instead, Washington is shifting the burden of bad choices today onto the backs of our children and grandchildren.  America has a debt problem and a failure of leadership.  Americans deserve better.”

Austan Goolsbee, the chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, is saying that the United States has to raise the debt ceiling. He say’s that not raising it “is not a game”. It would be utterly catastrophic.

And that’s what he’s urging Congress to do. It would seem that President Obama agrees.

Or does he?

Flip-Flop
I think Obama had it right in 2006 by saying that raising the debt ceiling “
is a sign of leadership failure” and it is used “to finance our Government’s reckless fiscal policies”. Obama said that “America has a debt problem and a failure of leadership.  Americans deserve better”. It must be all Bush’s fault.

Wait. This is Obama’s failed leadership. Obama’s debt problem. It was Obama that increased the debt more than $2 trillion in his first 421 days in office (and his Democrat controlled Congress).

Obama is right on one thing. He said “Leadership means that ‘the buck stops here”.

Great. Stop flip-flopping and Man-up. Cut the freakin’ deficit by cutting spending without raising taxes and DON’T raise the debt ceiling. Live by your words and what you believe…that is if you even know what you believe.

I really wonder what America was thinking they’d get with all the hope and change. All they got was Flip and Flop.

Again.

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An interesting video on our national debt and surplus’ we’ve had during our nation’s history. It makes you wonder what America is actually doing to itself.

Millions face tax increases under Dems budget plan

Tax Increase graphicsBy ANDREW TAYLOR, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama’s Democratic allies in the Senate promise to cut the deficit by almost two-thirds over the next five years, but their budget plan could threaten about 30 million people with tax increases averaging $3,700 in 2012 and after because of the alternative minimum tax.

The alternative is tax increases elsewhere in the revenue code averaging up to $100 billion a year after 2011 to continue alternative minimum tax relief and also curb taxes on people inheriting large estates.

The Democratic plan released Wednesday by Senate Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad of North Dakota relies on such boosts in revenues to carve the deficit from $1.4 trillion last year down to $545 billion by 2015.

The minimum tax, or AMT, was enacted four decades ago to make sure wealthy people couldn’t avoid taxes altogethe. But it wasn’t indexed for inflation in people’s incomes, so it gets “patched” every year or so in order to prevent people from being surprised by multi-thousand-dollar tax bills at tax time.

Estates larger than $7 million would also be threatened with higher taxes after 2011 if Conrad’s plan is carried out.

Conrad says lawmakers will have to find revenues elsewhere in the budget to pay for AMT and estate tax reliefafter 2011, which could require tax increases averaging up to $100 billion a year elsewhere in the code if Congress is going to keep its promises under tough new budget rules.

Conrad says he hopes the dilemma will force Congress to overhaul the complicated and inefficient U.S. tax code. The Tax Policy Center, a joint project of the Brookings Institution and the Urban Institute, says that 33 million taxpayers would face the AMT in 2012, adding $3,700 on average to their tax liabilities.

Extending AMT and estate tax relief would cost $300-$400 billion over 2012-2015, Conrad said. Many observers say it’ll be virtually impossible for Congress to produce offsetting revenues to extend the tax relief.GOP Sen. Judd Gregg of New Hampshire predicted that when Congress confronts the problem in two years it will blink and simply borrow the money as it has done in the past.

The looming tax hikes result from the structure of President George W. Bush’s 2001 and 2003 tax bills, whose provisions generally expire at the end of this year. Obama promises to fully extend them except for individuals earning more than $200,000 a year and couple making $250,000 a year. They include lower income tax rates, a $1,000 per-child tax credit, and tax breaks for investments and reductions in the estate tax, and their five-year cost of almost $800 billion would be covered by adding to the nation’s $12.8 trillion debt.

But in the case of the AMT and estate tax, congressional Democrats have broken with Obama and promise that after two years of deficit-financed alternative minimum tax and estate tax cuts, Congress will have to come up with the money.

“If we want those things taken care of … they’ve got to be paid for,” Conrad said.

That’s easier said than done.

Gregg said the Democratic plan is “a budget that kicks the can down the road. More spending. More deficits. More debt. Less prosperity.”

The annual congressional budget is a nonbinding blueprint for the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1 and sets the parameters for subsequent tax and spending bills. This year, that means a cut of almost $9.5 billion from domestic agency budgets and foreign aid and a freeze, on average, of those accounts for the following two years.

Conrad’s plan, to be approved by the Budget panel Thursday, would permit Democrats to advance legislation on priorities such as taxes, energy and job creation without fear of a Republican filibuster. That could boost clean energy programs and revive Obama’s stalled jobs agenda.

Democrats haven’t decided exactly what to include in the filibuster-proof measure, though Conrad promised it wouldn’t be used to pass deeply controversial legislation to curb global warming.

Obama suggests value-added tax may be an option

Obama and the VATBy CHARLES BABINGTON, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama suggested Wednesday that a new value-added tax on Americans is still on the table, seeming to show more openness to the idea than his aides have expressed in recent days.

Before deciding what revenue options are best for dealing with the deficit and the economy, Obama said in an interview with CNBC, “I want to get a better picture of what our options are.”

After Obama adviser Paul Volcker recently raised the prospect of a value-added tax, or VAT, the Senate voted 85-13 last week for a nonbinding “sense of the Senate” resolution that calls the such a tax “a massive tax increase that will cripple families on fixed income and only further push back America’s economic recovery.”

For days, White House spokesmen have said the president has not proposed and is not considering a VAT.

“I think I directly answered this the other day by saying that it wasn’t something that the president had under consideration,” White House press secretary Robert Gibbs told reporters shortly before Obama spoke with CNBC.

After the interview, White House deputy communications director Jen Psaki said nothing has changed and the White House is “not considering” a VAT.

Many European countries impose a VAT, which taxes the value that is added at each stage of production of certain commodities. It could apply, for instance, to raw products delivered to a mill, the mill’s production work and so on up the line to the retailer.

In the CNBC interview, Obama said he was waiting for recommendations from a bipartisan fiscal advisory commission on ways to tackle the deficit and other problems.

When asked if he could see a potential VAT in this nation, the president said: “I know that there’s been a lot of talk around town lately about the value-added tax. That is something that has worked for some countries. It’s something that would be novel for the United States.”

“And before, you know, I start saying ‘this makes sense or that makes sense,’ I want to get a better picture of what our options are,” Obama said.

He said his first priority “is to figure out how can we reduce wasteful spending so that, you know, we have a baseline of the core services that we need and the government should provide. And then we decide how do we pay for that.”

Volcker has said taxes might have to be raised to slow the deficit’s growth. He said a value-added tax “was not as toxic an idea” as it had been in the past.

Since then, some GOP lawmakers and conservative commentators have said the Obama administration is edging toward a VAT.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100421/ap_on_bi_ge/us_obama_tax

Bush Deficit vs. Obama Deficit in Pictures

Pictures are wort a thousand words. If you have ever really wondered what all the promised health care and other new entitlement programs are going to cost, the Heritage Foundation has done a wonderful job to help you visualize exactly what is going to happen – if we continue to let it happen. Just remember this is your money – not theirs. See the full article at http://blog.heritage.org/2009/03/24/bush-deficit-vs-obama-deficit-in-pictures/.