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The Great Tax Con Job

by: Thom Hartmann  |  OpEdNews.com

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Rupert Murdoch. (Photo: Jamie McDonald / AFP)

    Republicans are using the T-word - taxes - to attack the Obama healthcare program. It's a strategy based in a lie.

    A very small niche of America's uber-wealthy have pulled off what may well be the biggest con job in the history of our republic, and they did it in a startlingly brief 30 or so years. True, they spent over three billion dollars to make it happen, but the reward to them was in the hundreds of billions - and will continue to be.

    As my friend and colleague Cenk Uygur of The Young Turks pointed out in a Daily Kos blog recently, billionaire Rupert Murdoch loses $50 million a year on the NY Post, billionaire Richard Mellon Scaife loses $2 to $3 million a year on the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, billionaire Philip Anschutz loses around $5 million a year on The Weekly Standard, and billionaire Sun Myung Moon has lost $2 to $3 billion on The Washington Times.

    Why are these guys willing to lose so much money funding "conservative" media? Why do they bulk-buy every right-wing book that comes out to throw it to the top of the NY Times Bestseller list and then give away the copies to "subscribers" to their websites and publications? Why do they fund to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars a year money-hole "think tanks" like Heritage and Cato?

    The answer is pretty straightforward. They do it because it buys them respectability, and gets their con job out there. Even though William Kristol's publication is a money-losing joke (with only 85,000 subscribers!), his association with the Standard was enough to get him on TV talk shows whenever he wants, and a column with The New York Times. The Washington Times catapulted Tony Blankley to stardom.

    "Fellowships" and other forms of indirect sponsorship of right-wing talk show hosts have made otherwise-marginal shows and their hosts ubiquitous, and such sponsorships of groups like Norquist's anti-tax "Americans for Tax Reform" regularly get people like him front-and-center in any debate on taxation in the United States.

    All so they could run a tax con on the American people, thus keeping Moon and Murdoch and Scaife and Anschutz (and others) richer than you or I could ever even imagine.

    All of this money was spent - invested, really, since it's been more than saved back in low income tax rates on millionaires and billionaires - to convince Americans that up is down and black is white when it comes to income taxes. Here's how it works:

    Rich Person's Tax Effect

    If a person earns so much money that he doesn't or can't spend it all each year, then when his taxes go down your income after taxes goes up. This is largely because there's little to no relationship between what he "needs to live on" and what he's "earning."

    Somebody living on a million dollars a year but earning five million after taxes, can sock away four million in a Swiss bank. If his taxes go up enough to drop his after-tax income to only three million a year, he's still living on a million a year, and only socks away two million in the Swiss bank. His "disposable" income goes down when his taxes go up, and vice-versa. (Technically, the word is "discretionary" income for after-tax, after-living-expenses income, but "disposable" income has become so widely used as a phrase to describe discretionary income I'll use it here.)

    The Rich Person's Tax Effect is the one that virtually all Americans understand - and, oddly, most working class people think applies to them, too (this is the truly amazing part of the con job referred to earlier).

    But it doesn't.

    Working Person's Tax Effect - Version One

    Most working people spend pretty much all of what they earn - their "disposable/discretionary" income is close to zero. Savings rates in the US among working people typically are small - one to five percent - and during the last few years of the W. Bush administration actually went negative. So the take-home pay that people have after taxes - regardless of what the taxes may be - is pretty much what they live on.

    As economist David Ricardo pointed out in 1817 in the "On Wages" chapter of his book "On the Principles of Political Economy and Taxation," take home pay is also generally "what a person will work for." Employers know this: Ricardo's "Iron Law of Wages" is rooted in the notion that there is a "market" for labor, driven in part by supply and demand. So if a worker is earning, for example, a gross salary of $75,000, his 2008 federal income tax would be about $15,000 ($802.50 on
first $8,025 of income; $3,687.75 on income from $8,025 to $32,550; $10,612.50 on income from $32,550 to $75,000), leaving him a take-home pay of $60,000.

    Both he and his employer know that he'll do the job he's doing for around $60,000 a year in take-home pay.

    So what happens if his taxes go up, cutting his take-home pay to $55,000 a year (even though his gross is still $75,000)? Over time (typically one to three years) his wages will rise enough to compensate for the lost income.

    Alan Greenspan used to be hysterical about this effect - he called it "wage inflation" - and The Wall Street Journal and other publications would often reference it, although the average working person has no idea that if his taxes go up, his wages will eventually go up. Similarly, when working-class people's taxes go down, their gross wages will, over time, go down so their inflation-adjusted take-home pay remains the same. We've seen both happen over the past eighty years, over and over again.

    When I was in Denmark last year doing my radio show from the Danish Radio offices for a week and interviewing many of that nation's leading politicians, economists, energy experts, and newspaper publishers, one of my guests made a comment that dropped the scales from my own eyes.

    We'd been discussing taxes on the air, what the Danes get for their average 52% tax rate (free college education, free health care, 4 weeks of vacation, being the world's "happiest" country according to research reported on CBS's "60 Minutes" TV show, etc.). I asked him why people didn't revolt at such high tax rates, and he smiled and just pointed out to me that the average Dane is very well paid with a minimum wage that equals about $18 US (depending on the exchange rate from day to day).

    Off the air, he made the comment to me that was so enlightening. "You Americans are such suckers," he said, as I recall. "You think that the rules for taxes that apply to rich people also apply to working people. But they don't. When working peoples' taxes go up, their pay goes up. When their taxes go down, their pay goes down. It may take a year or two or three to all even out, but it always works this way - look at any country in Europe. And it's the opposite of how it works for rich people!"

    Working Person's Tax Effect - Version Two

    The other point about taxes - which Obama leveraged with his "no tax increases on people earning under $250,000 a year" pledge - has to do with the fact that our tax structure in the US is progressive.

    Here's how it breaks out for a single person from the 2008 federal tax tables:

10% on income between $0 and $8,02515% on the income between $8,025 and $32,550;25% on the income between $32,550 and $78,850;28% on the income between $78,850 and $164,550;33% on the income between $164,550 and $357,700;35% on the income over $357,700.

    Note that our $75,000/year worker has two full tax brackets above him, which, if they go up, will not affect him at all. (This is also true, of course, for the median-wage and average-wage American workers who earn in the low to mid-$40,000/year range.)

    The top tax rate that a person pays is referred to as their "marginal tax rate" (in our worker's case 28%). So what happens if the top marginal tax rate on people making over $357,700 goes up from its current 35% to, for example, the Eisenhower-era 91%?

    For over 120 million American workers who don't earn over $357,700/year, it won't mean a thing. But for the tiny handful of millionaires and billionaires who have promoted The Great Tax Con, it will bite hard. And that's why they spend millions to make average working people freak out about increases in the top tax rates.

    Income Taxes as the "Great Stabilizer"

    Beyond fairness and holding back the Landed Gentry the Founders worried about (America had no billionaires in today's money until after the Civil War, with John D. Rockefeller being our first), there's an important reason to increase to top marginal tax rate, and to do so now.

    Novelist Larry Beinhart was the first to bring this to my attention. He looked over the history of tax cuts and economic bubbles, and found a clear relationship between the two. High top marginal tax rates (generally well above 60%) on rich people actually stabilize the economy, prevent economic bubbles from forming, prevent economic crashes, and lead to steady and sustained economic growth (and steady and sustained wage growth for working people).

    
On the other hand, when top marginal rates drop below 50 percent, the opposite happens. As Beinhart noted in a November 17, 2008 post the Huffington Post, the massive Republican tax cuts of the 1920s (from 73% to 25%) led directly to the Roaring '20s stock market bubble, temporary boom, and then the crash and Republican Great Depression of 1929.

    Rates on the very rich went back up into the 70-90% range from the 1930s to the 1980s. As a result, the economy grew steadily; for the first time in the history of our nation we went 50 years without a crash or major bank failure; and working people's wages increased enough to produce the strongest middle class this nation has ever seen.

    Then came Reaganomics.

    Reagan cut top marginal rates on millionaires and billionaires from 74% down to 38% and there was an immediate surge in the markets - followed by the worst crash since the Great Depression and the failure of virtually the entire nation's savings and loan banking system.

    Bush I cut taxes, and the nation fell into a severe recession while debt soared and wages for working people fell.

    Things stabilized somewhat when Clinton slightly raised taxes on the very rich, but W. Bush dropped them again - including taking taxes on unearned income (interest and dividends - the "income" that people like W. born with a trust fund "earn" as they sit around the pool waiting for the dividend check to arrive in the mail) down to a top rate of 15%. (That's right - trust fund babies like Bush and Scaife pay a MAXIMUM 15% federal income tax on their dividend and interest income, thanks to the second Bush tax cut.) The result of this surge in easy money for the wealthy, combined with deregulation in the financial markets, was the "froth" Greenspan worried about and led us straight into the Second Republican Great Depression, ongoing today.

    The math is really pretty simple. When the uber-rich are heavily taxed, economies prosper and wages for working people steadily rise. When taxes are cut for the rich, working people suffer and economies turn into casinos.

    Roll Back the Reagan Tax Cuts

    While there's much discussion about letting the Bush tax cuts expire, if we really want our country to recover its financial footing we must do something altogether different. We need to roll back the Reagan tax cuts that took the top marginal rate from above 70% down into the 30% range.

    First, though, we have to help Americans realize that "no new taxes" is a mantra that is meaningful to the very rich, but largely irrelevant to average working people.

    Only when the current generation re-learns the economic and tax lessons well known by the generation (now dying off) that came of age in the 30s through the 60s, will this become politically possible. Americans need to learn what Europeans know about taxes - they only matter to the rich.

    Thus today the uber-rich are spending hundreds of millions to make sure words like "burden" are always associated with the word "tax," and to convince average working people that they should throw out of office any politicians who are willing to raise taxes on the rich.

    We have a lot of education to do...and as long as the Right Wing Machine of the uber-rich continues to "lose" (e.g. "invest") millions of dollars a year in their ongoing disinformation campaign, it's going to require all of us reciting the mantra, "Roll back the Reagan tax cuts!"

    --------

    Thom Hartmann is a Project Censored Award-winning New York Times best-selling author, and host of a nationally syndicated daily progressive talk program on the Air America Radio Network, live noon-3 PM ET.

  

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Comments

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It is truly a staggering

It is truly a staggering realization that the Republicans still have a political party after the absolute pathetic performance of the past eight years under their control. One would have thought that they would have simply disappeared into the obscurity from whence they operated. The word itself has , for me, entered the lexicon of foul words and truly frightening ideas!! In fact the two political parties in the US are filled with corruption and insanity! We are in desperate need of an alternative party to lead this once great nation.

What we need more than

What we need more than anything else from our so-called democratic government is a tax system based on ability to pay. One that is graduated all the wayup to the highest incomes. Political democracy is not possible without economic democracy. The US is now the most non-equalitarian system. Money buys elections, legislation, administrative policy and successful litigation (hence, judicial polity-making). Trickle-down tax policy never did work to create jobs. We need a welling-up systemwhich puts money into the hands of working people who will spend it right away for food and clothing for their children. Trickle-down policy did not work in Britain either. The rich used their extra money not to develop job-creating industry at home but to speculate on real estate in places like Toronto, Vancouver, and Sydney.

A related issue is what

A related issue is what appears to be a healthcare lobby ploy--divert the debate onto tax and cost fears. I believe that the health care industry lobby has skewed current debate with the following phrase: "reign in costs." β€œLowering costs” has become the central talking point in all the mainstream news reportage, including NPR. The main problem is not high costs, however. We need to create a system that takes care of the currently uninsured and under-insured. The best way to lower costs would be to institute a single-payer system and get rid of resource-wasting profiteering. Meanwhile, the industry seems to have Washington diverted with a notion of incremental change, using β€œcosts” as a scare tactic. Consider the uninsured and under-insured, not just the upper middle class. Thanks

The ordinary worker is taxed

The ordinary worker is taxed TWICE on the same income: Once on their GROSS income, at 15.3% (employer plus employee) payroll tax, then on their adjusted gross income at ordinary tax rates. The wealthy investor avoids the payroll tax, and just pays income tax on adjusted gross income. The wealthy would never tolerate a tax on their gross income - that's just for the working stiffs! By the way, while the think tanks constantly whine about Social Security going bankrupt, the government siphons off approximately 100 billion dollars per year in payroll taxes to be used as ordinary taxes.

Take our country back from

Take our country back from the Uber-rich!

Tom- you are exactly right.

Tom- you are exactly right. Single payer health care, eliminate payroll taxes, increase corp taxes to 44%, restore progressive personal 9income taxes (yes, 90% over $5 MM), and eventually cut military budget to 100B- and you will pay off the national debt in 10 years because of a thriving and globally competitive economy. ..Actually, the super-rich should like this, because it's the only way they are going to preserve their assets, instead of devaluing and selling them off to the rest of the world who knows how to run an economy!!!

Personal gain v collective

Personal gain v collective well being. This is the great tension, the great question as to where each individual puts their attention and allegiance. As we learn better what and what not to feed, the excessive feeders will be tamed.

Has anyone told Obama about

Has anyone told Obama about this?

I am not sure I understand

I am not sure I understand why a person's wages will go up after his taxes are increased. Doesn't Ricardo's law imply that it would be impossible to find labor to do work at a lower cost than what is reasonable? But does that statement hold true now? Employers can find tons of people willing to do work for less than a survival wage. They are to be found in India, China, Africa--everywhere there is an abundance of poor people. Maybe I'm missing something, but I do not see the "laws of economics" at work here.

I am so glad this is

I am so glad this is published for all to see. Thom Hartmann is correct, and it makes perfect sense. The sad thing is, "Do they really want the working class to survive?" That is the the question that is going on here.....Obama needs to raise the taxes on the rich, but will he? I support Obama, however without sounding too paranoid....I think there is something bigger going on here....like the complete fall of the middle and working class in the United States of America. With all the Dems in the House, you would think we couldn't lose.....it is a bit disturbing that we are still fighting over issues that could be resolved, especially now that there is so much Democratic support.

I would not change places

I would not change places with the rich for all the money in China. They are a miserable lot, lonely, isolated, living meaningless boring lives. Though I do believe it would be fun to disembowel their wealth. They should know by their ivy league education that they only exist subjected the will of organized ordinary people, people who have relationships with others, who joke, and enjoy life working together. Tax the rich 90% and put an end to global heating.

Wage slaves fund endless

Wage slaves fund endless wars and endlessly subsidize the rich. Speaking of con jobs, yes, let's skim pretty much a minimum of 25 percent of all wage earners' incomes - and then have them pay for all their day to day expenses like food, clothing, shelter - AND HEALTH CARE - with what's left over. Let's not even mention education, transportation and insurance costs.

Please clarify: Did not the

Please clarify: Did not the avalanche of decreases in the tax cuts for the wealthy begin with Carter ? Certainly Reagan destroyed the middle class momentum, labor unions et al, but what pushed Carter ?

Scholars point to the

Scholars point to the suffocating effects of high taxes on the "most productive workers" this country has, implying that the middle income earners and lower income earners are only marginally productive while the CEOs and CFOs and other high earning taxpayers (the "most productive workers") carry the burden of maintaining this economy. Some scholars suggest that tax policy should encourage productive workers rather than tax them. These arguments effectively set the middle income earners and the lower income earners against each other fighting for the small part of the pie remaining so we don't notice the sleight of hand practiced on behalf of the wealthy who leave the scraps for the remaining 95% of the population.

Probably the best and most

Probably the best and most important article I've ever read on Truthout. I think that the facts discussed in this article shed light on the true republican party platform. At the end of the day, this great con-job is the only thing they truly stand for. Personally, I think ALL income should be taxed, whether it was made through investment or actually earned through work. I think we'd all be better off if tax loopholes just no longer existed. I don't think they provide the incentive they're purported to have. I think there's already plenty of incentive to get rich and make money from investment. Taxing people won't take that away. I don't care if it takes away the "incentive" to donate to charity. Charities shouldn't have to rely on this. If they represent something that should be done for the public good then they should be funded by tax dollars. This would mean they wouldn't rely on the whims of how the wind blows as much and that we'd all have a stake in whatever they set out to accomplish.

Amazing that Hartman can

Amazing that Hartman can write about all of this and ignore the criminal cabal that invented the I.R.S. and the "Federal" Reserve.

A great article, as far as

A great article, as far as it goes, but you cannot talk about taxation without asking the question of why we have to pay them at all. The answer is that our perverted monetary system is a) based on fraud and b) mathematically impossible and therefore unsustainable. Banking in this country has been privatized since the Federal Reserve act was passed in 1913 which gave the FED (owned by members of the international banking cartel) a monopoly on the creation of money and requires the government to BORROW AT INTEREST from the FED money that was formerly issued debt-free by the treasury. What this creates is a huge drain on the economy in the form of interest on borrowed money from people who work for it to the people who can (by the further voodoo/fraud of fractional reserve banking) just create some more from nothing with a few keystrokes, issuing loans based on nothing. Were the US to reassert the sovereign right and responsibility to issue and lend money in proportion to the financial needs of the country, taxation of income would not be necessary--interest on treasury loans could be recycled back into the economy in the form of spending on infrastructure, health care, education and other projects for the common good. Moreover, it would bring a quick end to the current credit crunch and attendant economic misery as the Treasury would be in control of credit avalability instead of private bankers who don’t feel like lending bailout money but prefer to buy up other banks instead.

Feeling sick yet? We could fix it pretty easily but we need the truth about it first. Google "Money As Debt", "the Money Masters" or go to www.webofdebt.com for more info on banking fraud.

Re the comment at 16:22:

Re the comment at 16:22: "With all the Dems in the House, you would think we couldn't lose.....it is a bit disturbing that we are still fighting over issues that could be resolved, especially now that there is so much Democratic support." Democratic support for what? Certainly not for raising taxes on the rich, or providing health care to the poor. (Max Baucus is a Democrat, if you hadn't noticed). Where did you get the idea that the Democratic Party was working people's champion? Of course we can still lose, as long as Congress is made up of multi-millionaires and those beholden to them. They are not on our side -- that's just an impression they create to win elections.

To 19:04 - Anonymous: I was

To 19:04 - Anonymous: I was the one who wrote the remark you are commenting on. I agree with you completely. With democrats like these who needs republicans. Still, I don't think this is because there's no difference. I think it's because conservative opinion has so poisoned the well of public debate in this country that few democrats have the courage to stand for the values they are elected to represent. That doesn't let the republican party off the hook. They were the ones who came up with the great con in the first place. The democrats we currently have in congress seem to have battered wife's syndrome. It has been argued that Mondale lost to reagan simply because he called reagan on the logic of the "trickle-down" theory. Think about it, in this very thread we have comments from people proposing that we do away with income taxes altogether. The democratic party still has many liberals (something the republicans can't claim). The problem is that, in order to win elections in the short-term, too many of the current crop of the democratic politicians have sold their soul. Personally, I think we are living in a time that will be remembered as the beginning of a major shift in public opinion to the left. The demographics seem to point that way. Still, it's not going to happen overnight. Some things that need to be done immediately will probably be given the band-aid treatment a few decades too late to actually fix them. Forcing democrats to pay attention to their base the way republicans are forced to do the same with their's would be the first step to recovery from the damage done to this country in the past 3 or 4 decades.

Everyone reading this needs

Everyone reading this needs to read "The Rich and the Super Rich: A Study in the Power of Money Today" by Ferdinand Lundberg. It was first published by Lyle Stuart, Inc. in 1968 and is as relevant today as it was then. The rich have been hosing the proles for a very long time and will continue to do so unless people are made aware of the scam and wise up.

This article is a con job, a

This article is a con job, a straw man. Tax on labor income is not constitutional, because it is not apportioned. Period. To discuss low income labor tax rates in the same context as tax rates of coupon clippers is intellectually dishonest. Conservatives and liberals alike are loathe to discuss the true issue, lest their top-down tyranny be exposed for what it is. Nice try, Thom.

The Fairness Doctrine - Very

The Fairness Doctrine - Very Important Here If the fairness doctrine were restored, it would be harder for guys like Rupert to shovel out the one-sided propaganda that the room temperature IQ Limbaugh and Hannity listeners lap up and believe. The Fairness Doctrie is a step in the right direction. Reagan dropped it, along with his tax cuts on the uber-wealthy. Getting in front of the corporate-controlled lobbying system and bought and paid for career politicians will not be easy, but it must be done or the US, as we knew it, is doomed. The uber rich don't care because they will just hunker down in some far-away hamlet until there is a new way to exploit the American workers. It's up to us, the ones who are paying attention, to get the word out. I also support the concept of a national athenian initiative system to get on top of Congress. See www.initiativesamendment.org.

I understand arguments

I understand arguments flared up on the Titanic concerning the seating order in the dining room. Then there was a great outcry because the ventilation system was failing - later a lot of pushing and shoving to get into the lifeboats. The Titanic was supposed to have been unsinkable. Let's hope Professor Thomas Naylor of Second Vermont Republic is just being paranoid when he says the US is unfixable. Pete Edler, Stockholm

Reagan's true genius was in

Reagan's true genius was in persuading the American people that government is evil, is their enemy, is never the solution, but always the problem. The best government can do is get out of the way. We believe that today. We hate, fear and mistrust the federal government so much that even when the Democrats are in control there is little they can do. This despite some of the greatest feats in our history, performed by the federal government: Lincoln, holding the union together; our triumph over two super powers in World War II as we started nearly from scratch; the New Deal, and Social Security; Civil rights and Medicare; NASA and the astronauts landing on the moon forty years ago; the interstate highway system; the cleanup and protection of the environment. And then there are the catastrophic failures of the private sector, where the free market system is supposed to solve all problems in the most efficient manner: the outrageous health care mess; our complete dependence on filthy fossil fuels; the failure to take any action, even to recognize, global warming; the failure to launch electric vehicles as the next generation of personal travel. And then there is the really big question: what have the super wealthy done with all that money they've saved in taxes since 1987? Trillions upon trillions have been entrusted to them. What did they do with it? Did they invest it back into the economy, build a 21st century energy and transportation infrastructure? Cure cancer? Take us back to the moon? Create a modern, super-electrical grid? Bring health care security to every American? Raise the standard of living of the middle class beyond our wildest dreams? Isn't that what is supposed to happen if you give all the money to the richest? Isn't that what justifies unfettered capitalism? What did they do with it all? Squander it on Wall Street, gamble it away on derivatives and credit swaps? What happened to all that money?

Much sense here. The

Much sense here. The American playwright Eugene O'Neill wrote a play "Marco Polo". The (fictional) hero advises the Emperor of China that the secret of wealth for Emperors is to tax the poor, not the rich - after all there are so many more of them. This has been known for centuries, if not millennia. General welfare is a different case; incomes need to be limited at the top for all the reasons stated. But your correspondent is wrong to imagine that things are different in Europe or at any rate, in the UK, where the top rate of tax is 40% and starts at quite a low figure. The rich here are decidedly in a position to rob the poor and they're doing it ruthlessly, as witness the recent banking scandal, in which the bankers caused the problem by lending our money to excess then robbed the general public to save themselves from the consequences. (Yes, the same happened in the US). Then, irony of ironies, continued to reward themselves as though they'd been having a booming success, not the miserable failure of reality. When we were struggling to repay the US for having "helped" us during WW2, top taxes were set at 99.5%. We need a return to something like that to repay the common people for the theft they've suffered.

It is not what you

It is not what you think... True, these billionaires spent millions of dollars to promote their own news papers and columnists, but TAX is not the only neither is the main reason for them to do so. Most of them have their own agenda. Take Ruppert Murdoch whose agenda in addition to coning treasury department of paying taxes, he also is coning American of their tax dollar by pushing US to give Israel $5,000,000,000 FREE money every year. His newspaper pushed public opinion toward war with Iraq who had nothing to do with 9/11 and had no WMD!! When Obama adminestration says we do not need F22 at a cost of $350,000,000 each which did not perform even one mission in Iraq or Afghanistan, these billionaires lobbing through congress against adminestration. We do not need F22, we need New Orleans rebuilt. We do not need to wast our tax dollars on military buying those useless hardware to make billionaires more money, we need more social programs. If we help those below poverty level to rise, they will contribute to our economy and start paying taxes. After all we may not need to raise taxes back to 91%!!!

Interesting photo of

Interesting photo of Murdoch. He looks like the fox that ate all the rabbits, that because he knows he did and has. He squints because he can't look people in the eye. Passing health care reform should be a national concern and involvement right now.

Flat tax of 16 % for

Flat tax of 16 % for everyone. No exceptions.

Hartman's assumption is

Hartman's assumption is wrong, very wrong, wrong to the core, and severely wrong. The US supreme court, ruled unconstitutional the graduated personal income tax every year until 1913. In fact the supreme court ruled that way until a criminal, global conspiracy lobbied congress and the courts to create the federal reserve in 1913. Year after year, the court refused to rule graduated income taxes constitutional. Both the Federal Reserve Act and the Personal Income Tax Acts were created in 1913. The income tax was needed to force the American people to pay the interest on the national debt, which debt is increased each time the fed prints. Interest is the Feds profit for printing our own American money and making the numbers it prints on worthless paper an American debt to be paid by income taxes(our government should print our money). Eliminate the income tax and the monopoly power in patent, copyright and license (tax goods and services (sales tax) to return American to Americans.

Republicans: Comforting the

Republicans: Comforting the Comfortable, Afflicting the Afflicted.

In the 21st century a system

In the 21st century a system with only two acting parties can't assure the citizens of any measure of equality. Thankgod there is Hollywood and TV to imprint national core values and to distract us. The United States may be moribund but nobody will be able to say it was a boring crash - like the slow-motion yawn of the foundering Soviet Union. Pete Edler, Stockholm

Hark: Well said!! Hear

Hark: Well said!! Hear hear!! Reaganomics was the greatest con job of the 20th century, and Reagan was the greatest Con-municator. He made bank on the gullibility of the American people as the pitchman for G.E., medical service industry, and other big corporations. The public bought Reagan's mythology hook, line, and sinker. Science and medicine research slowed to a crawl or stopped. Mergers and acquisitions ala Michael Milken ("greed is good") were the order of the day. Even the personal computer was developed from engineering advances that originated during the 60's space program as miniaturization of the CPU did not have an obvious "business need." And without the PC, the 21st century would look exactly like the 70's. That is what "free market" fundamentalism has brought us. And now we have the Blue Dog Demos (i.e., Repubs wearing masks). I call them Scum Dog Millionaires.

Another regressive tax

Another regressive tax rip-off is the combination of the Standard Deduction (SD), $10.9,k for Married Filing Jointly) and Mortgage Interest Deduction (MID). You can't have both. If you owe $200k @ 5.5% you can deduct just enough MID to compensate for your lost SD. You effectively deduct 0% of your interest. BTW, median sales price this month: $206k. If you owe $300k, you get to deduct 33% of your interest. If you owe $2M, you get to right off 90% of your interest. $20M: you deduct 99% of your interest. SD and MID both sound great, but the combination screws the middle class.

Thanks Tom, What a great

Thanks Tom, What a great article!1 Noiw we just need to rally Americans to reinstate the tax regime of the early 20th century. I think there is plenty of support even from some enlightened wealthy people who see that more progressive tax regime will benefit everyone in the long run. Jason

Two points: 1. There is a

Two points: 1. There is a parallel to wages rising after a tax increase. After an increase in the minimum wage, small businesses and the economy in general do better (than before the increase). 2. Re Anonymous 16:33, β€œWith all the Dems in the House, you would think we couldn't lose . . .” We can’t expect Democrats to fix the current system. They are bought into the current Reaganomics boloney as are the Repugs. Things will not change as long as we keep voting for Democrats and Republicans as if they were alternatives to each other. Democrats are bribed and bought by the presence of special interest money in electoral campaigns and legislation in the same way and to the same extent as Republicans. At a recent hearing on health care reform, Senator Max Bauckus (D, Montana) made himself the poster boy for campaign reform. He laughed smugly at the ejection of single-payer advocates from the hearing. They didn’t contribute tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars to his campaign the way the health-insurance industry did. Bauckus knows where his bribes come from and how to vote and what ideas to consider and which ones don't even rate a hearing. A single payer system is not even on the table, not even to be considered and rejected.

A previous post hit the

A previous post hit the heart of the matter. The "wage" income tax is not constitutional. The constitution only calls for "gains" to be taxed. Gains is defined as profit or interest on a business or investment that we know as capital gains. The other aspect of this illegal tax is that the constitution requires that when income tax is collected, it must be apportioned back to the states based on the population of each state. This is not done. As stated previously, it is used to pay down the interest on the debt to the Federal Reserve, a private bank. It was the FED's idea to begin the wage income tax in 1913 because they knew it would be the only way the government could pay back the loans. The underhanded way the FED got Wilson to support the wage income tax was by telling him he would be able to borrow more money to go to war. After his presidency, Wilson said that helping to create the FED was the worst thing he did in office and regretted it the rest of his life.

"I am a most unhappy man. I

"I am a most unhappy man. I have unwittingly ruined my country. A great industrial nation is controlled by its system of credit. Our system of credit is concentrated. The growth of the nation, therefore, and all our activities are in the hands of a few men. We have come to be one of the worst ruled, one of the most completely controlled and dominated Governments in the civilized world no longer a Government by free opinion, no longer a Government by conviction and the vote of the majority, but a Government by the opinion and duress of a small group of dominant men." -Woodrow Wilson, after signing the Federal Reserve into existence

Fox News and the other media

Fox News and the other media are great at getting 50% of the American public to vote Republican year after year and this includes people making less than $300,000 a year and subject to Reagan's alternative minimum income double tax, people on social security and medicaid which were both enacted by Democrats in the White House and Congress and are continually under attack by the Republicans.

Well-explained Mr. Hartmann.

Well-explained Mr. Hartmann. The so-called working class have been taught to imagine that they can be rich, that it is not out of their reach. This is mostly an illusion. While it is possible, sub-cultural mores often disdain it from happening, as well as narrow education focused on preparing people for a life of following orders. A vernacular re-aquaintance with these points may be a tonic that can create some push back on an otherwise lop-sided and rigged system of pay to play.

Here's the REAL question;

Here's the REAL question; Why have any income tax at all? Income tax has created the monster we call Washington now,,it has created the great poisoner called the Pentagon,,and it gives an incredible amount of money directly to the mil/ind complex. We do not need income tax,, period. Income tax is WAR tax. Think for just a second,,,,,which federal employee did anything for you this year? Which services did he or she provide you? We are sheep,, we pay income tax because we are afraid of our federal government. I bought a pizza tonight,, well two really. The price was $20.25 and the tax was $3.53. That's all the tax I ever want to pay. Sorry feds,,,Bush increased the federal payroll by 40% in order to scare us more into paying federal taxes. I am not falling for it. Take me to prison,, but I refuse to enable the "War Machine." Want peace? Simple. Stop paying for more war. The waste in our federal government is astounding. Totally out of control. It has become a "work project" and very little else. All of us could afford great healthcare if we did not pay a federal income tax. That is the answer to healthcare. Baa, baa baa,,,pay up sheep. Send your money to your alcoholic Uncle Sam,, and then ask him please to stop drinking!! The biggest joke of all in D.C. is the U.S. Institute for Peace. What a facade. A total lie and deception. The problem is not really Washington,, because without the people enabling it, Washington is nothing but a few great museums, and some beautiful parks. We are the problem. We are the enabling sheep. We send our money,, and then we bitch and bitch, and whine and complain like little 15 year old girls. Blame the Federal Reserve,,the bankers, the Jews,, the socialists,, the Dems or Republicans,,it is all bullshit. We are the problem, because we don't have the balls to just say no.

What's left out of this

What's left out of this account of "working person's tax effect" is the psychological effects of the "bracket creep" of the late 1970s high inflation combined with the emergence of job export & the attack on private sector trade unionism. The latter two increased the downward elasticity of "what people will work for," as Hartmann puts it. To some extent this was disguised by the rise of "two income families," as the definition of "what people will work for" got shifted by the definition of who was working for wages/salaries. Plenty of federal employees did lots for me last year.

M. Taylor, Monsanto's "food

M. Taylor, Monsanto's "food safety" czar, is appointed, piled on top of Vilsack. The DEA is going into Afghanistan to fiddle with the opium trade. What other proof do we need that we need to zero out some corruption before we dump more money in, no matter whose money gets dumped? It is unfair to the taxpayer that s/he has funded so much harm. As long as the infrastructure of harm remains, with the norm in D.C. being to fund a project for a non-existent problem, then when it doesn't work, give more money to it the next year, forever. You name it, there is a federal -industrial complex next to it, feeding layers of aristocratic cabals. Do Ivy League endowments still benefit every time another little person is stuck in a private prison, with IL, liberal (in the sense of broad) control over what is called a crime? While many states have notorious bubba structures, the feds are the kings of cake-eating while the people struggle to grow beans. The feds are so far away from most ordinary people, especially the Senate, with their 6-year terms. When Hilary Clinton made a miraculous killing in the commodities market, it was the opposite of feeding 5,000 with some crumbs. We fix this stuff by shining light on it. As truthout has pointed out, oligarchic media have other things they want to do.

Someone above timidly ask

Someone above timidly ask how wages would rise as long as there is a surplus of cheap labor in the world. The answer is that wages as a WHOLE are always at a minimum after land and resource monopoly rent and government taxation have taken out their cut of the wealth production. If taxes go up, then wages must go up as a whole or the workers on the lowest and most general level of production begin to die, literally. And many do (in many ways) until the new equilibrium is reached. Now, the real solution to the tax dilemma is to tax the rent (windfall income) that accrues to the ownership of land and what are called "natural monopolies". Those values are commonly created as the economy grows and represent the logically communal source of public income. With this "economic rent" taxed, all other forms of taxation may be completely eliminated. For the discussion of this, search "Progress and Poverty" or "Henry George."

Name a demon and he'll say

Name a demon and he'll say hello. Very good article, but many of the responses here simply verify that the poor are still eager to make the rich vastly richer. A flat tax? No tax at all? First destroy this or that regulatory agency? First . . . do anything but raise the highest tax rate to over 60%! Nonsense! Tax the rich or lose the nation. (Whereupon the rich will simply move to another one, leaving the rest of us here, with their mess to live in.)