Saturday, April 15, 2006

Taxing Thinking About Taxes: Beware of W, The Tax Wolf in Sheep's Clothing

As the President stepped up to his unholy microphone to deliver a euolgy for the American economy as we know it, he suggest that his solution to our economic woes is the way to go:
Not everyone agrees that we should let you keep more of your money. Some in Washington said that by cutting taxes, we were "ruining" our economy. On the day that the House and Senate were finalizing the 2003 tax cuts, one Democratic leader said these cuts would "do nothing to create jobs." Since then, the facts have proven that critic wrong -- 5.1 million times over.

Tax relief has done exactly what it was designed to do: It has created jobs and growth for the American people. Yet some here in Washington are now proposing that we raise taxes, either by repealing the tax cuts or letting them expire. These are the same politicians who told us that letting you keep more of your own money would be irresponsible, and reckless, and shameful. They were wrong then, and they are wrong now. To keep our economy creating jobs and opportunity, Congress needs to make the tax relief permanent.
Blah, blah, blah Ginger, blah blah...Beware the wolf in sheep's clothing.

When the W, Rove and Co regularly borrows billions of dollars for the illegitimate war in Iraq (which, by the way, more and more Generals suggest we should have never perpetrated), isn't that worse than an income tax? The interest alone could bankrupt the US Treasury.

Are there any treasury experts out there who care to comment on how the National Debt (of which we actually had a tremendous surplus when W stole the election in Y2K) is going to turn our Stars and Stripes into straight Chinese Red?

3 comments:

Cathie said...

Please...it's called the Ronald Reagan Memorial National Debt!

Neil Shakespeare said...

There he goes, talking about those 'Straw Men' again! He just can't get enough of those invisible people who don't want us to keep more of our money! Those bastards!...whoever they are...

Anonymous said...

Ronald Reagan Memorial National Debt

LOL...much better than Reagan Washington National Airport, which I still call "National"