Saturday, July 19, 2014

GOP Passes Bill To Make It Easier For Rich Tax Cheats To Get Away With It

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Sometimes we forget that right-wing political parties generally are not really organized around racism, bigotry and societal divisiveness just for the sake of those values. Racism, bigotry and that kind of purposeful divisiveness are not really core values for most legitimate right wing political parties. Greed and selfishness are. The rest is a means to an end, an appeal to base right-wing populism and a system of stoking primitive fears for much narrower ends.

The bill the financial services bill the House passed on Wednesday-- by an almost entirely partyline vote, 228-195-- goes right to the core of what it means to embrace a conservative vision of governance than anything pandering to toothless, superstition-driven racists and primitives in the Old Confederacy. It makes it harder for the IRS to hold tax cheats-- the real core of Republicanism-- accountable. The 6 corrupt New Dems and Blue Dogs who backed the bill-- John Barrow (GA), Collin Peterson (MN), Nick Rahall (WV), Pete Gallego (TX), Mike McIntyre (NC) and Bill Owens (NY)-- are from the Republican wing of the Democratic Party and for this kind of vote, they are just plain garden variety Republicans catering to the wealthy donors who finance their sleazy political careers.

And the Hate Talk Radio zombies get some raw meat out of it because the tactic the GOP used to weaken accountability was to partially underfund an already severely underfunded IRS, whose enforcement budget was cut by a debilitating 25%. Win/win for the right. Their tax cheat base is sipping champaign and the rednecks are dancing around their radios with a breweski in each hand.
The bill also includes a handful of policy riders directed at the SEC and its implementation of Dodd-Frank overhaul (PL 111-203), including provisions loosening derivatives rules and imposing new reporting requirements.

A separate Democratic amendment that would have blocked a change in how the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is funded was also rejected. The bill would place the watchdog agency under the annual appropriations process; currently it receives funding transfers from the Federal Reserve.

...“This will prevent the IRS from going after tax cheats,” said Jose E. Serrano, D-N.Y., the top Democrat on the House Appropriations Financial Services Subcommittee.

The Treasury Department estimates that each dollar spent on enforcement yields about six dollars in revenue collection.

...The annual spending bill includes appropriations for the District of Columbia, which sparked a flurry of partisan policy riders. Democrats have repeatedly accused Republicans of trying to dictate local policies through the spending process.

Lawmakers adopted, 241-181, an amendment offered by Republican Thomas Massie of Kentucky that would block funds from being used by the District of Columbia to enforce various provisions of DC law related to its handgun ban.

“It’s difficult for D.C. residents to exercise their God-given right to bear arms,” Massie said, adding that “Congress has the right to legislate in this area.”

But Democrat Eleanor Holmes Norton-- the sole representative of D.C.-- said Massie is “not accountable to the residents of the District of Columbia.” She called the amendment “entirely inappropriate” and pointed to a slew of dangerous scenarios if D.C. citizens were allowed to carry handguns, including bringing firearms into federal buildings.

Also tucked into the underlying measure is a provision that would prohibit federal or local District of Columbia funds from going toward the legalization or decriminalization of marijuana. The D.C. city council voted in March to remove criminal penalties for the possession of small amounts of marijuana, while D.C. residents will vote on legalizing marijuana on the November ballot.

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1 Comments:

At 2:36 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

The Democrats have never understood how to talk about taxes. It's another powerful topic they've ceded to the Republicans. Democrats wind up talking about fairness, blah-blah when almost every American has a not-so-secret admiration for the guy who manages to avoid taxes.

If you've managed to hide a couple hundred here and there from the IRS, the last thing you want to talk about is better enforcement, because you know damn well the better enforcement is gonna be on your ass, not on the Koch brothers' asses.

This state of affairs is, of course, by design. The tax code is so Byzantine, so opaque and so unfair because first, it enables those with real money to keep more of it safe from taxation. Second, it makes parasites like lawyers and tax accountants indispensable. But most of all, it validates the notion in the broad populace that the IRS is an instrument of tyranny that metes out punishment under inscrutable rules that target ordinary people arbitrarily.

All of this adds fuel to the bonfires lit in the name of abolishing the IRS and doing away with income taxes altogether.

Add in a little perversion of history, a few chants of "No Taxation Without Representation!" and you've got a full-blown Teahadist Nullification Hootenanny.

In the face of all this, the Democrats, shitting their pants, dribble some stupidities about streamlining government.

How I long for someone with the balls to stand up and say, "Fuck you assholes, GROW UP! You want roads, you want clean water, you want armies, you want drugs and food that don't poison you, you want schools, you want a decent retirement, you want, you want, you want. But you don't want to pay for it. And you're too stupid to understand that the guy who's got most of the money can afford to pay more of the burden."

Of course there's no politician who can talk that bluntly, but Elizabeth Warren is one of the few who seems to explain the issues around taxes in an honest and adult manner. I can only admire her relentless good manners in the face of the howler monkeys abroad in the land.

When they talk about money, there's isn't a Republican alive who doesn't modify the noun "Democrat" with "Tax-and-Spend."

We can't avoid it, so maybe it's time to embrace it:

--Yes, we'll tax you, but we'll tax the 1% a whole lot more.

--And yes, we'll spend the money -- on the things a responsible democratic government needs to secure the blessings of life and liberty for the people.

Here's what we'll spend it on:

--A road in your town that doesn't blow out your tires.
--A school in your neighborhood that teaches your kid how to read and write.
--A visit to the doctor or hospital that's guaranteed to be affordable.
--Clean water, safe food, decent working conditions.
--A secure retirement without the fear of poverty.
--A post office in your town so you can always be connected to your government and to the world, as mandated by the Constitution.
--Non-profit research into the technologies that will provide good jobs in energy, construction, healthcare and education for your children and grandchildren.

The infantile notion of American exceptionalism -- that Americans can only prosper as sociopathic, Randian libertarians who don't need no gubmint handouts -- must be rooted out of the American id. Democrats must be on message every minute of every day: There are some things you and I can't do by ourselves. We need the government to help us stand against the power of the 1%. We need to reclaim our government -- not to destroy it but to make it work for us.

We have forgotten what the truly exceptional American notion is all about. It is that we are supposed to have a government that is of the people, by the people, for the people, and that we must rally now to keep it from perishing from the earth, a victim of greed and neglect.

 

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