Wouldn't taxing the churches go a long way toward balancing the federal budget?  Shouldn't we atheists be pushing for this?

Tags: deficit, taxes

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"...[C]ut the taxes on the rewards for making correct economic decision."

You know, this statement brings to mind certain attractions that might make a great Republican theme-park ride. You climb into the little car, buckle down, and off you go!

Your car turns the first corner. You see four white, uneducated, blue-collar Republican males sitting around a kitchen table in some dump, swilling cheap beer. "Yeah," one says, "we could be millionaires if we wanted. But fuck it! No way we're going choose to do that! We'd just end up having to pay 15% taxes!"

The car goes around the next corner. A billionaire is sitting in his skyscraper office on 34th street, overlooking lower Manhattan. He's surrounded by his tax lawyers. "Sorry boys," he says, "but we're shutting down. Sure, I could make another $500 million next year for me and my investors. But fuck it! Why bother? There's just not enough reward if we have to pay taxes on it!"

The car goes around the next corner. There's a 92-year-old woman laying in a nursing home bed. A doctor and nurse stand nearby. "Well," says the doctor, "they cut the funding for her medical care and housing. Take her outside and lay her on the sidewalk. Sure, she has severe dementia and diabetes, but the lazy parasite should get a job! That way, she'll have the dignity of work, and the rednecks and billionaires will have their incentives for getting rich(er)!"

Priceless.

@SteveInCO

Sorry, but your position is based on factually incorrect or nonsensical statements.

You are quite correct to be angry at corporate welfare. But this is *exactly* what the stimulus plans passed to date have been--and yes that was before the Republicans did their best to put a stop to the bullshit. 

The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act is not corporate welfare. Look where the money went: $290.7B in income tax credits and hiring incentives, 244.8B for education, transportation, infrastructure, and 236.5B for medicaid/medicare, unemployment insurance, and family services.

And so do attempts to stimulate the economy by spending tons of money we don't have.

We've already covered this. The US makes money, quite literally. Look at the charts at that last link. The federal reserve has issued billions of dollars since the Bush recession started and it hasn't done a thing to inflation. The economy IS spending. There is no other way to stimulate than by spending.

The real reason jobs are not being created is because businesses have no idea what the business environment is going to be like six months or a year down the road.  If I hire someone, how many extra costs (many associated with "Obamacare") am I going to find myself having to pay, over and above his or her salary?  

The number one concern of small businesses is lack of sales, which is the result of depressed spending, and the cause of layoffs and hiring freezes. Not only that, companies with fewer than 50 employees (96% of all US firms) are exempt from responsibility requirements under ObamaCare. 

You will notice that by the time you combine capital gains and corporate income tax the percentage rate is over 50% in the US and it's already higher than many of the countries people here want us to emulate.

The effective average corporate tax rate was 12.1% according to the CBO, and 55% of US multinationals have zero or even negative tax liability in some years.

This is one aspect of the corporate welfare system I mentioned earlier. The corporations pay (mostly Republican) Congressmen to create tax loopholes and other subsidies for their types of income. The official corporate income tax rate is set at 35%, but US firms are so adept at tax avoidance (and Congress is so corrupt) they almost never actually pay it.

Also, there is no valid reason to toss capital incomes and corporate incomes into the same pile when calculating tax liability. Corporations exist mainly to shelter individuals from liability. For instance, if Chase goes belly-up, the CEO won't lose his personal fortune. After all, he says, they're totally separate things! So Chase's creditors can't touch his stuff. But when the IRS comes, suddenly it's different. It's all one big pile of money, he howls, taxed twice!

I'd be willing to make a deal with him, though. We'll tax the corporation's income and his capital gains compensation "once" as though it's all in one big pile. But when the company fails or gets sued, it's still all in one big pile, and his income and assets are fair game to Chase's creditors and litigators.

A society cannot get prosperous by simply passing money around, more and more furiously..  Actual goods and services must be produced. 
Banks do little else but pass money around and they're quite prosperous, even to the point of being Too Big to Fail, and then having the $700 billion TARP bailout passed around to them. But that's a separate point.
It seems you're suggesting the stimulus was "simply passing money around" and no actual goods and services came of it. That's such an absurd statement that I find it hard to believe genuinely believe it yourself. And if you do I suppose, if questioned, it'll come down to your word or a link to a Fox "News" editorial. 
And that is being impeded by an explosion of regulation on both production and on hiring of employees, and by one of the most hostile-to-businesses tax codes in the developed world.  Which demagogues are screaming needs to be made worse.
Save it. It's pure fantasy. The "explosion of regulation" and astronomical tax rates exist only in the imaginations of screaming demagogues on Fox "News".
It is a fact that the three biggest economic booms of the last century, the 20s, the 60s and the 80s, all began when taxes were cut--furthermore what was cut the most were the top rates.
It sounds like you're saying trickle-down has a long record of success as a universal cure-all: it triggers booms, lowers deficits, and ends recessions. You might be persuasive if you produced some empirical data to back up these "facts". You may find that rather difficult, but by all means, have at it.
The 1920s culminated in the Great Depression, and in regulation to prevent that kind of meltdown from ever happening again. That regulation was repealed in 1999 and was accompanied by the largest tax cut in history (mostly for the top rates) and the result was Bush's Great Recession. The rich certainly did very well as a result, but the rest of us: not so much.
[C]ut the taxes that impede the flow of investment capital to corporations, and cut the taxes on the rewards for making correct economic decision. 
That's ridiculous. Lack of capital didn't cause or prolong the recession. Only 3% of small businesses say lack of capital is their top impediment, and just 8% say getting capital is a problem at all.
Businesses are struggling because consumers aren't buying. There's no reason to start or expand a business when businesses are selling under capacity (some to the point of going out of business entirely). That's lack of sales, not lack of capital. And since business incomes are the result of sales (e.i. spending) lower taxes help, but nowhere near as much higher sales.
I don't mind having a conversation about this subject, but it's less interesting (and even tiresome) when I'm the only one posting assertions backed by reason and citations from reputable sources of information. If you want to continue, do your homework. Bring something more substantial to the table than recitations of flimsy Republican ideology, or rhetorical nonsense like glibly misrepresenting my words ("passing money around more and more furiously!") rather than responding genuinely to address their substance.

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