25 Şubat 2013 Pazartesi

Who is Taxed, Corporations or People?

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Some Justices on the Supreme Court still insist that corporations are "people". Pictured below is the Ugland House of Grand Cayman Island. Inside the building is the office of the law firm Maples and Calder, which is currently called "home" by over 18,000 people who reside there, all living blissfully together under the same roof as happy tax shelters --- unless that is, shell corporations are considered as only "half-people".

Corporations were never enslaved, persecuted, discriminated against, tortured or murdered. Corporations were never forced to sit in the back of a bus. Corporations were never sent to prison (although some of their CEOs did hard time).

Our Founding Fathers never stipulated that corporations had inalienable rights. A Catholic priest will tell you that corporations don't have souls that go to Heaven or Hell when they die (when they go out of business).

No one can clone a corporation with DNA.

Despite what the Supreme Court says, people know what people are --- and corporations are not people, at least, not according to the Merrian-Webster dictionary.

Legal scholars will tell you that corporations are just legal entities that exist only because governments (people) permit them to exist. Corporations are just artificial man-made vehicles through which sales, wages and profits flow.

And when governments impose corporate taxes, the actual burden of who pays the corporate tax may fall on any three groups of people that receive such flows: the customers, the workers and the shareholders --- who are the ultimate owners of the corporation.

Corporations cannot raise prices to compensate for the corporate income tax because they will be undercut by businesses to which those taxes don't apply --- such as sole proprietorships, partnerships and S-corporations --- those business owners who are taxed under the individual income tax.

That leaves two remaining groups that may bear the burden of the corporate tax --- workers and the business owners (the shareholders).

The notable Bruce Bartlett wrote an excellent piece for the New York Times, and points out that several economists have shown that usually the shareholders bears the brunt of the corporate tax. One study he cites shows that the shareholders bear ALL the tax burden.

But Treasury economists conclude that 82 percent of the corporate tax falls on capital and 18 percent on labor, just as the Tax Policy Center assumes that 20 percent of the burden is on labor, while 80 percent is on the shareholders.

Another study by Oxford University economist Li Liu and Rutgers economist Rosanne Altshuler concludes that it's labor who bears 60 percent of the corporate tax burden.

One might wish to compromise (for the sake of a convenient consensus) and say that employers and employees each bear 50 percent of the corporate income tax burden (individual income taxes are a separate issue).

So if the corporate tax rate is raised, customers won't pay part of the burden for corporate taxes with higher prices, but newly hired employees might be offered less in wages --- or current employees might be asked to forgo their benefits and/or take a pay cut --- or instead, a few workers could be laid off, with the remaining employees being forced to bear the extra work load. And in doing so, would be expected to be "more productive" (working harder and faster for less).

And the shareholders, which are also usually the company's board of directors, and many times, very large institutional investors (such as the big banks, hedge funds and private equity firms) --- pay part of the burden for corporate taxes by receiving lower quarterly dividends, or they might earn less in capital gains when they sell off their huge blocks of stock.

Also, the CEOs pay part of the burden for corporate taxes, and might earn less if the rate is raised --- they might only earn $12 million a year instead of $13 million a year --- but they will still pay a lower income tax rate on their stock options with a 20% capital gains tax rate, which is lower than what their secretaries might be taxed on their hourly wages --- not to mention, their secretaries will still be paying Social Security taxes on 100% of their income, whereas, stock options (capital gains) aren't taxed for Social Security; and even if they were, the CEOs would be protected by the $113,700 income "cap".

And if a corporation (the shareholders) don't not want to bear any burden at all for corporate taxes, they can always un-incorporate --- but then, they might not also enjoy the full protection of limited liability from lawsuits waged against them in response to bad behavior and poor corporate governance. Many could not avoid jail --- and their personal possessions, such as their homes, could be at risk in legal settlements.

So ultimately, in my opinion, the burden of the corporate tax falls, not on corporate shareholders or the customers, but mostly on workers in the form of lower wages and benefits (and because the major shareholders are in a much higher income bracket than most of the employees).

And this is another reason why labor unions are so vital to the health of the middle-class ---- because when fair wages are negotiated, it "redistributes" a fairer portion of the CEO's under-taxed and excessive compensation package into the empty pockets of their much harder working employees.

Even if the $9.00 minimum wage were in effect this year, the inflation-adjusted value would still be lower than it had been in the late 1960s --- and those workers would still be earning less than their counterparts did almost 50 years ago.

So if corporations refuse to pay better wages (which would also increase federal income tax revenues to the Treasury), then our only recourse would be in the form of a "claw back" --- by extracting more by way of corporate taxes.

We can accomplish this, NOT by raising corporate tax rates (keeping the current 35% "statutory" corporate tax rate as it is), but by eliminating all the tax loopholes that congress has endowed them with, because many of the largest corporations are allowed to pay an average "effective" corporate tax rate of only 14.1% --- while many more pay no
corporate taxes at all.

The most recent (and best reason) for reforming the corporate tax code >>> Facebook is getting a multi-billion-dollar tax break on its corporate taxes because it paid its executives income in the form of stock options and dividends --- just like Facebook co-founder Eduardo Saverin, who renounced his U.S. citizenship to avoid paying income taxes on his capital gains.

We should either eliminate all the corporate loopholes (and subsidies), or end slave wages
completely by making the federal mandatory minimum wage at least $15.00 an hour...one or the other or both. (Voting for Democrats to do this would be very difficult, but voting for Republicans would make it virtually impossible)

If corporations are people, and people own corporations, and workers aren't owned by anyone, why is it that they are the ones being paid slave wages, rather than evicting the tax dodgers from that house in the Cayman Islands.

* This was also posted at the Daily Kos

  • My Related Post: Life Begins at Incorporation

It's NEVER a Good Time to Tax the Rich

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Weren't "good" economies the reason for lowering taxes inthe past? So if the economy is "bad" now, shouldn't we raise them?

As the March 1st deadline approaches for a budget sequester, a new PewResearch survey finds that the majority of Americans don't want spending cuts, butinstead, want to increase spending or maintain it at current levels.

Mitt Romney earns most of his money with "carried interest" (averagingabout $20 million a year), but accordingto Roll Call, there's a rumor that some Republican lobbyists might agree toclose the carried interest tax loophole in anticipation of the sequester.

In one year alone MittRomney had reported paying as little as 13.9 percent in capitalgainson $21.7 million he earned as carried interest. Will he soon have to start payingthe top marginal rate of 39.9 percent?

Mitt Romney and his money.

The "carried interest" loophole allows investors, whose personal income is generated mainly from"investments" (aka unearned income, such as stocks, bonds,annuities, vested stock options, real estate, rental income, dividends, silver,wine, art, gold, etc.), to pay taxes according to the capitalgains tax rate of 20%, which is significantly lower than the top marginalrate of 39.9% on earned income (such as regular hourly wages or managerialsalaries).

Some anonymous Republicans are only just now finally admitting that, by eliminatingthis loophole, itsimpact on the economy would only be "minimal", and they would considerchanging the tax code --- but not because we need the additional revenue --- butbecause it would "primarily hurt Democratic campaign donors".

Republicans have argued against similar tax increases in the past on thegrounds that it would "discourage work and investment and harm economicgrowth." (Bla, bla, bla...they always have a reason to not taxthe rich)

But closing this loophole wouldn't really be a tax increase, it would just bechanging thedefinition of their source of income, then taxing them accordingly --- carriedinterest would be taxed as regular wages ("unearned income" vs."earned income").

Waiters are taxed on their tips, why aren't multi-millionaires taxed in the same wayon their carried interest? Shouldn't the people with the least get thebetter tax break? I'm mean, it's not the same as if the rich were buying in bulkand expecting a discount.

But the rumor about eliminating the carried interest loophole is most likelyfalse. A spokesman for Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (the Republicanfrom Kentucky) rejected the premise that Senate Republicans would supporteliminating the carried interest loophole. (As we've learned over the past twoyears, his Tea Party supporters would rather we have NO taxes orgovernment at all.)

Michigan Democrat Senator Carl Levin introduced a bill that only mentionscarried interest but suggested it would be a good vehicle for raising additionalrevenue. However, eliminating the loophole is not included in the SenateDemocratic bill to replace this year’s sequester cuts.

Some politicians claim that by taxing carried interest (aka unearnedincome) as normal wages (aka earned income) might not be as simple asit sounds, and there is vigorous disagreement about which "technique"to use for doing so. (As though it takes a rocket scientist to figure this out.Why not just tax Warren Buffett at the same tax rate as his secretary? Simple.What's socomplicated about that?)

Private equity firms (such as Bain Capital), investment banks (such asGoldman Sachs) and hedge funds would be the most affected by eliminatingthe carried interest tax loophole, and argue (as always) that it would have anegative effect on economic growth at a time when the economic recovery remains"weak".

But the economy is only "weak" for the unemployed and the under-paidworkers. The "investor's economy" is doing very well --- recordprofits, record CEO salaries and record bonuses --- remember?

Over the last four years, the stock indexes have over doubled; the Dow JonesIndustrial Average recently hit a 52-week high of 14,058 and is on track tomatch its all-time historical high of 14,164 --- when almost four years ago onMarch 9, 2009 it was down to only 6,547.

Mitt Romney had said as much last year when hesaid the rich were doing "just fine".

Ken Spain, the vice president of public affairs for the Private Equity GrowthCapital Council (a lobbyist for vulture capitalists) said, “Lastyear, private equity firms invested over $140 billion dollars in U.S.-basedcompanies in every state and in every congressional district across the country.A tax hike on business investment would only serve to undermine our economicrecovery and disincentivize the kind of entrepreneurial risk taking to start,save and grow businesses."

Bla, bla, bla...the same ole, same ole excuses and threats, "If you tax us more, we won't try to make more money,and we won't hire more people." BillO'Reilly made a similar threat if Obama raised his taxes, and O'Reilly stillhasn't quit his job.

We've been hearing them whine like this for the past 40 years. When WOULDhave been a good time to eliminate this carried interest tax loophole? Would ithave been back in 2003 when George W. Bush had LOWERED the capitalgains tax rate, when the economy was doing "good"?

The rich NEVER think that ANY time is a "good" timeto raise their taxes, so let's have them make that "shared sacrifice"now, because the rest of us have sacrificed enough already.

* Capitalgains and corporatetaxes need major reform. They call it "unearned income", so even theyadmit that their money isn't earned! Too Much Online | Inequality and Excess

Cable TV Giant Tried before Supreme Court

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February 23, 2013 - Washington D.C. (AP) Last Friday afternoon alittle known, and much less publicized, milestone event took place behind closeddoors at the U.S. Supreme Court, while most of America had their attentiondiverted on the upcoming "sequester" cuts in government spending.

Bud Meyers, a long time advocate for the poor, the elderly, the disabled, theunemployed and the middle-class, had stood before the highest court of the land,to argue a case on behalf of millions of disenfranchised Americans regardingincome inequality, political corruption, excessive wealth, corporate greed, taxevasion, healthcare fraud and anti-labor business practices.

This proceeding, and the Chief Justices' ultimate landmark decision on WageWorkers of the United States vs. Cablevision et al Corporate Others isexpected to be one the most important cases ever heard by the Supreme Court inover 100 years, not since Standard Oil was broken up in 1911.

TV cameras were not allowed in the court, but Bud Meyers is expected to givean exclusive interview on this historic event to an as-of-yet unnamed majorcable news station later this month.

As of this press release, Mister Meyers is on his way home to Las Vegas,Nevada --- where he has lived since 1989.

---- BEGIN TRANSCRIPT -----

"Honorable Justices, members of Congress, and the American people ---thank you all for allowing me to present The People's case. Mr. Chief Justice,may it please the Court:

In August of 2011 CBS publisheda story reporting that twenty-five of the nation's highest-paid CEOs tookhome more pay than their companies shelled out in corporate income taxes, eventhough their companies earned an average of $1.9 billion, according to a studycited by the Institute for Policy Studies.

The IPS noted that 18 of these "hyperactive tax-dodging"corporations operate subsidiaries in offshore tax havens, such as Bermuda,Singapore and Luxembourg. They've also hired aggressive lobbyists to argue forspecial tax breaks.

There's a building in the Cayman Islands called the Ugland House of GrandCayman Island. Inside, there is the office of the law firm Maples andCalder, which currently houses 18,000 shell corporations for the benefit oftax shelters. There was legislation regarding these tax havens that wasrecently introduced to Congress by Senator Bernie Sanders earlier thismonth.

#16 on the list in the CBS report was my ex-boss, Steve Wynn of the WynnResorts casino in Las Vegas. His company paid ZERO in federal income taxesand had 16 subsidiaries in tax havens.

Today I received an email for a petition on behalf of a 44-year-old womannamed La'kesia Johnson. She and 21 other co-workers were just illegally firedfor trying to unionize with the Communications Workers of America at Cablevision/Optimum.They were locked out last month on January 30th. (Fullstory here)

La'kesia wrotein her petition," I've worked as a Cablevision/Optimumtechnician for more than 6 years. A year ago, my co-workers and I voted to forma union, so we could have a voice on the job. The company said they had an 'opendoor' policy, but when we wanted to talk with them, they told us they were toobusy. Later they fired 22 of us, then told us we were permanently replaced. Ihave two children, Alexis and Rayshawn, one of whom has needed serious medicalcare, which has left us with a stack of bills."

But La'kesia is lucky, because she doesn't live in North Carolina. MisterJason Saine had received unemployment benefits for more than a year before hefinally landed a job --- as a Republican state legislator in North Carolina.Then after he was seated, he joined with his fellow Republicans in supporting abill that slashedunemployment insurance. Because of outsourcing and H-B1 VISAS, how are thesepeople expected to survive without jobs?

#22 on the list in the CBS report was the CEO James Dolan, whose familycontrols Cablevision, and whose federal income tax was a negative$3 million. JimDolan is also the executive chairman of Madison Square Garden, whose assetsinclude the NBA's New York Knicks and Radio City Music Hall. Dolan had a6-year average compensationof $16.43 million a year.

Last year Cablevision was approved for a $37.5 million taxbreak for staying in Newark New Jersey to save 574 jobs with an averagesalary of $37,000. But 50% of the American workforce earns $28,000 or less ayear. These wages, not even with the proposed $9.00 an hour minimum wage bill,can not sustain this economy. Are American workers' labor now only worth theprice of a latte at Starbucks?

Recently another giant cable company, Charter Communications, has juststruck a deal to acquire Cablevision's Optimum West holdings in fourWestern states for $1.6 billion --- in cash. Just who's economy issupposed to be doing bad, theirs or ours?

In 2007 the Dolan family, for $10.6 billion, had once attempted to take Cablevisionprivate, but it's shareholders would not agree to the sale. Cablevision'sstock trades under the ticker symbol CVC on the New York Stock Exchangeand its current marketcap is almost $4 billion. Just who exactly has been making this "sharedsacrifice" that the American people have been hearing so much about? (* SECfilings and reports are here)

Also --- I sure hope La'kesia Johnson, the former Cablevision employeewho was illegally fired, won't need to rely on ObamaCare® for herdaughter's continued medical treatment, because the Pre-Existing ConditionInsurance Plan willsoon stop taking new applications; and also, because La'kesia is nowunemployed, I sure hope Medicaid and TANF and food stamps and unemploymentinsurance benefits are not also included in the upcoming sequester cuts.

And especially so if she or her daughter ever needs to make a hospital visit.

CNN and Time magazine investigatedhospital billing and found a family that was charged hundreds of thousandsof dollars. Hospitals are charging us $12 for those little paper pill cups andpaying their hospital CEO's over $9 million a year. People who are fullyinsured, or those on Medicare, have their medical costs negotiated, and eventhough there is fraud in billing to the government, at least those patientsaren't being bilked to death, at least, not like those who are eitherunder-insured or can not afford any health insurance at all.

We now spend 20percent of our GDP—an estimated $2.8 trillion — on health care everyyear. And we know the real reasons why, don't we? A special report on why ourmedical bills are so expensive can be found in a paper I wrote called "Fraud,Greed & Profits Drives Healthcare Costs".

The Center for Public Integrity also wrote an investigative seriescalled “Crackingthe Codes”, which found that thousands of medical professionals havesteadily billed higher rates for treating seniors on Medicare over the lastdecade — adding $11 billion or more to their fees. The investigation suggestedthat Medicare billing errors and abuses are worsening as doctors and hospitalsswitch to electronichealth records. (Readmore...)

But just like with tax evasion, and hiring more auditors at the IRS to catchtax cheats, the Republicans had cut the IRS budget (sayingthat with lower taxes, there will be less tax evasion) --- just as the GOPwould rather cut benefits to seniors on Medicare (or raise their premiums),rather than hiring more people to investigate fraud in the healthcare industry.Is that the permanent status quo between Congress and the top 1%?

The CEOs of these hospitals (as well as Big Pharma, the insurancecompanies, and other related providers in the healthcare industry), besidesearning these huge salaries year after year after year --- they are also payinga much lower tax rate than the rest us do in the form of "capital gainstaxes" --- by receiving stock options in company stock as a part of theirannual compensation packages --- just like those cited in the CBS story, such asSteve Wynn of Wynn Resorts and James Dolan of Cablevision

Just as Senator Elizabeth Warren had said, the whole system is rigged fromthe top down.

A newstudy performed by Thomas Hungerford of the non-partisan CongressionalResearch Service noted that 71% of all capital gains went to those in thetop 1% (e.g. James Dolan of Cablevision) --- and notes that historicallylow capital gains tax rates are by far the largest contributor to America'shistorically high income inequality. And the top 1% has enjoyed this specialtax since 1921. Why are they so special? What makes them feel so ENTITLED tothese special tax breaks when 46 million Americans need to rely on food stampsto eat.

What we've been seeing for at least the past two decades, some likemyself say, for the past 40 years, is this: these very wealthy and politicallyconnected CEOs have lobbied congress to pay less (or nothing at all) incorporate taxes, while at the same time, denying fair wages, healthcarebenefits, and job security to their own employees --- just average hard-workingAmericans who, through no fault of their own, were being systematically pillagedwhile trying to care for themselves and their families

Our "captains of industry" and "pillars of the community"were doing this while also enjoying special tax breaks on their own executivesalaries, and while the healthcare providers had been ripping off poor, sick andunder-insured families --- while also engaging in Medicare and billing fraud.

They were engaged in these nefarious activates, all at the expense of theAmerican taxpayers, who ultimately, in one form or another, have had to make upthe difference in their taxes --- because, thanks to Congress, these CEOs andcorporations were not legally obligated to pay "fair" taxes themselves--- even while the less wealthy and politically connected Americans have beensuffering the most --- and being forced to live with the bulk of any cuts togovernment spending. It's always those cuts that most affects usthe most --- the poor and middle-class.

We need tax revenues, but theRepublicans like Senator John Boehner have always been falsely claiming that"We don't have a revenue problem, we have a spending problem" --- andsay that "now, in a bad economy, is not a good time to raise taxes".But they always say NEVERis a good time to raise taxes on the very wealthy. And they always claimthat "government doesn't create jobs, the private sector does", butgovernment has always been the largest job creator ever since World War II. Walmartand McDonalds are the next largest job creators.

In closing, I'd like to finish with this:

What has the ultra-rich ever sacrificed in the last 100 years? In time ofwar, they dodge the draft. In time of financial need, they dodge taxes. For toolong they have been dodging their moral and patriotic duties to this country, tous, the people of the United States of America. I beg the court for redress.

"You must find them all guilty on all counts --- andthey all must be made to pay! Thank you very much your honors. I rest ThePeople's case."

---- END TRANSCRIPT -----

--- media frenzy --- applause --- cheers and whistles --- standing ovation--- pats on back --- handshakes --- camera flashes --- church bells in thedistance --- young mothers with babies break into tears --- ticker tapeparade upon exiting the courthouse --- the U.S. Marine Corps Band plays Star andStripes Forever --- TV helicopters overhead --- a small child offers flowers ---a phone call of congratulations to Bud Meyers from President Obama ---

* Note to the Republicans members of Congress who don'trealize parody or satire: A full disclaimer is applied to this post, which wasposted on behalf of Bud Meyers, and canbe found here.

**Also posted at the Daily Kos

Where's My California Unemployment Check?

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Have you recently applied for California unemployment insurance benefits and you're wondering where's my California unemployment check? The easiest method for finding out the answer to where's my California unemployment check is by calling the state of California's Employment Development Division in order to request information about the status of the check. Bear in mind that if you filed an initial application online for unemployment benefits, it can take up to 10 days before you receive any kind of information about your account or a check.
If you use the phone system to contact the California EDD or Employment Development Division you'll need to use your PIN to do so. If you use the telephone system to file an initial claim, you already have a personal identification number. If not you can use the same system to create a PIN which you will use to access the system each time you use it. You can contact the appropriate telephone number for the division anytime between 6:00 am and midnight, Monday through Saturday, and anytime from 6:00 am to 9:00 pm on Sunday Pacific Time.
Telephone numbers are offered in Vietnamese, Chinese, Spanish, and English. The English telephone number to call the department is (866) 333-4606. The Spanish telephone lines to contact is the same number as the English line. These lines are automated telephone lines so you will need to follow the voice prompts to get the information that you require. If you're looking to speak with the customer service representative you will need to contact the English line at (800) 300-5616; the Spanish line at (800) 326-8937; the Chinese line at (800) 547-3506 or (866) 303-0706, and the Vietnamese line at (800) 547-2058. If you are hearing-impaired you'll need to contact the TTY line at (800) 815-9387 to inquire about the status of your unemployment check and claim.

Veteran's Workforce Program Florida Veterans

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Search Veteran's Publications
MISSION
The mission of the AWI Veterans' Program is to promote and maximize the employment of Florida's veterans, especially veterans with barriers to employment, utilizing the complete menu of One-Stop Career Center resources.

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Florida ’s One-Stop Career Centers are staffed with a network of professional Disabled Veterans Outreach Program (DVOP) Specialists and Local Veterans Employment Representatives (LVER) staff who are tasked to provide priority workforce services to veteran customers.  DVOP staff focus on providing intensive case management services to veterans with barriers to employment, disabled veterans, etc.  LVERs conduct outreach to employers and engage in advocacy efforts with hiring executives and managers to increase employment opportunities for veterans.  LVER staff are also responsible for ensuring that veterans are provided the full range of priority workforce services in the One-Stop Career Center, providing functional oversight over the one-stop Veteran's Program and service delivery strategies and services targeting veterans.

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FLORIDA VETERANS' RESOURCES
•RWB Veterans' Program Websites
•County Veteran Service Officers
•Florida Veterans' Program Staff Directory
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Veteran's Program additional program information:
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24 Şubat 2013 Pazar

Pastor defiant over Qur'an burning

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Dressed in black robes, the white-haired Pastor Terry Jones looked down from his position in the "judge's chair"set up in the mock Courtroom of his tiny church.

Judgement HAD Been hmmmm. A verdict had occurred Been Given And now it was time for the sentence be carried out Thurs. The "guilty" party - the Qur'an - was set in a black metal fire-proof tray.

"Give Them a few minutes. Those WHO Desire leave Thurs. That is not a problem," Jones intoned in his Gravelly monotone as his Assistant Pastor Wayne Sapp Stood next to the book, looking Solemn with his hands placed behind his back.

read more at http://www.mg.co.za

Katie Couric Replacements For 'CBS Evening News' (PHOTOS, POLL)

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With news of Katie Couric's departure from the "CBS Evening News" All but official, talk is turning Quickly Thurs Who will replace her at the anchor desk. The network newscasts May Not Be The titans They once were, But They're Still the Most-Watched News Programs around, and anybody WHO gets the gig Will Be Occupying a very prestigious position. Below, see "some of the hotly-and Not So hotly, and purely speculatively-tipped picks for Potential Couric replacements. Be sure to tell us Whether you think These people nudged Actually take Couric's spot, Whether or hell will freeze over before That Happens.