Anonymous wrote:Obama has had 4 years to fix the tax issue and.....
Anonymous wrote:Liberal hate of successful people. The food stamp president.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Liberal hate of successful people. The food stamp president.
What a stupid statement! In fact, Democratics tend to win the rich vote. The criticism of Rommey is not that he is successful, but that he is paying taxes at a lower rate that those who do real work. Remember, Reagan eliminates the capital gains tax, and many Republicans support a flat tax of 1-2 marginal rates (all above what Rommey paid).
Anonymous wrote:Liberal hate of successful people. The food stamp president.
Anonymous wrote:Who cares, really?
jsteele wrote:The "Buffet Rule" is the idea that billionaires should not pay a lower tax rate than their secretaries. The "Romney Rule" apparently is that billionaires who pay a tax rate of 13.9% on $21.6 million in income should maintain Swiss and Cayman Island bank accounts and run for president on a platform that would lower taxes on people like himself while raising them on lower income earners.
Remember earlier discussions on DCUM when several posters assured us that the Buffet Rule was unnecessary because the wealthy actually do pay their fair share? Mitt Romney is a walking contradiction to that suggestion. An added bonus of Romney's tax release is that we have learned that this year he closed his Swiss and Cayman Island accounts because he is "running for President for Pete's sake".
Anonymous wrote:It's revolting, but not surprising. What is surprising is that Romney would let his opponents push him into releasing this info in the primary or that they would even ask. Newt has gone full circle away from Ronald Reagan's "thou shalt" and has put his own ambitions and ego above all.
I'm not a Republican, but I've really admired how much they have accomplished as a party since Reagan - most of which was gained as a result of being so unified (e.g., Romney's 13.9% tax rate, for starters) - and am in confused/hopeful that they appear to be throwing this critical advantage away. Can't quite think what to make of it.