palladin9479 wrote:@JL
We need to reduce spending and raise actual revenue (not a fictional percentage rate).
I agree. The question is how.
'Corporations and financial folks' are using the current tax loopholes that the folks in Washington have carefully written into regulatory legislation. The more regulations that come out of Washington, the more loopholes and exemptions have to be created to mollify the business class - to at least keep an illusion that the folks currently in charge WANT businesses to succeed. But the more regulation, the LESS friendly it is to the small-business climate - to the businesses that DON'T give a whole lot of campaign contributions.
So you've got an interesting environment. On the one hand, DC has to put the screws to the big guys to convince folks (possibly like you) that they're doing their part to regulate things. You're conditioned to think that the Corps and Banks are Evil. So you'll accept more regulation to stifle their evilness.
On the other hand, they know if they REALLY push things, grab all the revenue they can - the big ones will go "You know, it's been fun - but we're going to move on." So they have loads of exemptions written in, favoring the big companies that can afford to parse things out - and then 'fight it out' in court with expensive lawyers. Takes years, but in the meantime they're making money and the relative pittance paid to the shysters is likely deductible also. Not quite a win-win, but not a win-lose.
Except for the small businesses. They can't afford to fight the system, so they're stuck... and don't prosper.
Why? Well, the folks in Washington will tell you - Big Business is EVIL, and must be chained down even more so the small guys can grow...
Congrats. You've been scammed.
Most US companies aren't even US companies, they have their headquarters incorporated in some tax haven country and funnel their profits through various countries while utilizing exemptions by stating their income was made out of the country. How dumb do you gotta be to accept that an iPhone sold to a US citizen in California is treated as external revenue due to it being funneled through Ireland.
Again - isn't it funny how the tax code is so convoluted that such a thing is legal? Do you think it started out that way? Or was it a 'scratch my back and I'll scratch yours' situation that got out of hand in DC?
Now I dare you to actually do some research and outline 1.3 TRILLION that you would personally cut. Since you claim it's only a "spending problem" you shouldn't easily be able to reduce expenditures right.
Oh, I'm sorry. Did I give you the impression that there's actually things that could be cut? I didn't mean to.
Nothing can be cut. Anywhere. At any time. In fact, even a 10% programmed annual increase that's cut back to only 5% is totally unthinkable. Cut one dollar from any government program, anywhere, and you'll have widows and orphans starving in the street. If there's two programs duplicating a function, both are vitally necessary and they can't be merged or one eliminated. Ever. And if a program isn't showing any good result? It can't be eliminated or cut back.
Because you'd be firing government workers and that is the ultimate
BAD. (I'd have that red and flashing if I could, it's so bad.)
Okay - here's what I'd start with.
1. An immediate roll-back of regulatory requirements to 1998 on banks and business activities. Things were reasonably good during the Clinton era - Dot.Com bubble notwithstanding - so it's fair to say that the regulatory environment was about optimum. I'd even be willing to cut things back to a 2005 level - deficit was trending down hard, and if it hadn't been for the Democratic takeover in '06, we'd have been in green levels by 2008 even with the war going on.
2. An immediate cessation of all alternative energy subsidies. Corn for ethanol, solar power plants, wind farms - cut them all. If too much screaming ensues, take the money, funnel it into thorium reactor research on a Manhattan Project scale and timeline. (Show serious progress in 3 years, or your project is toast.)
2a. Streamline the regulatory environment for building new reactors. This ain't the days of TMI and 'The China Syndrome', we know how to build them. Do as the French did, mandate that engineering best practices be used on a certain design, then build mass quantities of that design to get the cost per unit down. This will decrease energy costs here in the US, giving a boost to businesses... and business revenue.
2a(1). Fund Polywell research as well as, say, cellulosic ethanol - if progress to date has proven promising. If it's proven VERY promising - raise funding to ITER levels.
2b. Streamline the regulatory environment for drilling for gas and oil. We need fossil fuels, it's stupid to pretend we can get by on renewables - and the cost of energy is something that businesses have to deal with. The more they've got to pay, the more their products cost. So become an 'energy friendly' country. Mandate best practices for new drilling, approve the Keystone pipeline, and get out of the way of the oil industry. They want to dig? Let 'em - and fine the hell out of 'em for any leaks.
2b(1). Federal lands that have recently (within the last 4 years) been placed off-limits to oil exploration would be reopened.
2b(2). Drilling in Gulf waters would be welcomed again. Just make sure the blowout preventers actually DO function, 'k?
2c. Expedite environmental lawsuits - especially those aimed at delaying or blocking new construction for reactors, pipelines, power plants and refineries. Institute a 'loser pays' system for all court costs. Court systems are expensive - there's not going to be any more 'Yeah, we lost, but we managed to delay them 15 years and cost them billions!' crap. You've got 3 months to prove your case, and the meter's running. If you're going to delay but figure you're going to lose anyway - better be prepared to shell out bigtime.
3. Remove all air conditioning systems in the Capitol building and all support buildings for the legislators.. Yes, DC sucks in the summer. And in the winter. We can't afford a full-time legislative body, the jerks feel they've got to justify their jobs by constantly passing legislation - and we're feeling the pinch of it. The least they can do is be uncomfortable along with us. If this means they limit themselves to a 30 day session in spring and fall when the weather's nice, then we'll just have to get by without them 'helping' us quite so much.
3a. Impose the same restrictions on age limits for the House and Senate that the airlines do. Mandatory retirement at age 60.
3b. Deduct $10,000 from Congressmen's salaries per year the budget doesn't balance. If their losing money doesn't get their attention, I don't know what will. We elect them to make the hard choices - time for them to earn their keep.
3b(1) Add $10,000 to their salaries each year there is a surplus in the budget of $100 billion or more - said surplus to immediately go against retiring national debt. Again, dangle a dollar bill in front of them, and you've got a good chance of getting the result you want.
4. Announce a 1 year Income Tax holiday, across the board. (Not unprecedented - this was somewhat done in WW2, switching over to payroll deductions as a means of paying income tax.)
4a. And switch over to the
Fair Tax. You want companies to come back from overseas and prosper? Take away the legislation and taxation that's driven them off. After implementing the Fair Tax, abolish the insane tax structure that's grown around favoritism and loopholes.
4b. Announce that any overseas company that would like to relocate to the US would be quite welcome, and they'd be subject to the same tax environment.
The above steps, I believe, would significantly boost the economy - and increase revenue to that cesspit on the Potomac. With a better economy, fewer services would be needed... and we could start shrinking THOSE to get to a point where we could balance the books.
But only if we can get them to stop 'helping' us in Washington.
The reason I rail against Fox News is that it's a pile of BS, mostly due to News Corp being 100% under the control of one of the Republican Parties biggest leaders. Their not "taking stand" their feeding BS propaganda to their faithful. Liberal news sites aren't much better but you expect that.
No, I don't. They're supposed to be REPORTING the news, not making it, not guiding public opinion, not shielding the officials they like and putting a spotlight on those they don't. That's not reporting - that's advocacy... as well as treating the viewer like they're a shapeless blob of clay that can have their opinion formed to proper specifications.
Unlike you I've actually taken a long hard look at our current budget and there is no way possible to get it remotely balanced without two things happening.
#1 Slash defense to 1/4 or less of it's current amount. Bad f*cking idea, we'll end up spending more in the long run cleaning up Europe's next Alexander the Great wannabee, or we'll be fighting the Chinese off of Hawaii.
I won't disagree with you there - it's a bad idea. We're already falling down on the job, I think - but that's a problem with the attitudes of the folks in Washington and not necessarily one of funding. So we need to raise revenue. I've given my thoughts on how to do that above.
#2, Reduce Medicare to social services to zero. This would barely balance the budget, of course it would cause the Civil War II as the have nots vastly outnumber the haves. Used to be that the rich (relatively speaking) and affluent could hide their prosperity by only associating with others of their ilk. The poor knew they were being bilked but didn't know by exactly how much. In today's modern connected world the poor know exactly how much money is being taken from them via powerful politically connected individuals gaming the system. All those various tax loopholes didn't mysteriously show up one day, they were carefully placed by politicians in exchange for money and support. Now the public poor can see all the Trumps go around spending money like water. Your not going to tell these people "shut up and just due, the country needs to reduce spending and you need to cough up more" without them rioting in the streets and burning your home down.
Or the Kardashians. We've elevated idiot celebrities to near-godlike status, and drool (at least some folks do) over their consumption. And here I thought we didn't agree on things... ;-)
So tell me JL, are you volunteering to be the first home to be burned? Cause I think you just volunteered.
I've outlined what I think above. We ARE spending too much - but we're spending too much because there's too much stuff that's been put in the 'Must Have' category, regardless of whether we actually need it. (Like Obamacare. OMG. Talk about a ticking financial bomb. Gotta admit I think at times that it was a poison pill manuver by the Dems - lose the 2012 election and have it repealed and it'd be campaign fodder for DECADES - but Obama won, and we're going to have to deal with all the consequences of that messy pile of legislation. I've seen costs of $20k/family for the 'free' health care that was promised. Bad move on someone's part...)
But also... I don't think you're past the 'blame the rich for being rich' mindset.
You see someone like Trump using a solid gold toilet, and go "That's so unfair!" You don't want to admit the work, the wheeling and dealing, the failed business ventures and the like that the man went through to get to the point he could afford one - you apparently just don't want him to have it. (Me, I think it's tacky - gold is much more useful in electronic uses, and gold-plate is shiny enough if that's what you're wanting...)
But I don't begrudge the man his eccentricities - or him spending his money how he wants.
I think - and I could be wrong - that you see the "rich-poor" thing, perhaps the economy itself, as a zero-sum game. For any stupid extravagance by the 'rich', the 'poor' take it in the shorts.
I don't see it that way. Bill Gates, for example, founded Microsoft. Who has he stolen from to amass his billions? Or did he get people to voluntarily pay money for software which THEY think has made their lives easier? (Having been a Microsoft user since Dos 1.0, he's pulled some boners at times - but I never would have imagined 30 years back we'd have the software and hardware we've got today.)
Anyhow. It's too late here, and morning's coming too early.
I leave you with two videos. You may know Bill Whittle - I'd ask you to watch and listen to them carefully, and think about the concepts in them seriously.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=661pi6K-8WQ
http://youtu.be/KkXI-MNSb8Q
Goodnight!