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Old 04-02-2009, 02:00 PM
 
1,693 posts, read 1,531,019 times
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Paterson Bids Rush Limbaugh Farewell - City Room Blog - NYTimes.com
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Old 04-02-2009, 02:34 PM
 
Location: Rochester, NY
1,293 posts, read 4,999,637 times
Reputation: 369
I saw this on the Today Show last night. I guess you love him or hate him. The Today Show was happy to see him leave.

If hes making all that money is a tax increase that bad? Isn't that like being able to afford a Porche but you complain about the gas mileage?
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Old 04-02-2009, 05:01 PM
 
Location: Pompey, NY
406 posts, read 1,451,298 times
Reputation: 331
Just when I was starting to think he deserves his poor public opinion rating, Patterson is up a bunch in my estimation. Rush Limbaugh is indeed a big fat idiot, a drug addicted immoral blankety blank. I have no problem with a reasoned opposition, but Rush and his ilk feed on fear, hysteria, and a deep dyed hatred for anything that smacks of tolerance. We need folks to pull together, and instead he is fostering unreasoned hate and loathing. Good riddance.
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Old 04-03-2009, 06:08 AM
 
Location: NW District of Columb1a USA
382 posts, read 1,531,563 times
Reputation: 221
Good riddance Rush and don't let the door hit you on the way out - assuming you can fit through the door in the first place.
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Old 04-06-2009, 09:16 AM
 
640 posts, read 2,013,022 times
Reputation: 349
Four times married and a drug addict...just the kind of GOP family values that will serve him well down SOUTH.
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Old 04-10-2009, 06:59 AM
 
36 posts, read 191,429 times
Reputation: 26
I'm glad to see Limbaugh go. I hope he takes a big loss when he sells his condo. He spends most of his time in Florida anyway.

I don't think Governor Paterson should have raised taxes though. New Yorkers are too heavily taxed in every way that you can think of already. Everything is more expensive in New York than anywhere else. New York taxes everything and everybody. That is why so many people are leaving the state. Wages in New York, except for the NYC area, are low and most people are struggling. Albany just keeps raising taxes. Tax and spend. That is all they know.

Here is a link to the NYS Commission on Property Tax Relief. It is an interesting read with some commonsense ideas about how to lower taxes in NY state. I wonder how many of the knuckleheads in Albany have read it. Not many I bet.
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Old 04-10-2009, 11:55 AM
 
2,539 posts, read 4,088,153 times
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He left there for sunny Florida a long time ago and is a resident here. If you listened to his show you would know it. Wait until you see more of your businesses leaving because of the idiot taxes businesses have to pay there. The south will raise again!!
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Old 04-10-2009, 11:59 AM
 
3,235 posts, read 8,719,629 times
Reputation: 2798
the south will raise what again? the roof?
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Old 04-10-2009, 12:06 PM
 
2,539 posts, read 4,088,153 times
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Welcome to the 1970's again New York City!!
New York City fears return to 1970s | U.S. | Reuters

Obomma will fix it for you!!
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Old 04-11-2009, 10:45 AM
 
2,539 posts, read 4,088,153 times
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The Tax Capital of the World
States are raising taxes despite the 'stimulus'; New York is No. 1.Article
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Like the old competition to have the world's tallest building, New York can't resist having the nation's highest taxes. So after California raised its top income tax rate to 10.55% last month, Albany's politicians leapt into action to reclaim high-tax honors. Maybe C-Span can make this tax competition a new reality TV series; Carla Bruni, the first lady of France, could host.


Getty ImagesThey can invite politicians from the at least 10 other states that are also considering major tax hikes, including Oregon, Illinois, Wisconsin, Washington, Arizona and New Jersey. One explicit argument for the $787 billion "stimulus" bill was to help states avoid these tax increases that even Keynesians understand are contractionary. Instead, the state politicians are pocketing the federal cash to maintain spending, and raising taxes anyway. Just another spend-and-tax bait and switch.

In New York, Assembly Speaker (and de facto Governor) Sheldon Silver and other Democrats will impose a two percentage point "millionaire tax" on New Yorkers who earn more than $200,000 a year ($300,000 for couples). This will lift the top state tax rate to 8.97% and the New York City rate to 12.62%. Since capital gains and dividends are taxed as ordinary income, New York will impose the nation's highest taxes on investment income -- at a time when Wall Street is in jeopardy of losing its status as the world's financial capital.

But who and where are all these millionaires to pluck? More than any other state, New York has been hurt by the financial meltdown, and its $132 billion budget is now $17.7 billion in deficit. The days of high-roller Wall Street bonuses that finance 20% of the New York budget are long gone. The richest 1% of New Yorkers already pay almost 40% of the income tax, and the top 0.5% pay 30%.

Mr. Silver thinks he can squeeze more from these folks without any economic harm, arguing that recent income tax hikes didn't hurt New Jersey. (Yes, the pols in New York actually hold up New Jersey, whose economy and budget are also in shambles, as their role model.) The tax hike lobby in Albany points to a paper by Princeton researchers reporting that the number of "half-millionaires," those with incomes above $500,000, increased by 60% from 2003-2006 after New Jersey taxes rose (the top rate is now 8.98%). But this was a boom time for the national economy, especially in the financial industry where many New Jerseyites work, or at least used to work.

The better comparison is how New Jersey compared to the rest of the nation. According to the study's own data, over the same period the U.S. saw an increase of 76% in half-millionaire households. E.J. McMahon, a budget expert at the Manhattan Institute, calculates that New Jersey lost more than 4,000 high-income taxpayers after the tax increase.

Mr. Silver says of the coming tax hikes: "We've done it before. There hasn't been a catastrophe." Oh, really? According to Census Bureau data, over the past decade 1.97 million New Yorkers left the state for greener pastures -- the biggest exodus of any state. New York City has lost more than 75,000 jobs since last August, and many industrial areas upstate are as rundown as Detroit. The American Legislative Exchange Council recently said New York had the worst economic outlook of all 50 states, including Michigan. And that analysis was done before these $4 billion in new taxes. How does Mr. Silver define "catastrophe"?

Oh, and it isn't just high earners who get smacked. The new budget raises another $2 billion or so on top of the $4 billion in income taxes with some 100 new taxes, fees, fines, surcharges and penalties to be paid by all New York residents. There are new charges for cell phone usage, fishing permits, health insurance (the "sick tax"), electric bills, and on bottled water, cigars, beer and wine. A New York Post analysis found that a typical family of four with an income below $100,000 would pay more than $800 a year in higher taxes and fees.

This is advertised as a plan of "shared sacrifice," but the group that is most responsible for New York's budget woes, the all-powerful public employee unions, somehow walk out of this with a 3% pay increase. The state is receiving an estimated $10 billion in federal stimulus money, and Democrats are spending every cent while raising the state budget by 9%. Then they insist with a straight face that taxes are the only way to close the budget deficit.

And so Albany is about to make a gigantic gamble on New York's economic future. The gamble is that the state with the highest cost of doing business can raise taxes on everyone who lives, works, breathes, eats or drinks in the state and not pay a heavy price for it. If they're wrong, New York will enhance its reputation as the Empire in Decline State.
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