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Archive for July, 2008

Whoopty Do

Well, the wait is finally over. The Democrats announced all those zany tax increases they’d been keeping secret for the past six months.  Alittle more than $8 billion worth. 

Whoopty do. 

Both Assembly Speaker Karen Bass and Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger say California needs to overhaul its archaic tax system, created during the Great Depression and riddled with so many inequities, loopholes and exceptions it makes Swiss Cheese look solid. 

They’re right. The tax system needs an extreme makeover. Except that’s not what they did. They just punted. Blew it off until some later date. Not exactly a chapter in Profiles In Courage. 

A cursory look at Appendix B of the Franchise Tax Board’s 2006 Annual Report – the latest available on their website — shows that 83 percent of the taxes paid in 2005 came from persons with adjusted gross income of $100,000 or more. In 2002, for instance, those same taxpayers forked over 46 percent of taxes collected. 

One might argue that the state is dangerously reliant on its higher income citizens. If the Dot Com bubble bursts and those swells don’t cash out their capital gains, tax revenues plummet. It’s happened before. 

Consider this: 

Over 1 million Californians with adjusted gross income of  $100,000 to $149,999 filed returns in 2005 and paid nearly $5 billion in taxes.  

The 75,384 persons who had adjustable gross income of between $500,000 and $999,999 paid $4 billion. 

The 27,271 at between $1 million and a dollar less than $2 million kicked in nearly $3.2 billion. 

And the 5,895 taxpayers at $5 million or more paid $9.1 billion – more than 20 percent of the $43.1 billion collected that year. 

So knowing that more than 20 percent of your taxes come from less than 6,000 persons wouldn’t the first move to solve this year’s budget gap be to increase the state’s reliance on that fraction of the population? 

Of course it would. And that’s exactly what the Democrats did. 

Taxpayers filing joint returns with taxable income of over $321,00 would pay 10 percent instead of 9.3 percent. Those with incomes over $642,000 would pay 11 percent. 

This is estimated to raise $5.6 billion. It won’t. 

Of course if you’re a millionaire you are already paying 11 percent to support mental health programs, much of the revenue gathering dust in county coffers because it can’t be used to support existing programs, it can only be spent to  create new ones. Bummer about the existing programs being cut. 

Presumably those millionaires would go to 12 percent although the Democratic proposal is silent on this. 

A number of these big money filers are actually Subchapter S corporations and sole proprietorships who run their earnings through personal income taxes instead of the bank and corporations tax.

 Senate President Pro tem Don Perata said at a press conference the other day the rationale was that the people who benefited from the state’s economic growth should pay more. 

Speaker Bass noted that state taxes are deductible on federal taxes. 

With respect: Whoopty do. 

The good news is there are two things on the Democrat’s wish list that Republicans will eventually go for after much gnashing of teeth and rending of garments. 

One is to offer tax amnesty, which is supposed to yield new revenue of $1.5 billion. Republicans have routinely supported tax amnesty in the past. 

Were John Burton, die-hard San Francisco liberal, penning this screed he would say amnesty allows the Captains of Industry to pocket more of the profits they earned off the sweat of the hard-working men and women of the Great State of California. 

And so on. 

Also, Republicans will eventually agree to suspending for a year or two the “net operating loss” write-offs corporations get to take.  They voted for it in the early part of this decade and the early part of the last decade so it’s not like they’re virgins on the issue. 

So after all the hooting and hollering the Republicans will probably agree to about $3 billion in new revenue that they don’t have to call tax increase thus maintaining the purity of their precious bodily essences.

 Adding indignity to the higher tax brackets, the Democrats propose not adjusting the income tax brackets for inflation, presumably for one year. They say a taxpayer with income of $50,000 would pay $34 more and one earning $97,00 or more would pay $180 more. 

There’s goes the ol’ economic stimulus check. 

And in case the “rich” Californians who have profited so handsomely off the state’s economic growth and earn $150,000 or more happen to have any kids, the tax credit for each chiild would drop from $294 to $94. 

What are they going to do with the $94? Buy a third of an iPod? 

Stand up on your hind legs and take the full $294. Show some backbone. 

Jeez Louise. 

While the Democrats want the wealthiest Californians to kick down another $5.6 billion they are raising the top tax bracket for businesses from 8.84 percent to 9.3 percent to generate $470 million. 

Ouch. Was that a paper cut? 

How about the multinationals paying $5.6 billion and the taxpayers $470 million? 

Better yet: Instead of all this timid horsing around, lower the sales tax by a penny or two and expand it to cover the stuff that powers this state’s economy, like software and services. 

Broadening the base is smart and forward thinking. It doesn’t make more of the state’s revenue stream dependant on the economic whim of less than 6,000 rich people. 

There are plenty of activities the sales tax can – and should – be applied to. Here are some examples. 

Whip up a little side plate of chicken salad.  

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The S-Man Cometh

Who says Republicans are melons? 

Assemblyman Cameron “Word-to-Your-Mother” Smyth was way crump the other night at Fiona Ma’s karaoke fund-raiser. So ill was the always dap S-Man that he totally overstood Vanilla Ice’s “Ice, Ice Baby.” 

Check out the hook while my DJ revolves it: 

Yo, vip, lets kick it! 

Ice ice baby, ice ice baby

All right stop, collaborate and listen

Ice is back with my brand new invention

Something grabs a hold of me tightly

Then I flow like a harpoon daily and nightly

Will it ever stop? yo — I dont know

Turn off the lights and Ill glow

To the extreme I rock a mic like a vandal

Light up a stage and wax a chump like a candle. 

Dance, bum rush the speaker that booms

Im killing your brain like a poisonous mushroom

Deadly, when I play a dope melody

Anything less than the best is a felony

Love it or leave it, you better gain way

You better hit bulls eye, the kid dont play

If there was a problem, yo, Ill solve it

Check out the hook while my dj revolves it

 

Ice ice baby vanilla, ice ice baby vanilla

Ice ice baby vanilla, ice ice baby vanilla 

Now that the party is jumping

With the bass kicked in, the vegas are pumpin

Quick to the point, to the point no faking

Im cooking mcs like a pound of bacon

Burning them if theyre not quick and nimble

I go crazy when I hear a cymbal

And a hi hat with a souped up tempo

Im on a roll and its time to go solo

Rollin in my 5.0

With my ragtop down so my hair can blow

The girlies on standby, waving just to say hi

Did you stop? no — I just drove by

Kept on pursuing to the next stop

I busted a left and Im heading to the next block

That block was dead 

Yo — so I continued to a1a beachfront ave.

Girls were hot wearing less than bikinis

Rockman lovers driving lamborghinis

Jealous cause Im out geting mine

Shay with a gauge and vanilla with a nine

Reading for the chumps on the wall

The chumps acting ill because theyre so full of eight balls

Gunshots ranged out like a bell

I grabbed my nine — all I heard were shells

Falling on the concrete real fast

Jumped in my car, slammed on the gas

Bumper to bumper the avenues packed

Im trying to get away before the jackers jack

Police on the scene, you know what I mean

They passed me up, confronted all the dope fiends

If there was a problem, you, Ill solve it

Check out the hook while my dj revolves it 

Ice ice baby vanilla, ice ice baby vanilla

Ice ice baby vanilla, ice ice baby vanilla 

Take heed, cause Im a lyrical poet

Miamis on the scene just in case you didnt know it

My town, that created all the bass sound

Enough to shake and kick holes in the ground

cause my styles like a chemical spill

Feasible rhymes that you can vision and feel

Conducted and formed, this is a hell of a concept

We make it hype and you want to step with this

Shay plays on the fade, slice like a ninja

Cut like a razor blade so fast, other djs say, damn

If my rhyme was a drug, Id sell it by the gram

Keep my composure when its time to get loose

Magnetized by the mic while I kick my juice

If there was a problem, yo — Ill solve it!

Check out the hook while deshay revolves it. 

Ice ice baby vanilla, ice ice baby vanilla

Ice ice baby vanilla, ice ice baby vanilla 

Yo man — lets get out of here! word to your mother! 

Ice ice baby too cold, ice ice baby too cold too cold

Ice ice baby too cold too cold, ice ice baby too cold too cold 

Peace out

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Lest One Forget…

 

How truly remarkable a president this failed haber-dasher and creation of the Pendergast political machine was, this will jog the memory. 

Here’s Harry Truman’s farewell address to the American people: 

January 15, 1953 

[Broadcast from his office in the White House at 10:30 p.m.] 

My fellow Americans: 

I am happy to have this opportunity to talk to you once more before I leave the White House. 

Next Tuesday, General Eisenhower will be inaugurated as President of the United States. A short time after the new President takes his oath of office, I will be on the train going back home to Independence, Missouri. I will once again be a plain, private citizen of this great Republic. 

That is as it should be. Inauguration Day will be a great demonstration of our democratic process. I am glad to be a part of it-glad to wish General Eisenhower all possible success, as he begins his term–glad the whole world will have a chance to see how simply and how peacefully our American system transfers the vast power of the Presidency from my hands to his. It is a good object lesson in democracy. I am very proud of it. And I know you are, too. 

During the last 2 months I have done my best to make this transfer an orderly one. I have talked with my successor on the affairs of the country, both foreign and domestic, and my Cabinet officers have talked with their successors. I want to say that General Eisenhower and his associates have cooperated fully in this effort. Such an orderly transfer from one party to another has never taken place before in our history. I think a real precedent has been set. 

In speaking to you tonight, I have no new revelations to make–no political statements-no policy announcements. There are simply a few things in my heart that I want to say to you. I want to say “goodby” and “thanks for your help.” And I want to talk to you a little while about what has happened since I became your President. 

I am speaking to you from the room where I have worked since April 12, 1945. This is the President’s office in the West Wing of the White House. This is the desk where I have signed most of the papers that embodied the decisions I have made as President. It has been the desk of many Presidents, and will be the desk of many more. 

Since I became President, I have been to Europe, Mexico, Canada, Brazil, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands–Wake Island and Hawaii. I have visited almost every State in the Union. I have traveled 135,000 miles by air, 77,000 by rail, and 17,000 by ship. But the mail always followed me, and wherever I happened to be, that’s where the office of the President was. 

The greatest part of the President’s job is to make decisions–big ones and small ones, dozens of them almost every day. The papers may circulate around the Government for a while but they finally reach this desk. And then, there’s no place else for them to go. The President–whoever he is–has to decide. He can’t pass the buck to anybody. No one else can do the deciding for him. That’s his job. 

That’s what I’ve been doing here in this room, for almost 8 years. And over in the main part of the White House, there’s a study on the second floor–a room much like this one–where I have worked at night and early in the morning on the papers I couldn’t get to at the office. 

Of course, for more than 3 years Mrs. Truman and I were not living in the White House. We were across the street in the Blair House. That was when the White House almost fell down on us and had to be rebuilt. I had a study over at the Blair House, too, but living in the Blair House was not as convenient as living in the White House. 

The Secret Service wouldn’t let me walk across the street, so I had to get in a car every morning to cross the street to the White House office, again at noon to go to the Blair House for lunch, again to go back to the office after lunch, and finally take an automobile at night to return to the Blair House. Fantastic, isn’t it? But necessary, so my guards thought–and they are the bosses on such matters as that. 

Now, of course, we’re back in the White House. It is in very good condition, and General Eisenhower will be able to take up his residence in the house and work right here. That will be much more convenient for him, and I’m very glad the renovation job was all completed before his term began. 

Your new President is taking office in quite different circumstances than when I became President 8 years ago. On April 1945, I had been presiding over the Senate in my capacity as Vice President. When the Senate recessed about 5 o’clock in the afternoon, I walked over to the office of the Speaker of the House, Mr. Rayburn, to discuss pending legislation. As soon as I arrived, I was told that Mr. Early, one of President Roosevelt’s secretaries, wanted me to call. I reached Mr. Early, and he told me to come to the White House as quickly as possible, to enter by way of the Pennsylvania Avenue entrance, and to come to Mrs. Roosevelt’s study. 

When I arrived, Mrs. Roosevelt told me the tragic news, and I felt the shock that all of you felt a little later–when the word came over the radio and appeared in the newspapers. President Roosevelt had died. I offered to do anything I could for Mrs. Roosevelt, and then I asked the Secretary of State to call the Cabinet together. 

At 7:09 p.m. I was sworn in as President by Chief Justice Stone in the Cabinet Room. 

Things were happening fast in those days. The San Francisco conference to organize the United Nations had been called for April 25th. I was asked if that meeting would go forward. I announced that it would. That was my first decision. 

After attending President Roosevelt’s funeral, I went to the Hall of the House of Representatives and told a joint session of the Congress that I would carry on President Roosevelt’s policies. 

On May 7th, Germany surrendered. The announcement was made on May 8th, my 61st birthday. 

Mr. Churchill called me shortly after that and wanted a meeting with me and Prime Minister Stalin of Russia. Later on, a meeting was agreed upon, and Churchill, Stalin, and I met at Potsdam in Germany. 

Meanwhile, the first atomic explosion took place out in the New Mexico desert. 

The war against Japan was still going on. I made the decision that the atomic bomb had to be used to end it. I made that decision in the conviction it would save hundreds of thousands of lives–Japanese as well as American. Japan surrendered, and we were faced with the huge problems of bringing the troops home and reconverting the economy from war to peace. 

All these things happened within just a little over 4 months–from April to August 1945. I tell you this to illustrate the tremendous scope of the work your President has to do. 

And all these emergencies and all the developments to meet them have required the President to put in long hours–usually 17 hours a day, with no payment for overtime. I sign my name, on the average, 600 times a day, see and talk to hundreds of people every month, shake hands with thousands every year, and still carry on the business of the largest going concern in the whole world. There is no job like it on the face of the earth–in the power which is concentrated here at this desk, and in the responsibility and difficulty of the decisions. 

I want all of you to realize how big a job, how hard a job, it is–not for my sake, because I am stepping out of it–but for the sake of my successor. He needs the understanding and the help of every citizen. It is not enough for you to come out once every 4 years and vote for a candidate, and then go back home and say, “Well, I’ve done my part, now let the new President do the worrying.” He can’t do the job alone. 

Regardless of your politics, whether you are Republican or Democrat, your fate is tied up with what is done here in this room. The President is President of the whole country. We must give him our support as citizens of the United States. He will have mine, and I want you to give him yours. 

I suppose that history will remember my term in office as the years when the “cold war” began to overshadow our lives. I have had hardly a day in office that has not been dominated by this all-embracing struggle-this conflict between those who love freedom and those who would lead the world back into slavery and darkness. 

And always in the background there has been the atomic bomb. 

But when history says that my term of office saw the beginning of the cold war, it will also say that in those 8 years we have set the course that can win it. We have succeeded in carving out a new set of policies to attain peace–positive policies, policies of world leadership, policies that express faith in other free people. 

We have averted world war III up to now, and we may already have succeeded in establishing conditions which can keep that war from happening as far ahead as man can see. 

These are great and historic achievements that we can all be proud of. Think of the difference between our course now and our course 30 years ago. After the First World War we withdrew from world affairs–we failed to act in concert with other peoples against aggression–we helped to kill the League of Nations–and we built up tariff barriers that strangled world trade.

This time, we avoided those mistakes. We helped to found and sustain the United Nations. We have welded alliances that include the greater part of the free world. And we have gone ahead with other free countries to help build their economies and link us all together in a healthy world trade. 

Think back for a moment to the 1930’s and you will see the difference. The Japanese moved into Manchuria, and free men did not act. The Fascists moved into Ethiopia, and we did not act. The Nazis marched into the Rhineland, into Austria, into Czechoslovakia, and free men were paralyzed for lack of strength and unity and will. 

Think about those years of weakness and indecision, and the World War II which was their evil result. Then think about the speed and courage and decisiveness with which we have moved against the Communist threat since World War II. 

The first crisis came in 1945 and 1946, when the Soviet Union refused to honor its agreement to remove its troops from Iran. Members of my Cabinet came to me and asked if we were ready to take the risk that a firm stand involved. I replied that we were. 

So we took our stand–we made it clear to the Soviet Union that we expected them to honor their agreement–and the Soviet troops were withdrawn from Iran. 

Then, in early 1947, the Soviet Union threatened Greece and Turkey. The British sent me a message saying they could no longer keep their forces in that area. Something had to be done at once, or the eastern Mediterranean would be taken over by the Communists. 

On March 12th, I went before the Congress and stated our determination to help the people of Greece and Turkey maintain their independence. Today, Greece is still free and independent; and Turkey is a bulwark of strength at a strategic corner of the world. 

Then came the Marshall plan which saved Europe, the heroic Berlin airlift, and our military aid programs. 

We inaugurated the North Atlantic Pact, the Rio Pact binding the Western Hemisphere together, and the defense pacts with countries of the Far Pacific.

 Most important of all, we acted in Korea. I was in Independence, Missouri, in June 1950, when Secretary Acheson telephoned me and gave me the news about the invasion of Korea. I told the Secretary to lay the matter at once before the United Nations, and I came on back to Washington. 

Flying back over the flatlands of the Middle West and over the Appalachians that summer afternoon, I had a lot of time to think. I turned the problem over in my mind in many ways, but my thoughts kept coming back to the 1930’s–to Manchuria, to Ethiopia, the Rhineland, Austria, and finally to Munich. 

Here was history repeating itself. Here was another probing action, another testing action. If we let the Republic of Korea go under, some other country would be next, and then another. And all the time, the courage and confidence of the free world would be ebbing away, just as it did in the 1930’s. And the United Nations would go the way of the League of Nations. 

When I reached Washington, I met immediately with the Secretary of State, the Secretary of Defense, and General Bradley, and the other civilian and military officials who had information and advice to help me decide on what to do. We talked about the problems long and hard. We considered those problems very carefully. 

It was not easy to make the decision to send American boys again into battle. I was a soldier in the First World War, and I know what a soldier goes through. I know well the anguish that mothers and fathers and families go through. So I knew what was ahead if we acted in Korea. 

But after all this was said, we realized that the issue was whether there would be fighting in a limited area now or on a much larger scale later on–whether there would be some casualties now or many more casualties later. 

So a decision was reached–the decision I believe was the most important in my time as President of the United States. 

In the days that followed, the most heartening fact was that the American people clearly agreed with the decision. 

And in Korea, our men are fighting as valiantly as Americans have ever fought-because they know they are fighting in the same cause of freedom in which Americans have stood ever since the beginning of the Republic. 

Where free men had failed the test before, this time we met the test. 

We met it firmly. We met it successfully. The aggression has been repelled. The Communists have seen their hopes of easy conquest go down the drain. The determination of free people to defend themselves has been made clear to the Kremlin. 

As I have thought about our worldwide struggle with the Communists these past 8 years–day in and day out–I have never once doubted that you, the people of our country, have the will to do what is necessary to win this terrible fight against communism.

I know the people of this country have that will and determination, and I have always depended on it. Because I have been sure of that, I have been able to make necessary decisions even though they called for sacrifices by all of us. And I have not been wrong in my judgment of the American people. 

That same assurance of our people’s determination will be General Eisenhower’s greatest source of strength in carrying on this struggle. 

Now, once in a while, I get a letter from some impatient person asking, why don’t we get it over with? Why don’t we issue an ultimatum, make all-out war, drop the atomic bomb? 

For most Americans, the answer is quite simple: We are not made that way. We are a moral people. Peace is our goal, with justice and freedom. We cannot, of our own free will, violate the very principles that we are striving to defend. The whole purpose of what we are doing is to prevent world war III. Starting a war is no way to make peace. 

But if anyone still thinks that just this once, bad means can bring good ends, then let me remind you of this: We are living in the 8th year of the atomic age. We are not the only nation that is learning to unleash the power of the atom. A third world war might dig the grave not only of our Communist opponents but also of our own society, our world as well as theirs. 

Starting an atomic war is totally unthinkable for rational men. 

Then, some of you may ask, when and how will the cold war end? I think I can answer that simply. The Communist world has great resources, and it looks strong. 

But there is a fatal flaw in their society. Theirs is a godless system, a system of slavery; there is no freedom in it, no consent. The Iron Curtain, the secret police, the constant purges, all these are symptoms of a great basic weakness–the rulers’ fear of their own people. 

In the long run the strength of our free society, and our ideals, will prevail over a system that has respect for neither God nor man. 

Last week, in my State of the Union Message to the Congress–and I hope you will all take the time to read it–I explained how I think we will finally win through. 

As the free world grows stronger, more united, more attractive to men on both sides of the Iron Curtain–and as the Soviet hopes for easy expansion are blocked–then there will have to come a time of change in the Soviet world. 

Nobody can say for sure when that is going to be, or exactly how it will come about, whether by revolution, or trouble in the satellite states, or by a change inside the Kremlin. 

Whether the Communist rulers shift their policies of their own free will–or whether the change comes about in some other way-I have not a doubt in the world that a change will occur. 

I have a deep and abiding faith in the destiny of free men. With patience and courage, we shall some day move on into a new era–a wonderful golden age–an age when we can use the peaceful tools that science has forged for us to do away with poverty and human misery everywhere on earth. 

Think what can be done, once our capital, our skills, our science–most of all atomic energy–can be released from the tasks of defense and turned wholly to peaceful purposes all around the world. 

There is no end to what can be done. 

I can’t help but dream out loud just a little here. 

The Tigris and Euphrates Valley can be made to bloom as it did in the times of Babylon and Nineveh. Israel can be made the country of milk and honey as it was in the time of Joshua. 

There is a plateau in Ethiopia some 6,000 to 8,000 feet high, that has 65,000 square miles of land just exactly like the corn belt in northern Illinois. Enough food can be raised there to feed a hundred million people.

There are places in South America–places in Colombia and Venezuela and Brazil-just like that plateau in Ethiopia–places where food could be raised for millions of people. 

These things can be done, and they are self-liquidating projects. If we can get peace and safety in the world under the United Nations, the developments will come so fast we will not recognize the world in which we now live. 

This is our dream of the future–our picture of the world we hope to have when the Communist threat is overcome. 

I’ve talked a lot tonight about the menace of communism–and our fight against it-because that is the overriding issue of our time. But there are some other things we’ve done that history will record. One of them is that we in America have learned how to attain real prosperity for our people. 

We have 62 1/2 million people at work. Businessmen, farmers, laborers, white-collar people, all have better incomes and more of the good things of life than ever before in the history of the world. 

There hasn’t been a failure of an insured bank in nearly 9 years. No depositor has lost a cent in that period. 

And the income of our people has been fairly distributed, perhaps more so than at any other time in recent history. 

We have made progress in spreading the blessings of American life to all of our people. There has been a tremendous awakening of the American conscience on the great issues of civil rights–equal economic opportunities, equal rights of citizenship, and equal educational opportunities for all our people, whatever their race or religion or status of birth. 

So, as I empty the drawers of this desk, and as Mrs. Truman and I leave the White House, we have no regret. We feel we have done our best in the public service. I hope and believe we have contributed to the welfare of this Nation and to the peace of the world. 

When Franklin Roosevelt died, I felt there must be a million men better qualified than I, to take up the Presidential task. But the work was mine to do, and I had to do it. And I have tried to give it everything that was in me. 

Through all of it, through all the years that I have worked here in this room, I have been well aware I did not really work alone-that you were working with me. 

No President could ever hope to lead our country, or to sustain the burdens of this office, save as the people helped with their support. I have had that help–you have given me that support–on all our great essential undertakings to build the free world’s strength and keep the peace. 

Those are the big things. Those are the things we have done together. 

For that I shall be grateful, always. 

And now, the time has come for me to say good night–and God bless you all. 

As Truman also said: The only new thing in this world is the history you don’t know. 

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