It’s unfair to say which corporation is more evil, so let’s make FedEx part of Sherrod Brown’s tax-hikin’ solution to America’s $1.62 trillion 2011 budget deficit and call it a day.
Category: Uncategorized
Communists Accidentally Correct
Understandable that no news outlets would cover this, right? Senators endorse all kinds of events, and Islam is just another interest group ripe for the pandering. Generally, though, I’d prefer my senators avoid shindigs keynoted by terror apologists.
Soak the Rich: CSX
CSX should get its trains out of the way for unmarketable, unaffordable passenger rail! In the meantime, we can subject CSX to Sherrod Brown’s fix for a $1.62 trillion 2011 budget deficit: higher taxes on American employers.
Extremely Expensive Signatures
Ballot initiatives always crow about being “citizen-driven” and “bipartisan,” however inaccurate the statement might be. It’s unseemly to say, for instance, “we spent big bucks pestering voters to sign petitions supporting our privileged status.”
Kasich Ends World
Did you feel a rumbling last Thursday? The earth shook as Ohio’s budget – spending cuts! lower taxes! – was signed into law.
Soak the Rich, Week 9
In the spirit of bipartisanship, I’ve been calculating the results of punishing evil corporations and their fat-cat CEOs. After nine weeks and 18 of the largest companies in the S&P 500 index, where has Sherrod’s Sure-Fire Budget Oil gotten us?
Soak the Rich: Amazon.com
Amazon.com isn’t evil in quite the same way as, say, Exxon Mobil, JP Morgan Chase, or Halliburton, but that doesn’t get Amazon off the hook!
Soak the Rich: UnitedHealth Group
Fear not: this punitive tax policy – like the millions of pages of bureaucracy Obamacare will spawn – won’t increase the cost of health insurance or care.
Soak the Rich, Week 8
For two months now we’ve been calculating the results of applying Sherrod’s Sure-Fire Budget Oil to evil corporations and their fat-cat CEOs.
Soak the Rich: Boeing
Sherrod Brown need only ask one question when raising someone’s taxes (are they rich?), so there’s a surplus of reasons for Boeing to pay their fair share.