They cost you too…
The drop in payroll tax from 6.2% to 4.2% results in a savings of about $1000 a year to every wage earner.
(If truth were widely known, that tax cut is actually a bad idea. It hemorrhages a dying social security fund, requiring the eventual death of the program or an expensive emergency last ditch surgery in the future.)
But it is hard not to give a $1000 present to every voter. Even if it only comes out as $19 dollars and change each week… But, still again, if your electric bill is $198 and you only have $189 in your account, that additional amount is, well, a lifesaver…..
But, Republicans in the House, even after Republicans in the Senate voted passage, overwhelmingly voted….. not to vote on the measure…
They didn’t vote against it… THEY VOTED NOT TO VOTE ON IT……
(speculation is that they lacked the votes to keep it from passing)..
So, how does that relate to you?
House Republicans (read Tea Party) just voted NOT TO VOTE on whether or not you will be losing an extra $20 a month out of your next paycheck.
Imagine what this is doing to payroll clerks around the country?
Imagine what this is doing to family budgets around the country?
Imagine what this is doing to businesses who rely on consumer spending around the country?
Imagine what this is doing to businesses heavily involved in the financial sector, around this country?
So what would normally happen?
Normally a group that can’t find agreement, acknowledges the sad fact, and long before the deadline, announces that they failed to reach agreement and that things would continue as they were on a temporary basis, to unfortunately allow for more time to solve differences.
But NOOOOOOOOOOOO, …. WE ARE STUCK WITH A TEA PARTY THAT FUCKS THINGS UP.
Instead, we have a vote not-to-vote, then get all sorts of very lame excuses from those who are delaying, none of which apply to the real problem that Social Security is doomed unless drastic action gets taken (higher rates, not lower), and we get nothing….
The tax cut will expire…
It is like sequestering a jury in a room, where everyone after much fact-covering argument has agreed to a judgment, except for one person who’s been bought off. And nothing, nothing, logic, emotional appeal, bullying, snuggling up to, befriending, produces any change. And you go years, every working day, to the same court house, the same jury room, they same chair at the same table, hear the same arguments, hoping against all odds, that today, he will see the light and switch. You go the next day.
That is today’s Congress. Held hostage by Tea Party Republicans who live in a dream world untouched by the reality of living under $185,000 a year. Like that bought-out juror, every day, they hold up progress with the unjustified belief that, if they wait long enough, the other 11 jurors will give up and sway over to the sole juror’s way….
Two things can happen… 1) return to the public and announce a hung jury, and do a complete retrial.. or 2) sneak up to that one juror, put a gun to his head, say nothing, pull the trigger, clean up the mess, dispose of the body, then go out to the public and announce what the 11 of you have decided…..
One is the nice way, sanctioned to due process of law. The other is the American Way.
It’s time to initiate the kavipsian policy of expression or what is otherwise known as “Show Us How You Really Feel”… Who knows? It could become the next great movement? The next time someone you know (or don’t), says anything about how millionaires should keep their tax cuts and the poor should pay, nod your head in agreement, smile a little bit, then hit them as hard as you can in their mouth, I mean as hard as you can! Put them flat on the ground holding their jaw… Then loudly say, “Don’t every talk that stupid way to me again!” Who knows, if 99% or all 303,930,000 would respond that way to our fellow congressional delegates, and the other 3.9 million of their like who advocate such madness, we might actually get the very progress we need, not because of intimidation, but because such policy is right….
For those who argue expression of violence is un-American, I’ll remind them that tonight, is John Wayne Night on AMC: view it!… I argue that such action is VERY American and perhaps it has been the lack of such spontaneous expressions of frustration from working American people, that has caused the logjam where nothing gets done because of one holdout, who thinks he can sway the world to his opinion and face no consequences… ….
Practice now, by punching brick walls.
11 comments
Comments feed for this article
December 21, 2011 at 10:05 am
Duffy
Shorter Version: Republicans are not voting in favor of a bad idea that helps me. They are putting the good of the nation over my own selfish needs. Therefore, violence is not just necessary but patriotic.
Thanks for clearing that up.
December 21, 2011 at 2:53 pm
kavips
You’re welcome…. KA–POW…. 🙂
December 21, 2011 at 3:36 pm
Rhymes With Right
So let’s see if I get this straight. The party that wants to give you that tax cut for a year is responsible for the intransigence of the party that only wants to give it to you for two months?
Face it — the Dems are willing to give you $160 in tax cuts — but the GOP wants to give you the full $1000. And interestingly enough, that means the GOP is out to make sure Americans get what Obama asked for — but Obama’s own party refuses to follow his lead on the issue.
December 21, 2011 at 3:40 pm
Rhymes With Right
One additional point.
Using your logic, “the American Way” would involve doing to Obama and Biden what you suggest be done to that juror so that we can clean up the mess they have made NOW rather than waiting until the results of the 2012 election are in.
Those of us with a moral compass find your POV to be repulsive.
December 21, 2011 at 11:34 pm
kavips
Except RWR. you have it backwards…
The party that wants to give the me the tax cut for a year is the Democratic one… The party that doesn’t want me to have one at all, is the Republican..You have not been paying attention!!!!!!!!!!!
(Of course, your attention deficit is to be expected)… So, the party that wants to extend the tax cut, so more time can be devoted to it, to get it right, and strip out all the crap the Right Wing buried in the bill, is the one who passed a resolution to extend the current cut for two months. So we could pass a tax bill not covered in crap and keep things orderly in the process. This was supported by Mitch McConnell who you obviously do no know, is a Republican.
The Tea Party Republican Party, which is you, said, “no way”.. We want crap in that bill too, and we won’t give the American people one damn thing, until we fill the bill with crap that will make our millionaire friends pat us on the back and say… “you done good son, now polish my shoes.”
That is what is happening… That is why punching these people in the mouth is extremely wise and actually, a rather thoughtful, good policy… And I agree with you on this point, if Biden and Obama were ever to say like the Republicans do when they stand up in front of a microphone, “fuck the hard working middle class of American people. the mother fucking bastards who suffering mightily every day to pay our lavish and outrageous expenses; fuck them and lets give the country away to our billionaire friends who will create a fake job for us after we leave office”… then, i would say the same applies to them.. That goes for them too….
But you see, they are on our side. They support us… Republicans don’t, never have, never will.
For you to even say such a thing, means either one of two ;things. One, you are lying and you know it… or Two, you’ve been living in a bubble all your life…. . Sorry dude. if you even believe what you said, .. you do.
December 21, 2011 at 11:39 pm
kavips
… and since you are a first time commentator here, I mean no offense… I treat Cowboy fans the exact same way, even though I love them to death when the game is not on…. 🙂
December 22, 2011 at 4:15 am
Rhymes With Right
You have called me three things that I won’t tolerate in your response to me.
First, you have called me a liar — even though I have the facts on my side on this matter.
Second, you have called me a Tea Partier — even though I have never been a part of that movement.
Third, and most offensive, you have called me a Cowboys fan…
December 22, 2011 at 7:33 am
kavips
LoL…
(btw…. i noticed you didn’t take issue with the “been living in a bubble part?” 🙂 )
December 22, 2011 at 10:09 am
Mike W.
RWR – Get used to it. Kavips lives in a dream world in which facts, logic, law, and the Constitution do not apply. You have facts and logic on your side but don’t ask him to use the same to back up his position. He can’t. He’ll abandon his position and not even try to intellectually defend it the moment he realizes he’s been bested.
“That is today’s Congress. Held hostage by Tea Party Republicans who live in a dream world untouched by the reality of living under $185,000 a year.”
Hilarious! I think someone needs to look at the Dems in congress just a little harder……
December 22, 2011 at 10:37 am
David Anderson
I really want to agree with my friend Kavips because it is the Hanukak and Christmas season of joy and peace, but I cannot.
We all know that this was a one year holiday extended to two. I enjoyed it, but now the social security trust fund is really suffering. I say that I can use $19 a week (not a month), but I don’t see it as good policy to keep raiding the trust fund to do it.
A two month extention is foolishness. You should at least do it quarterly to match the tax payments by employers. It causes confusion and is just another symbolic action that hurts the real world. The House is right to extend it a year. Go to conference and work out a deal. It is the way adults handle things not the Reid fly by the seat of the pants style of inept governance.
December 24, 2011 at 2:13 am
kavips
I agree with Mike and Dave.