Daily Archives: Friday, April 17, 2009

“We’re being taxed to death and we’re sick of it!”

That, of course, is the Howard Bealish narrative that Fox and talk radio (and those Republican politicians who tag along behind) are now engaged in pushing in some hope that this ‘populist’ rabble rousing will reverse entropy and cause time to go backwards and all those broken bits on the floor to fly up to the top of the table and become a reconstituted conservative movement.  Clearly one assumption here is that because truth was little present in that earlier era, there’s no reason to pollute the rebuilding with it now.  The following is from Steve Benen

Last week, Bruce Bartlett, a former Treasury Department economist in the Bush administration, wrote an interesting column comparing U.S. tax rates with countries around the world. Bartlett, a conservative, found that the United States “is a relatively low-tax country no matter how you slice the data.” In 2006, total taxation (federal, state and local) amounted to 28% of the GDP. Of the 30 countries in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, only four had a lower tax ratio than the U.S.

But, conservatives said, who cares what kind of taxes are imposed by other industrialized democracies? Since when do we care? So, this week, Bartlett went with a different approach, comparing the current U.S. tax structure with recent generations.

The exercise is straightforward enough. Bartlett identified the “effective federal income tax rate — taxes paid as a share of income — for a family with the median income. The median is the exact middle of the income distribution — half of families are above and half are below. It’s as close as we can get, statistically, to the typical American family.”

He found that the median family, in the most recent year available, “paid 5.91% of its income to the federal government in the form of income taxes.” In 1981, the median family paid double, and current rates are “well below the rate that prevailed from the 1950s through the 1990s.”

What’s more, the 2009 numbers are almost certainly lower than 2007, thanks to Obama’s middle-class tax cut.

Given all of this, Bartlett draws the right conclusion about the “Tea Party” events this week, where Tea Baggers complained bitterly about a crushing tax burden: “I believe this was largely a partisan exercise designed to improve the fortunes of the Republican Party, not an expression of genuine concern about taxes or our nation’s fiscal future. People should remember that while they have the right to their opinion, they are not entitled to be taken seriously.”

Post Script: For the record, I made this chart, using the table in Bartlett’s piece. I’m hoping to break into the lucrative world of chart blogging someday.

More quality snark

It’s only fair to give Republicans credit for one of the party’s strongest skills: manufacturing a controversy out of nothing. Turning molehills into mountains is an art, the GOP leaders — in conjunction with their various allies — are genuine masters.

This week’s flap over a DHS report on potentially dangerous right-wing extremists is the best example of this, at least since the manufactured controversy over President Obama “apologizing” for American “arrogance.” Which was the best manufactured controversy since the administration’s plan to “cut” military spending. Which was the best since Obama “bowed.” Which was the best since the “outrage” over the president using a teleprompter. Which was the best since conservatives bristled after seeing the president chuckle during a “60 Minutes” interview.

Steve Benen at Washington Monthly

Dilemma

The right wing media such as Fox and talk radio might have some problem here.  After a weeklong onslaught of chest-pounding for the heroism of the Maersk Alabama sailors, we have this Q and A from third engineer John Cronan on NBC News

Q:  How did you retain control of the ship?
CRONAN: We’re American seamen. We’re union members.We stuck together, and we did our jobs. And that’s how we did it.

h/t think progress

Today’s quality snark

From Josh Marshall at TPM

Conservatives are so incensed by warnings about the threat of right wing radicalism that they’re considering overthrowing the federal government.

Gary Kamiya on Leonard Cohen

April 17, 2009 | For the people fortunate enough to see Leonard Cohen on his current national tour, as I did Monday night at Oakland, Calif.’s Paramount Theater, the world is a bigger, deeper, older, more bitter and radiant place. Every Cohen performance is an epic event. And in his three-hour-plus performance, part of his first tour in 15 years, the great songwriter, poet and novelist once again used his powerful body of work to create, for one night, a theater of his life, a public confession so intimate, complex, combative and profound that it felt as much like prayer as performance. At the end of the evening, as the audience floated out, still transported to whatever unknown inner place his words and music had carried them, you could almost feel a palpable sense of collective gratitude that such artistry still exists in a weary world – that Leonard Cohyen is still around.

Much more here

I mention this not only as a longtime fan of this man (in 1967, a cool English teacher at our high school brought in a CBC film on the mesmerizing young poet) but because this coming Sunday I drive up to Vancouver to gather up my splendid daughter and some friends I’ve known since earlier than ’67 for dinner and then Cohen’s concert.  Yummy.

J Street proving successful in fund-raising

Those of us who welcomed the appearance of a liberal jewish lobby to counter the existing Likud-allied groups functioning in Washington will likely find this item pleasing news:

When a group of Jewish liberals formed a lobbying and fundraising group called J Street a year ago, they had modest hopes of raising $50,000 for a handful of congressional candidates.

Instead, the group’s political arm ended up funneling nearly $600,000 to several dozen Democrats and a handful of Republicans in 2008, making it Washington’s leading pro-Israel PAC, according to Federal Election Commission expenditure records. Organizers say 33 of the group’s 41 favored House and Senate candidates won their races.

“It certainly exceeded our expectations,” said Jeremy Ben-Ami, J Street’s executive director. “We didn’t know what level of success we would have. But we think this is a message whose moment has come.”

Riding alongside the ascent of President Obama and other liberal Democrats, J Street blends old-style politicking with a media-savvy approach aimed at altering the U.S. political debate over Israel and other Middle East issues.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/04/16/AR2009041603995.html?hpid=sec-politics

Gehry and Eisenhower?!

Ice cream and tofu?  Brandy with a peanut butter sandwich?  Top hat and blue jeans?

Interesting piece at the Washington Post on Gehry’s challenge in designing a memorial for the staid and unflashy President (and the future direction for memorial architecture.

Continue here

Gerson – three in a row (pinching self)

Michael has now written three consecutive columns that didn’t have propogation of partisan talking points as their raison d’etre.  And this last one is actually very good…clear-headed and honest.  So, hat’s off.

Column here