Monday, August 27, 2012

Think Republicans Won't Raise Your Taxes?

by muon

We've all had the experience of walking into a grocery store and finding that some favorite food is now in a smaller container.  Pounds of coffee are now 13 ounces. Half gallons of ice cream are now 1.5 quarts. Did they lower the price? No. Or, even if they do temporarily, the savings doesn't cover the reduction in size. Per ounce, you're paying more.

Grover Norquist is a lobbyist. In a kind of protection racket designed to keep certain kinds of Republicans in office and weed out anyone who doesn't toe the line, Grover has made elected officials sign a pledge never to raise taxes. It's the main reason nothing has gotten done in the US House the last two years. Republican congresspeople won't fund anything, because, they say, they'd be voting to raise taxes.

The Paul Ryan Budget, in essence, pulls the same kind of a switch certain brands in grocery stores have pulled. He and his GOP cohorts want to reduce the amount of product you get for your money. They say this isn't increasing your taxes. Technically, no, but I guarantee you're going to feel as gypped as you do when you pick up that new tube of Colgate, only to find that it's gone from 6 oz. down to 4.

Grover Norquist has said he wants to shrink government down to the size where it can be drowned in a bathtub. Even if Congress lowers your taxes a bit, you'll still be paying more than the shrunken services will be worth. Like the groceries, you'll be paying more for less. Get used to rutted highways and dangerous bridges, at the same price.

For corporations, sometimes the money they save by giving you less of a product goes to cover the rising costs of doing business. More often though, it gets diverted to increasing profits and executive compensation. According to the Ryan Budget, the extra money from cutting government services, used by the poor and middle classes, will go to the wealthiest people in America, by extending the Bush tax cuts.

Bottom line: you'll be getting less for your tax money. And that, pledge or no, is a tax increase.

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