Robin Hood in Reverse???

signalmankenneth

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Robin Hood in Reverse in the US: Seven Examples
Thursday 7 April 2011
by: Bill Quigley, Truthout

The rich have been getting richer and the poor and the middle class have been getting poorer in the US recently. Here are seven examples that show how the US is going through "Robin Hood in Reverse."

Between 1948 and 1979, the richest 10 percent of families in the US claimed 33 percent of average income growth. Between 2000 and 2007, the richest 10 percent claimed a full 100 percent of average income growth in the US, according to the Economic Policy Institute.

Business taxes were cut from 46 to 34 percent 25 years ago, according to ProPublica. But today, 115 of the big 500 companies listed on Standard and Poor's stock index paid federal and other taxes of less than 20 percent over the last five years, according to David Leonhardt of The New York Times.

General Electric's tax rate for last year was seven percent, according to ProPublica.

The top five percent of US households claim 63 percent of the entire country's wealth. The bottom 80 percent hold just 13 percent of the growth, according to the Economic Policy Institute.

Last year, John Paulson, a hedge fund manager "earned" $4.9 billion, according to The New York Times. Ten years ago, it took 25 such managers to collectively earn that much. Last year, the top 25 hedge fund managers pocketed (a much better word) a total of $22 billion. It would take over 440,000 people each earning $50,000 a year to match that amount.

A federal development program intended to help poor communities, the New Market Tax Credit, instead funnels up to ten billion taxpayer dollars to big corporations like JPMorgan Chase & Co, Goldman Sachs and Prudential to build luxury hotels, office buildings and a car museum.

Bloomberg Markets Magazine pointed to the Blackstone Hotel in Chicago, which was renovated for $116 million. Prudential got $15.6 million in tax credit from the US Treasury for helping fund the project because the hotel was in a census zone that included two colleges that housed a lot of lower income students.

According to the Financial Times, there are now more people living in poverty in the US than at any time in the last 50 years. Foreclosure filings were nearly four million in 2010, up 23 percent since 2008, according to RealtyTrac.
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so if one makes a thread and doesn't get response....that means they are right?
What makes it right is that it's true. The US is now a nation that takes from the poor and gives to the rich and what is really frightening is that I read posts from many that are not in the wealthy bracket that defend the policy.
 
What makes it right is that it's true. The US is now a nation that takes from the poor and gives to the rich and what is really frightening is that I read posts from many that are not in the wealthy bracket that defend the policy.

I defend the wealthy because I believe America is the land of opportunity, where people should not be punished for their success. As for the claim that the wealthy "take" from the poor, it is absolute horseshit. Hell, most poor people receive more on their income tax return than they paid in taxes.

Seriously, what is with your bigotry toward rich people?
 
What makes it right is that it's true. The US is now a nation that takes from the poor and gives to the rich and what is really frightening is that I read posts from many that are not in the wealthy bracket that defend the policy.

What was taken from the poor? Just for fun, what is truth? since many find it to be relative...
 
I defend the wealthy because I believe America is the land of opportunity, where people should not be punished for their success. As for the claim that the wealthy "take" from the poor, it is absolute horseshit. Hell, most poor people receive more on their income tax return than they paid in taxes.

Seriously, what is with your bigotry toward rich people?

Prove it.

Corperate welfare costs far more than social welfare.
 
What makes it right is that it's true. The US is now a nation that takes from the poor and gives to the rich and what is really frightening is that I read posts from many that are not in the wealthy bracket that defend the policy.

You do realize that about 50% of us don't pay any taxes and receive "refunds" from the Federal government that far outweigh our contributions... Right?
 
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