Moderator: Andrew

Seven Wishes wrote:Twenty five CEOs of America's top companies earned more money than their companies paid in taxes last year, according to the Institute for Policy Studies' Executive Excess report.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/08/31/us-usa-tax-ceopay-idUSTRE77U0KW20110831
International Paper
John Faraci
CEO compensation: $12.3 million
U.S. federal income taxes: $249 million refund
Prudential
John Strangfeld
CEO compensation: $16.2 million
U.S. federal income taxes: $722 million refund
Verizon
Ivan Seidenberg
CEO compensation: $18.1 million
U.S. federal income taxes: $705 million refund
Bank of New York Mellon
Robert Kelly
CEO compensation: $19.4 million
U.S. federal income taxes: $670 million refund
Boeing
Jim McNerney
CEO compensation: $13.8 million
U.S. federal income taxes: $13 million
Marsh & McLennan
Brian Duperreault
CEO compensation: $14 million
U.S. federal income taxes: $90 million refund
Stanley Black & Decker
John Lundgren
CEO compensation: $32.6 million
U.S. federal income taxes: $75 million refund
Chesapeake Energy
Aubrey McClendon
CEO compensation: $21 million
U.S. federal income taxes: $0
eBay
John Donahoe
CEO compensation: $12.4 million
U.S. federal income taxes: $131 million refund
Ford
Alan Mulally
CEO compensation: $26.5 million
U.S. federal income taxes: $69 million refund
Aon
Gregory Case
CEO compensation: $20.8 million
U.S. federal income taxes: $16 million
Coca-Cola Enterprises
John F. Brock
CEO compensation: $19.1 million
U.S. federal income taxes: $8 million
Dow Chemical
Andrew Liveris
CEO compensation: $17.8 million
U.S. federal income taxes: $576 million refund
Ameriprise
James Cracchiolo
CEO compensation: $16.3 million
U.S. federal income taxes: $224 million refund
Honeywell
David Cote
CEO compensation: $15.2 million
U.S. federal income taxes: $471 million refund
General Electric
Jeff Immelt
CEO compensation: $15.2 million
U.S. federal income taxes: $3.3 billion refund
Alleghany Technologies
Patrick Hassey
CEO compensation: $15 million
U.S. federal income taxes: $47 million refund
Mylan Laboratories
Robert Coury
CEO compensation: $15 million
U.S. federal income taxes: $73 million refund
Capitol One Financial
Richard Fairbank
CEO compensation: $14.9 million
U.S. federal income taxes: $152 million refund
Wynn Resorts
Steve Wynn
CEO compensation: $14.6 million
U.S. federal income taxes: $0
Motorola Solutions
Gregory Q. Brown
CEO compensation: $14 million
U.S. federal income taxes: $7 million
Nabor Industries
Eugene Isenberg
CEO compensation: $13.5 million
U.S. federal income taxes: $138 million refund
Qwest Communications
Edward Mueller
CEO compensation: $13.4 million
U.S. federal income taxes: $14 million refund
Cablevision Systems
James Dolan
CEO compensation: $13.2 million
U.S. federal income taxes: $3 million refund
Motorola Mobility
Sanjay Jha
CEO compensation: $13 million
U.S. federal income taxes: $12 million



Seven Wishes wrote:Twenty five CEOs of America's top companies earned more money than their companies paid in taxes last year, according to the Institute for Policy Studies' Executive Excess report.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/08/31/us-usa-tax-ceopay-idUSTRE77U0KW20110831
ensation: $19.4 million

slucero wrote:Monker wrote:Whatever...that just seems like too little straw being grasped at.
He'll just let the judicial system handle it and let it be.
De they even really know each other? I mean, do they spend holidays together or is it just a "Oh, yeah, that's guy is my half uncle...I haven't seen him in 30yrs."slucero wrote:Gonna be tough for Obama to sidestep this politically if his uncle gets to stay... irony is he may have to order him deported to protect his 2012 hopes...Official: Obama uncle here illegally since 1992
By Denise Lavoie
Associated Press
Posted: 08/31/2011 12:07:16 PM PDT
Updated: 08/31/2011 12:07:17 PM PDT
BOSTON -- A federal official says President Barack Obama's uncle, an illegal immigrant charged with drunken driving in Massachusetts last week, was ordered by an immigration judge to leave the country almost two decades ago.
The official says a deportation order was issued against Onyango Obama in 1992. The official spoke to The Associated Press on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to release details on the case.
The 67-year-old Onyango Obama is the half-brother of the president's late father. He is originally from Kenya.
Onyango Obama has pleaded not guilty to operating under the influence of alcohol and is now jailed on an immigration detainer.
His attorney declined to comment on his case or how long the uncle has been living in the U.S. illegally.
The White House also has declined to comment.
lmao.. you are officially Mr. "Whatever"...
It's political ammo... and Obama is gonna have a hard time answering a question like:
"Mr President, given that your uncle has been in the country illegally since 1992, when he was order to leave by the court, would you not agree that his deportation be immediately enforced, as the law requires?"
Gin and Tonic Sky wrote:Seven Wishes wrote:Twenty five CEOs of America's top companies earned more money than their companies paid in taxes last year, according to the Institute for Policy Studies' Executive Excess report.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/08/31/us-usa-tax-ceopay-idUSTRE77U0KW20110831
ensation: $19.4 million
the problem is these are all total tax Refunds not total taxes paid. Only when you look at the numbers of total taxes paid do you know whether or not this stinks. Did the IPS report these numbers in the same report?

conversationpc wrote:I was going to say...That stuff posted by Seven Wishes is very misleading.

Seven Wishes wrote:conversationpc wrote:I was going to say...That stuff posted by Seven Wishes is very misleading.
Way to swoop into the fray to rescue your Sauron-esque corporate overlords from their blind and maimed serfs. Utterly predictable. And wrong.
These corporations are paying less than one-quarter the rate they would in Europe or Asia. But thanks to GOP deregulation, it's really easy to move businesses abroad now, the American worker be damned.
conversationpc wrote:Seven Wishes wrote:conversationpc wrote:I was going to say...That stuff posted by Seven Wishes is very misleading.
Way to swoop into the fray to rescue your Sauron-esque corporate overlords from their blind and maimed serfs. Utterly predictable. And wrong.
These corporations are paying less than one-quarter the rate they would in Europe or Asia. But thanks to GOP deregulation, it's really easy to move businesses abroad now, the American worker be damned.
Woh, hold the fort there, moron. What you posted is easy enough for a 7-year old to disprove as Gin and Tonic Sky pointed out. So because I agreed with what he said, that means I'm sympathetic to the overpaid corporate cronies, huh? Interesting thought process and wrong as usual.
Seven Wishes wrote:"Abysmal? He's the most proactive President since Clinton, and he's bringing much-needed change for the better to a nation that has been tyrannized by the worst President since Hoover."- 7 Wishes on Pres. Obama

conversationpc wrote:Seven Wishes wrote:conversationpc wrote:I was going to say...That stuff posted by Seven Wishes is very misleading.
Way to swoop into the fray to rescue your Sauron-esque corporate overlords from their blind and maimed serfs. Utterly predictable. And wrong.
These corporations are paying less than one-quarter the rate they would in Europe or Asia. But thanks to GOP deregulation, it's really easy to move businesses abroad now, the American worker be damned.
Woh, hold the fort there, moron. What you posted is easy enough for a 7-year old to disprove as Gin and Tonic Sky pointed out. So because I agreed with what he said, that means I'm sympathetic to the overpaid corporate cronies, huh? Interesting thought process and wrong as usual.

Seven Wishes wrote:conversationpc wrote:Seven Wishes wrote:conversationpc wrote:I was going to say...That stuff posted by Seven Wishes is very misleading.
Way to swoop into the fray to rescue your Sauron-esque corporate overlords from their blind and maimed serfs. Utterly predictable. And wrong.
These corporations are paying less than one-quarter the rate they would in Europe or Asia. But thanks to GOP deregulation, it's really easy to move businesses abroad now, the American worker be damned.
Woh, hold the fort there, moron. What you posted is easy enough for a 7-year old to disprove as Gin and Tonic Sky pointed out. So because I agreed with what he said, that means I'm sympathetic to the overpaid corporate cronies, huh? Interesting thought process and wrong as usual.
Whatever. No-one "disproved" anything. The only thing that has been proven is that you're Limbaugh's whipping boy, and that major corporations are making record profits and paying less than they ever have in corporate taxes...not hiring in SPITE of those record profits, and giving their CEO's and BOD's hideously outrageous salaries.
Nice try, Dave. Move onto a subject you're more qualified to weigh in on.


Seven Wishes wrote:No, Stu...I'm not.
The very fact that the Republican policy of lowering the corporate tax rates to historic all-time lows - and the subsequent record bottom-line profits of those corporations, the historically high CEO paychchecks, with the "inexplicable" hiring freeze, which is in fact a combination of GOP deregulation and the lowering of barriers making moving American jobs overeseas easier than ever - if concrete proof of the fallacy of the Bush Tax cut theory. More and more money flows into the hands of the rich, and yet they don't re-invest into the economy by "creating jobs". They simply pocket the money. Without stricutres and incentives in place to incentivize these mega-corporations to create more jobs, everything stagnates. That's what's happening. So your defense of these record profits is, ironically, proof that the trickle-down theory is DOA, and always has been.

Seven Wishes wrote:conversationpc wrote:Seven Wishes wrote:conversationpc wrote:I was going to say...That stuff posted by Seven Wishes is very misleading.
Way to swoop into the fray to rescue your Sauron-esque corporate overlords from their blind and maimed serfs. Utterly predictable. And wrong.
These corporations are paying less than one-quarter the rate they would in Europe or Asia. But thanks to GOP deregulation, it's really easy to move businesses abroad now, the American worker be damned.
Woh, hold the fort there, moron. What you posted is easy enough for a 7-year old to disprove as Gin and Tonic Sky pointed out. So because I agreed with what he said, that means I'm sympathetic to the overpaid corporate cronies, huh? Interesting thought process and wrong as usual.
Whatever. No-one "disproved" anything. The only thing that has been proven is that you're Limbaugh's whipping boy, and that major corporations are making record profits and paying less than they ever have in corporate taxes...not hiring in SPITE of those record profits, and giving their CEO's and BOD's hideously outrageous salaries.
Nice try, Dave. Move onto a subject you're more qualified to weigh in on.
Fact Finder wrote:In response to Sevens tax screed...I'm changing the names to keep anonymous..taxes I did last year, and there are many millions more just like them.
Jay and Lauren made $13,678, they had $492 withheld, refund of $5378.
John and Penny made $32,450, they had $1318 withheld, refund of $11,092. (Think $8000 for buying a house)
Transfering wealth through the IRS via the EITC, Make Work Pay Credit, Child TaxCredit, Additional Child Tax Credit and
1st time home buyers credit....indefensible IMHO.
Gin and Tonic Sky wrote:
the problem is these are all total tax Refunds not total taxes paid. Only when you look at the numbers of total taxes paid do you know whether or not this stinks. Did the IPS report these numbers in the same report?

Fact Finder wrote:JOBS: ZERO...
First time since 1945...
UNEMPLOYMENT 9.1%...
AP Oops: Report could show signs of modest growth...
Obama: No comment, off to presidential retreat...
Dow plunges 2%...
Ø
Great job Barry!

Seven Wishes wrote:
Let's see...unemployment went from 4.2% to 8.2% under Bush, which is an increase of 4.0%. It's risen from 8.2% to 9.1% under Obama.
Glass houses, FartFinder....glass houses.

Seven Wishes wrote:Gin and Tonic Sky wrote:
the problem is these are all total tax Refunds not total taxes paid. Only when you look at the numbers of total taxes paid do you know whether or not this stinks. Did the IPS report these numbers in the same report?
Wait...this speculative question is the "fact" to which I'm supposed to reply? Granted, it's an interesting QUESTION, but it's not addressed in the article and I'm not sure where I'd find the information, since this information was culled into the article I quoted.
Good grief, Dave. You, RWF, and FF are the ones who NEVER address ANY FACTS I post. You just move on to the next Faux talking point and pretend nothing was said or written. There are dozens of examples of this in the past few weeks alone.
Seven Wishes wrote:Gin and Tonic Sky wrote:
Good grief, Dave. You, RWF, and FF are the ones who NEVER address ANY FACTS I post. You just move on to the next Faux talking point and pretend nothing was said or written. There are dozens of examples of this in the past few weeks alone.

RossValoryRocks wrote:
If you listen to any credible economist the TARP (you can blame that on Bush) and the 2 following stimulus bills hurt more than they helped, because it was done with borrowed money. If they would have just let the market correct normally, we would have a booming economy right now.

RossValoryRocks wrote:You are EVERY bit as bad as FF or RWF or Dave at not addressing questions put to you.
conversationpc wrote:RossValoryRocks wrote:You are EVERY bit as bad as FF or RWF or Dave at not addressing questions put to you.
Hey now...We're on the same side on this one...Ease up!![]()

RossValoryRocks wrote:conversationpc wrote:RossValoryRocks wrote:You are EVERY bit as bad as FF or RWF or Dave at not addressing questions put to you.
Hey now...We're on the same side on this one...Ease up!![]()
I should have said "every bit as bad as you CLAIM FF, RWF or Dave are...". Sorry about that.

conversationpc wrote:RossValoryRocks wrote:conversationpc wrote:RossValoryRocks wrote:You are EVERY bit as bad as FF or RWF or Dave at not addressing questions put to you.
Hey now...We're on the same side on this one...Ease up!![]()
I should have said "every bit as bad as you CLAIM FF, RWF or Dave are...". Sorry about that.
I figured that's what you meant. I just felt like busting your ass.

Gin and Tonic Sky wrote:RossValoryRocks wrote:
If you listen to any credible economist the TARP (you can blame that on Bush) and the 2 following stimulus bills hurt more than they helped, because it was done with borrowed money. If they would have just let the market correct normally, we would have a booming economy right now.
That hits the nail right on the head. If you listen to economists influenced by classical/Austrian free market economics they will tell you that it is the business cycle (and how human actions and expectations figure into it) that drives an economy. If you don't interfere with the business cycle the market clears bad debt at the bottom of the business cycle and the economy bounces back stronger. When the government interferes with the business cycle during a downturn ( like it did in 1929, 1930, 1933, 2008, 2009, 2010) it turns recessions into either depressions or prolonged periods of no growth.

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