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Posted: 7:50 a.m. Thursday, Nov. 29, 2012
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By Neal Boortz
Could have seen this one coming! Companies are shelling out billions in dividends in order to beat the fiscal cliff.
House Republicans have put revenue on the table by agreeing to close certain tax loopholes.
Even as Republicans agree to increased revenues through reducing deductions in the tax code, Dems reject any changes to entitlements. So, who is really playing chicken at the fiscal cliff?
This columnist argues that the fiscal cliff is the wrong problem to be worrying about.
Under Obama’s own budget, the tax hikes would not be used to reduce the deficit, but to finance new spending.
In 2011, 14.9 million American households reported receiving food stamps in the last 12 months — up from 13.6 million, or 11.9 percent, in 2010.
The painful truth for proggies: From 1979 through 2000, all of the changes in the tax code before the Bush tax cuts effectively reduced the average tax rate for the bottom 80 percent of earners and raised the average tax rate for the top 20 percent.
Does the GOP have some secret leverage in the fiscal cliff debate?
A new study on economic freedom in North America has concluded that some American states are less free than the provinces of Canada.
Here’s a good interview with Utah Senator Mike Lee who explains that there is no such thing as a tax increase that affects only the wealthy.
For every 1.65 employed persons in the private sector, 1 person is on welfare.
Which country is leading the world in terms of economic growth? Hint, it’s not the United States.
A proggies professor at Butler University asks students to disregard their “American-ness, maleness, whiteness, heterosexuality, middle-class status” when writing and speaking in the classroom.
Obama will eventually tax and regulate junk food to drive people to eat more healthily …
Some people have argued that secession is unconstitutional, but there's absolutely nothing in the Constitution that prohibits it.
It is now racist to say that someone is using the race card. Got it?
Neal Boortz chronicles his 42 years of talk radio in his book "Maybe I Should Just Shut Up and Go Away" Available on line and printed from Barnes and Noble and Amazon.
comment(23)
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