What should we talk about this week?

I’m planning to do a social media-driven show this week centered around tweets, posts and comments so please put in your two cents below 🙂 My show is on at the regular time Saturday 3-6pm ET on 95.5fm and 750am wsb…

To Vax or Not To Vax? Podcast of April 21, 2016 Show

Hour 1 Hour 2 This was the article by Dr. Don Miller about childhood diseases and cancer-resistance that I found interesting: MMR Vaccine: Risks & Benefits Here’s the book about the youngest person with narcolepsy, which resulted from an additive in a UK vaccine: Waking Mathilda   And for a swan dive into the rabbit … Read more

What Everyone Missed About the NC Bathroom Law (Including Me!)

Update (12/9/16): Since the first minute I heard of Georgia’s religious-freedom bill, I figured it was a trap. Get everyone riled up about another southern state showing its prejudice and get the national populace, or maybe even the federal government, to make sure that no one anywhere is permitted to enact anything so offensive. As … Read more

Something Rotten in Brussels?

I posted this to facebook as soon as I heard it, but I thought I should put it here just for the record. I heard Catherine Herridge report on Fox News recently that TSA Chief Admiral Neffenger had been in Brussels the morning of the attacks there. I can’t believe I missed this the first … Read more

The Forgotten 4%

In honor of tax week, I thought I’d repost this…it was one of my earliest posts, so please forgive all the exclamation points!!!!

All this talk about fairness and the “rich” paying their “fair share,” you’d think the lower classes were bearing the greatest burden of taxation but they are not, not by a long shot!  First of all, 49.5% of tax filers pay NO INCOME TAX WHATSOEVER–these of course are the lowest earners, not the highest earners!  For this reason, and others, the United States has one of the most progressive tax systems in the world and has the highest corporate tax rate in the world.

I do think the current tax system is unfair, but because only the top half of all earners pay anything at all! And what’s worse, it’s the top earners, not the wealthiest, who pay the vast majority of the taxes. The idle rich (not that there’s anything wrong with that!) and the government-connected rich (there IS something wrong with that!) aren’t necessarily the ones paying income tax. Income tax is paid by those who earn an income for labor. The richer you are the less you need to do this so per force the majority of the highest earners are still below the level of those rich enough not to have to work–this is primarily (and perhaps by definition) the upper middle class.

According to the chart below, the lower 95% of earners are paying the same in taxes as the top 1%–both groups pay roughly 40% of the taxes. That other 4%,

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“Instantly Labeled the Panama Papers” (Propaganda Report)

ICIJ-supporters1

This is part of a series called: The Propaganda Report, Your MSM Companion. Here’s what it’s about: I read the WSJ to keep up with the official narrative–if we know what they’re trying to feed us, we might be able to figure out why. I have concluded that nothing in The Wall Street Journal, which I consider to be the “conservative” newspaper of record, is put there simply to inform. It is to misinform in order to serve an agenda or to spin real information that cannot be ignored. With that said, I thought I would take an article or related articles from The Journal (and occasionally elsewhere) every day and try to start a conversation.

For some reason, today I read The Wall Street Journal backwards. The funny thing was, that let me see where they were headed with today’s theme before I got bogged down in the set-up. Here’s what I started with–an editorial on page A12:

The Panama Papers in Perspective
The news here are the incomes and bank accounts of politicians.

That subheading didn’t appear in the print edition, so I had to read the whole article to get the punchline:

[I]t’s hard to see how the big question in this story is whether everyone with a company in Panama paid the correct amount of tax. The far more important question is how so many public officials in so many governments managed to accumulate so much money.. . . .

The mistake now would be to narrow the focus prematurely, zeroing in on tax avoidance that is a hobbyhorse of the political class but in this case is a distraction. The real news here are the incomes and far-flung bank accounts of the political class.

But not just any political class…the body of the article set up exactly whom should be in the crosshairs…

It’s no surprise that the world’s undemocratic and nontransparent regimes figure prominently in the Panama Papers. . . .

Specifically?

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