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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mephisto who wrote (3080)2/28/2002 11:29:23 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15516
 
U.S. corporate parasites flee offshore

Monday, February 25, 2002

By MARK SHIELDS
SYNDICATED COLUMNIST

Profits trump patriotism. That is how Kate Barton, a tax
partner at Ernst & Young, explains the stampede of U.S.
companies rushing to incorporate in Bermuda while
retaining all the benefits of their U.S. locations and evading
millions in corporate tax payments to the U.S. Treasury.

Thanks to David Cay Johnston of The New York Times, we
learn that for a few thousand dollars in a paper transaction,
a U.S. drilling company like Cooper Industries of Houston
(which bills itself as "a responsible corporate citizen,"
because, "we believe giving back is good business") will
reduce its tax bill by 40 percent or $54 million. Kate Barton
told The Times that companies conclude that increased
profits are "powerful enough that maybe the patriotism
issue has to take a back seat to that."


Let us be clear: These fictitious Bermuda companies
continue to enjoy all the benefits of U.S. citizenship. They
and their property are protected by the American legal
system. Their contracts are enforced by American courts.
Because of the U.S. government they have chosen to stiff,
they breathe clean air and drink clean water, drive on safe
highways and they and their families are kept safe by the
world's best military.


To call these capitalist expatriates "freeloaders" is too kind.
They are corporate parasites, too many of whom after Sept.
11 in order to make a quick buck, wrapped themselves and
their products in Old Glory in a loathsome display of crass
and cheesy opportunism.

That's right, the United States is at war. Tonight, thousands
of brave young Americans live in harm's way. And what
does the White House of our commander in chief have to
say to these American companies whose chieftains scheme
to escape paying even one dime toward the modest salaries
of those warriors who defend their families?

"The White House has said nothing about these moves and
their effect on tax revenues," reports David Johnston.

Apparently, the Bush crowd is so worshipful of lower
taxation that some moral paralysis prevents any criticism of
even a screw-your-neighbor-do-it-yourself "tax cut."

Does not the systematic abuse of hard-working Americans
who obey the laws, pay their taxes and who would never
consider bartering their citizenship for a few lousy bucks
outrage anybody in George W.'s inner or outer circle?

At least one Republican, Iowa Sen. Charles Grassley, is
angry. He is determined to stop what he calls this
"corporate expatriation scheme." With moral clarity,
Grassley states: "If there's one thing I can't stand it's a tax
cheat."

He adds, "When one person or company fails to pay his
share of taxes, it falls on everybody else to pick up the
slack."

Forty years ago, a young president reminded the world that
"to assure the survival and the success of liberty," he and
his countrymen "will pay any price, bear any burden, meet
any hardship."

Today, the word from the White House, free of moral
outrage for profitable corporate parasites, is to defend this
nation: "You will pay no price, bear no burden and meet no
hardship."

seattlepi.nwsource.com



To: Mephisto who wrote (3080)9/2/2003 2:49:47 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15516
 
[Economy has lost 700,000 jobs]

“RICHFIELD,Ohio, Sept. 1—Since the last time
President Bush addressed a Labor Day
picnic—with carpenters in Pennsylvania—the
economy has lost 700,000 jobs, most of them in manufacturing.”

Article: Bush Defends Tax Cuts and Announces Job Posts
Author: David E. Sanger
Source: The New York Times
Reference: Tuesday, September 2, 2003, National Edition, Page 1