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To: TobagoJack who wrote (24680)10/31/2007 10:40:16 PM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 217551
 
In other countries people pay taxes to support the governments spending. The US needs to have its people paying taxes too.

There will much less enthusiasm for adventure in the Iraq sands, two aircraft carriers here in the Hormuz Straight and "aid" to Egypt and Israel if this amount of money would be coming from tax payer’s money.

Ask the Europeans how much tax they pay to support their government. It is half of their gains go to pay for government spending.

Petroleum products? Also taxed heavily. All money that goes to government. They are not very much gung ho on going to war or threaten to bomb anyone.



To: TobagoJack who wrote (24680)10/31/2007 11:22:43 PM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 217551
 
Let's publish about lead in the toy paint. But let's not talk about the backroom deals that the 1% do to gorge in the moolah. Oh, here is a horrible thing happening, right in front of our eeys!!

The dog food is tainted Mr. TJ! But wait a moment, the banks do "Caixa 2" and no one is saying anything!

"Caixa 2" is to have two books, one to show the finance controllers and another for your own wayo among your friends.

Call it conduit...

Now 'caixa 2' give you jail term. You may be doing the Colombian accountancy Mr. TJ, if you use 'Caixa 2'. This can send you to calaboush in other countries. Calaboush is the Arabic world for jail.

You may be laundering the money of the Russians!

I can't build and at the same time accept as OK, and pay my supplier, a single miserable GMS site at $150K, because company knows there's possibility to do wayo. But there are gazillions going through the conduits!

Was it not Sarbannes-Oxley made to improve corporate governance? The Plutocrats are nose diving the country!

Should we reach the point where the half of our population trying to make it on 12 percent of the nation's payroll can no longer meet the interest payments, we shall have a crisis where all the choices are worse than awful. And a happy doomsday to you, too.

Give Us This Day Our Daily Debt
Nicholas von Hoffman

How indebted are we? Danny Schechter's In Debt We Trust, produced by the Media Education Foundation, takes a look.

It was almost 100 years ago that Henry Ford startled the world by giving his workers a raise without being asked. He explained that if they didn't have money they could not buy Ford automobiles.

From then on, his self-evident bit of common sense was accepted decade after decade. But in recent years it got lost and forgotten. The big boys have stopped giving us little folks enough to buy the big boys' stuff.

Get this from the Wall Street Journal: "The wealthiest 1% of Americans earned 21.2% of all income in 2005, according to new data from the Internal Revenue Service. That is up sharply from 19% in 2004, and surpasses the previous high of 20.8% set in 2000, at the peak of the previous bull market in stocks. The bottom 50% earned 12.8% of all income, down from 13.4% in 2004 and a bit less than their 13% share in 2000."

Or as Forbes Magazine put it recently, "The price of admission to this, the 25th anniversary edition of the Forbes 400, is $1.3 billion, up $300 million from last year. The collective net worth of the nation's mightiest plutocrats rose $290 billion to $1.54 trillion." So 400 individuals, or about 0.00001 percent of the population, own the equivalent of more than 13 percent of the gross national product of the United States.

This is bad news for Wal-Mart, for Proctor and Gamble, for Delta faucets, for Whirlpool, for Dupont, for everybody who sells anything to the American consumer because the consumers, as the figures show, have run out of money with which to buy. The rich people are sitting on top of all the dough. Even with yachts the size of ocean liners and private planes of the dimension of an Airbus A380, the rich cannot, even if they shop day and night, buy enough to keep the wheels of American and world commerce turning.

It takes but a whisper that the American consumer is dying on them to cause near panic on the world's stock markets and central banks. It is a settled truth that without the American mass market booming away, the much-advertised and overly praised global system will swoon.

The American consumer, however, has the financial equivalent of angina pectoris and has had it for some years now. Terrifying cardiac incidents have been prevented by administering a financial form of nitroglycerin, which we call credit. With credit comes debt, and for tens of millions of us debt is how we live. We use it to buy the houses we live in and the milk our children drink.

It used to be that debt was something you got into when you were fully grown up. It was only after you had a job, got married and were buying a house or car that you contracted debt and worry lines and a disposition not to take risks because you owed too much money.

Since so few people have so much of the money locked up and do not plan to share, either the masses cut back on their spending, which is the road to universal disaster, or they must borrow and borrow and borrow without end. Not only the grownups.

From the point of view of the big rich, getting young people in debt not only keeps the money coming in but also makes youth timid and obedient. Debt ensures that they won't turn up on the streets to demonstrate for some unwholesome cause. You could almost call it a rule that all people--black people, Hispanic people, white people, trailer trash people, college graduate people--when put in debt pretty much do what they are told.

Debt, of course, breeds more debt, as people contract new debt to pay off old debt. As the process proceeds, first it becomes a practical impossibility to pay off the principal and then people find they cannot pay the interest on their debts. That is what has happened to the subprime borrowers.

Should we reach the point where the half of our population trying to make it on 12 percent of the nation's payroll can no longer meet the interest payments, we shall have a crisis where all the choices are worse than awful. And a happy doomsday to you, too.


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To: TobagoJack who wrote (24680)11/1/2007 7:12:10 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 217551
 
China's 20pc wages rise prompts inflation fears
By Richard Spencer in Beijing
Last Updated: 2:23am GMT 30/10/2007

Wages in China's cities have risen by almost 20 per cent since the start of the year, the government in Beijing said yesterday, adding to fears that the country's economy is overheating and might export inflation round the world.

According to the National Bureau of Statistics, the average salary in the first nine months of the year was 16,675 yuan (£1,082), up by 18.8 per cent on a year ago.

Although in recent years it has been salaries at foreign-run multinationals that have caused most envy, those at the remaining state-owned enterprises, which still control the commanding heights of the economy, went up by more than 20 per cent.

Rising prices and inflation are putting pressure on the government to rein in the economy.

Yesterday, it allowed the currency to rise significantly against the dollar.