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The Result of Tea Party Thinking?

How can anyone refuse to pay a paltry $75.00 per year when the stakes are so high?

Re: No pay, no spray: Firefighters let home burn – U.S. news – Life – msnbc.com

Gene Cranick

Firefighters in rural Tennessee let a home burn to the ground last week because the homeowner hadn’t paid a $75 fee.

Gene Cranick of Obion County and his family lost all of their possessions in the Sept. 29 fire, along with three dogs and a cat. 

“They could have been saved if they had put water on it, but they didn’t do it,” Cranick told MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann.

The fire started when the Cranicks’ grandson was burning trash near the family home. As it grew out of control, the Cranicks called 911, but the fire department from the nearby city of South Fulton would not respond.

“We wasn’t on their list,” he said the operators told him.

Everyone knows the story by now. The Tennessee man, Cranick, who didn’t pay the firefighting dues and then landed high and dry when his house caught fire. But, the burning question here is this: can there be a political story somewhere in all this? Is it really silly to ask the question, did Cranick refuse to pay the tax out of ideology or some hateful anti-tax spite?

Morally, I think we can all agree that the fire department and the city of South Fulton were WRONG (!) to let the house burn because of principle. There are other ways to enforce a tax law than letting a family suffer with such a devastating loss. It is sad that some folks out there have to see this occurrence to open their eyes to the necessity of taxes. The anti-tax protestors don’t seem to get it about how their streets aren’t paved with “smaller government”, but with the tax burden that all citizens of all stripes share.

It is a harsh lesson indeed – too harsh in my opinion, but this speaks straight to the heart of the tax issue.

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YOU LIE!

Re: McConnell Open To Talks On Bush Tax Cuts Compromise

“The most important thing is to prevent a tax hike in the middle of a recession,” Stewart added. “This should be done for as long as possible, but a 2-year freeze at the current rate, if that’s what it takes to prevent a Democrat tax hike, would certainly be preferable to an immediate tax hike on every taxpaying American.”

Don Stewart is Senator Mitch McConnell’s (R) communications director. First of all, the Bush tax cuts were forced down our throats when the Republicans used the reconciliation process to override a possible Democratic filibuster. (Dems won’t do the same to the Republicans because they have no balls.) These were cuts that were not paid for and added billions to our national debt. Secondly, letting the tax cuts expire under the current Democratic plan will only affect people who make over 250,000 dollars per year.

It is time that we speak up and stop letting them get away with lying to the middle class Americans.

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The Real Reason the National Debt is So High

People wave signs at a tea party protest. | Reuters Photo

People wave signs at a tea party protest. | Reuters Photo

First, I want to tell everyone that I have been nursing a nerve injury in my left hand. It has caused me to not want to type much as there was no telling which keys my fingers would hit. The numbness is subsiding some and I am able to work the fingers again. I’m back, somewhat.

The tea partiers rant and rave about the national debt, but fail to remember just how it got to where it is today. This is from an article back in July from Politico:

Sixty-one percent of the 697 self-identified tea party supporters surveyed identified the federal debt as one of the “extremely serious threats” to the future well-being of the United States.

They blame Obama, of course, but here’s the real reason our national debt is out of hand:

Re:  The true cost of the Iraq war: $3 trillion and beyond

There is no question that the Iraq war added substantially to the federal debt. This was the first time in American history that the government cut taxes as it went to war. The result: a war completely funded by borrowing. U.S. debt soared from $6.4 trillion in March 2003 to $10 trillion in 2008 (before the financial crisis); at least a quarter of that increase is directly attributable to the war. And that doesn’t include future health care and disability payments for veterans, which will add another half-trillion dollars to the debt.

As a result of two costly wars funded by debt, our fiscal house was in dismal shape even before the financial crisis — and those fiscal woes compounded the downturn.

Where were these pasty old white men with their “big government” rhetoric in 2003?

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