Remember the Constitution?

April 12, 2008

Government in the Mortgage Business?

Filed under: Article 1, constitution, government, liberty, politics, taxes, unconstitutional — usaconstitution @ 8:41 pm

The Right to a Mortgage…which Amendment is this one? I can’t find it!

McCain Defends Homeowner Plan

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Apr 11, 7:31 PM (ET)

(AP) Republican presidential candidate, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., left, speaks to reporters during a…
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LUBBOCK, Texas (AP) – Republican John McCain defended his latest plan to help some homeowners pay their mortgages, saying Friday it was not a reversal of his earlier opposition to aggressive intervention by the government.

The likely Republican presidential nominee on Thursday proposed to help 200,000 to 400,000 homeowners trade burdensome mortgages for manageable loans, a plan that would cost $3 billion to $10 billion.

Democratic rivals Sens. Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama argued that McCain was flip-flopping. Last month, he said he preferred only limited intervention and letting market forces play out, drawing criticism from Democrats and some Republicans that he was being indifferent to Americans facing foreclosures and other economic pain.

McCain said their criticism was “just factually incorrect.”

“I said there shouldn’t be a broad government bailout,” he told reporters Friday in Dallas.

“But I said very clearly – and I’d be glad to get a record of what I said – I said the government has to enact reform to prevent the kind of crisis we have, and there was a role for government, and I supported a bipartisan solution,” McCain said.

His plan falls in the middle; it would help twice as many homeowners as President Bush and fewer than half as many as congressional Democrats.

McCain held a rally Friday in an airport hangar after holding fundraisers in Dallas and Lubbock.

“I think you all know,” he told the crowd in Lubbock, “Americans are sitting around the kitchen table, and they’re trying to figure out a way to keep their home and realize the American dream.”

Fairness in taxation

This whole tax system has got me stumped.

I fall into the $42,650-$110,100 group.  This means I get taxed at $5,837.50 plus 25% of anything over $42,650.

So If I make $70,000. I would pay $5,837.50 + $6837.50  (($70,000-$42,650) * .25) = $12,675 in taxes on my income.  This turns out to be 18% of my income.

If someone makes $500,000 they pay $98,355.50 plus 35% of the amount over 349,700.

They pay $98,355.50 + $52,605  (($500,000- $349,700) *.35) = $150,960.50 in taxes on their income.  It would turn out to be 30.1% of their income.

Is someone makes $1,000,000 they pay $98,355.50 plus 35% of the amount over 349,700.

They pay  $98,355.50 + $227,605  (($1,000,000- $349,700) *.35) = $325,960.50 in taxes on their income.  It would turn out to be 32.6% of their income.

The popular argument is that the top earners should pay more in taxes and they surely do.  They also buy more vehicles, televisions, more valuable property and pay taxes on those items also.

So, this push to get taxes increases for the wealthy is just a push by our government to get their hands on even more money.

Don’t fall for the tricks.

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