These criminals use shady/borderline-illegal business practices to destroy the financial stability of this country yet it's the protester who is the "imbecile"?
One of the asshats, John A. Allison IV, says "Instead of an attack on the 1 percent, let's call it an attack on the very productive." I'm not sure of Mr. Allison's daily duties as former CEO of BB&T Corp. but I'm relatively certain it didn't produce anything other than the taste of vomit in the back of my throat. Calling the wealthiest 1 percent of Americans "very productive" is like calling pimps "investment bankers". It's nonsensical and masks the reality of the tactics involved in acquiring and maintaining those positions.
No one is upset that these
This whole scenario is assuming any of the wealthy individual's income was actually considered income. Capital gains on long-term investments, and several other forms of income, aren't technically counted as income. The Long-Term Capital Gains tax is currently set at 15% which coincidentally is also the same tax rate the single mom in the previous example, working and earning $8,500-$34,500, is responsible for. Yeah, that makes sense.
So to insinuate that the lowly hourly workers are just jealous and looking for a handout is arrogant and offensive.
According to a report from the IRS, average household income increased 62% from 1979 through 2007. I won't list every year's inflation rate but the inflation rates during 1979-1981 were 11.22%, 13.58%, and 10.35%. respectively. And as anyone with a credit card can tell you, calculating percentages of percentages is messy business. This is significantly skewed by the fact that income for the top 1% "more than tripled" during this time making the actual number for the remaining 99% a bit lower than the reported 62%. Factor in inflation, and the old adage of "The rich get richer, and the poor get poorer" doesn't sound too far from the truth.
(Quick math timeout to illustrate the previous comment:
Lets say all of your monthly bills cost you $1000 (if only, right?). A 10.35% annual inflation rate means that the next year those same bills will cost you $1103.50. That hurts already. Most people won't be getting a raise worth $100 extra every month to cover that increase in expenses. However, if that 10.35% increase came after previous annual increases of 11.22% and 13.58% your bills would have increased from $1000 to $1393.98 in just three years.
Using $1000 in 1979 as a base, and calculating each year's inflation rate on top of the previous year's rate, we see that in 2007 the same bills would cost roughly $3181.84. An increase of 318%. And, as stated previously, average household income (even including the top 1%) increased just 62% over this same time period while income for the top 1% alone "more than tripled". Regardless of the actual number, roughly tripling income would account for the roughly tripling expenses.)
I'll leave you with a few quotes from the unjustly vilified patriots interviewed for the Bloomberg piece.
-When asked about willingness to pay higher tax rates Blackstone Group LP CEO Stephen Schwarzman instead chose to complain about low-income families who pay no income tax saying "...we should all be part of the system". Classy.
-Robert Rosenkranz, CEO of Delphi Financial Group Inc., claims the 1% should be getting thanks instead of persecution. He says "It's simply a fact that pretty much all the private-sector jobs in America are created by the decisions of 'the 1 percent' to hire and invest". So the next time you see a new small business open in your town make sure to thank Robert Rosenkranz.
(No word as of yet on how Mr. Guildenstern feels about the U.S. tax code.)
-CEO of Euro Pacific Capital Inc. Peter Schiff claims his taxes are "more than a medieval lord would have taken from a serf".
Billionaire CEOs: modern-day serfs.