9/3/2005 11:39:00 AM
"Fuck dem fahggits" works really nice with trash Republicans, which are their majority.
9/3/2005 11:41:57 AM
^ says the non-American
9/3/2005 11:46:34 AM
All the better to see you with
9/3/2005 11:48:36 AM
You get a huge tax credit for purchasing a hybrid vehicle.
9/3/2005 12:01:38 PM
You can write off $1500 or $3500, I can't remember which, if you buy a hybrid.You can write off the entire value of the vehicle, over $50,000, if you buy an H2.
9/3/2005 3:09:22 PM
SHUT THE FUCK UP YOU MOTHER FUCKING FREEDOM HATING HIPPIE COMMIE MOTHER, MOTHER FUCKERSUPPLY SIDE IS THE ONLY ANSWER
9/3/2005 3:16:16 PM
We should have been doing both the whole time. Work on getting hybrids developed, improved, and distributed for benefits in the future, drill the fuck out of anything that isn't going to cause an ecological collapse for the present. Vision would have been doing both.
9/3/2005 4:26:53 PM
9/3/2005 5:49:21 PM
you can only write it off if you use it strictly for business related purposes - and the business has to have paperwork, etc. filed - it can't be something that you just make up.other than that - yea anyone can engage in tax fraud... are you saying that H2s are tax-free because it is possible for someone to defraud the government? wow you're stupider than the average liberal[Edited on September 3, 2005 at 6:11 PM. Reason : s]
9/3/2005 6:08:40 PM
No, you can write off the entire value of the vehicle weighing 6000 pounds or over, up to $100000, if you use it 50% or more for business. This deduction makes it possible, through the loophole, to get the biggest of the big SUVs at a hugely discounted price. There are H2 dealers that advertise this fact, selling it to doctors and lawyers who can write it off if they drive it to work.If there's anything factually wrong with this, please let me know. I know there were recent changes to the law, so feel free to correct me.
9/3/2005 6:30:58 PM
pyrowebmastr:
9/3/2005 7:10:48 PM
It's easy to see that no one is waiting in line to describe what they see as Bush's grand vision for the future. What, indeed, is leadership without vision? ...
9/4/2005 1:57:53 PM
p.s. I heard Excoriator had sex with a monkey once.
9/4/2005 2:00:31 PM
bttt
9/8/2005 1:40:11 PM
Only a business owner can write off an H2, right? Just as my friend can write off his new Saturn because ne needs it for his "business."Meanwhile, the rest of us that have jobs and don't own our own businesses, we can't write off anything EXCEPT a hybrid or other low emission vehicle, and then only the first 3500 of the purchase.[Edited on September 8, 2005 at 2:34 PM. Reason : ..]
9/8/2005 2:34:19 PM
9/8/2005 2:54:10 PM
9/8/2005 2:57:18 PM
Could you explain that more? Why is an H2 treated any differently from any other company vehicle? And am I right that only business owners can write off their vehicle purchases?
9/8/2005 3:09:46 PM
The H2, along with a few other SUVs, weighs over 6000 pounds. There is a federal exemption for vehicles over 6000 pounds. At the time the law was written, it was absolutely inconceivable that any consumer passenger vehicle would weigh that much. This is a deduction for trucks for people like farmers and contracters who need a heavy duty vehicle to get their job done. These vehicles are fully deductible because, as was the thinking at the time the law was written, if you get something that huge, it is necessary equipment for your line of work.The problem is, of course, that no white collar business owner (think realtors, lawyers, doctors) NEEDS an H2. They WANT them. So why is the federal government subsidizing extravagance?
9/8/2005 3:20:07 PM
I agree, but I fail to see why a cable repair contractor cannot deduct his entire van, weighing less than 6k, while a construction contractor can deduct his F350. They both need the vehicle, there must have been more rational than "the counstruction guy needs his vehicle MORE than the cable guy" which is questionable at best.
9/8/2005 4:42:39 PM
9/8/2005 4:51:06 PM
Section 179 was designated mainly for farm equipment to allow the full depreciation value to happen in the first year instead of over several years.http://www.bankrate.com/brm/itax/Edit/tips/Stories/sec179_deduction.asp
9/8/2005 4:58:58 PM
[quote]Response to demand, by definition, is reactionary. It supplies no vision of where you want to be in the future - only responds until you run out of resources, and then you look for another plan. That is the reason we are in the mess today.[quote]Yet what if the vision is that you allow the markets to manage the supply and demand issues, such as it is now? With gas prices hitting $3, all the major auto manufacturers are rapidly developing and building new hybrid models as the demand for the technology is being pushed hard by the markets. That has always been the traditional Republican mantra; let the markets settle the issue, not direct interference or centralized control from government (though I admit that they haven't always been faithful to this creed).I seriously doubt the tax breaks really made much difference in people buying SUVs; they would've bought one regardless, this was just gravy on top of it. That, and this little loophole I believe was more just an oversight than it was some intentional attempt to increase the market share of SUVs by the government. Whereas tax credits and other incentives for hybrids (like access to HOV lanes... a VERY big deal if you live in cities like DC) were a deliberate move to promote the technology.
9/8/2005 6:01:01 PM