http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11334751/
2/14/2006 12:43:12 AM
If not for the 1 year change in the foreign earnings tax rate, the vast majority of that money would have gone unreported due to the tax deferral on overseas income. This is good for investors, good for business, and good for the IRS given that it actually brought a lot of money into the treasury.The American Jobs Creation Act is somewhat flawed in that it doesn't have any way of tracing the money that companies repatriate. The law says that the money is not supposed to be used on executive compensation or boosting dividends, but the fungible nature of money makes it unenforceable.
2/14/2006 1:15:31 AM
They're just letting the free market run the government
2/14/2006 1:16:22 AM
6,250% Cumulative ROI
2/14/2006 1:28:38 AM
It doesn't work like that. They would have just reinvested those foreign earnings overseas if not for the AJCA of 2004.
2/14/2006 1:32:54 AM
Your one case doesn't undermine the myriad of other examples in which similar ROIs were accomplished through lobbying.
2/14/2006 2:42:54 AM
true.We need lobby reform, particularly with respect to earmarking. The whole process needs to be more transparent.I hate the stigma associated with business lobbying, though. Most businesses play by the exact same rules that environmental and labor groups do, but they (along with pro-business politicians) are constantly villified for perfectly legal lobbying tactics.For example, just about every day leading up to Arnold's initiative campaign, the LA times would post a front-page article saying how much money he got from such-and-such business and how it might have influenced his politics. Meanwhile, organized labor spent more than twice as much as business advocates did, over 100 million dollars, blatantly influencing the Democrat-controlled state senate. But that didn't make headlines because it doesn't sound as shady as a business spending money to get some face-time with a politician.The businesses that break the rules and buy off politicians should burn in hell, though.
2/14/2006 2:54:33 AM
A simple amendment to the Constitution could fix the lobbying problem...Any law passed must apply to all citizens equally.
2/14/2006 3:08:45 PM
How do you make an anti-lobbying amendment that doesn't conflict with the first amendment?[Edited on February 14, 2006 at 3:17 PM. Reason : that's where i get hung up every fucking time]
2/14/2006 3:17:40 PM
^^ I could have sworn that was already in there ^ You can't. That said, it is largely unnecessary to do so. In some respects, the current explosion of lobbyist activity was created by the most recent lobying and campaign finance reform bills. [Edited on February 14, 2006 at 3:31 PM. Reason : .,.]
2/14/2006 3:29:20 PM
There might be an equal protection case to be made here, actually. How do we allow a system in which one person with a deep pocket has more of a right to be heard by his elected representatives than another person without money to spare? If that's equality, I'm a fish.[Edited on February 14, 2006 at 3:34 PM. Reason : doesn't address the 1st amendment conflict, though...just food for thought]
2/14/2006 3:34:11 PM
2/14/2006 5:15:15 PM
Yes, let's ban the lobbyists! That way we can let rich people like Warren Buffett or George Soros run the country without competition [Edited on February 14, 2006 at 7:16 PM. Reason : ---]
2/14/2006 7:14:45 PM
Let's revive hyperbole and toss red herrings to the wind!!!And just how to rich people not run the country through direct or indirect means anyway?[Edited on February 14, 2006 at 9:24 PM. Reason : ...]
2/14/2006 9:23:39 PM
2/14/2006 9:41:23 PM
How T3h Gov Works: The rich decide who will best serve their interests (whichever interests they may be), donate heavily to their campaigns, and virtually ensure that they get into t3h gov.What I don't understand is how you don't think the rich don't compete with one another...
2/15/2006 2:48:15 AM
What I don't understand is how you don't think the poor can band together, hire a lobbyist, and compete with the rich...
2/15/2006 7:32:04 AM
encumbent politicians already have money, the purpose of non-existant campaign finance laws was to allow a challenger to compete.
2/15/2006 10:05:28 AM
2/15/2006 11:41:36 AM
FUZZY MATH
2/15/2006 12:16:32 PM
2/15/2006 5:04:10 PM
2/15/2006 5:45:45 PM
2/15/2006 10:58:22 PM
2/16/2006 12:57:22 AM
Who are my people? John fucking McCain????? You're getting slow in your trolling, and are still wrong to boot.When, even prior to the passage of the dreaded campaign finance laws, has a rich individual's interest ever received the same consideration as a poor person's interest? According to the Constitution, they ought to be equal.You're implying that the world was all peachy before McCain-Feingold. Jonathan Last would shit himself if he knew.[Edited on February 16, 2006 at 6:38 PM. Reason : ...]
2/16/2006 6:37:51 PM
^McCain-Feingold were the first campaign finance regulations ever enacted? Damn that's news to me.And I'm getting slow in my trolling...
2/16/2006 6:49:43 PM
Perhaps the third time's the charm...
2/16/2006 6:55:59 PM
So are you claiming there has never been anything resembling egalitarianism in the US government at any time since our founding?
2/16/2006 8:59:33 PM
If there was, I'd like to know when.Are you claiming that we live in that world now? Or that campaign finance laws are what tipped the scale in the first place?If it's the latter, please explain.
2/16/2006 9:57:34 PM
EarthDogg, Perot didn't want to win the presidency. he just didn't want Bush to win it, and he succeeded.
2/17/2006 12:20:50 AM
Still wondering...
3/13/2006 2:55:47 AM
3/13/2006 9:36:00 AM
I guess we've got a "no comment" from TGD.
3/13/2006 10:54:52 AM
^Some of us have lives my friend...especially when we're busy corrupting the body politic
3/13/2006 11:17:47 AM
One more:
3/13/2006 11:34:43 AM
3/13/2006 1:15:17 PM
Check out the history of Athens sometime. Still not a perfect example, but a lot closer to egalitarianism than what we have now.
3/13/2006 1:24:04 PM
Check out the history of the Jackson administration sometime. Still not a perfect example, but a lot closer to egalitarianism than what we have now.
3/13/2006 1:27:07 PM
How can you even compare the two? Are you referring to Jackson's spoils system or the issue over the bank?
3/13/2006 1:34:08 PM