http://www.democraticunderground.com/100240566mmonk (45,438 posts) Profile Journal Send DU Mail
We're not oddballs or unrealistic nutjobs.
I'm speaking of those of us that want a fully funded public sector and are against austerity. Those of us who want a strong regulatory regimen. Those of us who do not want the safety net monkeyed around with. Those of us who want living wages and balanced trade policies. Those of us who demand corporations and the well to do to pay more as they have in the past. Those of us who want those in government and all its functionaries to be bound to Constitutional compliance and restraints. Those of us against privatization of government functions. We're not pie in the sky unreasonable wide eyed crazy liberals. If we complain about course of events and "compromise" at this point, please think of other ways to describe us rather than "purists", Nader supporters, people that don't understand "process", Obama haters or whatever. Just argue your position straight up and if we are wrong, show us where we are wrong.
Thanks
Actually you are but you knew that.
NNN0LHI (63,630 posts) Profile Journal Send DU Mail
2. What is your definition of "well to do?"
Reason I ask is it seems like a lot of 99 percenters think raising our property taxes is a great idea.
I don't think being forced out of our home due to rising property taxes is a great idea. All my wife and I have is our home. And we can't sell it for what we have invested in it.
Do you consider us well to do?
Don
Torches and pitchforks dude,you have something others don`t.
Sarah Ibarruri (16,081 posts) Profile Journal Send DU Mail
5. I know, but I don't think he's mentioning the million specifics? Merely a GENERAL CONCEPT that
Last edited Mon Dec 19, 2011, 07:55 AM USA/ET - Edit history (1)
those of us who want to PROTECT AND DEFEND the 99% against the 1% are not crazy. As for your property taxes, I'm all for property taxes being raised on properties beyond a certain value that render these properties of the rich. I doubt yours fits into that. Am I correct in assuming your property doesn't fit into the description of a property owned by someone who is rich? Are you rich? Just asking, and not trying to play 'semantics.' I've played semantics with Repukes plenty of times, whereby they say, "Oh well, someone who makes $200,000 and has 14 kids is not rich!" That's just bullshit to prevent a real discussion.
Speaking of nutjobs.
NNN0LHI (63,630 posts) Profile Journal Send DU Mail
11. I retired from an auto factory so I am not rich
My retirement is about $24,000 a year and dropping. My pension was reduced by about a $1000 this year. My property taxes went up $1200 this year.
I consider our 1500 square foot house a pretty nice place to live because we fixed it up and took care of it. Sure isn't no McMansion though.
Does that sound rich to you?
Don
Sounds like your state/county/town has overspent,gotta love those blue states so pay up Don.
Bluenorthwest (17,451 posts) Profile Journal Send DU Mail
13. Property taxes are local, not nation wide issues, Don
What this thread addresses is the larger picture. There are many States and localities that run property taxes in ways those of us from other places do not understand at all. I offer that failed local politics is what leads to that sort of thing. Your taxes went up because of your local tax law, not because others are seeking justice on other issues thousands of miles from you.
There are places in the US where property taxes need to rise. Others where they need to drop. In CA., they freeze at purchase, so some folks I know who inherited homes pay under $500 on houses now worth more than half a million. Should my pals complain that they pay 375 on a house they could sell for 600K today? Is their situation anything like your own?
NNN0LHI (63,630 posts) Profile Journal Send DU Mail
19. Don't agree about this not being a federal issue
This is why when someone begins talking about raising taxes with no specificity it unnerves me. It is because I am already on the edge financially.
This is a national issue because if my state doesn't receive the federal dollars it needs to keep operating I know darn well my state will need to make up for the loss of those federal dollars somewhere. And in the past those shortfalls were made up with higher property taxes on people just like myself. Texas used Federal Stimulus money to balance the state budget for instance.
So this is a concern that is probably more important to me than most of those concerns expressed by those seeking justice on other issues thousands of miles from me. I am much more concerned about my property taxes increasing than the Federal Reserve. My wife and I don't want to become homeless.
Don
In other words take it from someone else so I can have mine.
**** you Don and pay your fair share for the benefits you want your state to bestow.
Sarah Ibarruri (16,081 posts) Profile Journal Send DU Mail
25. I know, Don. People are living on the edge. Right wingers have destroyed this country.
It's up to us to educate people and begin rebuilding it. I do understand the fears about what might be done. We can't trust the govt. from Reagan to the present day.
I would say people like Don begging for something for nothing is what ruins things idiot.
NNN0LHI (63,630 posts) Profile Journal Send DU Mail
21. $1200 is what the taxes on our home were when we moved in 22 years ago
Last edited Mon Dec 19, 2011, 10:20 AM USA/ET - Edit history (1)
They are right at $4800 now. Haven't seen the increase for next year yet. When we bought the place we figured they might double and go up to $2400 tops and we should be able to pay that after we got it paid for even on a small pension.
Now we are discovering by the time we get it paid for the property taxes alone per month will be more than our entire original monthly mortgage payment was when we bought this house which included principal, interest, taxes and insurance back then. And my income back then was three times what I am making now.
Last time I told this story here another DUer posted, "Rent, problem solved."
Nice, huh?
Don
Pay up Don,you owe it to your state.
NNN0LHI (63,630 posts) Profile Journal Send DU Mail
24. Most of it is attributable to our factories closing up
Last edited Mon Dec 19, 2011, 11:18 AM USA/ET - Edit history (1)
Just one Ford plant I retired from used to have 4800 hourly workers and another 1000 salaried employees paying huge amounts of withholding taxes into the state and federal coffers every week. They were all paying the maximum into FICA to keep Medicare and SS well funded too. Most those jobs have been moved overseas.
And that is just one factory out of hundreds just like it. We used to have streets lined with them. Both sides. Gone.
That is the problem.
Don
Edit: I ruled out the housing bubble theory when my homes value increased and my taxes went up, and then later my homes value decreased my taxes still went up.
Gotta love those unions though.
eridani (32,837 posts) Profile Journal Send DU Mail
26. The problem is that property tax is now the major form of wealth tax
It shouldn't be that way, and it doesn't have to be. We can tax many other forms of wealth, and should.
Just as long as it isn`t mine!!!!
It is hard not to hate these whining,useless leeches.