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Re: Editorial in the paper 

By: DGpeddler in POPE | Recommend this post (1)
Wed, 13 Jul 11 11:26 PM | 27 view(s)
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Msg. 39160 of 65535
(This msg. is a reply to 39152 by clo)

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clo, let me explain this to you one more time. Businesses DO NOT PAY TAXES. If the government taxes a business $1,000, 10,000 customers pay an extra dime for what they get from the business. If the price goes up so high that customers quit buying, the business finds away around the tax or GOES OUT OF BUSINESS. If the business goes out of business, the employees lose their jobs and their pay checks.


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The above is a reply to the following message:
Re: Editorial in the paper
By: clo
in POPE
Wed, 13 Jul 11 8:25 PM
Msg. 39152 of 65535

Here you go snapits, I posted this earlier on FFFT.

Congress hears outcry from business lobby on debt ceiling and deficit

By Jia Lynn Yang and Dan Eggen, Published: July 12

A sprawling coalition of Wall Street and Main Street business leaders sent an unmistakable message to lawmakers Tuesday: Enough squabbling. Get the debt ceiling raised.

The message, sent in a letter to President Obama and every member of Congress, puts pressure on GOP lawmakers, who have staked out an uncompromising stance against raising taxes in the partisan wrangling over the country’s borrowing limit.

Republicans rely heavily on corporations for political support and have regularly cited the opinions of these “job creators” in their opposition to new tax revenue. Many of the House GOP freshmen most opposed to a compromise were swept into office with the help of financial support from groups behind the letter. 

But the business community, which has largely kept quiet on the issue until now, does not uniformly share the Republican orthodoxy on taxes, according to some lobbyists who helped craft the statement.

The letter conspicuously avoided any mention of tax revenue partly because of differences of opinion among executives over whether to compromise on taxes to get a deal done, said a senior industry lobbyist, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the internal deliberations were private.

“The debt default would be exponentially more painful than anything else,” said another senior executive at a major business lobbying group.

The letter, signed by hundreds of senior company executives and groups including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the Business Roundtable, said that “it is critical that the U.S. government not default in any way” and urges lawmakers “to put aside partisan differences and act in the nation’s best interest.” 


http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/congress-hears-outcry-from-business-lobby-on-debt-ceiling-and-deficit/2011/07/12/gIQAiVGpAI_story.html?hpid=z1


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