| Omblog.net | |||
|
Blog Home By Month Recent Entries
Here are some links that we like: Huffington Post DailyKos Talking Points Memo The Young Turks Dean Baker Oliver Willis Frank Schaeffer Matt Taibbi Cliff Schector Bob Cesca Mahablog Atrios Sam Seder Ezra Klein Kevin Drum John Cole Matthew Yglesias Hullabaloo DailyKosTV Firedoglake BAGnewNotes Paul Krugman Rober Reich Baseline Scenario Tapped Blogs TPM Muckraker TPM Cafe Juan Cole Talk To Action Bartholomew 's Notes Things You Wouldn't Know... Cosmic Variance Rumproast The Daily Beast Dome on the Range Leftyblogs/Kansas Leftyblogs/Missouri Best of the Blogs Firedup Missouri Show Me Progress Media Matters FAIR Blog The Authoritarians Bonddad Blog Zero Hedge FiveThirtyEight Consumerist Future Majority ThinkProgress Campus Progress Center for American Progress OurFuture.org Crooks and Liars : AlterNet Video AFLCIOnow Gun Guys Jesus' General Flying Spaghetti Monster Max Blumenthal Truthout BuzzFlash.com The Nation AlterNet News Hounds Liberal Oasis The Raw Story American Rights at Work
Cost of the War in Iraq
(JavaScript Error)
|
Blog Home : January 2010 : 2010-01-11 to 2010-01-17
There's only one big remaining issue on health care reform: how to pay for it. The House wants a 5.4 percent surtax on couples earning at least $1 million in annual income. The Senate wants a 40 percent excise tax on employer-provided "Cadillac plans." The Senate will win on this unless the public discovers that a large portion of the so-called Cadillacs are really middle-class Chevys, expensive not because they deliver more benefits but because they have higher costs......
.......So by taxing so-called Cadillac plans, the Senate bill would actually end up taxing the Chevy plans of a large portion of the middle class. And as time goes by, a still larger portion, since the Senate plan is geared to the overall rate of inflation rather than to the (much higher) rate of increases in health-care costs.......
.....But why even take these chances when the House bill simply and cleanly goes after the top 1 percent? It's not as if couples earning over a million can't afford to pay the tax. When I last looked, the top 1 percent was taking home a record 23 percent of total income. If anything, the Great Recession is widening the gap. It's bonus time on Wall Street again. But the middle class is taking a beating.
A better copy of the video at link below.
| ||