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The gap on the TABOR question is most definitely closing, so I'm not really sure what will happen. I think there is a good chance to defeat TABOR, but sure, it's all a big question right now. At the very least I think it's going to be close. But I don't think we entirely "agree" at all. You seem willing to vote for TABOR because you are frustrated with your taxes and you don't see other alternatives on the ballot. While I agree more needs to be done on taxes even though we do have homestead, circuit breaker, and LD1, (all of which need some more time for full implementation) I am unwilling to support TABOR because I think objectively that it is a very flawed plan and would never do anything to perpetuate the very dangerous agenda of ultra-right-wingers the likes of Howie Rich, Grover Norquist, or Mary Adams. These people are right-wing-extremist liars whose mission in life is the consolidation of wealth and power into the hands of the few at the expense of the many, and the dismantling of public programs and services again at the expense of the many. My argument is that any real progressive would outright reject TABOR and the agenda of its leaders to its very foundations on principle. You seem to be dismissing your progressive principles out of frustration with your taxes. I am only therefore saying that if it were to pass, then sure, allow people to feel its pain just as it is written so then perhaps they'll think long and hard before embracing something like this again. So no, we don't "agree" because I am voting against it, don't want it to pass in the first place, and believe that there ARE steps in effect right now on taxes and that there ARE real alternatives that CAN and WILL be implemented even if they aren't in the form of a competing ballot measure right now.
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