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Two or three guys in a virtual-office (or as I call it - Business by Blackberry) partnership to contract out specialized thinking type work;independent business "evaluations" and assessments, contracted fund management, day-trading, marketing analysis, business coaching/advice or lobbying work for a hundred or so an hour might make more than $250K a year on income if they identify their business as their income. But they're not going to be in the position to use their Bush Era tax cuts to hire more people because they're just not going to hire more people. They don't have an office, they don't have staff, and it probably wouldn't matter to them if their LLC expanded or not in the long run. They're probably around two or three percent of small businesses.
The family business that actually produces items or provides a broad-based service that requires employees, or has a storefront of some sort is not going to see any change to their business if the Bush Tax cuts expire for the wealthiest 2% (but they might see individual taxes rise by 1 to 3% depending on their income level) They have all sorts of deductions, even if they might "work from home" and use personal income tax codes when they file.
Unfortunately, even though the "small businesses" that are the actual backbone of the economy in terms of employment are the latter, not the former, the media likes to play up an "onerous" burden to the 2% who would at most have to start thinking about how they file their deductions so they can keep their current lifestyle going without worrying about having to cut back.
I don't begrudge those who have individual incomes of over a quarter million dollars, but honestly, their use of the common services that government oversees, including many programs and agencies that enable them to make that sort of income and keep it safe, are unwilling to pay for those services, they're nothing but greedy fools. The government's services that provide and safeguard their level of wealth, their safety, their infrastructure usage (especially water, power, mass communication and roads) and their property is far cheaper on a yearly basis than paying individual private companies to do the same jobs.
I'm not talking about taking away every dollar they make over a million a year, but I am asking that they pay their fair share for their "footprint", like everyone else has to. Why should the middle class support them? What do they think the American workforce,from truck drivers and grocery baggers to police and nurses are - indentured servants working off the privilege to exist?
Haele
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