Home » E. J. Dionne is getting tired…

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E. J. Dionne is getting tired… — 13 Comments

  1. From the article:
    “And in the short term, shouldn’t jobs and rising incomes be a higher priority than austerity?”

    Where does he think money comes from, exactly?

  2. If we held an award ceremony for most self-deluded pundit, I would nominate Dionne.

    He is the most partisan “non-partisan” in the land, the most extreme “centrist” conceivable (well, apart from Obama – but he’s not a pundit, his pretensions to being one notwithstanding).

    I wonder if Dionne believes in miracles. Because the way in which the “reasonable,” “centrist” position always winds up coinciding with boilerplate leftist dogma smacks of some pre-established harmony. Every time we read a Dionne piece we witness such a bona fide miracle.

    That’s why me and my brother call him St. Dionne.

  3. Mr. Dionne’s thought processes have long been a disgrace to his alma mater, whatever that may be. He talks of “tax cuts” when the issue is the expiration of current tax rates or the return of higher tax rates. He does not point out that ~45% of the population does not pay income taxes. Nor does he point out that in 2008 the top 1% of earners paid 38% of income taxes. There is so much blood you can squeeze out of a turnip . See what happened to NY and NJ when they raised income taxes on the top earners.

    Mr Dionne ignores the main issue, which is SPENDING.

    http://www.ntu.org/tax-basics/who-pays-income-taxes.html

  4. Well there’s always Matt Taibi. He’s the biggest Obama schill around. (Oh, and Ezra Klein.)

  5. You have to hope at least that [Obama] doesn’t want to spend the rest of his term issuing apologies to Mitch McConnell and John Boehner.

    Yeah, better to be apologizin’ to the rest of the world for us uppity and mean-spirited Americans than to apologize to those whom he ignored or denigrated (depending upon his mood) for the entire first 18 or so months of his term.

    Gringo,

    The stats on taxes get even better. Not only do the top 1% pay around 40% of the personal income taxes collected by the Infernal Revenue Service, but the top 5% pays close to 60% of the total taxes collected. Couple that with the top 50% paying around 97% of taxes collected, and you reinforce the ‘there is so much blood you can squeeze out of a turnip’ statement. What bothers me greatly is how little it’s mentioned what the bottom 50% pay, around 3%, which means they have little skin in the tax game yet are the biggest beneficiaries of other peoples’ taxes. Is there ever a point at which enough is enough? http://www.ntu.org/tax-basics/who-pays-income-taxes.html

    On top of all the class war rhetoric (the rich should pay more taxes etc., without ever mentioning how many small business owners file SubChapter S returns which show their business income as personal income), no media pundit ever seems to acknowledge that currently those who want to pay a larger tax bill than calculated are free to do so. I would love to ask such class warfare advocating media pundits if they voluntarily pay more than than their amount owed or whether their accountants go for every deduction to reduce their tax bite (seeing’s how just about 100% of such pundits fall into the >$250K rich category). And if they don’t pay more, why not. Such a simple question which no one will dare publicly ask themselves or their media brethren.

  6. Sorry, the first paragraph above is supposed to be the blockquote, not the entire post.

    Preview would be my friend if there was such a beast.

  7. Gringo, I see on a more recent thread you cite the same link as I did. Sorry about the duplication.

  8. I just went to the comments section to Dionne’s article and of the 51 comments, all were in opposition. I’ve noticed that often a majority of comments at the L.A.Times and the WaPo are conservative-leaning. Does anyone have a theory why?

  9. E.J. is still a disgusting, slavish TAXTAXTAX moonbat.

    But Obama simply threw in the federal workers in exchange for — well, as best I can tell, nothing.

    The federal workers got hefty raises while a lot of Americans were losing jobs. And, in return for foregoing more raises while other Americans are losing jobs there should be some exchange?

    Like what, frinstance? Retirement before being hired?

  10. Having just spoken with a friend who works for a federal law enforcement agency about the supposed “pay freeze”, there is something that is being missed in all of this. The freeze only affects their yearly “cost of living” raise, which is worth about 1.5 to 3% of salary. However, it does not affect their “step increases” which occur periodically and are much larger than that, so nobody is exactly “bummed out” in her office over the big “freeze”.

    Besides, the average pay of agents in her office is $120,000 to $145,000 per year, not counting benefits. Considerably more (as in double) than us local cops make (even more than the local chief of a department with over 800 personnel).

    I won’t go into the scarce amount of work that they do for that money.

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