We don't seem to be able to check crime, so why not legalize it and then tax it out of business?
The childcare tax credit makes some sense.
If we're not going to tax the rich anymore, we're going to create class warfare.
What is the difference between a taxidermist and a tax collector? The taxidermist takes only your skin.
For if you love those who love you, what reward have you? Do not even the tax collectors do the same?
There are only two reasons to compile list of gun owners: to tax them or to take them.
The complexity of a tax system is every bit as damaging to competitiveness as the overall tax rate. The more convoluted the tax code becomes, the more time we have to take off work to comply with it.
My salary is converted to bitcoin, and taxes are taken out. You have to do all the tax computations in dollars because the IRS does not deal in bitcoins.
Much fiscal policy is implemented, not through spending increases, but through tax credits and other so-called tax expenditures. The markets should respond to them as they do spending cuts, with little contraction in economic activity.
I have no tax breaks or corporate interests to be supported by Barack Obama.
Corporate tax dodging impacts us across generations and over time. It is corrosive. It is unethical. It is unsustainable.
Its no secret that I've never liked tax credits.
We cannot afford to deliberately cripple our cities by transferring public tax dollars to private entities for benefits that are unclear at best.
The death tax causes one-third of all family-owned small businesses to liquidate after the death of the owner. It is also an unfair tax because the assets have already been taxed once at their income level.
The death tax is unfair, inefficient, economically unsound and, frankly, immoral.
The death tax should be completely and permanently repealed now in order to make the Tax Code fairer and simpler and to eliminate the harmful drag this tax has on the economy.
The death tax is one of the leading causes of the dissolution of small businesses.
The precise point at which a tax deduction becomes a 'loophole' or a tax incentive becomes a 'subsidy for special interests' is one of the great mysteries of politics.
Tax rates for the wealthy should revert to Clinton-era levels, both because it is necessary for long-term deficit reduction and because fairness dictates it. Moreover, there is no proof that higher marginal rates dissuade investment, all the rhetoric from the Right notwithstanding.
Tax season always means a deluge of tax advice. Unfortunately, most of it is futile and lightweight.