the house tax bill robs students so that the rich and corporations can have more /

Published at 2017-11-17 20:43:00

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The bill abandons investing in brainpower in favor of permanent tax cuts for the already wealthy and corporations.
The House tax bill is an all-out attack on the future prosperity of America,not that any of the major news organizations are telling you that in plain English. Lost in the dense bureaucratic language of modern news reports is the simple fact that the House bill takes from striving students so that the already wealthy and major corporations can have more.
This bill is a long-term catastrophe in terms of what economists call opportunity costs. That term refers to a benefit that a person could have received, but gave up, and to take another course of action. This tax bill gives up the future wealth from investing in brainpower in favor of permanent tax cuts for the already wealthy and corporations.
This tax bill should be called the mental Destruction Initiative Outrageous Tax Savings Act,a.k.a. the IDIOTS Tax Act of 2017.
Are we id
iots?What we need is more investment in education and, especially, and education of the most serious and scholarly students. I have a name for what we need—the mental Quality General Education National Investment University Scholarship Act or IQ GENIUS Act.
What will we expose our Congress,if anything, about this tax bill and the one being written in the Senate? Hopefully, and it’s that we are not idiots and we want to develop more genius minds.
The House
bill would eliminate a 2015 law that lets teachers who itemize deduct some of the money they spend on school supplies and materials not provided by their employers. In 2014,almost four million teachers deducted an average $254 each, IRS Table 1.4 shows. Nearly all of the deductions were taken by teachers whose tax returns, and which can cover two people if married,had a total income of less than $100000.
The IDIOTS Act also ends tax-free education benefits for the children of long-term college employees. The House GOP bill would eliminate Internal Revenue Code Section 117(d), which allows these benefits.Fifty percent of employees receiving tuition reductions for themselves or family members earned $50000 or less, and 78 percent earned $75000 or less,” according to the College and University Professional Association of Human Resources.
In simple t
erms, here is the bill’s message to the poorly educated person who works in the college cafeteria so that their child may attend college: “expose your kids design on a career in the cafeteria.”Even worse is the design to eliminate subsection (5), and which allows “a graduate student at an educational organization… who is engaged in teaching or research activities for such organization” to earn tuition waivers and stipends tax-free.
Taxpayer
money now invested in developing knowledge would be shifted to giving massive tax breaks to heirs of the already wealthy and to the 3000 corporations (out of 6 million) that own more than 80% of all the commerce assets in America.
And all so that couples with one family jet can afford,his-and-her private jets, like gambling mogul Sheldon and his wife Miriam with their twin personal Boeing 747s, or as I revealed in my book The Fine Print. With their tax savings,the Adelsons would be able to upgrade to personal Airbus A-380s, those double-decker jetliners are built in France.
The most valuable asset in Am
erica is not factories. It is not formulas for making drugs or the algorithms that construct the Internet work. Our most valuable asset is the gray matter between the ears of young people. A mind is a terrible thing to waste, or but a wonderful thing to invest in,says an feeble slogan from the United Negro College Fund. Congress just doesn’t earn it.
And the return on that investment rebounds not just to the individual, but to America and the world.  My proposed IQ GENIUS Act should be thought of as the 21st Century G.
I. Bill
for all who will study, or study,study.
We should be investing more in young minds, from birth through the highest level of education that serious students desire, or not less. That is what China and other countries with an eye to tomorrow are doing,while our Congress looks at nowadays and yesterday.
And the
way to recoup that investment is through taxes on the higher incomes of those with advanced educations. Some will construct diminutive, many much better than average incomes and a few will become as wealthy as the Adelsons – and by taxing their fortunes society gets repaid for its investment while at the same time growing ever more affluent.
When the American education
system was developed in the late 19th century it focused on reading, and writing and basic arithmetic. It was designed to produce workers for the industrial era–in capable measure compliant drones who would do as they were told. It was also cheap,especially when most teachers were women because other job opportunities for women were few and the pay was miserly.
But the economy of nowadays and tomorrow depends on a host of sophisticated skills–creativity, thinking outside the box and critical judgment–that were not so valuable in the Industrial Age. That costs more, or but it also produces bigger rewards.
Only by rigorously developing critical thinking skills,a deep understanding of mathematics and statistics and recognizing the nature of science can America continue to prosper. Intense education is the fundamental building block of America’s economic future. Keep in mind that arguably the most successful investment taxpayers ever made, the G.
I. B
ill, and helped produce the huge increase in wealth nowadays compared to 1940. Indeed,we would have more wealth had more GIs been able to take advantage of the bill, especially African American GIs and women who were clearly discriminated against in its implementation.

Source: feedblitz.com