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Taxes

Mar 2006Chance that the family of an African-American child is too poor to qualify for the full U.S. child tax credit: 1 in 2
Source:

Tax Policy Center (Washington)

Jul 2005Portion of the German Catholic Church’s income that derives from a government tax on members: 1/2
Source:

Carsten Frerk (Hamburg, Germany)

Oct 2004Maximum percentage income- and corporate-tax rate under laws made for Iraqis by the Coalition Provisional Authority : 15
Source:

International Trade Administration (Washington)

Jul 2004Estimated percentage of U.S. corporations that paid no federal taxes between 1996 and 2000 : 61
Source:

General Accounting Office (Washington)

Apr 2004Number of the five tax-cut questions asked the president on Meet the Press last winter that concerned the cuts' inequity : 0
Source:

Meet the Press transcript, 2/8/04

Apr 2004Average amount a Bush Cabinet member will save this year due to cuts in capital-gains and dividend taxes : $42,000
Source:

The Independent (London)

Jan 2004Estimated number of Americans who refuse to pay some or all of their federal income taxes to protest military spending : 2,000
Source:

National War Tax Resistance Coordinating Committee (Brooklyn)

Oct 2003Percentage of Americans who will save less than $100 on their 2006 federal taxes as a result of this year's tax cut : 88
Source:

Citizens for Tax Justice (Washington, D.C.)

Aug 2003Number of years that the new increase in the federal child tax credit is scheduled to last: 1
Source:

U.S. Department of the Treasury

Jul 2003Amount of the $106,185 price of a Hummer H1 that businesses may deduct under the proposed Bush tax plan: $88,722
Source:

The White House (Washington)/Harper's research

May 2003Estimated percentage by which the average U.S. gasoline price would rise if costs of securing oil were recouped with a tax: 29
Source:

Prof. Darwin C. Hall, California State University, Long Beach

Apr 2003Amount of import-tax revenue that Israel is withholding from the Palestinian Authority: $400,000,000
Source:

Embassy of Israel (Washington)

Apr 2003Ratio of the U.S. median income in 2001 to what Dick Cheney would have saved that year with the new dividend-tax cut: 2:5
Source:

Office of the Vice President (Washington)/Harper's research

Apr 2003Ratio of the number of words in the U.S. income-tax code today to the number in 1955: 6:1
Source:

Tax Foundation (Washington)

Mar 2003Number of the last four years in which CSX paid any federal income tax: 2
Source:

CSX Corporation (Richmond, Va.)

Aug 2002Extra amount Oregon charges per year to register a hybrid gas/electric car in compensation for lost gasoline taxes: $15
Source:

Oregon Department of Motor Vehicles (Salem)

Apr 2002Amount that U.S. companies are projected to write off this year to account for devalued acquisitions: $1,000,000,000,000
Source:

Valuation Research (Milwaukee)

Mar 2002Total voting population of a Denton, Texas, tax district when a development plan was approved there in 1996: 1
Source:

City of Denton, Texas

Dec 2001Total new tax cuts for U.S. businesses approved by the House of Representatives in October: $146,000,000,000
Source:

Citizens for Tax Justice (Washington)

Oct 2001Amount the Treasury Department will borrow this year to pay for the tax refund: $51,000,000,000
Source:

U.S. Department of the Treasury

Oct 2001Amount The U.S. Treasury Department had projected spending to service U.S. debt this year, before the tax bill passed: $57,000,000,000
Source:

U.S. Department of the Treasury

Jun 2001Number of members of Congress or their staffers who failed to file a tax return or pay back taxes in 1999: 856
Source:

Internal Revenue Service (Washington)

Apr 2001Chances that the taxes of a low-income working American family will not be reduced by the Bush tax plan: 3 in 5
Source:

Citizens for Tax Justice (Washington)

Apr 2001Percentage of federal returns audited last year that were filed by poor Americans seeking Earned Income Tax Credits: 44
Source:

Internal Revenue Service (Washington)

Apr 2001Percentage change between 1999 and 2000 in the number of audits of U.S. corporations: –28
Source:

Internal Revenue Service (Washington)

Apr 2001Federal income taxes paid by PepsiCo in 1999: 0
Source:

Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy (Washington)

Apr 2001Amount by which federal taxes paid in states carried by Al Gore in 2000 exceeded federal spending in them, per capita: $685
Source:

Taubman Center for State and Local Government, Harvard University (Cambridge, Mass.)/ Harper's research

Apr 2001Amount by which federal taxes paid in states carried by George W. Bush fell short of federal spending in them, per capita: $645
Source:

Taubman Center for State and Local Government, Harvard University (Cambridge, Mass.)/ Harper's research

Sep 2000Percentage of Americans who favor repealing the estate tax: 60
Source:

The Gallup Organization (Princeton, N.J.)

Sep 2000Estimated percentage of Americans deceased last year whose estates paid the estate tax: 2
Source:

The Cato Institute (Washington)/U.S. Bureau of the Census

Sep 2000Factor by which homeowners' deductions claimed by Americans last year exceed the budget of HUD: 3
Source:

National Low Income Housing Coalition (Washington)

Aug 2000Percentage change in the gonorrhea rate among teens and young adults when the beer tax is raised by 20 cents: -9
Source:

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (Atlanta)

Jun 2000Portion of California's revenue between 1852 and 1870 composed of taxes paid by Chinese laborers: 1/2
Source:

Professor Ronald Takaki, University of California (Berkeley)

Apr 2000Chance that an American earning more than $100,000 in 1988 was audited: 1 in 18
Source:

Internal Revenue Service (Washington)

Oct 1999Percentage change in domestic discretionary spending required through 2002 to fund Congress's proposed tax cuts: - 18
Source:

Center on Budget Policy and Priority (Washington)

Oct 1999Portion of resulting from -18% change in domestic discretionary spending required to fund Congress's proposed tax cuts that will go to corporations: 9/10
Source:

Citizens for Tax Justice (Washington)

May 1999Number of states in which families living at or below the federal poverty level are subject to income tax: 19
Source:

Center on Budget and Policy Priorities (Washington)

May 1999Percentage by which Jasper County, Texas, raised property taxes this year to finance the murder trial of John William King: 4.5
Source:

Jasper County Appraisal District (Jasper, Tex.)

Apr 1999Maximum number of pages of tax forms an American was required to fill out in 1913: 3
Source:

IRS (Washington)

Oct 1998Estimated U.S. taxes that multinational corporations legally avoided this year by using foreign accounts: $10,100,000,000
Source:

Joint Committee on Taxation (Washington)

Apr 1998Ratio of the average amount a U.S. family spent on food, clothing, and shelter last year to what it spent on taxes: 3:4
Source:

Tax Foundation (Washington)

Apr 1998Percentage of Germans who believe that those who don't cheat on their taxes “deserve only pity”: 46
Source:

Taxpayer Association of Germany (Düsseldorf)

Apr 1998Chance that an American would rather be mugged than audited: 1 in 2
Source:

Luntz Research (Arlington, Va.)

June 19, 2007A study found that paying taxes activates pleasure-centers in the brain.A study found that paying taxes activates pleasure-centers in the brain.
Source:

NYT

November 9, 2006In Patna, India, twenty eunuchs were hired to sing, beat drums, and collect municipal taxes.
Source:

MSNBC

October 25, 2006 President Bush called Nancy Pelosi a “secret admirer” of tax cuts.
Source:

New York Post

September 22, 2006 President Bush predicted that, given the opportunity, Democrats would raise taxes.
Source:

Reuters

August 1, 2006The Senate Permanent Investigations subcommittee reported that law enforcement agencies were powerless to prevent the super-rich from cheating on their taxes.
Source:

NY Times

July 9, 2006 U.S. tax revenue was up.
Source:

New York Times

May 18, 2006It was revealed that in 2004 a group of Republican lawmakers wrote letters to the IRS calling for a probe of the NAACP.
Source:

Guardian Unlimited

April 16, 2006Polls found that 52 percent of Americans would give up some tax deductions for a simpler tax code.
Source:

Asbury Park Press

April 12, 2006Vice President Dick Cheney, who will receive a $1.9 million refund on his 2005 taxes, was booed at a Washington Nationals baseball game, where he threw out the first pitch. “I have never, ever,” said one fan, “heard anyone get booed like that man.”
Source 1:

The Washington Times

Source 2:

The Mercury News

March 22, 2006 China announced a new 5 percent tax on disposable chopsticks.
Source:

ABC News Online

September 2, 2005Senator Bill Frist called for a permanent repeal to the estate tax.
Source:

Think Progress

August 30, 2005Federal prosecutors accused eight officials from KPMG and a lawyer of conspiracy for helping wealthy people evade at least $2.5 billion in taxes, and a man named Glenn Allen Powell pleaded guilty to taking as much as $1.25 million in kickbacks in Iraq while working for Halliburton subsidiary Kellogg Brown & Root.
Source 1:

The Washington Post

Source 2:

The Washington Post

March 3, 2005 Alan Greenspan called for the United States to replace the income tax with a consumption tax.
Source:

New York Times

December 16, 2004The Securities and Exchange Commission accused Fannie Mae of cheating on its taxes.
Source:

New York Times

October 8, 2004Federal tax revenue was lower than it was in 2000.
Source:

New York Times

June 28, 2004 Hillary Clinton promised that if John Kerry wins the election, Bush's tax cuts will be eliminated: "We're going to take things away from you on behalf of the common good."
Source:

Associated Press

April 21, 2004Governor Rick Perry of Texas proposed shifting the burden of school financing in the state from property taxes to sin taxes on gambling, alcohol, and stripping.
Source:

New York Times

April 14, 2004President Bush saved $35,000 on his 2003 taxes as a result of his tax cuts.
Source:

New York Times

March 16, 2004The Congressional Budget Office published calculations showing that the federal budget deficit is largely a result of President Bush's tax cuts and spending increases; the agency estimated that only 6 percent of the deficit was the result of economic weakness.
Source:

New York Times

January 27, 2004The Congressional Budget Office predicted a record $477 billion budget deficit this year; deficits over the next decade could reach more than $2 trillion if the president's tax cuts are extended.
Source:

New York Times

January 19, 2004 Spanish bordello owners were protesting a court ruling that the owner of an "alternative club" in Seville must pay social-security tax on the prostitutes who work there. The owners, who claim that the women are technically freelance marketing consultants, said that paying such taxes would turn them into pimps.
Source:

New York Times

October 30, 2003Members of the House Ways and Means Committee decided to give tax relief to manufacturers of bows and arrows; makers of fishing tackle boxes were also expected to see relief, as were liquor and wine distributors and movie studios.
Source:

New York Times

September 17, 2003 Voters in Seattle rejected a proposed 10-cent tax on espresso.
Source:

Reuters

July 16, 2003The Bush Administration revised its estimate of the federal budget deficit for the current fiscal year and said it was likely to be $455 billion.
Source:

New York Times

July 16, 2003Ireland's environmental minister called for a tax on chewing gum.
Source:

New York Times

June 21, 2003 New Zealand proposed a tax on flatulent livestock.
Source:

Reuters

May 14, 2002 A man in Malacky, Slovakia, tried unsuccessfully to decapitate himself with a homemade guillotine in front of the local tax office because he was unable to pay the taxes on his house. “It did not cut his head off completely,” said a policeman, “but he wounded himself so badly that he died afterwards.”
December 11, 2001In Missouri, a pharmacist admitted to diluting cancer drugs; he did it because he needed to raise money to pay $1,000,000 in taxes and a pledge to his church.
November 27, 2001A new study confirmed that abuse of stimulants used to treat attention-deficit disorder, such as Ritalin, was rampant among children and teens. “People don't realize what these drugs are,” one scientist said. “The similarities between them and cocaine are much greater than the differences.”
October 30, 2001The House of Representatives decided to repeal the corporate alternative minimum tax in a putative economic stimulus package. If signed into law, the repeal, which is retroactive to 1986, will this year result in $25.4 billion in tax refunds to corporations; seven large companies, including I.B.M. ($1.4 billion) and General Motors ($832 million), would receive $3.3 billion. Enron, the Houston energy company and a major Bush supporter, would get $254 million. Economists pointed out that such refunds do nothing to stimulate the economy.
August 21, 2001Celltech Pharmaceuticals, the maker of Metadate CD, an attention-deficit-disorder drug, was using a cartoon superhero in its brochures: “A new hero for ADHD patients is here!”
July 31, 2001A report funded by Philip Morris to dissuade the Czech Republic from raising cigarette taxes was made public.
July 24, 2001The IRS sent about 523,000 notices to taxpayers mistakenly informing them that they would get the maximum possible refund check under President Bush's tax-cut plan.
July 24, 2001Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neil proposed reviewing whether the corporate income tax is really necessary.
May 29, 2001 Congress passed a $1.35 trillion tax cut, thereby spending the projected federal budget surplus before it could even come into being.
May 15, 2001 President Bush said that his big tax cut was the best way to deal with high energy costs.
April 10, 2001The United States Senate passed a budget plan that contained a $1.2 trillion tax cut.
April 3, 2001Senator Joseph Lieberman proposed a $300 tax rebate for every American worker.
March 6, 2001 President George W. Bush, whose approval rating was at an historic low for a new president, unveiled his budget and his tax-cut proposal, and made it through his first major speech with only one minor Bushism.
February 13, 2001 President Bush sent his tax cut plan to Congress.
February 13, 2001About fifteen American states that were enjoying surpluses last year suddenly found themselves with large deficits this year after a decline in tax revenue.
December 19, 2000President-elect George W. Bush was worried about a slowing economy and called for a large tax cut.
December 5, 2000 Russia's Orthodox Church named St. Matthew as the patron saint of tax police.
September 26, 2000 Traffic was snarled in Sweden, Ireland, Spain, and Germany because of fuel-tax protests.
September 19, 2000Protesters prevented the distribution of gasoline in England, causing 90 percent of the country's filling stations to run dry; Prime Minister Tony Blair refused to reduce fuel taxes.
September 5, 2000Vice-presidential candidate Dick Cheney said he would forfeit $3.5 million in stock options if he were elected; he also released tax forms showing that his income increased from $258,394 in 1992 to $4,423,289 last year.
August 1, 2000Luciano Pavarrotti agreed to pay the Italian government over $12 million in back taxes.

AUGUST 2008

THE WRECKING CREW
How a Gang of Right-Wing Con Men Destroyed Washington and Made a Killing
By Thomas Frank

THE MANDARINS
American Foreign Policy, Brought to You by China
By Ken Silverstein

JACK
A story by Marilynne Robinson

Also: WILLIAM H. GASS on Henry James