Re: The 2nd Term - Round 2 - Amensty for Some, Miniature AR-15s for Others...
This is exactly the point that is always overlooked by those pushing for a one-size-fits-all central planning approach to the federal budget. The easy-peasy 102% plan the liberals always push for rests entirely on the wrongheaded assumption that every single person in each state makes the same income. Obviously it's not the case. In Michigan, for example, Detroit and its suburbs are worlds apart, economically. Sure, Detroit has most of the state's population and is a big suck-hole of federal dollars collectively. But the suburbs have nothing in common with the city. To lump the whole state into one economic status is mind-bogglingly stupid.
Last week, Mayor Bloomberg was quoted as saying that the taxes from 5,000 families supply 30% of NYC revenue. You have a relatively tiny amount of multi-millionaires supporting a very wide pool of people receiving benefits; and in some cases the benefits are absolutely absurd. There is something like 300 people receiving six-figure pensions merely because they gamed the overtime system right before they retired; there is a major prosecution underway for railroad workers who "retired" on "disability" pensions who show no evidence of disability (one of them competes regularly in triathlons, for example).
New York is really schizophrenic when it comes to the really rich and the really rich benefit packages. It's not safe to make too many generalities.
George Steinbrenner's death alone might have raised $500 million in taxes had there been an estate tax in 2010....while in aggregate it might look like NY pays more than they get; it is probably more realistic to say that a few neighborhoods in Manhattan and Brooklyn pay more than they get while the rest of the state gets more than they pay.
This is exactly the point that is always overlooked by those pushing for a one-size-fits-all central planning approach to the federal budget. The easy-peasy 102% plan the liberals always push for rests entirely on the wrongheaded assumption that every single person in each state makes the same income. Obviously it's not the case. In Michigan, for example, Detroit and its suburbs are worlds apart, economically. Sure, Detroit has most of the state's population and is a big suck-hole of federal dollars collectively. But the suburbs have nothing in common with the city. To lump the whole state into one economic status is mind-bogglingly stupid.