Yes, most self educated 16 year olds usually like to go by their gang name
:)

You have to keep in mind the 80/20 rule.  I firmly believe 80% of the
population could be considered idiots.  It's our responsibilty, being the
20% non-idiots, to keep them safe and us safe from them. :)

But yes Tim, in a perfect world I'd be standing right beside you on this
issue.

-----Original Message-----
From: Heald, Tim [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, May 29, 2003 12:41 PM
To: CF-Community
Subject: RE: What the Bush tax cut could have paid for


Or, god forbid they educate themselves and go on to lead exciting prosperous
lives.

Tim Heald MCP/CCFD

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Marlon Moyer [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Thursday, May 29, 2003 1:40 PM
> To:   CF-Community
> Subject:      RE: What the Bush tax cut could have paid for
>
> Yeah, because the other option is that they don't get an education and
> wind
> up being thugs that we'll support in our broken prison system later :)
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Heald, Tim [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Thursday, May 29, 2003 11:33 AM
> To: CF-Community
> Subject: RE: What the Bush tax cut could have paid for
>
>
> <cf_sarcasim>
> Oh come on now man.  Do you reallythink your responsible enough to manage
> the money you own?  Shouldn't you be paying for your neighborsd kids to go
> to school?
> </cf_sarcasim>
>
> Im with you bro.
>
> Tim
>
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From:       John Stanley [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Sent:       Thursday, May 29, 2003 11:35 AM
> > To: CF-Community
> > Subject:    RE: What the Bush tax cut could have paid for
> >
> > I for one am glad that we are getting this tax cut. It should mean an
> > extra
> > 3 grand for me and my family. I am tired of paying out the ass in taxes.
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: William Wheatley [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Sent: Thursday, May 29, 2003 11:32 AM
> > To: CF-Community
> > Subject: Fw: What the Bush tax cut could have paid for
> >
> >
> > Just passing along don't fry me up like a cat fish :)
> >
> >
> > "When I came back from Korea, I had no money, no skills. Sure, I was
> good
> > with a bayonet, but you can't put that on a resume - it puts people
> off!"
> > Frank Barone, "Everybody Loves Raymond"
> >
> >
> > ------------------------------------------------------
> >
> > That $330 billion could have covered every uninsured person in the
> country
> > and paid for millions of teachers and child-care workers. Instead it's
> > going
> > to the richest Americans.
> >
> >
> > By Laura McClure and Mark Follman
> >
> >
> > May 29, 2003  |  This has been a trying week for those with math
> anxiety,
> > not to mention anyone who, owing either to their fear of numbers or
> their
> > lack of millions of dollars of disposable income, may be struggling to
> > understand the impact of the tax-cut bill that President Bush signed
> into
> > law Wednesday. White House press secretary Ari Fleischer, for instance,
> > said
> > the new measure, which includes $330 billion in tax breaks over the next
> > 10
> > years, would create "more than a million jobs." Many economists dispute
> > Fleischer's analysis, but even if it turned out to be true, given the
> > overall job loss during Bush's administration -- 2.7 million jobs in the
> > private sector alone -- it would still leave us in the red, job-wise.
> >
> >
> > In fact, it is in the red where the really impressive numbers reside.
> The
> > day before the East Room signing ceremony, in a move unembellished by
> > ceremony, Bush signed a bill that allows the federal government to
> borrow
> > up
> > to $7.4 trillion -- a $984 billion increase in the federal debt limit --
> > to
> > cover the tab for the tax cuts. This year's deficit, after surpluses
> > during
> > the last four years of the Clinton administration, already is expected
> to
> > exceed a whopping $300 billion.
> >
> >
> > According to Bush, the tax cuts will give tax relief to 136 million
> > American
> > taxpayers -- another impressive figure, but especially if you are the
> kind
> > of American taxpayer who seeks relief from taxes on capital gains and
> > corporate dividends. Some of the less advantaged -- especially those who
> > have children, are married, or own small businesses -- will also get
> tidy
> > sums. But universal relief, or even respite, is not part of this deal.
> >
> >
> > Meanwhile, every dollar sent back to an American taxpayer, however
> > deserving, is one less dollar that can be spent to meet the nation's
> > ever-growing needs. To facilitate a better understanding of what kind of
> > relief, other than tax relief, this kind of money could buy, we have
> > listed
> > the price tags for some of the programs and projects that comprise the
> > nation's basic domestic wish list. With that $330 billion, for instance,
> > the
> > president could have funded health insurance for all uninsured
> Americans,
> > erased all state budget deficits, completed Superfund cleanup at the
> > nation's worst toxic waste sites, and funded Head Start for all eligible
> > children -- and still had almost $40 billion left over for a rainy day.
> >
> >
> > Here's an itemized list of things the tax cut might have paid for. They
> > are
> > diverse, pressing, some would say essential -- not just to low-income
> > Americans, but to many citizens who, having had a choice, might have
> > directed their billions elsewhere.
> >
> >
> > Tax-cut total: $330 billion
> >
> >
> > Amount needed to provide health insurance for all 9.2 million currently
> > uninsured children for one year: $13 billion
> >
> >
> > Amount needed to provide health insurance for all 41.2 million uninsured
> > Americans, including children, for one year: $98 billion
> >
> >
> > Amount needed to close state budget gaps across the country: $78 billion
> >
> >
> > Amount needed to hire an additional 100,000 teachers to reduce class
> size,
> > provide grants to repair 6,000 schools and assist with new-school
> > construction, and provide additional math and reading help for over 9
> > million eligible low-income students: $300 billion
> >
> >
> > Amount needed to end homelessness for chronically homeless people within
> > 10
> > years: $1.3 billion per year to create and sustain 150,000 units of
> > permanent supportive housing
> >
> >
> > Amount needed by the Environmental Protection Agency to complete
> cleanups
> > at
> > high-priority toxic waste sites through the Superfund program: $92
> million
> >
> >
> > Cost of Head Start for all 1.8 million children, up to 5 years old, who
> > currently need but don't receive it: $25 billion
> >
> >
> > Cost of continuing to provide grants to potentially jeopardized regional
> > poison control centers and maintain a toll-free poison information phone
> > number between 2005 and 2009: $142 million
> >
> >
> > Cost of USDA testing of 12,500 cattle samples for mad cow disease, in
> > addition to homeland security measures such as physical security
> upgrades
> > at
> > lab facilities and background investigation of workers: $21.7 million
> >
> >
> > Budgeted cost of continuing to enable states to meet energy emergencies
> > due
> > to extremes in temperature, either during severe cold weather in the
> > winter
> > or sustained heat waves in the summer: $1.7 billion
> >
> >
> > Cost of measures to improve food safety in 2003, including hiring
> > additional
> > FDA inspectors, and developing new ways for federal inspectors to detect
> > food-borne illnesses in meat and poultry and determine the source of
> > contamination: $101 million
> >
> >
> > Estimated homeland security costs for full support of state and local
> > emergency personnel in their efforts to prevent and respond to acts of
> > terrorism for three years: $12 billion
> >
> >
> > Cost of providing housing assistance nationwide for victims of domestic
> > violence from 2004 through 2008: $100 million
> >
> >
> > Cost of hiring 100 new public-school teachers: $3.125 million
> >
> >
> > Cost of hiring 100 state child-care workers: $2.08 million
> >
> >
> > Cost of fully immunizing 100 children against preventable diseases:
> > $64,433
> >
> >
> > Price of 250,000 new fire trucks: $56.2 billion
> >
> >
> > Identified funding needs for community-based services in the care and
> > treatment of HIV/AIDS in 2002: $2 billion
> >
> >
> > Identified funding needs for HIV prevention and surveillance prevention
> > programs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: $1 billion
> >
> >
> > Identified funding needs for HIV/AIDS research at the National
> Institutes
> > of
> > Health: $2.9 billion
> >
> >
> > Estimated cost of funding Older Americans Act programs for seniors --
> such
> > as transportation, delivered meals and elder abuse prevention -- for 10
> > years: $39 billion
> >
> >
> > Cost of providing needed assistive technology and durable medical
> > equipment
> > for 1 million individuals with disabilities for 10 years: $39 billion
> >
> >
> > Cost of compensating federal employees called to active duty in the
> > uniformed services or National Guard for the difference between their
> > civilian and military pay: $89 million over the 2004-2008 period
> >
> >
> > Yearly cost of direct treatment for mental illness in both the private
> and
> > public sectors in the U.S.: $92 billion
> >
> >
> > Estimated cost of spending for countermeasures against smallpox,
> anthrax,
> > botulinum toxin, plague and Ebola under Project BioShield: $5.6 billion
> > between 2004 and 2013
> >
> >
> > Cost of 60 million doses of an improved smallpox vaccine: $900 million
> >
> >
> > Annual cost of providing services to foster children, including
> > educational
> > assistance, job placement, health services and room and board: $200
> > million
> >
> >
> > Amount needed to establish a National Housing Trust to provide
> communities
> > with funds to build, rehabilitate and preserve 1.5 million units of
> > affordable housing over the next 10 years: $5 billion
> >
> >
> > Cost, per recipient, of Job Corps, an education and training program
> > benefiting disadvantaged youth and young adults: $17,000
> >
> >
> > Federal funding requested in 2004 to maintain the National Domestic
> > Violence
> > Hotline: $3 million
> >
> >
> > Federal funding requested in 2004 for the national Abandoned Infants
> > Assistance program: $45 million
> >
> >
> > Cost of assisting states in covering the excess costs of providing
> special
> > education services to children with disabilities: $8.9 billion
> >
> >
> > Annual cost of providing funding to public libraries through state
> formula
> > grants so that libraries can promote wider access to learning and
> > information: $1.6 billion between 2004 and 2009
> >
> >
> > Cost of providing grants for treatment, counseling and referral for
> > runaway
> > and homeless youth subjected to sexual abuse in 2003: $15 million
> >
> >
> > Annual cost of funding the National Center for Missing and Exploited
> > Children: $20 million
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > Sources:
> >
> >
> > Children's Defense Fund
> >
> > Physicians for a National Health Program
> >
> > National Conference of State Legislatures
> >
> > Fair Taxes For All, National Education Association
> >
> > National Alliance to End Homelessness
> >
> > Natural Resources Defense Council
> >
> > Children's Defense Fund
> >
> > Congressional Budget Office
> >
> > United States Department of Agriculture
> >
> > Administration for Children and Families
> >
> > Food and Drug Administration
> >
> > Fair Taxes For All
> >
> > Congressional Budget Office
> >
> > Children's Defense Fund
> >
> > Children's Defense Fund
> >
> > Children's Defense Fund
> >
> > The National Priorities Project
> >
> > Human Rights Campaign
> >
> > Human Rights Campaign
> >
> > Human Rights Campaign
> >
> > Alliance for Retired Americans
> >
> > Fair Taxes For All
> >
> > Congressional Budget Office
> >
> > National Mental Health Association
> >
> > Congressional Budget Office
> >
> > Congressional Budget Office
> >
> > Administration for Children and Families
> >
> > National Low Income Housing Coalition
> >
> > Brookings Institution
> >
> > Administration for Children and Families
> >
> > Administration for Children and Families
> >
> > Administration for Children and Families
> >
> > Congressional Budget Office
> >
> > Congressional Budget Office
> >
> > Congressional Budget Office
> >
> >
> > salon.com
> >
> >
> >
>
>
>

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