Showing posts with label Raise Taxes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Raise Taxes. Show all posts

Thursday, September 29, 2011

If the Tax Man Cometh, Please Light the Lamp

On Tuesday night of this week, I took part in a town hall meeting, via the telephone, with John Gerretson, a cabinet minister in the McGuinty government.

Gerretson happens to be my MPP in Kingston, though his "wired" gathering was not for a Kingston audience, but was province wide. He was acting in his capacity as a senior provincial Liberal.

I had anticipated that the questions would relate to the economy, or healthcare, and of course the dreaded HST. In fact one caller spoke of the HST on Hydro bills, prompting Gerretson to point out that the HST was a federal tax and that rebates compensated most Ontarians for any extra tax burden.

However, many of the questions were about the state of our society. One woman was concerned with the plight of the homeless. She was obviously not homeless herself. There were questions about what could be done about the increase in the use of food banks.  About unemployment that was hurting families and why so many seniors were forced to live in poverty.

What was wrong with these people?

Why weren't they whining about high taxes, the debt or the deficit? Aren't they supposed to be our top priorities?

I generally tune out politicians, though I'm sure Gerretson's answers were just what the callers wanted to hear.

But I learned something about the Canadian people. We still care about the disadvantaged in our society, and more importantly, expect our government to do something for them.

And I learned that maybe we are smart enough to realize that if we lower taxes .... again .... our government would not have the means required to do what we expect them to do.

And maybe we now also realize that "lower taxes" is New Right speak for lowering the taxes on the wealthy, while offsetting them with reductions in services for everyone else.

The tired logic of lowering taxes, creating jobs, has been debunked.

I watch Bill Maher religiously, craving for a Canadian program promoting progressive ideas, and this week as a guest he had the lead singer from a group called Rage Against the Machine, Tom Morello.

I have to admit that I'd never heard of them, but I gathered that they may be a bit radical. However, Mr. Morello was intelligent and articulate, and absolutely captivating.

A champion of social causes, he told the story of a group of workers, who made guitars for companies like Gibson and Fender. The work had been outsourced to Seoul, Korea, where working conditions and wages were so deplorable, they would have been shut down in the U.S.

So the workers tried to unionize, and instead of hearing them out, the American based industry simply moved the factory to China, leaving many families destitute.

So they pooled their resources, sending three delegates, the 6,000 miles to the United States, hoping someone would take up their cause. As a result, Morello's group offered to perform a benefit concert, with all proceeds going to the struggling Korean workers.

However, the day before the concert was to take place, the earthquake hit Haiti. What happened next is nothing short of a miracle.

All of the affected Korean workers asked Morello to instead give the proceeds to the Haitian Disaster Relief Fund.

If people with nothing can be so generous, what is wrong with us? Why has lowering our taxes taken precedence over doing what is right?

The "Tax Man" theme is played out across the United States, mostly by Republicans against their Democrat opponents. It's getting old.

Supreme Court Justice, Oliver Wendall Holmes, once said that "Taxes are what we pay for civilized society".

What is a civilized society worth to you?

Are we being impoverished by taxes, or is cutting taxes impoverishing our society?

I find that those who scream the loudest about taxes, are also those who scream the loudest about potholes, or rant, "where are the police when we need them?", or complain about standing in line at government service offices.

How do you think those things are paid for?

So if the "Tax Man" cometh, I'm lighting the lamp and putting on a pot of coffee. We need to talk. I don't want him to lower my taxes, only to make better use of them.

And if that makes me a "leftie, tree-hugging liberal", I'll wear the title with pride.

Monday, September 13, 2010

Jim Flaherty Announced That he Will Have to Raise Taxes

It's almost too easy after the Reformer's attack ads suggesting that Michael Ignatieff will raise taxes, when instead they raise them themselves.

Not that their hypocrisy is really news, but I don't know how their candidates are going to campaign with the usual 'tax and spend' Liberals, when this government now presides over the largest tax increases in our history.

They have also spent and wasted more money than any government in our history, and have the largest deficit. Brian Mulroney held that record before Harper.

And remember they were already in a deficit before the economic crisis hit. 'Tax and Spend Conservatives'? Looks like.

Thomas Walkom rightly suggests that this government needs a reality check.
Finance Minister Jim Flaherty acts as if the economic crisis is over. It is not. Friday’s announcement that unemployment is starting to inch its way up again merely confirms what most had suspected: We’re not out of this mess yet. Yet the Conservative government insists that everything is back to normal. This week, Flaherty quietly let slip that Ottawa will cut benefits to jobless workers. On Thursday, he announced plans to raise taxes by hiking the Employment Insurance premiums that workers and their bosses must pay (this even though the EI program is running a $55 billion surplus).

His rationale, that stimulative measures are no longer needed, flies in the face of reality.
We can no longer afford these guys. It's that simple.