• Answers
  • Web
Personalize Yedda, (And make Danny Happy)
People ask & answer about almost everything. Tell us what you're interested in... So we can personalize Yedda especially for you
I'm interested in:
Originated from
AOL News

Dear President Obama and the US Congress

Dear President Obama and the US Congress I hope that you are able to read this letter and consider my proposal. Bailing out corporations is not working. This is “reaction” to the problems, not a solution. It is a reward to these corporations for continuing to make the same major mistakes that have brought their company’s and this country to the financial crisis that we are in now. The US Government is not “the private sector”! How many industries are they going to take over? Mortgages, Insurance, Investments, Auto manufacturing, and now Retail!!!The distribution of the trillions of taxpayer dollars being used for CEO bonus’, severance packages, travel expenses, “relaxation get away’s”, is an insult. These people do not have the slightest concern for the average American citizen, and what their greed and mismanagement is doing to us. How many “mom & pop” small business’ are getting a “bailout”? Congress seems to think that writing a “blank check” will solve all the problems, just keep printing money and somehow it will all get better. What happens when that money is spent, write another “blank check”! There needs to be an immediate halt to “bailouts” and a complete accountability of every dollar by each corporation that has received this money. These corporations also need to pay back the money for all the frivolous expenses they have used this money for. “Trickle Down Economics” doesn’t work!!! Apparently no one in Congress remembers the 80’s. A true sound economy is dependent on the average worker and their continued employment. It doesn’t take an “Economist” to figure out that if average citizens do not have a JOB to pay for basic living expenses, then all the corporate credit in the world is not going to fix anything, you can’t get a loan without that JOB. It is ridiculous to think that “loosening credit” is going to effect anything. The initial “stimulus package” issued earlier this year was a joke. As a “Head of Household” filing taxpayer with 2 dependents (both in college), I received $300.00 !!! This did not cover one month’s car payment. I certainly did not “stimulate” the economy. The only way to get over this financial crisis is to let the American taxpayer fix it (it’s OUR money). Consider the following proposal for a “stimulus package”, it may sound simple but it would save the US Government billions of dollars. IT WILL WORK. A). Eligibility would be based on the following: 1. MUST be a United States citizen at least 18 yrs old or over, 2. Filed a 2007, or 2008 tax return (regardless of your income or filing status), or in the case of retirees, submit the same form used for the first “stimulus package”. 3. In the case of 18 yr olds & over dependants not having filed a tax return, they would also be eligible. B). The minimum amount of this check would be $500,000.00 per person. A ONE TIME, NON-TAXABLE payment. Even though the amount of money per person is considerable and there may be several eligible citizens in one household, it would not effect jobs in a negative way as the majority of people would not be able to retire, or quit their jobs outright. This may sound like an extreme amount, however, it is “spare change” compared to what has already been spent and what is expected to be spent in the coming months for a select number of companies. Number of eligible citizens: 225 Million (approximate) Total Stimulus Pkg $: $1,125,000,000 (1 Billion) not Trillions $ Spent on bailouts: 3.45 TRILLION dollars. Not billions. TRILLIONS. that's 25% of the US GDP. Yes, $3.45 trillion has already been spent, as Bailoutsleuth.com details: $2T Emergency Fed Loans (the ones the Fed won't discuss, as detailed here) $700B TARP (designed to buy bad debt, the fund is rapidly transforming as we'll discuss in an upcoming segment) $300B Hope Now (the government's year-old attempt at mortgage workouts) $200B Fannie/Freddie $140B Tax Breaks for Banks (WaPo has the details) $110B: AIG (with it's new deal this week, the big insurer got $40B of TARP money, plus $110B in other relief) Tallying up the "true" cost of the bailout is difficult, and won't be known for months if not years. But considering $3.5 trillion is about 25% of the U.S. economy ($13.8 trillion in 2007) and the U.S. deficit may hit $1 trillion in fiscal 2009, hyperinflation and/or sharply higher interest rates seem likely outcomes down the road. Based on the spending habits of “middle class America”, the majority of people would mostly likely use the money in the following ways: 1. In the 18-24 age bracket: a majority would spend this money on cars, electronics, clothing, entertainment, etc. The immediate benefit would be to the Retail Industry, including the AUTO Industry. This age group would also be able to pay student loans, or pay tuitions to continue their education which would benefit all industries in the long term. 2. In the 25-55 age bracket: it is likely that a good deal of the money received would be used to catch up on mortgages payments, payoff existing mortgages (if possible), make down payments for new mortgages, pay credit cards, car loans, small loans, or medical bills. Another portion would be used to upgrade manufactured goods (cars, appliances, electronics, etc.), and also on home improvements. In addition, a majority of people in the (40-55 age bracket) would put money into retirement investments (the stock market). The immediate and long term benefit would be to the Financial Industry, Housing Industry, and Manufacturing Industry. 3. In the 56-??? Age bracket: a considerable amount of the money would be used to payoff mortgages and put into padding retirement funds. The immediate and long term benefit would be to the Financial Industry. 4. All age brackets: there would be a great deal of new small business’ opened (“Joe the Plumber”), as people would have the startup capital. In the long term this is a win-win situation. Instead of the money being wasted on these industry or better put “individual corporate” bailouts, the savings would be used for the benefit of the whole country in: 1. Employment - small business employees thousands of workers across the country (especially younger workers) which would benefit communities. Manufacturing (i.e. “Republic Windows & Doors”) would increase due to high demand, therefore, more workers needed. 2. Housing - the housing markets across the country would stabilize as foreclosures would stop, and housing resales, and new starts would increase. 3. Education – preschool & after school programs, lunch programs, libraries and computers in the schools, physical education, arts & music. New and remodeled school buildings. 4. Health Care – funding for universal health care, medical research, mandatory child health programs, drug /alcohol abuse education and rehabilitation programs. 5. Security – funding for increase in city police, fire department, and border patrol officers. 6. Infrastructure – bridge and road repairs, utility upgrades, etc. 7. Social Security – money could be put into the fund (“lockbox style”). Of course there are probably many other areas that have not even been mentioned, but I think that what I have proposed would benefit every aspect of the economy. People would continue to work (retirement age is still 62 +), students would still be going to college (and many people would be able to go back to college). The difference would be financial security for our citizens, the extraordinary monetary savings and redistribution of funds by the government, and the financial stability in the world markets. Thank you, Karen E. Hilton Rio Rancho, New Mexico


Share Send to a friend Watch Report
 
 

5 Posted Answers
Order by

 

225,000,000 persons times $500,000 = equals $112,500,000,000,000 (quadrillion not billion). Although yur math is incorrect, your case is sound.

 

 This is exactly what I have been hearing from everyone. I agree 100%. The average hard working American is the backbone of this Country and a huge bailout should be given to them. I am disgusted to see where so much of the money is going! The amount of greed that is being seen is appauling. It is no different than if they were to spit in our faces. Even if $50,000 was sent to each tax payer, that would stimulate plenty. Unfortunately, your words will fall on deaf ears. You know as well as I, that there is no way in heck they would ever think of doing that. They have to keep us poor folk in our place, that way they will have someone to look down their noses at.

 

I figured it was, I know it would still be less than what they are spending now.

Posted 2009-02-04T22:28:30Z
 

I sent this proposal to every member of the US Senate and Congress, with canned "thank you's".  I have tried to send it to CNN, the Whitehouse, Letters to the Editor's of several papers, no one listens.  Thanks for your reply, if you know where else to get some attention, I would appreciate it. 

 
908 helpful answers

I'm a secular progressiveAnimated MonkeysThrow the ball back Biden

 

 


Cap-and-Trade = The Biggest Tax Increase In U.S. History
 
King Obama opened his address to a joint session of Congress last month by saying “the economy is an issue that rises above all others.” By that standard, his key energy proposal fails badly. King Obama’s proposed Kyoto-style cap-and-trade plan would be the biggest tax increase in American history. It would hit every American who fills a gas tank, pays an electric bill, or buys anything that has to be grown, shipped, or manufactured.
Cap-and-trade is a way to impose a massive energy tax and pretend it’s not a tax. It puts a cap on overall greenhouse gas emissions, and establishes a market for companies to buy and sell the permits. In Obama’s version, the permits would all be auctioned off and the hundreds of billions of dollars would be used to fund higher government spending.

The hardest hit will be those least able to pay: lower income families, who spend a disproportionate share of their income on energy.

The so-called cap-and-trade energy tax would, according to the president himself, force energy prices to go way up. In an unguarded moment, speaking to The San Francisco Chronicle last year, King Obama said: “Under my plan of a cap and trade system, electricity rates would necessarily skyrocket… they would have to retrofit their operations. That will cost money. They will pass that money on to consumers.”

The economic impact of imposing these huge new costs on energy consumers would be devastating. Even using the King Obama administration’s own numbers, it would amount to a tax hike of $645.7 billion over the first 8 years, over $80 billion per year.

But as the cap becomes more and more strict over time, those costs would skyrocket into the trillions of dollars.

King Obama’s proposed 83 percent reduction below 2005 levels by 2050 dwarfs the proposal from last year’s Lieberman-Warner bill, which included a 63 percent reduction.

An analysis commissioned by the American Council on Capital Formation and the National Association of Manufacturers projected the economic impact of last year’s bill by 2030: 3 to 4 million fewer jobs, $4,022 to $6,752 in lower annual disposable income per household, an annual hit to GDP of between $631 billion and $669 billion, and much higher energy prices — 60 percent to 144 percent higher for gasoline and 77 percent to 129 percent higher for electricity.

These figures are all adjusted for inflation. The hardest hit will be those least able to pay: lower income families, who spend a disproportionate share of their income on energy. The King Obama plan requires considerably steeper cuts and therefore will be even more expensive.

Much of the cap-and-trade tax revenue will be earmarked for the so-called Making Work Pay tax credit, worth $400 for a single-worker family and $800 for a two-worker family. So while the left hand offers $400 or $800, the right hand snatches $4,000 (or more) from the pockets of American families. Some deal.

This is not an unintended consequence of the plan–it’s the intended goal .King  Obama made it plain as day when he said that he wants to give so-called renewable energies a market advantage. That requires stepping in with heavy taxes to dramatically raise the price of fossil fuels, which are much, much cheaper than renewables and are projected to remain so for a long time, especially since oil prices have come down sharply.

And what do we buy, environmentally, with this enormous hit to the economy? Basically, nothing. Cap and trade is already failing to reduce emissions in Europe. And even if emissions targets are met, climate models show that the reductions would have no detectable impact on global average temperatures. That’s why leading climate alarmists have hailed a Kyoto-style cap-and-trade regime as just the first step of 30 to curb global economic activity. There’s never a good time to embark down such a path, but it seems particularly hare-brained during an economic crisis.

And that’s not all, I urge you to also keep an eye on the Environmental Protection Agency. April 2nd marks the two-year anniversary of the Supreme Court decision in Massachusetts v. EPA that found, on a 5-4 decision, that the EPA can shoehorn a cap and trade regime into the 1970 Clean Air Act, passed before anyone in Congress–or anywhere else–had even heard of global warming theory. EPA is likely to celebrate the anniversary by laying plans for moving ahead. Before Congress does anything else on this issue, they should pass a clean bill to stop the EPA and give us time to consider our policy through the proper democratic process.

No matter whether it’s through legislation or regulation, cap-and-trade would destroy the only bright spot in the current economic environment, low energy prices, and cause severe economic pain. Anyone who supports it can’t be serious about putting the economy first.

Sign in to participate

Got an answer for Concerned Citizen? Would you like to comment on the posted answers, or vote for the one which you think is the best?

Sign up for a free account, or sign in (if you're already a member).

Explore Related Questions

Other people asked questions on similar topics, check out the answers they received:


Q:

A Bailout That Would Really Work

Would it not have been more prudent to put these billions in the hands of consumers? 1 million to every legal citizen in the US ...
Submitted by rhymn001   10 months ago.
  • viewed 86 times
Last answer posted 10 months ago by knlchicago


Q:

Best use of bailout money

When are they going to start printing checks to every US citizen over the age of 18, not incarerated or in a mental home. If they ...
Submitted by tmebbers   10 months ago.
  • viewed 62 times
Last answer posted 10 months ago by fedup


Q:

Why don't they make a bailout plan for all the ...

Why don't they make a bailout plan for all the private homeowners who are kicked to the streets after their homes are reposessed ...
Submitted by tony   10 months ago.
  • viewed 93 times
Last answer posted 10 months ago by Malk



» More...

Explore Related Posts in Forums

The Official Thread of the Financial Crisis and Bailout Extravaganza 4.0

To the worldwide credit crisis, and all Americans are feeling the effects of the worst economic downturn of nationalizing our way out of an economic crisis. Using the slow gears of gov't as a means to regulate A pretty compelling case for bankruptcy. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122688631448632421.html Quote: : After 42 years ...

How does congress bailout the financial crisis without the taxpayers money...

How does congress bailout the financial crisis without the taxpayers money? ? Are there any ? Without congress using taxpayers money for this bailout? Right now, the details are that the government will try to help the people keep the homes

Thoughts on the financial crisis and the "bailout" plan

Some thoughts about the current financial crisis: The irresponsibility of those goofballs Roulette with financial hard times for everyone, and disaster for those retiring in the near future (ie "money") that the US government is creating to address the financial system problems
» More...
Powered by
Feed - Subscribe to changes to this Q&A Blog

More AOL News Stories

Obama's Bow in Japan Enrages Critics

Bloggers are still buzzing about the way President Obama greeted Japan's Emperor Akihito in Tokyo this weekend. His defenders say Obama's deep bow was in keeping with protocol while his critics call it a sign of weakness. Regardless of the political signals, experts on bowing say Obama botched it.

Cops Search for Missing 5-Year-Old

The location and fate of a 5-year-old girl reported missing by her mother was unknown even after authorities charged the mother with human trafficking and other offenses.

Charities May Not Have a Happy Holiday

American charities have weathered a significant drop in giving this year, and while they're hoping for a holiday miracle, a recent survey shows they will probably see a decrease in year-end generosity.

Palin's Way of Talkin' Dissected

When Sarah Palin burst onto the national political stage, there was a lot of talk about her distinctive way of talkin', you betcha. Heck, she grew up in Alaska but doggone it, why did she talk like someone from the movie "Fargo"? Three linguists tackled the conundrum in a research article to be published next month.

Police: Chicago School Official Killed Self

A body pulled from the Chicago River early this morning is believed to be that of Michael Scott, president of the Chicago School Board, according to local media reports.

Doctors Operate on Conjoined Twins

A team of Australian surgeons were working Monday on a delicate and complicated surgery to separate twin sisters who are joined at the top of the head.

Climate Blamed for Swarming Jellyfish

Scientists believe climate change — the warming of oceans — has allowed some of the almost 2,000 jellyfish species to expand their ranges, appear earlier in the year and increase overall numbers, much as warming has helped ticks, bark beetles and other pests to spread to new latitudes.

Drilling for Scotch Whisky in Antarctica

A beverage company has asked a team to drill through Antarctica's ice for a lost cache of some vintage Scotch whiskey that has been on the rocks since a century ago, when it was shipped by British polar explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton as part of his abandoned 1909 expedition

Study Raises Concerns on Heart Drugs

A new study raises fresh concerns about Zetia and its cousin, Vytorin _ drugs still taken by millions of Americans to lower cholesterol, despite questions raised last year about how well they work.

JFK's Last Autograph Sold for Big Bucks

What could be the last autograph signed by President Kennedy was sold recently at an auction of items linked to his assassination in Texas. Kennedy reportedly signed the front page of the Dallas Morning News, which contained a photo of him and the first lady and a preview of their arrival that day in Dallas.
» More...
Powered by
ADVERTISEMENT
  • Answers
  • Web
Copyright © 2006-2009, Yedda Inc. and respective copyright owners · CC License