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Showing posts with label tax dodgers USuncut. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tax dodgers USuncut. Show all posts

Monday, April 18, 2011

For Tax Day, US Uncut Asks Americans to Hold Corporate Tax Dodgers Accountable

http://www.thenation.com/blog/159996/tax-day-us-uncut-asks-americans-hold-corporate-tax-dodgers-accountable


In honor of tax day, US Uncut is launching nationwide actions in over 100 separate cities. The group is calling upon Americans to resist an unfair taxation system that permits wealthy people and corporations to dodge paying their fair share while poor people are expected to suffer under cuts in their health services and educational systems.

About the Author

Allison Kilkenny
Allison Kilkenny is the co-host of the progressive political podcast Citizen Radio (wearecitizenradio.com) and...

Also by The Author

As the GOP continues to spread the lie that corporations pay too much, Americans are beginning to fight back against two-tier America.
Protesters gathered in New York City today to demand corporate accountability, an end to foreclosures and that corporations pay their fair share in taxes.

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US Uncut stresses the problem of tax dodging is systemic. According to the Government Accountability Office, 83 of the top 100 US companies use tax havens to dodge taxes.
“Why are we cutting $400 million from local law enforcement funding, while corporations like GE, Verizon, Bank of America, and FedEx continue to get away with not paying any taxes year after year?” asked Carl Gibson of US Uncut Mississippi, “If GE alone paid their fair share of taxes, then we could ‘uncut’ nearly $2 billion in job training programs. Do we want good jobs in America or do we want tax cheats?”
Today, on the anniversary of Paul Revere’s ride, Boston activists are planning a March for Common Sense with rallying cries such as: “The Cuts are coming! The Cuts are coming!”
Earl James, an unemployed veteran and US Uncut support, wants tax revenue invested in domestic programs rather than hidden in offshore bank accounts.
“I’m a veteran that’s been unemployed for over 99 months now, and on the same day I heard about GE’s tax evasion, I got a letter saying my VA benefits were being reduced... Why not invest in jobs for veterans and VA benefits for those who served instead of letting tax cheats like GE’s Jeffrey Immelt get away with cheating our country?"
In Washington DC, a Power Shift flash mob led by US Uncut’s Carl Gibson, successfully shut down a BP gas station. The protest was in response to BP’s $9.9 billion tax credit from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, which nearly matches the EPA’s entire annual operating budget.
Additionally, budget cut protests continue across the country. Rain couldn’t stop more than 150 protesters from participating in a show of solidarity outside the Mercer County Courthouse in Pennsylvania this weekend. The state is set for a cut of $1.2 billion to education under Gov. Tom Corbett’s budget plan.
"You just can't balance the budget on the backs of the working people in the country or in the state," said Chaz Rice, Chair of the Mercer Democratic Committee.
Students in Katy, Texas have chosen a different approach to protesting. Following two days of protest last week at multiple campuses, the students are now engaging in a letter writing campaign to lawmakers in Austin. Katy ISD faces a $50 million budget shortfall due to state budget cuts.
In New Jersey, union leaders have called for members to protest the firing of Paterson’s 125 police officers (a quarter of the city’s total force). The city has already eliminated 392 municipal workers. In the meantime, eighteen Guardian Angels (read: unarmed civilians) are patrolling the city. Mayor Jeffery Jones says the Angels can play a “significant role” in public safety. The group “keeps an eye on neighborhoods, breaks up fights, and makes citizen arrests.”
The effects of the budget cuts have already been manifesting in ugly ways. In Kentucky, job losses and foreclosures have resulted in a spike of homelessness. With the state unable (or unwilling) to fill the void, the homeless turn to shelters. Unfortunately, with so many in need, the shelters can’t keep up. The Salvation Army in Paducah has had to send families (married couples only) to go live in the woods, armed with nothing more than tents.


On Wednesday, President Obama unveiled his deficit reduction plan as a plausible alternative to the GOP’s cruel budget proposal delivered a week earlier. That plan, presented by House Budget Chairman Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI), showed that the GOP isn’t interested in cutting the deficit; they would pay for tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans with spending cuts for services that benefit the elderly, the working-poor and a beleaguered middle-class. Even the non-partisan Congressional Budget Offices estimates it would increase the deficit over 10 years. Please check out my post, “Fighting for a People’s Budget,” outlining alternatives to the GOP’s reverse Robin Hood agenda.

Media

  • Slide Show: 7 More Corporations That Owe You Money
Slide Show: 7 Corporate Tax Evaders

About the Author

Katrina vanden Heuvel
Katrina vanden Heuvel has been The Nation's editor since 1995 and its publisher since 2005. She is the co-editor of...

Also by The Author

Obama's budget speech was a clear rebuke to the GOP's reverse Robin Hood agenda. But he continues to legitimize the inside-the Beltway consensus that spending cuts are necessary for fiscal responsibility.
Deficit hawks across the political spectrum and the tea partiers claim America is broke. It isn't. We can deal with our debt by taxing extreme concentrations of wealth.
When President Obama spoke of “shared sacrifice” this week, two-thirds of the cuts he proposes to reduce the deficit with would come from education, health and other social programs while a paltry one-third would come from our bloated defense budget. This week, we ask in our lead editorial, “Whose Shared Sacrifice?
With a government shutdown averted, the budget compromise calling for $38.5 billion in spending cuts passed by Congress on Thursday, touted as “the largest annual spending cut in history,” is now headed to President Obama’s desk for approval. And yet, as Iargued this week in the Washington Post, somewhere along the way we lost the point of having this debate in the first place: a need for a clear strategy to build the economy and revive the middle class.
Also this week…
SLIDESHOW: 7 Corporate Tax Evaders
Tax Day is right around the corner. This week, we’re reminded that while Washington continues to tell Americans to tighten their belts, some of the country’s most profitable corporations aren’t paying their fair share of taxes. Who are they? Be sure to look at our slideshow, looking at seven corporate tax dodgers. And let’s not be fooled: by restoring saner corporate tax policy, we wouldn’t have to balance the budget on the backs of struggling Americans. The slideshow is available here.

AWARD: The Nation Nominated for Best Political Coverage in Utne’s 2011 Independent Press Award
This week we received word that The Nation has been nominatedfor Best Political Coverage in Utne Reader’s 22nd Annual Independent Press Awards. And we’re in good company. Nominees include Dissent, In These Times, Mother Jones, The American Conservative, The American Prospect, The New Republic and The Progressive. We’re honored for the recognition. Winners will be announced May 18th at the MPA-Association of Magazine Media’s Independent Magazine Media Conference in San Francisco. Congratulations to all our co-nominees.
BLOG: Tax Day Activism
Guest-blogger Allison Kilkenny continues to bring us the latest on US Uncut, which most recently pulled off a clever hoax with the cultural activist duo The Yes Men. They widely circulated a false AP report stating that General Electric would refund its entire $3.2 billion tax return. Wouldn't that be something! Be sure to read Allison's report here. More actions are planned across the country for Friday, over the weekend, on Tax Day this Monday, led by US Uncut, MoveOn and others. Be sure to read my colleague Peter Rothberg’s post, “A Primer on Tax Day Activism” for a powerful look at what many will be doing around the country.
WELCOME: Jamelle Bouie
We’re pleased to welcome Knobler Fellow and guest-blogger Jamelle Bouie, who is also a Writing Fellow at The American Prospect. Bouie’s specialty is US politics—with a focus on parties, elections and campaign finance. His writing has appeared in The Washington Independent, CNN.com, and in Ta-Nehisi Coates' blog at the Atlantic. Be sure to head to The Nation’s group blog,The Notion, and check out his latest post, “Democrats Prepare to Embrace Anonymous Campaign Contributions.” Read it here.