Tag Archive for corporation

The Family Budget as a Weapon

Here, in the middle of the year, many of us are reviewing our family budget to make sure we’re okay until January.  This is a good time to take a close look, to see if our spending habits reflect what we say we believe.  For example, I believe in human dignity, so shouldn’t I stop buying at that huge discount chain that has been in the news often for mistreating and intimidating their non-documented immigrant employees?  I respect how hard local farmers work, so why not buy at farmers’ markets and through co-ops?  I may have to pay a little more.  But I can save money (and the environment) by walking or car-pooling sometimes.  Or by exchanging one night out a month for a family-centered game-night in.  I need to make my priorities clear to myself and to the stores and corporations I buy from.  They notice how we spend our money.  That makes our family budget a potential weapon of mass instruction!

 

How Prop. 13 is Harming California

No, I’m not talking about Grandma’s home, which, thanks to Prop. 13, is secure even though she’s on limited income.  I’m talking about how corporations are benefiting from that 1978 proposition while small businesses and the rest of us are suffering with greatly decreased public services, including education.

Robert Reich has a short, yet clear, explanation of what is happening.  It’s worth the three minutes it will take you to view it.

Do you have a statute like California’w Proposition 13 in your state?

Go to Make It Fair California —

(https://www.facebook.com/MakeItFairCA/videos/1641088839470558).

 

 

 

Fewer Taxes for Corporations?

Poor FedEx, Amazon, Ikea, Pepsi, JP Morgan, Proctor and Gamble.  They feel they pay too much in taxes.  So they keep searching for ways around paying.  Now, thanks to Luxembourg, they and other corporations have a new path to minimizing their taxes.

That bothers me on so many levels.  The more people (yes, the courts have declared that a corporation is a person) who don’t pay their fair share of taxes, the more the rest of us have to pay if we want adequate basic services.  It means that people in poverty have less chance at life-sustaining jobs, therefore slimmer chances of lifting themselves up into a better life.  It means higher profits for corporations but not lower prices for us.

Get details about this new corporate tax break at the Sum of Us website.