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11/22 |
2012/12/19-2013/1/24 [Politics/Domestic/California, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:54563 Activity:nil |
12/19 Tea Party Patriots have been with us for a long time: http://preview.tinyurl.com/bso455m |
2010/8/23-9/7 [Reference/Tax, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:53934 Activity:nil |
9/19 http://www.latimes.com/news/local/bell/la-me-city-property-tax-table,0,5895218.htmlstory Poor cities pay more % of prop tax than wealthy cities. Compton pays 1.5% prop tax. \_ poor people also pay more for groceries. and taxes and in general everything. It's why rich people stay rich. I love $2 country club burgers! \_ Maybe it's because the average property value in poor cities are lower than those in rich cities, such that a higher prop tax % rate doesn't translate to higher proper tax dollar? And maybe it's also because poor cities need to provide more service per capita than rich cities? \_ it's ok to make fun of the poor again. Just call them The Offline. remember you're at the top of Digital Darwinism, you're online with your iphone because the Digital God gave you the best genes. |
2010/2/8-3/9 [Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:53694 Activity:nil |
2/7 Is Mello-Roos common in new homes in the Bay Area? \_ In SF, yes. \_ Why? All the pipes are laid out in SF. School districts are well established. It's not like it's in the middle of nowhere like Riverside. I would expect Mello-Roos to be more common in say, Gilroy or southern parts of of San Jose. It is certainly common in San Ramon. \_ While there are no true CFD's in SF, the voters have approved a few extra bonds that appear on your property tax bill. For example, I see "SFUSD Facilities District" and "SF - Teacher Support" on my property tax bill. They add up to .03% of my assessed value. \_ This is not true, SF homes in general are not subject to any kind of Mello-Roos assessments. I think it is possible to join one to help pay for your own Solar energy installation, but you are not required to do this. -sf homeowner |
2009/8/12-9/1 [Politics/Domestic/California/Arnold, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:53268 Activity:moderate |
8/12 Thanks for destroying the world's finest public University! http://tinyurl.com/kr92ob (The Economist) \_ Why not raise tuition? At private universities, students generate revenue. Students should not be seen as an expense. UC has been a tremendous bargain for most of its existence. It's time to raise tuition to match the perceived quality of the institution. Good privates are charging $50K/year. UC would be a bargain at 1/3 that amount. Stop trying to go back to the taxpayer well. \_ 35% of the undergrads at Berkeley are Pell Grant recipients (which means they're amongst the poorest in the country). Berkeley leads all universities in that regard; UCLA has a similar number. The purpose of a public university is to provide educational opportunities to the public, including those who do not have the money to attend a private institution. There is a clear public benefit to giving access to higher education to this population, measurable in terms of reduced need for social services by the individual and his or her family, increased worker productivity, reduced incarceration rates, reduced population growth, etc. All these things benefit the state. California is the center for industry that it is in large part because of the historical success of the California public education system. Turn it into Stanford-lite and you'll find the next boom happening in North Carolina, or Texas, or Michigan. -tom \_ Interesting you mention these, because UC tuition and fees are less than those for Texas and Michigan. UNC's fees are cheaper. The education-for-all universities are CSUs. With the existence of CSU there is no need to keep fees at UC low. Further, Pell Grants are *federal* funds and federal aid (likely loans) is likely to rise in response. Chancellor Birgeneau: "Ironically, it appears that the group that will be most disadvantaged by our funding challenges are not those who are truly low income people but rather the State's middle-income families. Specifically, current federal, state and university financial aid plans protect the poor; however, the middle class - that is, those whose family incomes fall in the $60,000 to $120,000 range - receive limited aid and the current disinvestment in higher education by the State of California will only exacerbate their plight." In this instance, I am not overly concerned about the plight of the middle class if fees rise. A family that makes $90K per year, while not rich, will figure it out. \_ UC is education for the top students in the state, whether they come from rich, poor, or middle-class backgrounds. That's its mission, and it's been a runaway success as an institution and as a benefit to the state. -tom \_ You ignored two of my points: 1. Even the chancellor isn't too worried about your Pell Grant recipients being able to attend UC. 2. There is good reason to believe the at-risk middle class students will be able to afford an increase in fees given increased federal aid. So even with fee increases the best students will still be able to attend UC. However, without the fee increases then why would they want to? I want to protect this institution, but if you want it to fall to the level of CSU then keep hoping for government handouts which aren't going to happen. I prefer to be proactive and if a was a UC Regent I'd raise the funds we needed outside of government by partnering with industry, creating a larger endowment in flush times (UC's is pathetically low), and raising fees on students. Hoping taxes go up or down leaves the issue to the whims of others. \_ Guess what happens when UC raises more money from industry, grants, and endowments: the anti-govermnent ideologues use that as an excuse to further cut state funding. Endowment for UC, in particular, is at best neutral and at worse negative in terms of ongoing funding. (Universities with large endowments are also getting pummelled right now. Harvard had 9% of the combined endowment for all US universities, and they just did 300 mandatory retirements and 270 layoffs). The question is, how can you fund a great state university? The question isn't how to turn a great state university into a private university. We know how to do that, and it's a bad idea. -tom \_ Why is it a bad idea? I think UC should look to the privates for an idea of how to run a great university. Paying more attention to your students, but charging them for the privilege, is a great business model. I reiterate that UC views its students like an expense and they should view them like a source of revenue. UC has a lot of students who wish to attend - more than it has spots. If it cannot survive in that environment it has a problem. Believe me, the students won't miss that extra $5K/year a decade after graduation but they will appreciate what it gets them. Don't you find it odd that the schools that charge higher fees have more satisfied students that donate more back to the school rather than being angry at paying a higher tuition? I know I had mediocre experiences at both UCB and UCLA. I would've bitched a lot about fee increases while in school, but now I realize it's necessary and I'd pay a few $K more per year for my kid to have a better education (or even to preserve what we have). Otherwise, send my kid to JC or CSU and save a lot of $$$ and just send my kid to UC for grad school. \_ As I said, it's not like the privates are any paragon of virtue; they're mostly in financial straits just as dire as UC. You can assert that you don't believe in public education; that's your opinion and you're entitled to it. But to suggest that, essentially, California "should" give up on public education, because of Harold Jarvis, begs a whole lot of questions, the primary one being, would California and its citizens be better off if UC were privatized? It seems highly unlikely to me. -tom \_ Let's say for sake of argument that UC was privatized and tuition was the same as it is now. Would that be a problem? Is it the cost you have a problem with or with privatization? I never argued that UC should be privatized - only that fees need to be raised to help defray costs. I think this is true whether UC is public or private, because there isn't anywhere else to get money from. Howard Jarvis has nothing to do with it and has been a favorite target of the liberal community for some time now, but is mostly a red herring because California's tax revenues are about the same as they were pre-Prop 13. You'd better find another target to pick on, because Prop 13 will *NEVER* be repealed. Ever. Property owners vote and there will be a revolution before Prop 13 is repealed, so better start working on Plan B, which is to increase income tax rates. \_ If UC were privatized, its fees would be like Stanford's. -tom \_ Please answer the question: Are you opposed to privatization or to high fees? If it was public but expensive, would that be acceptable? What about private, but cheap? \_ You'll have to find someone else to beat that straw man for you. -tom \_ I'm sorry, but privatization was *your* straw man. I never mentioned it. \_ The part of Prop 13 that applies to commercial owners will be modified or overturned in the next five years. You\ can take that to the bank. \_ Possibly, but it's all the same pool of money. If commercial owners pay higher taxes they will sell properties and property values may fall, which results in less tax. Tenants will pay more for leases and will have to raise prices or close some businesses. This is what people don't realize. You can't abolish Prop 13 and have 25% income tax and 10% sales tax and full employment and expect to keep as much business here as exists now. Something has got to give and it will find a new equilibrium at around the old one. There are no secrets here. Tax revenues are going to be about what they always have been. We need to live within that stream of revenue or grow it by growing the economy faster than inflation. \_ You like to use a lot of words without actually attempting to prove your point. You're just reciting. -tom \_ It is simple economics. You don't just raise taxes and expect the status quo to continue. \_ And you don't just cut services and expect the status quo to continue. California's success has been much more a result of investment in public education than it has been a result of ridiculous ideas about low taxes. -tom \_ Depends on what the services you cut are. That's up for debate. So don't cut education and cut something else. \_ The CA budget is basically education, health, and prison. Only prison can be reasonably cut. -tom \_ They can *all* be reasonably cut. You just have to decide where and how. \_ Per capita real revenues are down since Prop 13 and have been trending down for a long time. \_ Down 16% but higher now than in 1981 according to at least one study. However you want to frame it, they haven't changed drastically. Per capita revenue is down because we have a huge influx of people who don't contribute much to the economy but take more than their share from it. \_ Down 16% is huge. The entire higher education system is less than 16% of the overall state budget. First you claim that per capita is not down, then you admit that it is. Which one is it? \_ Down 16% AT THE MOMENT, but overall up since 1981. In flush years (like <DEAD>dot.com<DEAD> height) it was up. Right now, in one of the worst years in a long time, it is down. Overall, it's about the same, which is amazing when you consider the huge influx of low income and paid-under-the-table workers flooding into California over the last 3 decade which drags down any per-capita figures. \_ I agree with you in general, but it isn't like fees haven't increased. They have increased dramatically since I was a student in the early 90s. Has spending really outpaced it by so much? I'd be interested to see a breakdown of where UC money has come from and gone to over the last 15 years or so. (anyone know if/where this might be available?) \_ The UC used to be free, before Reagan decided to punish the UC for not supporting his policies. The question goes to the heart \_ If you can't blame Bush, blame Reagan... \_ Facts are such bitter things. \_ They sure are. The only reason CA is in its current budget mess is because of Gray Davis and the Dem majority state legislature has done jack squat for the past two decades. Oh yeah, and the unions getting Arnold's budget props defeated. \_ In the last 25 years, the governor has been Republican for all except 4 years. Gray Davis (from Stanford, by the way) wasn't a great governor, but it is the ideological position of Wilson, Schwarzenegger, and the Republicans in the legislature which has whittled away at UC's funding. The budget requires a 2/3rds majority to pass, which is why the Republican minority can hold up the process as long as they do. -tom \_ Maybe the Democrats should be more bi-partisan in their thinking. \_ That is pretty funny coming from a Republican. \_ I'm not a Republican. However, consider this: The minority party doesn't have the votes to institute any major changes. All they can do, politically, is dig in. It is up to the party in power to reach out to the minority party to pick up the few votes it needs for a compromise. If the Democrats cannot appeal to *any* Republicans then they are taking the wrong stance and are just being stubborn. You can't blame the Republicans for anything, because they don't have enough votes to do anything even with fairly broad Democratic support. \_ "If you are not with us, then you are with the terrorists." Does that ring a bell with you at all? In CA, the GOP has been able to screw up state finances with a small minority, because passing a budget requires a 2/3 majority. What the Democrats should be trying to do is over turn this law. \_ Democrats need 6 votes in the Assembly and 2 votes in the Senate to have this supermajority. If they cannot convince even that few opponents to see their point of view then they aren't trying very hard to find a compromise. I know you'd like to see a tyrrany of the majority, but I rather like this current system because it represents the interests of more Californians. \_ Did Reagan institute the first tuition at the UC or didn't he? of what public education is for. Is it intended to be a chance for everyone to have an opportunity to better themselves, or is it just for the wealthy to entrench their children's position in society? Californias wealth was founded on the former, btw, since a lot of talent goes to waste if you just don't educate well the bottom 80%. \_ This is when you have to decide what your goal is. If it's to educate everyone cheaply, then UC can do that with the cuts. If the goal is to be a world-class institution, then tuition will have to rise. I think that since Cal State exists to educate the masses at *very* affordable tuition, then it's okay to raise fees at UC to something like 1/2 of a comparable private school. I realize fees have gone up a lot, but it's apparently not enough if cuts have to be made. The cost of education has gotten very expensive. I agree that it's too expensive in many instances. However, that's the econimic reality. If you graduate from a school like Boston College you will have over $150K in debt. UC will cost $50K. The State cannot afford to make up the difference any longer. \_ Sure we can. The difference today is that we have decided to spend a whole bunch on putting people in jail, so we have no money left over for college. As Clark Kerr put it: The universities are "bait to be dangled in front of industry, with drawing power greater than low taxes or cheap labour." It is this vision that has given California an educated workforce and high standard of living and we are at risk of losing it. Your point about the CSU system is well noted, but we are also making it harder and harder to afford as well. \_ I agree that the prison system is too expensive, but not all of that is a choice. If people wouldn't commit so many crimes we wouldn't need so many prisons. California is not the white middle-class paradise it was in the 1950s and as the demographic has shifted and gangs have grown in prominence more prisons are necessary. My point was that education costs have increased faster than inflation for whatever reason. Privates have responded by jacking up their tuitions to beyond-reasonable levels and therefore if UC wishes to compete it must do the same. A lot of people blame Prop 98 for taking money from UC, but Prop 98 allocates money to education for all! If UC is to be an elite university for only the best (as it was envisioned) then it has to raise tuition or cut enrollment. Spending on entitlements is only going to grow to a larger share of the budget short-term. Raising taxes is not an option. Increasing tuition is most fair, because it places the burden on those getting the advantage instead of on everyone. By "taxing" students via tuition increases, that is effectively a middle-to-upper class tax increase since those students will be middle-to-upper class taxpayers as they pay their loans back (or their parents already are if daddy is footing the bill). An added benefit is that the UC has to be more accountable to students and parents paying the bills than it does to the anonymous taxpayer and I believe the quality of education will increase. This goes back to the idea of considering students to be sources of revenue (as privates do) versus annoying expenses (as UC does). \_ Why is raising taxes not an option? Is there any sane reason California does not have an oil excise tax, for example? -tom \_ Raising income taxes is not an option because the voters are opposed and would rather see expenditures cut. We can debate an oil excise tax, but it's moot because it won't solve the budget problem anyway. \_ No single thing will solve the budget crisis. The ridiculous stand against all conceivable taxes is the primary cause of the budget crisis. -tom \_ It's not a stand against taxes so much as it is a stand against current levels of spending. We've already increased some taxes (like the sales tax) and now it's time to make some cuts. That the legislature screwed around on the budget for so long and didn't do anything in a time of crisis highlights the need to cut government. No one is eager to give more money to those people to spend given what they've done with what they have and raising taxes at a time when so many are already living with layoffs and pay cuts will create resentment. Most of us are already squeezed and giving our last few pennies to the legislature isn't high on our list of priorities. However, anyone so inclined can feel free to mail in a check to help out. \_ It absolutely is a stand against taxes. When people are asked which services they want to cut, the only service which people want to cut is prisons. The only reason the legislature screwed around for so long on the budget is that Arnold and the Republicans refused to even consider proposals which raised taxes, and we have a budget situation which cannot be solved without raising taxes. (Despite there now being a "balanced" budget, it's only through accounting tricks such as paying this year's final paycheck on July 1 next fiscal year; we're going to be in the same position figuring out the 10-11 budget). -tom \_ Not true. People want to cut lots of things, including more furloughs for State employees, less healthcare for illegal immigrants, and cutting enrollment at UC. Arnold gave the voters a chance to avoid cuts and the public said they want cuts! So make the cuts! I think cuts are overdue and if they are really hurt then we know we cut deep enough. There hasn't been a good housecleaning in a while. \_ Horseshit. Arnold's initiatives were complete garbage, and they wouldn't have stopped a single furlough. They generated almost zero money! The initiatives were just a way to further handicap the legislature's ability to do anything about the budget (by shackling them with more and more rules). -tom \_ "Cutting enrollment at UC"? Are you serious here or just trolling? Show me the polls where CA voters want to cut UC enrollment. \_ I'm a CA voter and I'm in favor. \_ The Legislature "screwed around" because of the obstructionist minority GOP. \_ You mean the party who actually listened to the voters instead of their own agenda? \_ Really, there was an oil excise tax and a tobacco tax on the ballot? I must have missed that proposition. -tom \_ Hmmm. The legislature put the initiatives on the ballot. The legislature is comprised mainly of...? Prop 1A was a tax hike and was voted down. Maybe you missed that. \_ Prop 1A was not a tax hike. It included continuing an existing tax in a future year (would have had no impact on 09-10 finances), and a whole bunch of stupid shit about the rainy day fund. -tom \_ If it doesn't pass, then taxes will go down. Of course it's a tax hike. It was voted down. \_ You're an idiot. -tom \_ Nice retort. I expected better from you, but I guess this is all you have in the face of the facts. \_ The next time I'm at the top of a hill, I'll remember that not going down can be considered a hike. -tom \_ Oh come on. The proposition was to raise taxes in future years. Without it, taxes will decline. So it is a tax hike. What's even more damning is that voters didn't even want to vote for the status quo, let alone new higher taxes. In effect, they voted for a tax *decrease*. \_ If the prop were only about the tax, you might have a point. It wasn't and you don't. I would have voted for continuing the tax; I voted against the rainy day shit. -tom \_ People are actually not committing any more crime, we are just locking them up longer for the crime that they committ. Crime rates are way down from the 70s and 80s. This is true even in states that did not get tough on crime, so maybe it is time to rethink our sentencing policies. I can sort of see your argument as long as we are willing to lend even poor students enough money to fund their education. \_ The crime rate is back down to the level of the early 1970s, which is still above that of the 1950s and 1960s. Do you really want to return to the crime rate of the late 1980s and early 1990s? That is what will happen if we rethink our sentencing. It seems to me that our sentencing is working very well as the tough on crime stance coincides with a reduction in crime. The problem isn't the number of people locked up. It's how much we are paying to incarcerate them. California pays almost 60% more per prisoner than other large states. That cost has to come down. \_ We should ship them to prisons in India. Outsourcing something like this isn't rocket science like R&D, and Indians are super cheap. \_ I actually agree with outsourcing. Maybe not India (too far for visitation) but to states that do this more cheaply (and better) than we can. \_ Maybe you missed the part where I said that even states that have lower incarceration rates than CA saw a similar drop in crime. Correlation does not imply causation. It is almost certain that there are other factors which lead to all or most of the drop in the crime rate. \_ Maybe, maybe not. I can tell you that releasing a lot of inmates isn't going to be *good* for the crime rate. Most of them end up back in jail when released anyway. \_ We wil find out pretty soon, won't we? The murder rate is down, even though we are in a recession. I don't think that violent crime is going to go up, though perhaps the amount of drug use will. \_ Murder rate is down b/c so much of the riff-raff is in jail! (possibly) \_ The incarceration rate has not increased from 2008-2009, but the murder rate went down. \_ Welcome to the reality that not everyone should go to college. if they did, our standard of living would go down, nobody to run the services well. \_ Yes I agree! We should also legalize illegal immigrants who are the backbone of Los Angeles. The Angelinos have it good, everything is so cheap there and gourmet tacos like Lolo, Mercedes Hair of the Dog Cantina are everywhere and they're just called... tacos! \_ Wtf? Dude the czech woman who cuts my hair is an Ex Model from EU, Think I want her to go to college so I can get some ugly fat woman cutting my hair? \_ What are they called elsewhere? \_ In Northern Cal, Mexican food is gourmet food. In LA, it's just called food. \_ We have gourmet Mexican and Mission Burritos, we go the whole gamut. I think LA does too. \_ I get 'mexican food' from the little holes in the wall. what is this 'gourmet' you speak of? |
11/22 |
2009/8/10-19 [Politics/Domestic/California, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:53259 Activity:high |
8/10 College ranking http://shine.yahoo.com/event/backtoschool/americas-best-college-497708 #10: StanfUrd #73: Cal Even if ranking public colleges separately, Cal still ranks only #8. (Though The top 3 are all military academies.) \_ Yeah, Cal isn't what it used to be anymore. Increasing bureaucracy and long lines really made it go downhill in the past decade and a half. That, and pissed off alum don't want to donate... \_ What the FUCK is Williams College? WTF? |_ Short for Williams and Sonoma College. \_ There is no such college. There is Williams-Sonoma, Inc. \_ We have now identified Mr. Pedant! \_ If you had gotten a better education, you would have heard of Williams College. \_ Conservatives in California have finally achieved their long desired dream of destroying public higer education. \_ Because conservatives have controlled the California state legislature for the past 4 decades, right? Or was it Bush's fault? \_ It's Pete Wilson's fault. Don't hide it. I know it. You know it. And the American People know it. \_ bullshit \_ It is the combo of Prop 13, "Three Strikes" and Prop 98 that has massacred higher ed funding in CA. These are all Conservative initiatives. The legistlature has very little control over the budget anymore, it is almost all set by Constitutional initiative. \_ I agree that Prop 13 and 3 strikes (I'm not that familiar with prop 98) are largely responsible for budget problems, but if you think those are the only major contributions to the budget problems, you have anti-conservative blinders on. And the state legislature does have control over the budget. That's their job. The fact that they've not done anything significant the past few decades because they're horribly deadlocked doesn't let them off the hook. \_ Prop 98 is 40% of the budget, corrections is now 15%. Interest on bond issues approved by voters is another 10%. Just those alone are 2/3 of the budget and all of that is out of the legislatures hands. \_ Prop 98 might be 40% of the budget, but that 40% is going to educate people for free. To steal money from K-12 kids with no other options to educate kids at UC seems disingenous. \_ It is still money that the Legislature does not have at its disposal, no matter how noble what it is being spent for. \_ Do you want to cut K-12 spending? I don't. Not even for UC. \_ These rankings are bogus. Nothing more to say than that. Mills College is ahead of Cal, Brown, Penn, *and* Dartmouth. Not. \_ Just like it is unreasonable to keep tweaking your ranking criteria and weights until it produces an ordering you like, it seems bogus to not feedback patently bogus orderings into refining your process. Perhaps the answer isnt more tweaking but just to limit what results to share ... for example a system which seeks a lot of resolving power at the top end may not do much in the middle of the pack ... like say in a sport tournament, you may not waste resources to separate #30 from number #31. |
2009/5/19-25 [Politics/Domestic/California, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:53015 Activity:nil |
5/18 How did you vote? I voted: No on 1A-C, and Yes on 1D-F \_ I voted yes on 1A because I want tax to be as high as possible to increase our standard of living, and to get rid of people who are otherwise unfit to live in California-- they should move back to Arizona or other anti-tax states. Viva La California de Republica para Socialism! \_ I actually don't mind a small tax increase and I think a spending cap is a good idea, but I didn't like that the governor can override it whenever he wants and that we have to contribute to this "rainy day fund" even when we are having "rainy days". 12.5% also seems like an awfully large amount of the budget to set aside. With some changes I would have voted Yes on it. \_ I'm hoping for 15%, on top of much higher property tax, as well as 45-50% tax for the wealthiest Americans. Will that ever happen in America? Hell no. But somebody's gotta try. -pp \_ California and Arizona have the same overall tax burden: http://money.cnn.com/pf/features/lists/taxesbystate2005 But don't let facts get in the way of a good rant. \_ I voted no on 1C and yes on the rest. Pretty funny that you would ask how people voted and then censor their responses. \_ I'm the original poster and I didn't censor any responses. Must be someone else. I didn't even see any responses other than the very first, which I responded to. \_ I haven't voted yet, I'm still trying to decide on a couple. 1A: Not sure, the write-up seemed good, but the argument against was much stronger than the argument for. Very complex. \_ You do know that the arguments for/against were written by the same people, right? 1B: No. Schools never seem to have trouble getting money in good year. If the years are good, they'll get money, if not we years. If the years are good, they'll get money, if not we can't afford it. 1C: No. I hate the lotto. 1D: Not sure, transfer money from 1 child service to another? 1E: Not sure, transfer money from metal services for adults to kids? 1D: Yes, the yes argument is better. 1E: Yes, "" "" 1F: Sure, why not? Screw those guys. \_ No on everything. That should be the default position, and there's nothing compelling in this slate. -tom \_ Not sure that follows here. Props can only be adjustd by props, and that's basically what 1D and 1E are. \_ Agreed. 1D and 1E try and undo damage that previous props did. \_ Tom agrees with the Bay Guardian. \_ We may hold the same position on this; that doesn't mean I agree with them. -tom \_ Surprised he isn't pro-tax and pro-schools. \_ You got what you wanted. The cuts at the UC are going to be severe. \_ What I want is to get rid of the 2/3rds majority bullshit that we have right now. \_ I like it. \_ GO GALT!!!!!! |
2009/5/4-6 [Politics/Domestic/California, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:52938 Activity:high |
5/4 Why does The Netherlands have such a sustained lower unemployment \_ Why is it The Netherlands? Is it like an LA Freeway? rate and higher growth than the US? Maybe we can replicate their success here. \_ Start by not spending all your money on military and prisons. \_ They don't have as large a population of illegal immigrants -jblack \_Lots of Euro countries don't have this problem, they still mostly have double digit unemployment. \_ Timely Question: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/03/magazine/03european-t.html \_ jeesh, They really should not be paying this guy by the word. \_ So the government taxes you to death and then gives some of the money back if you have kids, for vacations, and so on. This "Big Brother" sort of society in which the government claims to know what you need more than you do is very anti-American to me, although staunch Democrats must love it because they could tell people what to do with their money. \_ My mother is Dutch and I still have family there. It's a wealthy nation, but very small. I don't see many opportunities to parallel their policies here successfully. \_ Why not? We should have economies of scale that they do not. \_ Because we are much larger and more diverse. I'm not sure that economies of scale play a large part in this. For instance, are there economies of scale for educating 1 million kids versus 100 kids? I'd argue not. In fact, I'd argue it would be cheaper (per kid) to educate the smaller number. \_ It is certainly cheaper to build 100 miles of road, than 10 roads, each 10 miles long. Why do you think that it is cheaper to educate smaller numbers of children? You can get some kinds of economy of scale even in education, with things like standard tests, school books, etc. \_ Examples of why it might cost more to educate more: higher administrative overhead higher probability of kids with special/unique needs more disparate learning abilities and backgrounds harder to find/recruit so many well-trained teachers. \_ Why would there be a higher percentage of kids with special needs? And why harder to find teachers? It should be the same percentage of population in both cases. \_ Because you don't judge these by percentage. Imagine there is a special need which occurs 1/10000th of the time. The school with 100 kids probably doesn't have to deal with it at all (or rarely), whereas the school with 1 million kids probably needs a whole program created to address it. For an example of this consider bilingual education. The Japanese kids at my public school did not have a class dedicated to them, but the South American kids did even though both were small percentage-wise. did. A single Spanish-speaking kid isn't a burden to instruct, but 1,000 is. \_ There is a lot of evidence (and probably literature) on the diseconomies of scale in education. Anecdotally, it explains why property values are significantly lower in parts of LA that are part of LAUSD, one of the largest and most inefficient school districts in the nation. (e.g. San Pedro vs. PV, Culver City vs. Palms, etc). Another way to look at the diseconomies of scale problem is to think of all the complaints against big government (gubment = BAD) or big companies (startups = rewl). \_ If there are diseconomies of scale, why are small private schools so much more expensive than public schools? -tom \_ It's not linear. There can be economies of scale which then translate into diseconomies. Do you really think that LAUSD is more efficient than, say, Berkeley USD? Tangentially related is the whole cherry-picking, charter school and/or voucher concept. Voucher/Charter folks like to really against large districts, but they get to cherry pick students. That said, I think http://greendot.org is pretty awesome and there is a lot to learn from these guys. They fix a lot of standard inner city problems just by "caring". I think it's hard to scale caring. \_ 1. They often provide a better product. 2. It varies by state and district, but many times private schools aren't more expensive for a similar product. California spent $8496 per student in 2005-2006, which was 29th in the nation. The US average was $9100. This figure excludes capital outlay, interest on school debt, and other subsidies. (Source: link:tinyurl.com/cyg468 I believe for example that most private schools (unless they are religious) pay property tax on their land while public schools do not. For this price you can find plenty of private schools for your kids to attend and this discounts scholarships that are often offered. I could not find the average cost of a private school in California, but nationwide in 2003-2004 (latest year I could find) it was $6400 for elementary schools and $13300 for high schools. (Source: http://tinyurl.com/cog8wj Clearly, this figure is not too different from the $9100 average for public schools. \_ You can't compare private schools in Des Moines to public schools in San Francisco. For example: Head-Royce school in Oakland is $19k/year for K-5, $21k/year for 6-8, $27k/year for high school. -tom \_ I am comparing the average national public expenditures to the average national private expenditures. I am not comparing Des Moines to SF. However, I assure you that you can find plenty of private schools even in urban California for less than $10K/year. The schools charging $20-30K per year are elite schools providing much more to their students than public schools do and that's why they cost more. My neighbor's son goes to Saint Francis High School in La Canada. It's a pretty good school. Tuition is $10324. I bet that's not much different from what the local public HS spends. Mater Dei tuition is $10950. Don Bosco Tech is $8600. Not every school is some elitist academy that costs more than Stanford. \_ Parochial schools may be subsidized by the church--you can't just look at tuition to know their costs. -tom \_ They may be, but they may not be and it's not clear to what extent. I went to a Christian school and it wasn't. Public schools receive money from other sources, too, like the PTA fundraisers and gifts. (The public middle school my nephew goes to just received $400K from a donor for a new tennis court.) Also, many students at private schools pay *less than* tuition because they receive financial assistance. I think it's reasonable to compare tuitions because public schools receive a lot of subsidies and private schools have expenses public schools do not (like advertising). I would argue they all wash out, which is why the average private tuition and public school expenditures are so similar to each other. \_ Even Communist Mainland China has a sustained higher growth rate than the US. \_ http://delong.typepad.com/sdj/2009/05/upward-mobility-reality-and-illusion.html \_ This one is great, take that Gold Bugs: link:tinyurl.com/d4lsch |
2009/3/16-21 [Politics/Domestic/California/Arnold, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:52721 Activity:nil |
3/16 RECALL RECALL RECALL! http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/03/16/MN9T16DDOA.DTL \_ 47 states facing deficits: http://www.cbpp.org/cms/?fa=view&id=711 |
2009/2/17-25 [Politics/Domestic/California/Arnold, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:52594 Activity:moderate |
2/17 Calculate how much you're about to get taxed per year for the next 5 years: http://www.sacbee.com/1098/story/1627728.html \_ $2000 for me. Pocket change, considering that I'm well over 6 dig salary Even if I pay 10X, if it improves traffic conditions, air quality, better city planning, less crime, etc, I'm all for it. Then again, I'm a socialist, so I want to see social programs done right \_ Just repeal the stupid Prop 13 (appeals to poor liberals most of whom are renters), put a tough border + deport illegal immigrants who are leeching on our infrastructure costs (appeals to conservatives). That solves 1/2 of the problems. \_ Just repeal the stupid Prop 13 (appeals to poor liberals most of whom are renters), put a tough border + deport illegal immigrants who are leeching on our infrastructure costs (appeals to conservatives). That solves 1/2 of the problems. \_ When your landlord's property taxes go up who do you think is going to cover the difference? Hint: you. \_ I rent in a rent-controlled place but yeah, I could imagine rent going up for a bunch of people. \_ $2000 for me. Pocket change, considering that I'm well over 6 dig salary. Even if I pay 10X, if it improves traffic conditions, air quality, better city planning, less crime, etc, I'm all for it. Then again, I'm a socialist, so I want to see social programs done right. \_ Since you are a socialist and $10K is pocket change then pay my share, too. Thanks! \_ paying individual is capitalism. Sorry. \_ Not me. My share to the glorious state, comrade. Clearly you can afford to pay much more than you are. \_ Uh, it's not going to improve conditions, why would you expect that it would? \_ Do you honestly think that we can chop $15B from the state budget without any reduction in services? \_ 1) !reduction != improvement 2) Gov't has DOUBLED IN 10 years! Have you seen a doubling of services? \_ Apparently you still don't understand math. \_ What do you intend to cut then? \_ The current compromise only has real cuts of $3B. Most of the "cuts" are reductions in planned increase. So the actual proposed cuts are 3%. \_ And $15B in new taxes right? Which you claim are unneeded. Where would you chop the state budget by $15B? \_ Just about anywhere. Across-the-board cuts. \_ Close the prisons and let the prisoners all out? That would just about do it. Or shut down the CSU and Community Colleges? \_ I've worked as a contractor at "Department of Health Services" when I was in school. There are PLENTY of people who can be cut and not cause ANY drop whatsoever in service level. Now, if you ask me if I think they'll cut the right set of people, of course not. Incompetent at one thing almost always implies incompetent at other things, like the ability to determine incompetence in people. \_ So your solution to the budget crises is "fire all the imcompetent people" which you believe to be impossible? \_ $570/year for me. I'm with pp, this is well worth it. \_ *WHAT* is well worth it? \_ $570/year to keep the unwashed masses from losing all hope and burning down my neighborhood. \_ That $570/year will fund Irvine and Orange County's shuttle-homeless-to-Venice program. Works wonderfully. Crime has gone down in Irvine+OC by at least 25% since the program started, and may I add that Laguna Beach is a lot cleaner now than 5 years ago? OC OC OC!!! \_ I'd rather spend $570/year to give kerosene and matches to the homeless and set them loose in OC. Your enclave has no soul, and neither do you. \_ Uh, I was just trolling as a typical lame OC person that I totally despise. I hate OC but people in it love OC and their BMWs and their homes -pp \_ Then you and I are brothers. Here's your kerosene tank. Party time TBD. \_ You're also black? Cool man. \_ Silly troll. |
2009/2/17-19 [Politics/Domestic/California/Arnold, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:52590 Activity:high |
2/16 California is truly f'd for sure this time. Can we find another pair of stupid radio DJs to start a drive to recall Arnold? http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/17/us/17cali.html?_r=3&hp \_ It will only help if we get a governor with a spine, and get rid of the incompetent legislature. \_ How do you expect that we will get a decent ledge? With the 2/3rd requirement to pass a budget and ridiculous gerrymandering \_ How do you expect that we will get a decent ledge? With the 2/3rd requirement to pass a budget and ridiculous gerrymandering creating permanent seats for wackos and wingnuts on both sides of the debate, we essentially have tyranny of the nutty minorities. I don't see how you fix California without having a constitutional convention, and I can't see how that would ever happen. \_ We can amend the constitution with an initiative. In the past the super-majority to pass a budget issue was put in front of the voters and they voted it down, they might be more receptive after this year. \_ I actually like the super-majority rule. Why don't they cut more spending? They talk about the budget as if it's set in stone and there's no way to solve it except raising taxes. \_ What is the rationale for tyranny of the minority for simple rule changes? \_ Example of simple rule change? \_ Redistricting is the only thing that will fix the legislature problem IMO. \_ I thought a proposition to redistrict passed in the last election? \_ Redistricting plus removal of the 2/3rds rule plus removal of the set-asides. California's troubles are a layer cake. \_ Oh hell no. The 2/3 requirement for RAISING taxes needs to remain. In fact, it should be 2/3 for raising total expenditures. \_ Ah, I see. You're actually a wingnut. \_ No, we got into this mess because as fast as revenue went up, we spent even more, vastly outpacing inflation + population growth. \_ Where are you getting your figures? \_ http://www.lao.ca.gov/laoapp/laomenus/lao_menu_economics.aspx Spending in 97-98 = 52.8B, 07-08 = 102B Spending based on pop + infl: http://www.reason.org/commentaries/summers_20090126.shtml \_ What is the figure of population + inflation? The reason article is playing games with averages that make it very difficult to tell how honest he is being. This article is more balanced imo: http://www.istockanalyst.com/article/viewiStockNews/articleid/3020153 \_ GDP is going to grow a bit faster than population + inflation. \_ Why do you think its the governator's fault when the budget has been hung up in the legislature all this time? \_ The governor has vetoed a compromise, and the Republicans refused to override his veto. \_ Really, the problem is not so much legislative incompetence as legislative inexperience. The problem is term limits, which ensures that no one in the legislature has the experience or the relationships to work through a budget impasse like this one. -tom \_ The budget has doubled in 10 years, and rose faster under Arnie than under Davis. The Governor has line-item veto. He could fix this problem if he wanted to, but instead worked on budgets that papered over problems for years. \_ line-item veto only works when there is something to veto. The budget is still stuck in legislature.... \_ Shouldn't budget numbers be looked at as a constant % of GDP rather than absolute dollar value? Some folks like to bitch that spending has gone up 82% since 1998, but so has GDP. Looking at things in terms of relative share is important. \_ Do we have to spend every freaking dollar? If GDP went up 82% then what if we increased spending 60%? Would that be wrong? \_ It would be wrong if the state does not have enough money to provide the services it should. For example, per-student funding to UC has dropped 40% since 1990. So yes, if the state gets more money, it needs to spend it to begin to restore services which have been cut in previous hard budget times. -tom \_ Our tax burden is still among the highest in the nation (#6 I think). We should be able to confine ourselves to such a budget without putting the state in danger of insolvency like the Democrats + Arnie are doing by refusing to make any meaningful cuts. \_ We are no where near #6. http://money.cnn.com/pf/features/lists/taxesbystate2005 http://tinyurl.com/9mv2z (Money Magazine) \_ this isn't 2005 (although even taking that data I think my post still stands to reason) \_ What, taking the data that California is actually in the middle of the pack in terms of state and local tax rates? And of course, California's average income is higher, which pushes the tax burden higher. And doing things in California costs more (land and salary), so we need more state money per capita to provide the same services. Do you have anything other than ideological ranting? -tom \_ It's not middle of the pack. http://www.taxfoundation.org/files/sr163.pdf Average income being higher does not push the tax burden higher, are you on crack? Tax burden is a function of tax rates. A rich state should actually get away with less, because govt's costs do not scale linearly with income. A car in CA still costs the same as a car in OK, basically. Land is not a recurring cost, in general. Also, for tax burden, it is much worse for CA when you look at the burden on those who actually pay the tax. CA's income tax is very progressive and we have a large population of low-income freeloaders. \_ Are you really this stupid? Among other things, a car in CA pays 20% more for gas. Property is absolutely a recurring cost, and I noticed you completely ignored the question of salary. -tom \_ You are a complete idiot. The car itself costs the same. Land itself is not a recurring cost either. I said "costs do not scale linearly" not that there are no higher costs. Higher income trumps those costs. \_ Let me put it this way; how much more do you think it costs to do business in California, compared to, say, Kansas City? Are you really trying to make the assertion that California business operators spend about the same as Kansas City business operators? -tom \_ We need to deport IMMIGRANTS \_ Nope, like I said, he's another wingnut. Part of the problem. \_ We have the highest income, sales, and gas tax in the nation. \_ Where do you get your BS from? Tennessee has 9.25% sales tax. NY has the highest gasoline tax. CA has very low property taxes, as I am sure you know. \_ Low in terms of % of value, but not in absolute terms. We pay about the same property tax as everywhere else and a high income tax to boot. \_ Paying the same dollar amount on a mansion in Malibu and on a shack in Wyoming is not "paying about the same property tax." You're a moron. -tom \_ A mansion in Malibu pays a lot more tax than a shack in Wyoming. Stupid argument. Reality is that California is #26 in local property tax collections per capita and #20 per household. http://tinyurl.com/aopmde \_ And top-3 in property value. -tom \_ So? That doesn't mean we should be top-3 in taxes paid. I know your dream is to be #1 in this particular category, but some of us think paying average taxes is just fine and that the State should be able to survive with that given that income taxes are also high. I don't use any more services here in CA at my $650K house than I do at my $150K house in another state. In fact, that house is bigger but the tax bill is much less. Cost of living is less there, too, but not *that* much less. You just love to pay taxes. I'm happy at #20 for property tax. Feel free to mail in more on my behalf when your next bill is due. \_ Services cost more to provide in California, due to higher land, labor, fuel and food costs; therefore, the state needs more money to provide the same services as cheaper states. That's why our state services are massively underfunded. -tom \_ Do you think services cost 8x more, because that's the difference in property tax I pay even though the cost of living is only 40% less and the other house is 2x the size. I assure you that the fire and police work just as well and that the schools are better than in most of CA. Our services are not underfunded. We allocate money incorrectly and, sad to say, the illegal immigrants are sucking the State's coffers dry by using services they do not pay for. do not pay for. \_ You have no content. Goodbye. -tom \_ Loser. I give you a real example of property tax disparity dispar- ity and you can't handle the truth. \_ I agree with you that Arnie has been very fiscally irresponsible but at this point the GOP is being reckless. Aren't they just as much to blame for pushing the state towards fiscal insolvency? \_ No, because they aren't the ones who added the spending. The Dems and Arnie busted the budget repeatedly even during the times of bubble-inflated tax revenues. \_ They had their share in busting budgets, if nothing else, they could have shut the state down during the boom years. Now they are just appearing as immature obstructionists. \_ I agree. If conservatives hadn't decided to push for three-strikes and put all those extra people in prison, we wouldn't be in this mess. We warned you at the time that it going to get too expensive. \_ Don't forget the "car tax" cut! \_ Or Prop 87, when California tried to put royalties on oil production (like almost every other state does, when oil or mineral resources are extracted) and was opposed by the GOP, combined with Big Oil. |
2008/11/21-28 [Politics/Domestic/California, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:52069 Activity:nil |
11/21 California now state with 3rd highest unemployment rate at 8.2% (behind Michigan and RI at 9.3%) \_ Just wait until Ahnold's new taxes kick in. \_ I'm looking forward to my new 11.25% sales tax rate. \_ Is this for reals or just a joke? URL? \_ REPEAL PROP 13!!! |
2008/11/11-13 [Politics/Domestic/President/Reagan, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:51906 Activity:low |
11/11 Ronald Reagan is my hero. \_ Did you know about his support of California's lovely Proposition 14? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_Proposition_14 \_ My hero! -landowner and landlord, love prop 13 and 14 \_ Yup. He won in two landslide elections. \_ You are aware of the blatant racism involved in the prop. 14 campaign, and that the supremes overturned it in '67 anyway? \_ if I'm a landlord, I could care less. Go Pete Wilson! \_ What does Pete Wilson have to do with the '60s? Oh I see, you are just a dumb troll. \_ Maybe you're too young to remember this but Pete Wilson was a racist and people loved him for Prop 187. YES ON PROP 187 Pete. http://members.tripod.com/~cochiseguardian/NEWS/WilsonDefImmStance020503.html \_ ofc not, he's a troll. \_ Yup. He won in two landslide elections, better than how Clinton did in his two. \_ But Obama just won a larger percentage of the vote than Reagan in '80. \_ "Gov't should protect people from each other but not from themselves." Also you gotta love how he ordered the nat'l guard to open fire on the UCB protesters. \_ "So you wanna be treated like a communist, huh hippie?" \_ You're an idiot, but you're not alone. That doesn't mean you're not an idiot. |
2008/11/6-13 [Politics/Domestic/California, Politics/Foreign, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:51866 Activity:low |
11/6 SOCIALNETWORKISM \_ Yes? What about it? Young people today with nothing to lose but everything to gain from Socialism, embrace it. We're tired of having sucky infrastructures and unfairness. Let us all embrace socialism. \_ Why do you think they have nothing to lose? \_ Read Prop 13 history and ramifications \_ I presume you are free-market type. Please do tell me you oppose the 700 billion bail out package. Please tell me you do support the abolishment of - SEC - FDIC - FDA - minimum wage - child labor law - ban on human trafficking and let the invisible hand does everything. \_ Excellent straw man sir! \_ oh yeah? why don't you take a shot at it. Free Market right? do you support the 700 billion bail out? do you support government bail out of GM/Ford? do you support government in effect double our national debt by acquiring AIG (liability on AIG's book constitute as part of national debt). Do you support roll back of margin requirement regulations that imposed by FDR? Do let me know. Because *PERSONALLY* given the choice of government take over these failed companies versus just hand out free cash to them with little or no string attached, I prefer the former. If a company is too big to fail, then, it's to big. Let it fail as free market dictate, right? \_ You know, I'd say 8 of the top 10 nicest countries to live in in the world are socialist. \_ Which are the other two? Switzerland and Singapore? \_ Nicest for who? You need to think about that. \_ I'm the decider, and I decide what is best for the country. -GWB \_ Wow, I think this is the most efficent troll I have ever seen. Bravo! \_ Seconded. It takes the Art of Troll to the next level. Kudos! \_ Key word: socialism \_ BUD CORT doesn't like your tone. Obviously you've never \_ BUD CORT doesn't like your tone. Obviously you've never been served. |
2008/10/2-6 [Politics/Domestic/California, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:51343 Activity:nil |
10/1 I am a liberal. I've constantly being lectured about how great free-market is. I am a bit frustrated now that practically *NO* ONE talk about free-market anymore. \_ eBay works well in the free market. In short, IMHO free market works the best if you're dealing with oranges and such, and not so well when you're dealing with homes and healthcare. I for one welcome FDR style government because we're ready for it. The pending wave of Socialism reforms is about to sweep America. I know, because I am the next generation, and we want Socialism. We are as talented and hard working as the generation before us, and the generation before that, but unlike them we all missed out the dot-com and housing boom. We have NOTHING to win and everything to lose with the F-U everything for myself Reagan style Capitalism. But we have everything to win and NOTHING to lose with FDR style programs. We're fed up, and we want CHANGE. The future of America depends on a bunch of people like us, and we want Socialism NOW. More taxes on the people who have, and less taxes on people who do not. Fuck Prop 13, fuck corporate tax cuts, fuck religious nuts, fuck anti-gay biggots, fuck tax cuts, fuck deficits, fuck automobiles, fuck free market. We are ready for change. \_ http://tinyurl.com/socialismisback |
2008/8/21-26 [Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:50924 Activity:nil |
8/21 greatest hammond organ solos of all time http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0nsPgSl52qY \_ I'm sorry, why is this even posted? Why is this so interesting and or special? Why would I care about some dude playing organ? Is he famous in the old days? If you post shit like this without explanation I'll just nuke next time. \_ I did describe it. Does it have to be about BUSH==OBAMA or Prop 13 to pass your motd content test? \_ الله أَكْ! |
2008/8/21-26 [Politics/Domestic/California, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:50923 Activity:kinda low |
8/21 CA highest income tax bracket hits at 44K? http://www.ftb.ca.gov/aboutFTB/press/2007/07_38.shtml \_ seems like it's 60k for head of household, which would apply for anyone not claimed as a dependent I believe. --jwm \_ So 90K for married filing jointly. Anyone here call that rich? \_ I think Head of Household is when you are not married and you pay for more than 50% of the living expense of another person who is not a dependent of another taxpayer. \_ Yeah you're not head of household if you are just a single dude without dependents. (like me). fuck. \_ Well, at least we still have one of the lowest property taxes, and capped so that when we retire, we don't have to worry about ridiculously amounts of tax increase! By a happy owner. Once you buy a home in CA, DON'T EVER SELL!!! Trust me. This is the way of life in California. \_ ObSwami \_ الله أَكْ! \_ No, our property taxes are around the median. \_ Median in rate, but because of Prop 13 they are lower than most places if you've owned a property a long time. When I bought my house for ~$350K N years ago it had been in the seller's family for 65-70 years. They paid something like $600/year property tax, which is definitely low. I paid $4000/year on the same property when I bought it, not that I'm complaining, because now my neighbors are paying $8000+/year on similar houses. \_ You know I wouldn't pay $100K for any piece of land in inland Southern California, though I would be willing to pay millions of dollars for Malibu and coastal estates. S Cal inland in general is dumpy, including Santa Ana, San Fernando, and even Pasadena. Hot. Traffic. Dumpy. \_ Yes, much better are New Jersey, Texas, and Florida. |
2008/7/16-23 [Reference/RealEstate, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:50601 Activity:kinda low |
7/16 Support air-drying laundry. Save energy. http://www.laundrylist.org \_ I just learned that a friend's home owner's association has a rule against drying laundry outside, even in your backyard. I'm still flabbergasted by this. \_ Why? Some won't even let you keep your garage door open longer than it takes to put your car in. \_ Most HOA's do. This is one of many activities associated with poor folks, that are perceieved as lowering property values. \_ Banning this in front yards I can understand. But backyards? \_ Banning this in frontyards I can understand. But backyards? \_ Some HOAs don't even let you keep your garage door open for longer than it takes to park your car. \_ Is this for lowering auto theft rate? If not, I'd think leaving doors open on garages with Porsches and Mercedes inside would raise property values. \_ No, it's because the inside of garages is usually cluttered with junk. BTW, my old neighbor used to park his new Porsche on his lawn. Talk about conflicting statements. \_ So, I figure a lack of HOA add $20,000 or so to the value of the house. Any opinions? \_ I don't know, but a lack of HOA fees probably adds value. \_ depends on HOA amount... but do some math \_ Rule #632 why you should never buy a condo - stuffy HOAs telling you what to do. \_ HOA is not limited to condos. \_ Don't most new suburban developments these days have HOAs? \_ Yes it is very true. Take a look at the Rosedale Community in Azusa. You have 2 HOAs. One is the North HOA at $150, and the other one is the South HOA at about $150. Then there is Mello-Roos that jacks your property tax to about 1.75%, because the state of CA no longer can pay for new schools in that new area. We're talking about "cheap" homes between $450K to $750K. http://www.rosedaleazusa.com/community New SFH today have HOAs in addition to Mello-Roos. I'm talking about S Cal. N Cal doesn't seem to have that type of shit, presumably because it's regulated growth so no need to rebuild schools/pipes/wires. \_ ^regulated growth^farther from Mexico^ \_ what does Mehico have anything to do with this? \_ Rub your two brain cells together and you will figure it out. \_ I get it, you think IMMIGRANTS cause all the problems that S Cal has. Yes immigrants are bad GO BACK HOME IMMIGRANTS! \_ ILLEGAL immigrants are hard to plan for and regulate. |
2008/7/9-13 [Politics/Domestic/California, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:50526 Activity:moderate |
7/9 Now we know what the definition of "rich" is: $150K/yr/household http://www.sacbee.com/111/story/1069753.html \_ Only $150K, why you poor poor thing. \_ The GOP has no function in CA, except as obstructionists. \_ You mean like all those Republican unions that got all of the Governator's propositions defeated in the 2005 special election? \_ I notice you still can't pick one thing that the GOP has accomplished in California in the last 30 years. \_ That's because the California State Legislature has had a Democratic majority for the past 30 years. So the inability to get anything done is somehow the minority party's fault? Try again, dumb troll. \_ In other words, their only function is as obstructionists. \_ Sure maybe in the CA Legislature, but the you must have missed my comment 9 lines above yours. Oh wait, you're a troll. So you're deliberately ignoring presented facts. \_ Somehow the Republicans in Congress get things done even though they are in the minority and they control the Executive. Why can't the GOP in CA? Is it because the Executive. Why can't the GOP in CA? \_ You do realize that US Congress has a completely different legislative process than the state of California, right? Oh wait, you're a troll. Is it because they hold onto a tired and inflexible ideology which rejects the possibility of compromise? Also, there rejects the possibility of compromise? \_ You're nothing but a political homer if you think California Republicans are the only ones with an inflexible ideology. Also, there have been many GOP "victories" at the initiative level. Why not trumpet those? The extension of Prop 13 tax breaks to the decendents of the original home purchaser must count as a great victory in the general Conservative agenda of advancing inherited wealth over earned wealth. breaks to the descendants of the original home purchaser must count as a great victory in the general Conservative agenda of advancing inherited wealth over earned wealth. \_ Prop 13 is older than 30 years old. How about "Three Strikes and You Are Out"? earned wealth. How about "Three Strikes and You Are Out"? Surely, breaking the back of the State budget with earned wealth. How about "Three Strikes and You Are Out"? Surely, breaking the back of the State budget with overflowing prisons and severely cutting back public post-secondary education must count as one of the greatest victories of American Conservatism in the 21st century. The GOP has always hated great public institutions like the University of California, and it looks like you will finally get your long desired goal of destroying it, or at least severly weakening it. How about Prop 187? Surely eliminating schooling for the about Prop 187? Eliminating all schooling for the children of the poorest must rank as a great victory in the Class War against The Poor! Isn't it every Conservatives secret desire to have a house full of poor, dumb, uneducated servants, too hopeless to be anything but docile? Eliminating any chance of becoming literate is surely a huge step in the right direction. Oh, that's right, the courts shot that one donw. C'mon Oh, that's right, the courts shot that one down. C'mon fly your flag high, you have lots to be proud of! \_ So pretty much the California GOP has the courts against them now too. So, what have CA Dems accomplished with the deck stacked so heavily in their favor? \_ Were you foaming at the mouth when you wrote this rant? \_ Yes, because obviously anyone who disagrees with the GOP is rabid. \_ That is the most off the rails rant I've read in months. That has nothing to do with the target. -!pp \_ Still waiting for some "successes" from the CA GOP. Don't the things I listed count as initiatives they are proud of? \_ Actually, if you read it it is $321K. The $150K number is just for a child dependent exemption worth $200. \- well there are a few way to approach "rich" ... say the "top 5%, 2%, 1%" in the country/state/"area" and then there is "doesnt have any money worries" ... can buy any car they want "within reason", can vacation anywhere they want, no worries about healthcare expenses, or college tuition for kids, has all the house they "need". i think we operate in the latter context ... but if you are "richer" than 98% of "everybody", can you really say you arent "rich"? rather than picking a wealth/income level, how would you define "rich"? the "relative income" approach or the "opportunity" approach or something else? |
2008/7/9-13 [Politics/Domestic/California, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:50508 Activity:high |
7/9 Check out the graph of CA revenue vs spending http://preview.tinyurl.com/2ttws3 \_ CLEARLY, we need to cut pork, like education (for illegal immigrants), lunch food (for illegal immigrants), healthcare (for illegal immigrants), transportation (amigos driving on my I-210). You see it's all about illegal amigos. Say no to illegals, say yes to tax cuts! !dim \_ it's hard to tell whether this guy is a nutjob, or is satirizing nutjobs. \_ Is this guy one of those "compassionate" conservatives I keep hearing about? I just *love* his idea of scrapping public health. Can you say epidemic? \_ Look at the chart. Notice how spending increases outpace revenue increases? -op \_ what a surprise, given relentless tax cuts amidst growing demand for services. -tom \_ Next time I spend more more money than I make, instead of cutting back on my expenses, I will just order my boss to give me a raise so that I can keep on binge spending. That is such a great plan, I can't believe I never thought of it before. \_ Noone is saying cuts shouldn't be made, but the cuts this person came up with are beyond dumb. You can cut services that may very well pay for themselves and have serious quality of life concerns when they are gone (even for people who don't directly benfit from them) or you could go after the real pork like prison overspending. \_ I agree. I don't agree with the cuts the guy in the url wants to make. I think some of them are totally nuts. My point was only that some cuts should be made and that it is unrealistic for the government to keep demanding ever increasing taxes to fund pork projects. \_ How about, next time your are spending about as much money as you make, you order your boss to give you a pay cut, since the extra profit the company makes from paying you less salary will trickle down to you. -tom \_ This is just bizarre. Revenue was increasing. Spending increased as well, just faster. I can't see any evidence of "tax cuts" in the revenue curve. \_ Well tom's idea is that spending has a natural positive growth and income should have a similar growth (by maintaining or increasing taxes). I don't think he accepts the premise that perhaps government spending and income shouldn't grow. Re tom's hypo - perhaps the government should try spending LESS than it makes and re-thinking what services are absolutely necessary. \_ I think my brain just popped. Does tom think that we should decided spending first and then set taxes to raise that money? \_ You can find evidence of tax cuts in the legislative record. Revenue continued to rise because *more people came to California*. In 1980 there were 23.7 million people in California; now there are 36.5 million. -tom \_ Overall state government spending as a percentage of GDP has been within 1% of 9% since the mid 90s. It has not gone appreciably up or down. \_ Inflation-adjusted per-capita spending has increased over 40% in the last decade. \_ Please provide evidence for this "fact". \_ Math is hard. \_ http://www.caforward.org/dynamic/pages/link_10_135.pdf \_ link:preview.tinyurl.com/65rpor [caforward.org] \_ Personal income has risen much faster than state spending; obviously the state's increase in spending is trickling down to the people of the state. (NB: a likely flaw in these numbers is use of incomplete or fudged figures for inflation.) -tom \_ So, as a percentage of personal income, state spending has actually gone down. As I have asked before, why do you think that state spending should track inflation? Most of what the State spends on is salaries. Shouldn't state spending track GDP or personal income instead? Why do you think that State employees should expect their salaries to constantly lag behind the private sector? \_ Government employees in general are compensated extremely well. Have their numbers increased or decreased over time? (Honest Q) \_ Government employees are not compensated well compared to corporate employees; at low levels, if you include benefits (which are better for government employees) people are still paid a little better in the industry, and at the high end, there's nothing in the public sector anywhere close to the compenstation given to industry executives. Their numbers have increased, as the population and thus the need for government services has increased. -tom \_ Actually, government employees are compensated very well. We're not talking CEOs here. We're talking rank and file government employees. Government jobs are some of the highest-paying jobs around *NOT ACCOUNTING FOR* the ridiculous benefits. You don't realize it, because you work in one of the few fields where the government underpays. Two of my sisters work for the gov't (county and city) and for example the county just hired a new 24 y.o. civil engineer with an MS at $120K per year. The evidence is not just anecdotal, either. For example, 2/3 of OC sheriff's deputies make $100K+ with the top sheriff making $221K. Note that this is not The Sheriff, but a detective. not The Sheriff, but a detective. The average DWP employee makes $77K. Locksmiths and painters for DWP make $80K. I read a gardener for the City made $100K including overtime and a transportation coordinator (coordinates events like LA Marathon) made $120K base + $60K overtime. No, the government pays quite well, the benefits are good, expectations are low, and it's hard to be fired. \_ gee, then why aren't you working for the government? How much do you think a sheriff's deputy should make? -tom \_ My industry is one in which the gov't underpays unless I move to DC which I don't want to do. But, actually, I do work for the government indirectly. Not sure what your point is with that ridiculous comment anyway. As for deputies and prison guards, compare their salaries with those of free market security guards. I think a deputy should be paid more, but not *that much* more to work the mean streets of Irvine. BTW, if gov't pay is so low then why have you been working for the gov't for 20 years - all through the <DEAD>dot.com<DEAD> era of easy wealth? <DEAD>dot.com<DEAD> era of easy wealth? \_ Because I am not motivated by pursuit of wealth. -tom of wealth. (Although I will note, you have no clue about my career.) -tom \_ I was exaggerating, but it's been 13 years according to your own resume. \_ Your anecdotal evidence is BS, as I am sure you well know. I have three family members who work for State of California and they are all paid poorly for their level of experience. One is a DBA, with 20+ years of experience, who makes $80k one is a programmer, with about 10, who makes $60k and the last is a secretary, who makes about $30k. \_ IT is one of the few areas where the gov't underpays. I won't dispute that. However, a secretary at $30K is about market value. The average pay at the DWP is $77K. That is not anecdotal, and the average is not brought up by lots of $800K managers. In fact, only about 10% of the workforce makes more than $100K. If you work for DWP you can make $70-80K for just about any job and it's easy money, too. It's not just the DWP either. Pay in the public sector is, in general, below the private sector. And even if it wasn't, why should people who work in the public sector expect their pay to lag and fall further and further behind? You cannot even answer this question, which is why you are trying to change which is why you are trying to change the topic. \_ I have no interest in answering that question. I am not the person to whom it was asked. I just want to point out that the government wastes a lot of money, which should come as a surprise to no one other than tom. \_ Corporations waste a lot of money, too. -tom \_ Maybe, but here's the point you miss: It's *THEIR* money! The government's money is *MY* money. \_ So? It's not possible to run a large organization 100% efficiently; that standard is simply not realistic. -tom \_ So? SO? You like handing over your $$$ to be wasted?!?! Maybe the gov't shouldn't be so large then. shouldn't be so large then. \_ It doesn't bother me any more to hand over money to the government than to United Airlines or any other faceless corporation. I think most governmental programs have decent return on investment. -tom \_ I can't say I agree that that has been true for many years now. It was true once upon a time. What's the ROI for attacking Iraq? D'oh! \_ State spending as a percentage of GDP has remained essentially unchanged since the late 80's: http://www.cbpp.org/7-31-07sfp-f2.jpg \_ http://www.urban.org/publications/1001173.html "State and local revenues have been relatively stable over the last 30 years..." Sorry to bust your bubble, buddy. |
2008/6/22-23 [Politics/Domestic/California, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:50327 Activity:kinda low |
6/22 Who Ruined California Public Schools? http://www.broowaha.com/article.php?id=267 Is it true that CA is 42nd in school spending? By what measure? \_ Oh yes, blame it on Prop 13. Why do you hate tax cuts? \_ No, it's a simple lie. CA spending has been well outpacing inflation, and enrollment has actually declined significantly. \_ Other states could still have raised their spending more. Do you have any data that supports your claim? \_ Which means nothing. Performance has almost no correlation with spending. \_ So does that mean you have changed your tune and now agree that CA is 42nd in school spending? \_ Not the PP and I'm not sure what the right number is, but it has nothing to do with Prop 13 as CA tax revenues are the same as they always were. \_ You need to explain what you mean by "the same as they always were". Same in nominal dollars, in inflation adjusted dollars, in inflation adjusted per capita dollars or as a percentage of GDP dollars. Those are all pretty different things. \_ http://www.rand.org/pubs/monographs/2004/RAND_MG186.sum.pdf We used to spend 4.5% of total income on education, now we spend 3.5%. \_ Enrollment has declined since 1978? Are you crazy? |
2008/6/17-20 [Politics/Domestic/President/Reagan, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:50284 Activity:high |
6/17 Obama the Marxist http://preview.tinyurl.com/3qxoqt [wsj.com] "Globalization and technology and automation all weaken the position of workers," he said, and a strong government hand is needed to assure that wealth is distributed more equitably. \_ Highly unequal wealth is generally considered bad. In the past the government of the united states WAS concerned when regular wages stayed stagnant or dropped while the upper 1% gained a higher percentage of the pie. That's not Marxism, no matter what your Libritarian echo chamber says. \_ Grive me Librity or grive me Dreath! \_ Thank god, I can't wait to see tax rates go to pre-Reagan era. Fuck globalization and trickle down to China economy, it was a dumb idea in the beginning, and a complete disaster in practice. \_ Sorry but you're either incredibly stupid or ignorant if you want to go back to the Carter era economy. Compared to then, this is a golden time for the economy for rich, middle class, and poor. Or wait, there's a third option I forgot: you're a troll which is why you keep mentioning Reagan; you're looking to draw someone out on how great Reagan was or something. \_ Real average hourly wages peaked in the early 70s. \_ Real average hourly wages peaked in the late 70s. \_ You gonna support the shit you just made up from your ass, liberal? \_ What shit? That in the Carter era we had double digit inflation, we voted in prop 13 to save people from outrageous property taxes and that the country was headed downhill in a huge way as stated by Carter himself in a major speech? If you don't know those things then as I said you're either ignorant, a troll, or just plain dumb. I'm pretty sure you're a troll. \_ Facts are such bitter things when you are a Conservative: \_ Facts are such bitter things when you are a Conservative: link:preview.tinyurl.com/3w79k5 From article at: http://www.demos.org/inequality/numbers.cfm \_ "Public programs that enrich..." Looks like a socialist advocacy group. Try the Cato Institute web site if you want to convince me. -pp \_ Yes, the BLS is such a biased org. So you only accept facts authorized by the Authorized accept facts approved by the Authorized Conservative Statistical Institute? How Stalinist of you. An overwhelming body of evidence points to three decades of stagnate wages for the middle three decades of stagnant wages for the middle class. Amazing that you have somehow missed it. \_ Cato Institute > Heritage Foundation, but not by much. \_ So, what, you are against technology and automation? Let's all go back to stone age tech. Let's redistribute all resources equally to everyone! Actually no, fuck that. Poor people should have fewer kids. \_ You're entitled to your extreme thought processes and belief as do I. -fuck Reagan \_ You're entitled to your extremely bad grammar. \_ I'm entitled to have 100 kids because I'm winning the genetic pool race. PS my kids have US citizenship, nah nah nah nah nah -fuck Reagan \_ Believe it or not the world isn't binary. Marxism is one extreme, yes. However that doesn't mean, say, Pell grants are Marxist. But Pell grants do have a good track record of increasing social mobility and in doing so decreasing the inqequality of wealth. A large, desperately poor, increasingly hopeless segment of the population is something any government wants to avoid if it wants to prosper. \_ I don't want the government to prosper. I want the people and the country as a whole to prosper. Providing some education assistance (or a more reasonably priced educational price at each institution would really be more helpful) is helpful. Raising taxes on everyone and flushing more money down the drain is not helpful to anyone unless you're one of those government employees sucking the life out of the rest of us who earn our living the traditional way: working. \_ duhhh what? hmmm your dumb \_ thank you for adding zero content. \_ Raising taxes on everyone is not good. Raising taxes on the wealthiest as the income gap continues to grow makes a lot of sense. Hint: no one earns $1bn strictly through "working." \_ No. The folks making tens and hundreds of millions are mostly hedge fund manger and other NYC financial types who are taxed at the cap gains rate instead of the income rate where they belong. That is the only place you need to change the tax code if you want a fairer tax on the truly rich. But slamming people who make $100k in this area with a higher tax rate because they are 'rich' is just stupid and harmful to the economy. Raising taxes across the board is not going to cause economic prosperity. \_ Agreed. Making income>$1m level pay their fair share, though, might. $100k is not filthy rich anymore. --pp \_ Obama wants to raise taxes on people who make over $250k, not $100k. If he means family income, I am screwed, but if he means personal income, I am still under that. \_ Screwed? Just how exactly are you "screwed" if you pay more tax on your $250k? \_ The dead hand of The State will force me to quit being productive, drink cheap wine and die of alcoholism. \_ I agree, my grandfather worked hard so his descendants could have the best of everything. Why should I let the mean old government, at the point of a gun, take away everything he sacrificed for, just so some truck driver's son can get some education he will just throw away anyway. away anyway. -truck driver's son \_ Hey, Obama wants to eliminate capital gains taxes on start-ups! Now that's a Marxism I can get behind. \_ What is his definition of "start-ups"? |
2008/6/17-20 [Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:50277 Activity:high |
6/17 When I first came to California many years ago my advisor invited me to his house and gave me an advice that I never really thought about until recently. It was dead simple, and had nothing to do with what I was studying-- if you ever buy houses in California, DON'T SELL THEM. Keep them around, because in time, property tax will be so low that it'll take an act of stupidity to sell them. As long as population is booming and as long as people like me flock to California, property values will only go up, and in time, I will be a wealthy landlord just like my advisor. That's it! His second advice was a counter advice of the first one-- don't buy a house in California unless you're rich enough to hold on to it forever. Why? Because of Prop 13 which acts like Social Security in many ways. As long as you're the first recipient, you have a lot to gain from because newcomers pay more taxes to cover the old timers who are paying less. In addition, because (he thought) both SS and Prop 13 ecosystems are not sustainable in the long term, newcomers will receive much less services when they get old themselves, while new comers are hit with shit like property tax reset which are always proportionally much higher than pre Prop 13 taxes, as well as Mello-Roos, an additional 1% on taxes to pay for services that pre Prop 13 taxes used to cover. In another word, people who gained the most were those who joined the game early on while those who are new to the game (me) will simply pay exorbitant amounts of money with proportional gains that will only decrease in time. Hmmmmm. So basically-- my advisor's advice to me was pretty much: newcomers are pretty much screwed because they're late in the game, but if they ever get sucked into the game, don't leave. Thanks for coming to California Joe! \_ California is full, go home. \_ No please stay. The longer you stay, the higher value my home is. -home owner \_ Your advisor's advice to you was: buy as early as possible and don't sell. Sounds likes good advice. \_ Holding onto a property that is not making enough rent is stupid as hell. Sell the house and invest in something that's actually making you money. Property tax is not a reason to hold onto a losing investment. \_ In California, even if you put down 20% on normal homes (decent location, decent crime rate, etc), you're mostly likely still not going to make enough rent for the first decade or so. \_ Only if you're an idiot who buys without considering cash flow. If you only buy SFR in areas where rents are low compared to prices then sure. Don't do that. \_ *BUYING* a property that is not making enough rent is stupid. No one said to be stupid about buying. \_ There's all sorts of reasons you can end up with property that's a bad rental. Maybe it was a previous home. Maybe you inherited it. I'm just saying that buy early and never sell is not a given. \_ It wouldn't be buying if you inherited it. \- it's unclear what you advisor's "objective function" was, and i am guessing he is not an economist, but what an economist \_ right he's not an economist. He's one of those jolly old guys who love drinking and talking shit and always says things like "LIVE SIMPLE & BE HAPPY!" and "BUY LOTS OF PROPERTIES IN CA AND NEVER SELL, TRUST ME!" \_ This advice makes sense if you were a Baby Boomer, which this guy probably is. Our lives are more complicated. \_ I think the moral of the story is you should have bought properties when you were 5 years old. \_ I'm 27, is it more complicated than a 35 year old, and even more complicated than a 45 year? \_ no. life is no more complicated now than then. oh wait, we have the intartubes now and ipods so gosh i guess life is really hard now not like the people who fought in ww2, got schooled on the gi bill and bought houses in the 60s. those guys had it easy. \_ You are confusing Boommers with the WWII generation. People who were born after WWII would not have had a chance to fight in it. would not have had the chance to fight in it. \_ I'm not confusing it at all. Few of those wwii vets came out and bought a house. They went to school, they saved up, then bought later. So someone buying in the 60s was likely a wwii vet. Someone born in 1945 would have been 20 in 1965 and not buying a house. None of which has anything to do with anything on this thread. \_ I think most people born in the late 40's bought their first house right out of college. I know my parents, who were born in 42 & 45, bought their first house in 1968. It was easier to buy a home in California those days. \_ My advisor said when he first got his BS in the 70s his salary was about $10K/yr and homes were $20K/yr, and it wasn't a big deal getting a house 1-2 years after you graduated. A lot has changed since then. \_ A lot of veterans bought houses when returning from the war. That's when cheap tract housing became popular. In CA there were a lot of houses built in the 1920s, but very little in the 1930s (Depression) and then a big boom in 1945-1950s or so when returning vets came back, took factory jobs (or similar) and bought homes. Even now in much of the country two people with union manufacturing jobs or even something less well paid like call center operators can buy a nice home in a safe neighborhood. would tell you is "people move too little" and would make more money if they were more open to moving because of jobs. but of course that in turn doesnt factor in quality of life issues [like how much of a premium would you have to be paid to move to the fresno branch of your office for a year? $50k? $100k?]. but once you start including more than NPV in the calculus, you have to start considering that in terms of house purchase too. if having three kids is important to you, that may affect you housing decisions. also, when you no longer need the services of a local good scholl district, it might not make sense to keep paying for it. imagine how much more expensive SF real estate would be if the schools were palo alto level. \_ Not that much more. Reason: Most people who can afford SF can afford private school and would likely put their kids in private school even if they lived in Palo Alto. \_ I'm not sure that most means what you think it does. Here's a hint, there's a hell of a lot of kids in SF public schools. \_ Sure, but how many are there by choice? \_ There are some very good public schools in SF, as good as the schools in PA. The trick is getting your kid into them. \- look at percentage of WHITE CHILDREN in SF public schools as you go from low grades to high school. it's amazing how non-white SF public high schools are. \_ So, what is your point? That only white children can be good students? \_ White kids don't go to SF public schools. Either there are none living in SF (possible) or they are going to private schools anyway. \_ This is mostly true. About 10% of the kids in school are white, while 30% of the population is (non-hispanic) white. 20% of the students are in private school, so I think you can figure out where they went. |
2008/6/1-5 [Politics/Domestic/California/Prop, Politics/Domestic/California] UID:50116 Activity:nil |
6/1 question for MOTD Armchair Economists, are home prices in CA artificially high because of old people homeowners and Proposition 13? are rents artificially high because property value is so high? are rents really artificially skewed in the Bay Area because land is more precious than gold, Prop 13, rent control and what the hell throw in all powerful fabulous and fabulously wealthy gay couples? \_ according to Master Dimwit, they are high because of speculation. Speculators think it'll be high, so they keep buying until... they're too high for speculators. In all seriousness, dimwit will most likely say something to the effect of free-market, supply and demand, etc. \_ Bay Area is more expensive because of several reasons. One is a much much stricter land use control. Lots of areas are reserves and hippies from Sierra Club fight to preserve whatever land is available in the Bay Area, so developers have less land to build. The other reason is average income. N Cal on average has higher income and educational level and attracts more immigrants who are well educated or well to do. In contrast LA has been the manufacturing and service hub of CA and attracts different types of immigrants and workers. In addition LA has been sprawling crazy in the past few decades so homes are plentiful and cheap and attracts a much diverse populace, from those who are super rich all the way to those who are super poor. Proposition 13 is just one of the few components, and just as important as Prop 13 is the low property tax, which drives demand from investors from all over the world who hold on to their investments for decades but don't really use (look at all the empty and expensive homes in Arcadia and San Marino), since homes in CA have much lower tax to deal with (compared to say 3% prop tax in Texas), which make properties in CA very good long term investments. CA properties attract certain types of buyers (investors) similarly to FL properties that attract certain types of buyers (criminals... because properties in FL are not repossessed even if you go bankrupt). All of these things make \_ WTF are you talking about? If you don't pay your mortgage in FL you lose your home just like anywhere else. \_ In FL, if you paid off your home and then declare bankruptcy, they can't repossess your property back. This is why Al Capone "invested" heavily in FL properties, and ditto with many criminals. \_ You are confused about the Homestead Exemption: http://preview.tinyurl.com/63bs5f (No need to read the whole thing, just read the five states that allow unlimited HE, FL is not one of them) Also, Federal bankruptcy code changes have considerably limited this kind of protection. \_ Dude! Capone! Obviously we are still living in the 30s! Now why aren't you wearing a suit and hat? CA homes highly desirable, which then drive up huge demands from all over the world, which then drive up prices. It's all inter-related. \_ What makes you think rents are too high and if they are too high then why do people pay them? All things considered I find rents in CA reasonable compared to income. I can't believe people pay $1000/month to live in places like Alabama. (I own a rental home in Alabama so I know what rents there are.) |
2008/1/17-23 [Reference/Tax, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:48962 Activity:high |
1/17 Bond insurers go foom. MBI/ABK down 31%/51% respectively. \_ What is this, Bloomberg? \_ are you kidding? we're better than that. \_ Geez, just http://finance.google.com, you can see it. \_ I think he's asking why lame financial headlines are being posted here. \_ Yes, exactly. If you want to start a disucssion about the state of the economy, that is fine, but up to the minute stock ticker info is not going to do it. \_ Oh, I'm pretty sure this is housing bust gloating. -pp \_ As I explained to my desperate-renter-wants-to-be-a -home-owner-waiting-for-big-housing-bust coworker: As a home owner I don't care at all what housing prices do except on two days: the day I buy and the day I sell. All the ups/downs in between mean nothing to me. \_ That's fine, but it's obvious your co-worker DOES care, because he wants to buy, and wants a good deal. So why even say this to him? \_ Because he's an ass. \_ You have it backwards. The guy was sending gloaty email links and smothering lunch chats with bad housing news smirking at the home owners. I simply explained to him the way I and likely many other home owners view the ups and downs of housing prices. Are you one of the bitter-renters? \_ I'm a renter who wants to be a home owner, but do not yet know much about owning a home. Does the housing price fluctuations affect your property tax? (Don't you pay a percentage of increase in value? What about if the value decreases?) Also, I'd imagine it would matter if you ever need to take out a new load against your home. Feel free to clue me in. \_ In CA, price fluctuations aren't really an issue because of Prop 13. If valuations fall below the assessed value, then yes your tax can be lowered. However, since increases are capped at 1% per year and the rate of appreciation generally is more than that, it is rare that homeowners worry about it. It is safe to assume that your property tax is ~fixed here in CA. Other states do things differently. \_ I would not be surprised to see Prop 13 modified in the next decade. \_ No one is going to push to have other people's taxes raised. If anything they will push to have their own lowered. But I seriously doubt anyone really has any clue what their neighbors are paying anyway so this whole line of thought is just silly. What are your neighbors paying in property taxes? Do you know? \_ Yes, I know. Just look on http://propertyshark.com. People push to have other people's taxes raised all the time, you just aren't paying attention. What do you think Hillary's campaign promise to raise the top rate to 39.6% is? \_ I would. Homeowners are a big voting block. Who would vote to change it? \_ Everyone who bought a home after 1999, once they realize they are paying 10x in taxes than the neighbor who bought in 1977, for the same services. I don't think it will go away, just reindexed to inflation, not inflation minus 1. \_ They won't ever know what their neighbors are paying. And if the taxes hurt that much they'll want theirs lowered, not their neighbor's raised. \_ That's how it works. You pay more today to get a break in the future when you are (presumably) retired. I don't have a problem that my neighbor who moved here in the 1940s pays less tax than I do. He bought his house for less, too. I can't worry about that. \_ Nobody cares if they paid less when they bought the house. That's just pure strawman. \_ You can worry about whatever you like. My neighbors on each side own many rental properties. Even combining them all, they probably pay less in property taxes for much more city services than I do Why should these multi- millionaires get subsidized by everyone else? In the long run, taxes should keep up with inflation (or even GDP), unless you want service levels to fall, which is what has happened to CA over the years. The voters are slowly coming to realize this fact. \_ Ah here it is: class warfare jealousy and envy. They pay less because they were smart enough to get in early. You are now locked in at your current rate and your future neighbors will want to know why you pay less than them. Think your taxes should rise to their level just as you're retiring? \_ If property tax exists for a reason, then it should be raised if it needs to be raised. I don't see how you justify your position. If you extend the idea into the future for all possible market scenarios you see that it is unsustainable. The focus should be on keeping the overall rate low, not arbitrarily locking rates. Capping the amount it can rise per year would seem prudent, but not making that 0. It's not just about fairness but market efficiency: in my experience people become really "attached" to their low tax rates. \_ We effectively cap property tax rates because people should not be taxed out of their homes. This is still the U.S. the last I checked where the people are more important than government revenue. If the gvt needs more $$$ they should cut the pork and increase efficiency. I've worked for both state and federal gvt for many years. There is tons of room for pork cutting. They make large corps look like models of efficiency. \_ No, they pay less than me because they were born a generation earlier than me, and then rigged the game in their favor, not because they were "smarter," as you claim.\ Property taxes should pay for the city services required to support them. Consistently charging less than inflation guarantees that this cannot happen. Why should others have to pay the tax burden shifted to them? Who should pay taxes instead of the homeowner? Streets, schools, police and fire protection are not free. And even if you did cut city services, the anomaly of early owners gaming the system in their favor still remains. Why do mostly wealthy older home owners deserve a tax break at the expense of everyone else? I think the idea of a tax break for an owner occupied residence with a low income senior citizen in it is great but this not what Prop 13 does. That's still not an argument for prop 13. Cut _/ pork, great, benefit everyone. So what. \_ Prop 13 only caps property tax rates if you hold on to the house. If you sell, which most people do, the rates catch up. Property tax revenues are plenty high and do a job tax revenues are plenty high and do a good job of beating inflation. BTW, it's easy to find out what your neighbor pays for tax if you want to know. Why should you care? Should a family of eight pay more property tax than a single homeowner? They use more services. It really sucks to live in a state where the tax is not capped. In many states property values doubled or tripled in the last few years. Would you like your tax to go from $3K to $9K a year just because speculators are moving the market? How can anyone plan and budget for that? It has nothing to do with the cost of services tripling either. No, I think CA got it right. If the state needs more revenue then tax income. \_ Adjusting Prop 13 so that property taxes go up with inflation after purchase, instead of inflation minus one, would not cause of two percent a year, would not cause anyone's tax to go from $3k to $9k in one year. Go fight that Straw Man somewhere else. \_ Whose definition of inflation and why? They are already keeping up with inflation. $10.3 BB before Prop 13 = $35 BB in 2006. (calculated from CPI). Actual amount collected in 2006 = $38 BB From Howard Jarvis: "Despite Prop 13's restrictions, today's government in California collects the same 16% of personal income in taxes, fees and assessments that it collected before Proposition 13 passed. Today, the government in California collects and spends per capita in constant dollars - that is, incorporating population growth and inflation growth - more than it taxed and spent per capita in 1978." What has changed is the distribution of taxes: 1977: Schools: 53%, Counties 30%, Cities 10%, Other 7% 2006: Schools: 38%, Counties 26%, Cities 18%, Other 18% Any homeowners, like Tom, who feel they aren't paying enough property tax are free to write a check out for more. It's easier to steal money from other people instead, though. \_ Right and all you have done is steal money from other taxpayers to reward homeowners for voting for you. The overall tax burden is the same, it has just shifted away from property tax, to one that is less reliable (mostly sales and income). Jarvis lies with statisics, btw, since the per capita inflation adjusted property tax burden has gone down. You forget the per capita part in your calculation there. Here, \_ Presumably the increase in population is a major driver in "inflation" so it is accounted for. \_ No. I will present you with a logic problem: Since the overall state spending per person has stayed the same since 1970 \_ So why are the State's infrastructure and schools falling apart? Sounds like poor spending decisions. IOW, where's the problem then if there's plenty of money already? Why abolish Prop 13 to give the government more? \_ That is a good question, but Prop 13 doesn't have anything to do with it. "Three Strikes You're Out" is one reason. You're Out" is the biggest reason. The State is spending much more on prisons that it used to. The rest of the answer is not worth going into as a tangent on the motd. You abolish Prop 13 to: 1) eliminate the boom/bust that goes depending on revenue so closely aligned with the business cycle and 2) shift the tax burden back to the users of the services where it belongs, instead of poor schmuck third party \_ What poor schmuck third party is that? Everyone uses the services. As for boom/bust, I think abolishing Prop 13 is the wrong way to go about that. You know that what will happen is that everyone will pay higher property taxes and overall burden will also go up, because the State can't stop spending like drunken sailors. \_ I already established that per capita real spending has been constant, so give up with the drunken sailors theme already. I would prefer to see other taxes, like sales tax, go down as property tax went up. \_ Where is your evidence that the State spends like drunken sailors? As best as I can tell, inflation adjusted per capita spending has been near constant, with a dip after 1977, but then an increase in the 90s, so that we are back to where we were in 1970 (and less as a percentage of GDP, the traditional way to measure tax burden). we were in 1970. link:preview.tinyurl.com/386grn (PDF) \_ We are spending the same, but doing less with it. If we had to do as much as before, then we'd have to spend a lot more. That's why people want to raise taxes - the amount of money we used to spend isn't cutting it. My solution is to figure out what we're blowing money on and stop it. Then we won't have to choose between services and high taxes. Throwing more money at the problem is not a solution. Revenues and expenditures are same as ever and yet the infrastructure is deteriorating. The Throwing more money at the problem is not a solution. Revenues and expenditures are the same as ever and yet the infrastructure is deteriorating. The problem is we're not spending where we need to, not that property taxes ar too low. taxes are too low. \_ While you're busy trying to prove that it's better for people if you tax people instead of corporations, why don't you also try to prove that US corporations don't benefit from the public education system. -tom \_ I'm just responding to the person who wants to tax based on services used. A single person also benefits from public education, but where do you draw the line on which services you use and do not use? Therefore, it's better to just charge everyone (including corporations) the same. (in real dollars) and the proportion of tax revenue from property tax has declined, then the per person amount of (real) property tax has _____. A) Declined B) Increased C) Can't tell from information provided D) I don't know \_ Q: Why should we care? A: because we pay tax. S: most people sell A: not if they can help it because after a while that tax base is too big of an economic advantage to pass up, so it dicks with normal market forces. My family benefits a lot from prop 13 but it also complicates things because it adds this weird disincentive for them to sell their property. They just hang on to stuff because they are more profitable for rentals. I hate when gov't tax schemes dick with markets. Q: like your tax to go from $3K to $9K a year A: There are many ways to prevent someone's tax going 3-9k in 1 year besides locking their tax base completely. \_ It's not locked. It adjusts 2% per year plus whatever happens from sales. That seems reasonable. If you are in favor of a cap you are in favor of Prop 13 and the only question is what the cap is. Most states have no cap at all. \_ What the cap is makes a huge difference. 2% beats inflation, so in some place where the home market was flat the base goes down in practical terms. 10% would basically be acceptable to me. I'm not really in favor of a cap, I'm just saying I wouldn't really complain if it was at least matched to inflation. \_ I am actually in favor of a cap, because I can see the advantage of giving homeowners more predictability over their tax bill. But it should be inflation and I think it should be retroactively adjusted back for homeowners since 1978. Okay, I know the latter will not happen. \_ The real scam of Prop 13 is that it was sold to people based on the story of the aging grandmother taxed out of her too-valuable house, but the major dollar beneficiaries are corporations, who own more valuable real estate and turn it over less often. -tom \_ To prevent corporations from getting any tax benefits we should make sure to put all the people on fixed incomes into the streets. Great plan. Very humanitarian. Perhaps you have a newsletter to which I can subscribe? \_ nice strawman. Hint: You could have a law that taxes corporations differently than homeowners. -tom \_ Then again corporations are not sending kids to school or using public services to the extent that private parties do when compared to property parties due when compared to property valuations, plus corporations provide jobs which increases the tax base. Corporations pay plenty of tax as it is. Corporations play plenty of tax as it is. If you make the business environment more unfavorable to corporations then you also hurt individuals, most of whom work for corporations and pay property taxes out of their earnings. \_ That's an ideological stance not backed by any real proof. \_ Proof that corporations don't send kids to school? They are paying for a service they don't directly use. Please explain why corporations should pay a different property tax rate from individuals. What about a property that switches from commercial to residential and back? It's silly to base property taxes based on use, unless the use causes for instance some egregious environmental harm. Corporations pay plenty of dollars in taxes as it is, but they get swept under the rug because they are "payroll taxes" when people like to focus on income taxes. How about we don't tax earnings and then dividends, too? \_ The assertion that it's better for people if you tax people instead of corporations is unproven and unsupported by evidence. I would argue that it's silly to cap property tax, but if you're going to use Grandma's House as an emotional argument for Prop 13, it makes no sense to give corporations the same tax break as Grandma. -tom \_ Maybe grandma is a shareholder. You have the mentality that it's okay to screw over corporations because they are faceless entities, but the reality is that we are all shareholders and customers of corporations. When you raise tax on corporations then who do you think will pay for that? It's not like money gets magically created. Now, I do agree that one major difference between a corporation and a person is that the corporation will live forever and never has to transfer property if it doesn't wish to. (It would be nice to know how often this really happens.) So maybe corporate property tax can reset after some period of time (e.g. 99 years)? \_ Who will pay for it? The corporation. That's why you tax them. Taxes placed on corporations don't come directly out of people's pockets any more than taxes placed on people come directly out of corporations' pockets. Chevron had $17 billion in profit last year; you really think it needs to be protected from property taxes? -tom \_ The corporation will pay for it with the dollars its customers pay, which will probably be a regressive tax in a lot of instances. You don't think Chevron isn't going to try to pass the costs along to its customers? While it may not be successful in doing so, you're deluded if you think they are just going to take the money out of profits (which also affects investors like you and me and probably everyone with a pension and/or 401k). Or Chevron might trim costs by laying off employees. Whatever happens, you are redistributing wealth from Chevron's customers to the State. You think this is a good thing when the State's budget is as healthy as it has been over the past 35 years?! Throw more money at the State? \_ Your connection to reality is strongly correlated with my interest in continuing this discussion. Goodbye. -tom \_ The State's budget is healthy? \_ Yes, the State just has a problem living within it. / If your income jumped up and then went down year to year, it might be hard to adjust to it. \_ Oh please. What the State does is spend every dime the minute there is a surplus. \_ http://csua.com/2007/10/31/#48495 \_ I hope this is a lame financial headline and that's it -op |
2007/4/24-27 [Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:46435 Activity:nil |
4/24 More on Mello-Roos. Basically it curbes growth and sprawling, which you poor environmental hippies want anyways: http://www.planetizen.com/node/91 \_ "The "auto mall" is now common throughout the United States, but it was invented in California -- not by the auto industry trying to sell cars, but by local governments trying to capture sales taxes. The plethora of outlet malls, entertainment retail centers, and regional malls is also partly the result of Proposition 13. So is the boomlet in the creation of new cities in the last twenty years -- because for the first time in history, a California community could incorporate by transferring money out of the county treasury rather than raising taxes. Many of California's sprawling regional development patterns are the result of Proposition 13 also." What article are you reading? \_ That article is kidding itself if it thinks all of this is a result of Prop 13. All of that crap has happened in non-Prop 13 states, too. |
2007/4/23-25 [Reference/Tax, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:46415 Activity:very high |
4/22 What exactly is the "maler-roos" on new properties? Why is the property tax rate close to 2% instead of 1%? \_ A little history on CA tax: 1978: Reaganomics advocates-- "Tax cut is good for everyone! " Prop 13 of 1978 will cut slacks for existing land & property owners, allow self-reliance, force government fat to be cut, and kick start trickle-down economy! \_ Were you here in CA in 78? Your version of how this went down has nothing to do with reality. 1979-1981: Uh, we fucked up. We lost so much revenue that we no longer have money to fund government fat like public parks, new transits, new bike lanes, and public schools. \_ New bike lanes? I'll bet they stopped funding linux too! Schools got as much/kid then as now. It is *how* it is spent that matters, not the total number. And the *how* is that it is being pissed away on excess administation and fake special programs while the bulk of students get crap education. \_ reference for school spending, please \_ CA state budget is higher than ever before. 40% of budget is mandated to be spent on schools, which was not true in 1978. Do math. \_ Your claim was based on $/kid; please provide a reference. (Extra credit if it's adjusted for inflation.) -tom 1982: Henry Mello & Mike Roos-- It's ok! We'll double the cost of property tax for *future* homeowners and since they're not here to speak for themselves, the Mello-Roos Community Facilities Act will get passed easily and save all of our problems! \_ Because forcing old people on fixed incomes to sell their homes so they could eat is always a good idea and the morally right thing to do. \_ This is, and always has been a red herring. The largest beneficiary of Prop 13 tax cuts is not old people on fixed incomes, but corporations. If we really cared about old people, we could have made Prop 13 apply only to residences, but that's not what it's about. Corporations not only own more valuable property, they also resell property less often. -tom \_ I ask again: were you here in CA in 78? I was. There were for sale signs everywhere. People were leaving the state young and old because they couldn't afford their property taxes. If corporations got a free ride along the way, so be it, they weren't the ones who voted on it, nor were they the ones who came up with the idea. \_ People were leaving the state because of complex reasons. Property tax was simply one of the many components. Trying to fix the root of the problem by adjusting proprety tax is like the Feds trying to stabilize an extremely complex & globalized economy with 10000 of knobs and switches with this single knob called the interest rate knob. It's absurd. \_ Were you here in 1978? I was. When your neighbors tell you they are selling because they can't afford it and it's the same story in the newspapers, tv, everywhere, I'd go for that long before I'd accept your "well there was other stuff too but I won't mention any of it, just claim that your thing is absurd". None of this stuff is a big secret. Apply browser. \_ You keep repeating this unverified claim that you were here in 1978. Who are you? How old were you in 1978? How does your anecdotal evidence outweigh all other input to this discussion? -tom \_ Real estate is not a large part of expenses for most businesses. It's labor, of course. For most corporations it's in the noise and they are depreciating the properties anyway. Many of them lease, too. Do you know what the average property tax rate was before Prop 13? \_ Throwing a lot of stuff at the wall there, aren't you? None of it sticks; if corporations don't mind paying more property tax, Prop 13 is totally stupid, since it gives them more tax benefit than it does homeowners. And whether corporations buy or lease their space, they receive the benefits of the lower property tax. Non-residential property taxes *dropped* by 5% from 1991 to 2001, during the largest increase of property values in CA history. -tom \_ Who gets more of a benefit?: Me, saving $2K of my, say, $100K salary or a corporation saving $50K of their, say, $100 million revenues? I think it's clear I do. I am not sure I understand your last sentence. Are you saying total revenues dropped? You do realize that the commercial property market was not part of 'the largest increase in property values', right? It's very possible that commercial property taxes might rise even as residential home values fall. In fact, I predict that. \_ You really have no idea how much corporate real estate is worth, do you? Property taxes on a big commercial building go into the millions of dollars. So, you saving $2K get hurt because you lose more than $2K worth of services due to Prop 13 and the relief it gives corporations. Plus, cities then do things like raise sales tax (CA: highest in nation), which, guess what, you pay! -tom \_ How much do you think commercial real estate is worth? The most expensive skyscrapers sell new for a few hundred million dollars. Most buildings are far less. So even if I own 100% of the TransAmerica building (whose property taxes are paid for by many tenants and not just one) then the property tax is still only a couple of million per year. How much in revenues is generated there? Your typical industrial building is only worth a few million, which is at most 10x a house, and yet revenues are likely much more than 10x higher. As for sales taxes, CA's are not that much higher than anywhere else. \_ No matter what the corporations pay in taxes it will get passed down to the consumer. And corporations doing well isn't necessarily the horrible thing you imply considering how much retirement money is invested in these same corps and how many people they employ, etc. The anti-corpo screed is insufficient to make an honest claim that prop 13 was bad for the people of california. \_ It's clearly bad for everyone who doesn't own property in CA. It's very likely bad (negative total ROI) for residential homeowners. It's not even clear that homeowners pay less tax, overall, due to Prop 13. It's clearly good for major commercial real estate holders. -tom \_ It reduces carrying costs for real estate holders, which means they can charge less rent and/or develop the land more intensely. I am guessing that this is a net benefit to the economy in terms of taxes. Imagine if property taxes were back at 20% like they were. Who do you think would be doing business here? What would the tax base be? Low property taxes are even good for people who don't own land, because they (renters and consumers) carry the costs anyway, as alluded to above. \_ Corporations don't just "pass on" costs. They charge what the market will bear, no more and no less. It is important to understand the difference between the two ideas. -ausman \_ I understand economics, but property tax is a fixed cost. It will be paid even if the land lies fallow. (In fact, for this reason high property tax encourages sprawl, since the cost of holding land is high.) There can be no market at all and yet the taxes are still due. This is different from most expenses. The tax represents pretty much the baseline cost of holding the property. If an owner were to lease for less than the taxes owed, he'd rather just let the property go rather than take a loss on it to hold it. So when the tax increases, so does this "minimum rent". E.g., I have to rent my house for ~$400/month just to cover the property taxes - $700/month if I just bought it. This is *with* Prop 13 if I paid *cash* for the house. \_ BofA building just sold for $1B: http://www.csua.org/u/ijt \_ Which is too expensive and unusual, as the article says. The most expensive building in LA just sold for $600 million and most of the office towers are ~$300M. But even using this ($1B) figure, it's still just $10M/year in tax. I pay ~4% of my income in property tax. If I bought my house new it would be ~8%. So the equivalent in revenues is still around $200M/year. I am guessing that the businesses housed there will have more than $200M in revenues per year for the operations based in that building. I am guessing a *LOT* more, given the (presumably high) salaries of people working there. Actually, doing the math in the article (1.3M sq feet @ $75/foot) shows they are hoping to lease it for $100M/year, which means 10% of the rents would go to property tax. Using my own house as an example, I pay ~$24K/year rent and $4K/year in property tax so my burden is higher. Why would you want to eliminate Prop 13 when it helps me more? (Being I have a higher tax burden.) Now factor in that most of the corp tenants (other than the landlord) are probably paying much less as a percentage of revenues in property taxes. If you double property tax then my burden goes to, say, 33% (where it was in the 1970s) and the landlords goes from 10% to 20%. Who will be more hurt by that? BofA or me? Now, if you want to eliminate Prop 13 for commercial buildings (as some propose) that is something else entirely. \_ "You're talking a lot, but you're not saying anything." \_ Prop 13 benefits homeowners more than businesses. That's the gist. To say otherwise is ridiculous and to repeal it completely would be ludicrous. 1990-2007: Future homeowners paying 2X property tax-- Why the fuck is my property tax bill near 2X my parent's rate? \_ The rates are known before you buy your house and directly impact the sales price. If property taxes were lower the house base price would be higher. Your monthly wouldn't change. \_ Google will find you more info under "Mello-Roos" \_ The Mello-Roos Community Facilities Act of 1982 was a reaction to 1978 Prop 13's cutting of property tax for existing home owners while not cutting back on government spending. In layman's explanation, Prop 13 in 1978 cut taxes while gov fat remained so money had to come from elsewhere. Thanks to rich people like you, your 2% prop tax (w/ Mello-Roos) benefits everyone else, including those who are only paying 1% tax on nice (but older) homes. Thanks rich guy! \_ This is not true. Mello-Roos is a special assessment that applies mostly to new development, to pay for things like sewers, roads and schools in new areas. The beneficiaries of the tax pay the tax. \_ Yes, it is true that the beneficiaries of the tax pay the tax. In theory, that is absolutely correct. \_ To some extent. In the future, the bonds will be paid off and future owners of the same house may not pay the tax despite being beneficiaries of it. |
2007/3/29-31 [Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:46139 Activity:nil |
3/28 David Brooks apparently hasn't read his Orwell - says the new Right-wing paradigm is "security leads to freedom" http://select.nytimes.com/2007/03/29/opinion/29brooks.html?hp and Glenn Greenwald's response: http://www.salon.com/opinion/greenwald/2007/03/29/brooks/index.html \_ With or without the Orwellian tint, it's closer to the zeitgeist than the tax cuts/Prop 13 of the 80s. |
2007/2/2-6 [Politics/Domestic/California, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:45643 Activity:moderate |
2/2 http://republican.sen.ca.gov/web/mcclintock/article_detail.asp?PID=289 Link that talks about how CA spends $3200 per capita now versus $1240 (inflation adjusted) in the 1960s. \_ Thanks for the link. Do you know where he got those statistics? I am actually most interested in what local+state taxes collected have looked like over time, both inflation adjusted and as a percentage of income. I know there was a big shift from local to state when Prop 13 passed, so this is going to kind of distort the number that McClintock reports here. to state when Prop 13 passed, so this is going to distort the number that McClintock reports here. \_ I assumed that he meant *ALL* taxes in CA (local+state), but I really don't know. Obviously, if State doubled and local fell in proportion then it's just cooking the books. I think we are both interested in *TOTAL* spending and re-reading what McClintock wrote it seems like he might be referring only to State spending. You might want to read the following, though: http://www.caltax.org/MEMBER/digest/Jun98/jun98-4.htm It reports that total spending is higher now than it was, although not so much higher. Look at the chart on this page: http://www.caltax.org/research/taxspend.htm \_ Yeah, I also would like to know if McClintock measured from "peak to peak" or "trough to peak" as these kinds of factors make a huge difference. The first caltax article measures spending as a percentage of GDP, which is probably a better measure than inflation adjusted anyway, since the things that government spends money on (health care, education, bridges and roads) has on (health care, education, bridges and roads) have increased in price faster than inflation. This is \_ Government always over-pays for everything. This is not a surprising finding. probably not a conincidence. The second caltax article \_ We are in agreement here. probably not a coincidence. The second caltax article measures overall tax burden, which is mostly because the federal government overtaxes Californians compared to the rest of the country, because of the relatively high wages here. \_ So what have our reps done to correct this imbalance? I haven't checked but my bet is on "nothing". \_ You are surprised that after 12 years of GOP dominated Congress that pork tends to flow from blue states to red states? What could the (Democratic) California caucus have done about that? Hopefully, Nancy Pelosi will even things out a bit. \_ Oh please, what did they do in the previous 50 years of Dem control? The same nothing. This has nothing to do with the evuuul GOP and everything to do with tax'n'spend. Nancy isn't going to even anything out. If Hillary was elected in 08 and the Dems had both houses, there would still be no cost/location based federal tax system that accounted for living in higher price/wage states. It isn't even on anyone's radar. \_ We used to get a larger percentage of our taxes dollars back. I don't think that the Democrats are going to lower my taxes. I do think they will start diverting tax money from Republican favored states (wars, defence contractors, etc) to Democratic favored states (mass transit, public health care, etc). \_ I don't want a larger portion of federal tax dollars coming back to the state. I want them to take into account that I live in a more expensive area with higher wages and thus need more money to maintain the same standard of living as someone making half as much in some other states and lower my tax bracket. I agree that the Dems won't lower anyone's taxes, but you're off base in claiming that "Republican States" are the "War States" and "Democratic States" are the peace loving, we take care of our people states. CA is chock full of military bases, defense contractors, etc. I used to live with in get-nuked range of a nuclear sub base and related defense contractors in CT. They are in every state. I also don't see the Dems unporking the budget since they invented the concept, although the last Repub. government honed that skill to a fine point. They're the same, we're all hosed either way. \_ You are full of it. CA lost most of its military bases in the 80s. \_ You are wrong about spending. CA lost most of its military bases in the 90s. Maybe you are too young to remember. In any case, most of the defence contractors are heavily Republican. Whatever you want to call it, the pork should start flowing our way. http://www.taxfoundation.org/taxdata/show/443.html Shows overall state and local tax burden as exactly the same today as in 1970. And this is from an anti-tax site (!) This site also shows a drop from 1978 to 1995, so at this point it is almost a case of dueling experts: http://www.ppic.org/content/pubs/rb/RB_998MSRB.pdf \_ My expert can beat up your expert. \_ I think the key point to take away here is that there's at least as much money now as ever. So why is the infrastructure falling apart? \_ That is a really good question and I do not have the answer for it. A small part is that we spend more on prisons, but that can't be the whole answer. \_ While tax revenue increases linearly, waste and corruption increase quadratically. \_ Exactly and most of it is not in the prison system. It is in the k-12 education system. Which is not to say the prisons aren't a big scam, too, just a smaller scam than the k-12 system. |
2007/1/30-2/1 [Science/GlobalWarming, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:45617 Activity:high |
1/30 You know what will stop global warming? Energy shortage. Refinery fubars. Oil peak. Things of that sort. I pray our oil fields get sabotaged so that our energy costs would be 10X it is now. Then, there would be no more wasteful lifestyles. No more SUVs and less traffic jams, and most importantly no more irresposible suburban sprawl. -sierra club urbanite hippy \- do you understand that a large increase in energy prices hurts poor people as well/even more than the person who how has to spend $50 instead of $40 to fill up gas, but still only see a 1% of income increase in cost of living? it's the same thing with global warming ... it's not like the main consequence will be on rich people's beach houses. or teaching evolution instead of biology ... the people who can opt out of these crazy school boards are the one's who get shafted. \_ your opinion does not matter. \- do you understand that a large increase in energy prices hurts poor people as well/even more than the person who how has to spend $50 instead of $40 to fill up gas, but still only see a 1% of income increase in cost of living? it's the same thing with global warming ... it's not like the main consequence will be on rich people's beach houses. or teaching evolution instead of biology ... the people who can opt out of these crazy school boards are the one's who get shafted. \_ I'm not filthy rich but I don't mind paying extra for gas if that extra cost comes in the form of a tax that goes to pay for infrastructure. Our public roads cost an arm and a leg and someone has to pay for all that road maintenance, emergency service, and environmental cleanup. If I use those roads as a luxury (which I do), then I should pay for my fair share of that road usage. How much gasoline you consume is a better correlation than how much money you make in a year. Joe Shmo who drives his 2500 lbs Honda 5 miles a day probably damages the road less than soccer mom who drives her 5000 lbs SUV 20 miles a day. \- i'm talking about about actual poor people ... which is relevant if we're talking about "global energy/oil prices" ... like people who dont have electricty and only have kerosene lanterns. if we're just talking about say califnornia slightly more expensive gas blend for pollution purposes, then those people dont really factor in, but they do when considering "the big picture". does your life really change at all whether gas is $2.25/gal or $2.75/gal? [i'm more irritated the bay bridge toll is going to $4]. \_ You know all the infrastructure we have came from somewhere and it wasn't paid for with criminally high levels of taxation. Ask yourself how the state brings in more money than ever yet falls further into debt every year while doing very little to improve infrastructure or even really maintain what we have now. There is plenty of money, it is just spent poorly. \_ I am not so sure that there is plenty of money. Inflation has made everything so expensive. Additionally, as the standard of living has risen so have expectations. One example is that longer lives have resulted in more medical costs. We never spent money on lots of expensive procedures and medications before, because they did not exist. I think it is obvious that the current standard of living is not sustainable long-term and will have to decline to meet the rising standard of living in the Third World at some less-than-current level. There really isn't enough money to live like we have been, hence the national debt. \_ You were talking about things like public roads and other infrastructure. Did you know there are 42 levees in CA that are considered New Orleans quality unsafe? Anyone can see the roads are crap. Emegency rooms are packed. Follow the money. Inflation has not eaten the budget. The CA state budget has ballooned up to gigantic proportions in the last 15 years while inflation has remained low and we still keep adding to the debt, selling bonds and doing very little about our state's failing infrastructure. \_ I really don't think that is true. What is the state spending, per person and adjusted for inflation and how does it compare with past years? I am sure we spent more per person back in the Pat Brown "golden years" when California was able to make the desert bloom, build a great transportation network and a world class university system. Nowadays, since Prop 13, no one wants to pay for new schools, so we are just living off stuff built and paid university system. Nowadays, with things like Prop 13, no one wants to pay for new schools, so we are just living off stuff built and paid for by our parents. That, compounded with the sprawling McMansion problem, gives us a need for more roads and less money to pay for them. All the illegals don't help. \_ I am the person who mentioned emergency rooms. I wasn't saying that inflation per se is the cause. We spend 2x the money per capita now than we did 40 years ago, even adjusting for inflation. When I say 'inflation' what I am saying is that costs have risen because of increased standards. That is, we are getting more for our money. My example was medical treatment. \_ So you think the MediCal program is the cause of limited infrastruct- ure spending? Health care costs a lot more now than it did then, even adjusted for inflation, but we received more for it. More regulations we receive more for it. More regulations (e.g. environment), longer lifespans, and illegal immigration are all things that are costing the State money that were not really big issues in the 1950s. Add to \_ How does longer living people cost the state money? Same question for environmental regulation. that the growing population (growing faster than high-paying jobs which contribute to the tax base) which contributes \_ Low paying jobs don't cost the state money. to the high prices of, for example, real estate and utilities. This effects the State and \_ High incomes are inflationary, so you get higher real estate prices but no more real income from them. Low paying jobs don't cost the state money. employers both. There is no way the State can return to business as it was in the 1950s and 1960s, when untreated sewage drained into the ocean, people died at 70, ESL classes were unheard of, land was plentiful, and crime was low. I read that \_ Thank God, no, it can't. But boy we sure had good roads! Santa Ana spends 50% of its budget on police now. I doubt that was the case in 1960. Prop 13 is a red herring. LA County just had a huge surplus in budget because of windfall property tax generated by the rising real estate market. Look at \_ Fake money. \_ Unlike pieces of paper, backed by nothing? Is that "real" money? the State budget and you'll see that there's almost nothing to cut except for perhaps the penal system, where we spend much more money than ever before. \_ Nonsense. The education budget is a ridiculous mess. \- people who follow these kinds of things are well aware the real issue on the horizon is medical spending not the social security. there was an excellent article on this some months back in the ny rev books. i can dig it up, but you have to email me. --psb \_ Prop 13 is *not* a Red Herring. Overall per person tax revenue plummeted after it was enacted. True, other taxes eventually \_ Because it was criminally high and forcing people from their homes. \_ Obviously you prefer shitty roads, overcrowded emergency rooms and declining schools to paying a few more percentage points of GDP to taxes. I respectfully disagree. took the place of property taxes, but they are much more cyclical, causing weird booms in tax revenue and then inconvenient busts, during recessions, right when government spending needs to be higher. \_ Gosh, you mean the people we elect to manage the state will have to take that into account and have a rainy day fund and not spend every penny plus the future with bonds? Furthermore, the decade or so of under- investment in infrastructure post-13 has put us in a rut we still haven't dug ourselves out of. I am not even going to get into the regressive effect of things like sales taxes, which replaced prop-13. \_ Yes, it's a red herring because - as you say - other taxes replaced it. We spend 2x the tax dollars per capita now than we did 40 years ago. The solution here is not to repeal Prop 13, too. Infrastructure is not failing because of Prop 13. The State funds most of that anyway and the State doesn't collect property taxes. \_ I don't believe you. What is your source for your "2x" figure? We spend 13% more than we did in 1990: http://www.csua.org/u/hz3 Are you saying it almost doubled from 1970 to 1990? Show me your statistics. link:www.csua.org/u/hz4 It also fell from 1978 to 1995. \_ So you're praying for global economic collapse and the deaths of billions. Ok, I guess one way to save the environment is to just kill off humanity. Of course your life style will be impacted in ways you can't even imagine but I'm figuring you're much more likely to be a troll than believe what you're saying. Now I know soda is back in action. Welcome, first motd troll of 2007! \_ I don't think a gradual ratcheting up of gasoline prices will cause global famine. If it goes up 10-20%/year, we will adapt. There will be fewer sprawling suburbs and smaller cars and yes, probably a slowing in global growth, but this is better than runaway global warming, imho. \_ Why do you hate America? \_ As the total cost of fossil fuels rises, other energy sources will be competitive and we'll shift to somehitng else. The end. \- it's not that simple because of externalities. although it is true that all of a sudden were not going to have 0 oil because it all ran out. [so the easter island tree analogy doesnt quite work]. \_ which externalities? \- risk, pollution, tax policy, govt subsidy etc. but i do agree [i think we're agreeing] that correcting the mkt forces and moving toward a level playing field between oil and other fuels is what is most likely to bring about change. frankly things like preaching about conservation is stupid. that just keeps things cheaper for the people who dont conserve. and minor investments such as smal tax credits for solar or small r&d isnt going to make that much of a difference. the biggest problem in teh global wamring area [as opposed to "energy security"] i feel will be the "big fuck you" from china, india ... i cannot see what an agreement between them and the us over how to share the costs of dealing with global warming will work ... it's going to be even more stark than the doha round collapse. \_ In what way is there not a "level playing field" between oil and other fuels? What are these other fuels you're talking about? Then you mention solar but *no one* is talking about solar as a fuel source. \- when the govt sells drilling rights to an oil company [or spectrum rights, or western grazing rights, or water rights etc] those are all subsidies. when the govt [us army corps of \_ How is it a subs. if they paid for it? Do you want to have food, radio, tv, and transportation? To not sell rights to some corporation means these will all be govt provided. No thank you. \- i am not saying the govt shouldnt sell these. but the way you sell them affects the prices you get. e.g. an auction vs the govt setting an aritificially low price for western grazing lands, giving the networks free spectrum in retun for public service messages etc. do you know about say "water farming"? ... where a famers real asset is his right to artifically cheep water which he can resell? that is bullshit ... it is just welfare for some rich farmer. \_ There are no rich farmers. Just ADM. Anyway, you/someone mentioned a level playing field between alternative fuels but no one said what fuels. Like bio diesel? Like ethanol? Like what? For many reasons these are worse than oil for fuel and make for a giant boondoggle to the farm states. Which alternative fuels were we talking about? engineers?] dreges channels differently for oil transportation, that is a subsidy. i am not sure if costs are internalized for say pipeline construction. also in cases of oil spills and such, it is unclear full costs are paid. \_ probably not, but that's a minor cost on the scales we're talking about. note: it is quite possible other industries receive efective/indirect subsidies as well, such as nuclear. some of these subsidies may make senes, but they exist and people should be cognizant of them. \_ So you'd prefer the oil companies dredge the channels themselves or that they pay for the USACoE to do it for them? Let's say all of the govt provided infrastructure you mentioned was taken away. Either we wouldn't have an oil industry or it would just pass the costs on to all of us at the pump. So rich people are mobile and empowered while the poor are screwed and the middle class lags as usual picking up the bulk of any tab. Taxes won't be any lower if all these services are not provided to corporations, they'll just be spent on some other pork project that doesn't help the average citizen. \_ If the tax dollars were returned to you then you could choose whether to give it to the oil companies to dredge (via gasoline purchases) or to do something else with it. When it's a subsidy the cost is hidden. It's more more useful when people realize what it is that they are paying for. Costs don't get "passed on" to consumers. Consumers choose to absorb them - or not. \_ But the tax dollars won't be returned to me. They will be spent elsewhere and I'll still have to pay more for fuel. If there was a direct link between cutting these corp. subsidies and lower taxes I'd agree with you on the rest of it, but the world does not work like that. |
2006/11/6-8 [Politics/Domestic/California, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:45207 Activity:low 79%like:45200 |
11/6 1A: . 1B: 1C: 1D: 1E: .. \_ None of the above because running your failed state via proposition to purchase basic structural needs and services while using the general fund for pork is nutty and doomed: . \_ So, how much of the general fund is used for pork? It does seem crazy to borrow money for basic structure, but it's pretty obvious the CA legislature isn't going to become sane anytime soon. \_ In the last 3 years, tax revenue has grown by about 22% and spending about 28%. You tell me -not pp \_ None of the 1*'s are propositions. They're all either amendments to passed initiatives (1A) or bond measures which the legislature approved, but which by CA law require direct voter approval to pass. Bonds used to be (and in most other states are) sold without direct voter approval. \_ ok, ok, I'm voting for 1a but not the rest. \_ why not 1e? \_ eh. Compared to the size of the general fund and considering it takes several budget cycles to build, repair, etc, on that scale, we can or at least should be able to afford the levees from general funds. \_ the bonds are all going to get paid that way anyway. Why not get some balls in the legislature and get the work done, wihtout having to pay interest for borrowing the money to do the job. That way just costs more in the long run. \_ yeah that's what i'm saying. we're in agreement. \_ If you're in favor of the legislature being able to operate as they do in other states, as the person above, that's exactly backwards. \_ I'm definitely no on 1C. The problem with housing in CA won't be solved by the govt. giving handouts. Lifiting building restrictions would do a lot more. \_ McClintock on the props. As usual, good on bonds. http://www.tommcclintock.net/news.php?news_id=85&start=5 Good, Interesting justification on 1E. (no on B, C, D) \_ Gah, hadn't read that, but that was the exact reason I came up with for having that be my only 1* "yes" Sad to see he actually believes 83 will do anything. \_ I don't think opposing that prop is politically tenable. \_ Yeah, I've decided to vote no on 83. Sad as it is to see kids get raped, it's too much money to reduce a very rare crime. Not to meantion things like Satutory rape can get you a GPS tracker. Seems a bit much. \_ False. Statutory isn't part of it. \_ Why should my tax money go to support someone who decided build in a flood plain? I'm voting no on 1E. |
2006/6/7-9 [Politics/Domestic/California/Arnold, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:43306 Activity:low |
6/7 LA Times: http://tinyurl.com/hozap Angelides the Nerd to face the Terminator Governator. From LA weekly: Angelides will be playing for Best Supporting from the start, because Arnold will always be bigger, tanner and shinier than his opponent. So a guy like Angelides, whose limbs flail out at irregular angles but whose ears look like satellite dishes receiving and transmitting all forms of knowledge and expertise, is the best bet. Californians, after all, just dated a jock, and you know how that turned out. This time around, they.ll want to settle down with the valedictorian. \_ Were there really as many anti-Angelides adverts as anti-Westly? I don't watch TV but I do listen to Air America, and only remember lots of anti-Angelides spots (I assume because Westly was coming from behind). \_ Fact: Westly started aggressive negative ads 3 whole days before Angelides started fighting back, after they promised each other to not do negative campaigns! Westly threw the punch first when Angelides didn't expect it, and still loss. What a loser. \_ Yes Angelides #1. I want new creative taxes on everything! I want to drive businesses out of California, too! remember lots of anti-Angelides spots. \_ You can't have service without paying tax, unless you actually believe in Reaganomics. \_ I want small, efficient government with a safety net without paying welfare to people who can work, skyrocketing tuition, rolling blackouts, and huge deficits. Davis and Ah-nold didn't seem to help. Who can I vote for to get all that? \_ Nobody. California is ungovernable. If you really want to change things, get rid of the initiative system and all the stupid set asides and budget constraints. Of couse, this will never happen. \_ I'm all for breaking CA into 3 states, \_ I'm the opposite. I'd like to see it unite with Baja California and form its own nation. \_ I'm interested in this subject. But where do you draw the lines? I guess the middle should be the bay area counties incl. Santa Cruz, with Yolo, Sacramento, El Dorado incl. Santa Cruz, with Yolo, Sacramento, Placer bordering the north, and Merced, Madera, and Mono along the south. This captures the direct relationships pretty well, with the Sacramento corridor out to the Sierra tied to the bay area and including Hetch Hetchy (and Yosemite). What do you call the middle state? I can't see any downside to this and we'd pick up 4 more senators. http://img247.imageshack.us/img247/8188/ca3state0kk.jpg Actually Placer probably belongs to the middle too. A couple of these are debatable. Actually this is better: Or actually this is better: http://img266.imageshack.us/img266/8968/ca3state20dx.jpg \_ I think that cutting the state apart like this would really hurt the far northern part. There's no tax base there, except Sacramento. \_ Well right now, the state pretty much ignores the north. They have their own industries and don't need a lot of social services because they don't have big messed up cities. They'd be fine. Maybe A bit of southern Oregon also belongs with them but that would be even harder to do. Sure you could keep them together, but I thought they'd want to be separate. They have different concerns than the bay area or LA. Maybe with their own state they could develop better. It's really beautiful country. \_ Gross Regional Product: SoCal: $710 billion Bay Area: $410 billion (includes Napa/Stockton) Rest: $180 billion (1/3 from Sacramento) If you siphon off the Central Valley into Central California then "Bay Area" increases and "Rest" decreases. \_ Sounds fine to me. That Northern CA would still have a bigger economy than some other states like Wyoming or the Dakotas. It will be growing in the coming decades too. \_ Wow, bigger than North Dakota. Sign me up! I think it is in the interests of NoCal to remain attached to the rest of CA. For example, you can have UC Davis or University of North Dakota as your state university. Which would you choose? \_ They could develop Chico and a couple others. There's nothing stopping you from going to another state uni. All I know is, as long as those northern counties are attached to the rest, they are drowned out. I think NoCal would be bigger than a number of states. I guess at least #35-40 in size maybe. Again, the population isn't large so the needs are less. Whether or not the north benefits from leeching off the south like that is true, that is not a good reason to keep it that way. Do you really think in those terms? I think it would do better by looking out for itself instead of being drowned out. Anyway, at least SoCal should be split off. Ok then, maybe this should be done since it already exists: http://www.jeffersonstate.com Then Northern Cal, and Southern Cal. All I really want is SoCal separate. \_ We don't really like you hippy freaks either, but I don't see any advantages gained by breaking apart the State. There's a lot of synergy between NoCal and SoCal. \_ There's a lot of synergy between lots of states. So what? Should Wash and OR be combined? Washington: 5.9M pop, $262B Oregon: 3.4M, $145.35B Washegon: 9.3M, $407B Calif: 33.8M, $1.55 trillion Why or why not? Obvious advantages are better Senate representation, and more responsive state government. No and So already have their own utility companies. \_ What do utilities have to do with anything? San Diego's is different from LA's. OC's is different from Pasadena's. As for representation, why not split CA into 50 states? Imagine how many senators we'd get then! There are a lot of restrictions and regulations on interstate commerce. Things would work okay as long as NoCal and SoCal stayed in synch, but what happens when they start to heavily diverge? For example, the NoCal people repeal Prop 13 and the SoCal people don't. Does the population shift? Such unforeseen changes can have unintended consequences. Why mess with a good thing? \_ because it's not a good thing? \_ Sure it is! CA is the best State in the USA! \_ Local self-determination is better for its own sake. Plus the above post. If they heavily diverge, then it's good because they WANT to diverge. It's called democracy. And there are NOT a lot of restrictions on interstate commerce. Read the Constitution. \_ Why not have city-states if you're into local self-determination? We can divide the nation into 100 square mile grids of self-determining fiefdoms. As for commerce, a big thing I was thinking of is farming. There are restrictions because of threat of transmission of pests/disease. Also, liquor is often restricted. There are other examples. |
2006/1/26-29 [Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:41547 Activity:moderate |
1/26 Does anyone have a pointer to research that shows how the FMV paid for eminent domain purchases compare to some "fair" FMV for the property? I know anecdotally the government-paid FMV is unfair, but some research would be nice. \_ The government should pay whatever the owner wants and forget about FMV. If the owner wants too much, the government should not buy it. It's that simple. \_ Wow, thanks for that astute analysis. \_ Seems like common sense and yet that's not the way we are doing things at the moment. \_ The 5th amend. requires "just compensation" not fair market value. This gives a court considerable flexibility in dete- rmining what the appropriate value is for property. Usually they get an appraiser, look at the property's income (if use for rental purposes), and compare the prices of similar property in the same locale. I don't have a url w/ numbers, but I remember looking at a Real Estate Valuation treatise that had some comparisions. \_ Well, there was an allegation here that prices would plummet if a neighbor has been declared the target of eminent domain seizure. Then the government would come in and pay the post- plummet price. Is there anything beyond anecdotal that this happens? \_ Generally the gov. comes in and makes an offer on your house prior to using ED. They would prefer that you leave willing instead of being forced out. In many cases, the gov. price is reasonable but not great. But it is enough for the vast majority of people to sell and leave. The people who suffer the low price problem are the holdouts. No one wants to buy their property and they've already told the gov. no, they are probably stuck getting a very low ED price rather than the gov. original offer. Pre- Kelo there was a HOPE that a sympathetic ct would say no public use and you could stay, but now there is no such hope. \_ Eminent domain purchases would suck in California. For example, if you bought your house 10 years ago for $200,000 and had to sell it for $800,000 and if you wanted to buy a comparable house in the same area for $800,000 now your property taxes go up by at least a factor of 3. \_ I agree. For the sake of fairness, we should get rid of prop 13. \_ For the sake of truth in advertising, everyone in an ED discussion should self identify as [renter,owner,want-to-own, will-never-own,bitter/not-bitter]. For the sake of of well run government, we should stop spending an insane amount of money on our broken k-12 educational system, then we wouldn't have people looking to kill prop 13 as yet another way to raise taxes even if it means old people cant afford their homes anymore. Anti-prop 13? I'll start: owner, amused, feel bad for you. I'll guess you are: renter, want-to-own, will-never-own, very bitter. \_ Let me guess, you have asperger symdrone and you think everything is either black or white, democrat or republican, good or evil, renter or buyer, happy or pissed off. Fucking dumb turd. \_ Sounds like he pegged you. \_ Sounds like he's a bitter renter, a poor guesser, and can't read well either. Sounds like you're very much the same. \_ Pegged! |
2005/11/9-11 [Politics/Domestic/California/Prop, Politics/Domestic/California/Arnold] UID:40520 Activity:moderate |
11/9 Why did people vote against the teacher "5 year probation" prop? Seems like only incompetent teachers should worry about that. Maybe they miscalculated and "4 years" would have passed? \_ Maybe it was a combination of people thinking the current two-year probation period was enough and hating Ah-nold. \_ Why did people love him before but hate him now? I haven't really been paying attention. \_ it really started to turn when he decided to mess with the nurses / teachers / firefighters / police. and then people realized he was doing the same ol' "i'm ah-nold" routine, without providing any substance behind the muscle. and then people realized that it was the CA Republican party that was controlling his agenda. light at the top, actually operated by people smarter than him, just like dubya. \_ Yet here were are with the same old status quo and \_ Yet here we are with the same old status quo and looming deficits and blah blah. Poltics sucks. \_ huh? looming deficits and blah blah. Politics sucks. \_ I liked this story: http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-teacher10nov10,0,7202054.story \_ Why should the employment rules of schools be a political issue decided by the uninformed masses based on what sounds good to them? -tom \_ We should let the King decide these issues. Death to the plebes! \_ Because the uniformed masses are paying for it and it's bankrupting the state? \_ Let's vote to change police officer's uniforms to pink, while we're at it, since we're paying for them. The idea that schools are bankrupting the state is ludicrous, and in any case, probation length has no effect on the total amount spent. -tom \_ Errr... talk to any business major about this. -jrleek \_ CA spends ~50% of tax revenue on education. MN (one of the highest ranked if not the highest) spends <30%. I don't know what's wrong, but spending more money on it isn't the answer. \_ Just out of curiosity, what is MN's total tax revenue per capita, including income and property tax. Saying MN spends less than 30% on their schools impresses me not at all since they are still spending far more per student than CA. \_ They have fewer students to educate. CA's problem is all the low income immigrant children who are filling the schools at the same time that their parents don't contribute much to the tax base. Those kids deserve an education, but I think it necessarily won't be one as good as what the kids in, say, MN receive. The failure is thinking that it should/can be. \_ What's the percentage of MN children whose native languge is not English or whose parents' language is not English and how does that compare to CA? \_ So you're saying you want to kick out all the illegals to bring CA costs in line with MN? \_ Sounds good to me. Might save some ER's down in SoCal as well. \_ No, what I am saying is that demographic factors probably can offer an explanation to why factors probably can offer and explanation to why CA students underpeform despite the state spending lots of money on them. 88% of MN population are white with a tiny hispanic minority. \_ I have yet to hear a good explanation for why pre-college teachers need tenure. \_ Because the incredibly power teacher's union says so. \_ Because the incredibly powerful teacher's union says so. \_ Because most can get more money working at a different job. They are trading salary for some job security and with the add on of pensions, school districts keeps fairly steady workforce. \_ College professors, yes. School teachers? Mostly not. I had one teacher that could hold a real job in the real world K-12. The rest were "mom" types working for extra take home cash. "Those who can, do. Those who can't, teach." \_ So the state should be willing to pay private school prices for teachers? Or should the state should expect to accept a high turnover rate for teachers. Note that most teachers don't get past the five year mark. \_ I think your points are unproven bullshit. \_ What do you mean 'private school prices'? Most private school teachers make less. \_ Where's your evidence? \_ http://stats.bls.gov/oco/ocos069.htm "Private school teachers generally earn less than public school teachers." \_ And it also says at least some of those private school teachers don't have the credentials to work at a public school. It's only fair to compare ones that do. \_ http://nces.ed.gov/pubs/web/95829.asp "On average, public school teachers earn between about 25 to 119 percent more than private school teachers earn, depending upon the private subsector... Between about 2 and 50 percent of this public- private difference can be accounted for by differences in teacher characteristics depending upon the private subsector. Controlling for differences in teacher and school characteristics between the public and private sectors, one observes a residual difference in the salaries of teachers that is simply associated with the sector in which the teacher is employed." Anything else I can point you to to convince you (everyone else is already convinced) that you are wrong? \_ I went to a private school (many of them, in fact) and the teachers always said they could make more in public schools but that they didn't want to deal with public school students, parents, and administrators. Also, many teachers are at private schools because they care about more than a paycheck (many private schools are religious). \_ Why should anything be decided by the uninformed masses based on what sounds good to them? The whole proposition system is dumb. \_ All Hail Caesar! Long Live The King! Democracy is dumb! Why should the same 'uninformed masses' be allowed to vote on anything? Isn't having the same dumb people choosing their own leaders dumb too? You're totally right, all the modern dictatorships one could name were much better off with A Strong Noble Leader(tm) than we are with all those dumb uninformed masses running around *gasp* voting! and participating in other things normally reserved for Noble Leader and His Family. Is there a place I can donate a few bucks to start a CSUA Motd History Book Fund and then can we require that people like this be a certain height before posting here? \- strictly speaking this is more E_RATCHET than E_TOOSHORT \_ Strictly speaking, this comment is considerably more stupid than the one to which it was responding. \_ This falls under the "I know you are but what am I?!" school of debate. Would you like to add some actual content or are you happy at the "sticks and stones" level? \_ I love the motd. Calling a post that starts out "All Hail Caesar!" and proceeds off on some straw man dictatorship tangent "stupid" really requires clarification? If you actually need it spelled out for you, the response below does a decent job. \_ Here's the difference: the below posted something that makes a point and is worth responding to. You posted noise and then waiting for someone smart to respond and then said, "yeah! what *he* said! nyah!" \_ False dilemma. It's not about democracy vs. dictatorship; it's about pure democracy vs. representational. Hey, let's have everyone in the nation vote directly on congressional bills too. Doesn't that sound like a grand idea? Who needs leaders? Let's let all the people vote on everything. \_ When your respresentatives no longer represent and the system has gone too far to self correct, there needs to be some form of check/balance to counter the prevailing non-representative system. In CA we have the prop. system. It provides the people, you know, the tax payer plebes/victims, a chance to retake control of an out of control system. It can also be abused and can create bad situations as well, but overall I have a lot more faith in the voters than I do in life long political hacks and beaurocrats. Pure democracy would likely lead to the people voting themselves goodies from the public trough as they say, but no direct democracy has given us the same problem with corporations and special interest groups and the proposition system is a reasonable attempt to restore power to where it belongs: the people. |
2005/9/25-28 [Politics/Domestic/California, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:39865 Activity:nil |
9/25 My property tax for 2005, the amount I need to pay, has increased 8% from 2004. Is this legal? I thought the cap was 2% a year (and it has been more/less for the past 2 years). The total assessed value is only increased by 1.9%, but the end result is a whopping 8% increase. Anyone else seeing similar things? This is Santa Clara county. Thanks. \_ Your city has been taken over by evil socialists. \_ Prop 13 limits the raise in assessed value to 2% per year. \_ http://www.hjta.org/faq.htm#I%20just%20got%20my%20property%20tax |
2005/8/26-29 [Reference/Tax, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:39296 Activity:low |
8/26 How many poeple here would find the following tax system to be acceptable: A flat income tax of 15 % is paid by everyone, *but* it's based on your first job right out of college, and stays fixed even as your income increases. So if you work at walmart for a year and then go into investment banking, you're still taxed at the flat 15% rate based on your walmart salary, while the guy who got the ibanking job right out of college pays six times what you do in taxes. Imagine also that everyone who moves into the state starts at the rate of their first california job. Hence when an out of stater takes a job, they might pay four times what their co-workers pay, since the co-workers are paying based on happening to have a low paying job 15 years ago when they graduated college in California. Sound fair? Or does it sound like a perverse nightmare that would fuck up the whole labor market for the state and totally distort the tax base? \_ I didn't think the current tax system could be any more broken than it already is. I was wrong. \_ I'm guessing this was intended as a Prop. 13 analogy. \_ Yes. I wanted to see if any of the pro-prop 13 crowd would be willing to defend the same system applied to fucking up the labor market as they're using to fuck up the real estate market. \_ Then get a real analogy. Yours is silly. \_ Hm, I guess. It's a poor analogy since a job != a house. I can get a crummy job for a day and then get a high paying one. If I get a crummy house, I pay less property taxes. If I get an expensive house, I pay more. The analogy falls over at step 1. \_ It continues to be poor: changing income tax rates don't screw over retired people on a fixed income. \_ When I graduate, I'll make sure I tell Google or whomever to postpone my start date by a month, so that I'll have time to take up a job at Walmart for a few weeks. \_ How do idiots like this get into Cal? Is it really that easy? \_ broken analogy. When/if I buy a new home, I pay new taxes. |
2005/8/25-26 [Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:39268 Activity:low |
8/25 My feeling wrt Prop-13 is that many proponents of Prop-13 also think that tax is too high, that we should do whatever we want with our own money, and that flat-tax is fair. Is this completely off? \_ Yes. You're completely off. \_ Pretty much. These days, most Prop. 13 proponents are people owning property they haven't bought in the last year. A general reassessment would hurt that much. \_ I purchased my house about 5 years ago. Today, similar houses are selling for more than 2x what I paid. Should my property tax double? My income certainly hasn't. -emarkp \_ I think YOUR tax should quadriple because I don't like you as fucking stubborn thick headed conservative dweeb who thinks the Iraq war has made the world a safer place to live. Fuck you. \_ Absolutely. If someone is really willing to pay twice what you did, and you can't pay the taxes, I think you should be forced by economics to sell and move. That's how it would work in any other state, and I know of no place in the U.S. where real estate is as blatant a rip-off pyramid scam as in California. \_ This is bullshit. The government should not force people out of their homes just because some other person is an idiot who overpaid for a property and will be foreclosed on in 3 years. Now that other states are seeing the type of price inflation that CA has had for the last 30 years more and more states are realizing how progressive and valuable Prop 13 really is. \_ Even Prop 13 allows the assessed value to rise, but only like 2% or whatever. I think that should be more like 5%. So if prop values double they'd have to stay that way for like 10 years+ before you reach that level. Gov't wouldn't "force people out", it would tax them the same as the others in your neighborhood. If prop values double they'd still have all that equity sitting there. \_ I am talking about the situation if Prop 13 did not exist. People have seen their taxes rise 50% in 3 years in other states (and in CA before Prop 13). Prop 13 prevents that. As for the rest of your argument, read my example. Someone overpays for a property and will lose the house anyway. Meanwhile, the prudent consumer has to sell because the government bases taxes on market forces? \_ For owners that bought properties that are similar in your neighborhood but bought/sold at different times, are they paying similar taxes? \_ No, they aren't. When I bought my house, which had been in the family for 60 years or more, the property tax went up a factor of 7. The old family was undercontributing and now I am making up for it. That's fine, because I budgeted for it. Some day I will reap that benefit if I don't sell. It all balances out. \_ What if my neighbor and I bought the house at the same time, but he's a better negotiator and paid less for the house? \_ I think it should approach that gradually, giving you time to evaluate your options. (and faster than 2%). But yes. \_ I disagree. \_ That's just because you don't feel like paying taxes. \_ I think more than half of the people on the motd base their entire political philosophy on this one principle: not feeling like paying taxes. \_ I'd be much happier paying taxes if I can pick and choose what programs my tax dollars fund. \_ You can, it's called voting. \_ Only if your guy ends up winning in that case. And then the control is indirect at best. I want a system that I can fund programs on a line-by-line basis. |
2005/8/25-26 [Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:39267 Activity:low |
8/25 You know, I don't like tom's personality but at least we're both socialists and agree on certain social/government issues. Way to go tom. -tom's #2 fan \_ What's socialist about opposing prop. 13? Prop 13 is anti-free market. Of course, the kool-aid drinking greedheads who call themselves "libertarian conservatives" on the motd don't care to notice this because prop 13 saves them money, but it's still true. \_ It's a socialist position to want to raise taxes and a libertarian position to want to eliminate them as much as possible. How is Prop 13 anti-free market? I didn't realize tax rates were determined by supply/demand. \_ I have an advice for you tom. Occasionally you make valid points and you'd definitely add more weights if you simply don't sign your name. The reason is that people are used to laughing at your rants that even when you do in fact make a valid point they turn their heads away knowing it's from you. -tom's #2 fan \_ You're mistaken. -mice |
2005/8/25-26 [Reference/RealEstate, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:39265 Activity:nil |
8/25 Is property tax painful because the housing price / rent ratio is so out of whack? It's like, for the property tax one is paying, one may as well go rent. \_ If you are not taking property tax into account when buying a house, you don't deserve to own. \_ Yes, which is why Prop 13 is so valuable. If you take it into account and then 3 years later it rises 50% because the market goes nuts you can be screwed. It is not a good solution to sell or to take out a loan to pay for the tax, in spite of what Tom says. Prop 13 actually allows one to budget because it limits the rise of property tax to a reasonable level (1%/year). known level (1%/year). \_ do you think artificially low property tax has artificially jacked up real estate prices? \_ Heh, that's pretty funny. "artificially low property tax". You do know that all taxes are arbitrary, right? -emarkp \_ Well, if property tax is raised then prices will fall, sure. Does that sound like a good idea to you? Transfer more wealth from the people to the government, right? It's here to help us. \_ Not to mention that if the rate rises and the values then fall the government still collects the same amount of $$$ except the homeowner is assed out of his equity. \_ How about a scheme that keeps track of additional property tax owed and then charging the seller that amount when the property is sold? \_ too fucking complicated. \_ What do you call the IRS? |
2005/8/25-26 [Reference/Tax, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:39262 Activity:high |
8/26 Does anyone know how prop 13 even come about? On one hand it makes sense that old people who owned homes for 30 years should not have to pay mortgage up their nose. On the other hand, new home-owners many who are young and owning homes for the first time have to pay MORE than old home-owners, many who are corporate land owners, or individual investors owning and controlling vast amounts of lands? We talk about flat tax, but this is the opposite of that. Is this even fair? \_ How about taking an end-run around prop13 by abusing the newly refined powers of eminent domain (thanks SCOTUS) to force longtime landowners to sell in order to bring the property taxes on their properties in line with current valuations of the property. Yeah! \_ "old people who owned homes for 30 years should not have to pay mortgage up their nose" You mean pay taxes up their nose. Let's see...is it fair for the government to reassess your property and then tax you on their assessment? That sounds a bit scary doesn't it? \_ This is how government has been raising taxes as long as there has been government and still how it is done all over the world. Don't know why it scares you so much. \_ It's not fair at all. It passed because people were sold fake images of old people sitting on extremely valuable property, losing their homes because they couldn't pay property tax. -tom \_ Well, the people who voted for it were people who owned land. In another word poor people didn't vote, and people who wanted to protect their assets, did so regardless of consequences like less funding for infrastructures, etc... \_ Were you in CA at the time prop 13 passed? I was. People were selling houses left n right and moving out of state because they couldn't afford to own their houses anymore. They were taxed out of home ownership. \_ True, but you didn't answer the question about fairness. Why is it fair that new hard-working home owners have to pay more than everyone else? Whatever happened to meritocracy, where the harder you work, the more you should get back? What about the fact that old timers usually own properties close to down-town or working areas where they no longer work, forcing young home owners to buy properties much farther away, and causing traffic? You mentioned one effect of not having Prop-13, but what about its side-effects? \_ The idea is that over time people will sell and the house will be reappraised at market value or die or whatever. The effect is to slow down the overall rate of increase of property taxes across the state. Those same young people (but really *any* new buyer) who pay current value rates will be paying next to nothing in 30 years, the same as that "old couple" who stayed in their house. I see nothing wrong with encouraging and even rewarding people to stay in the same neighborhood, helping to build a community instead of the super transient "don't know who my next door neighbor is and don't care" nature of many people today. Those old people paid high rates when they were young. They pay low now. Same thing for current young people. No issue. \_ The issue is that the cost of the services keeps going up, so other taxes, like sales tax, get raised to pay for them. So Prop 13 transfers the tax burden onto people who don't happen to be sitting on half a million dollars in equity. -tom \_ I'm not the pp but I think he will respond like this: "No. The old couples were once young and had to share the burden of having to pay more. Now new young couples have to share the burden of paying more but when they're older, new young couples will share their burden, so on and so forth. No issue." \_ Uh, you might not realize this, but there are a lot of people in California who don't own property and are not likely to ever own property. So they get to pay more for their whole lives. -tom \_ That isn't the first thing I thought of, but yes I believe that's true. In direct response to tom above, "the cost of the services keeps going up" is not just an inflationary measure but also an ever increasing number of 'services'. I'll happily pay my share of roads, schools, etc, but there's a zillion other "services" I'll never use which are just vote buying at best and high corruption and criminal at worst. \_ That's a red herring argument; the vast bulk of municipal government expense is roads, schools, police and fire. -tom \_ When Warren Buffet advised Ah-nold to repeal Prop-13 to raise revenue, Ah-nold said "If he mentions Prop-13 again I will make him do 500 push-ups." Thank god for Ah-nold, thank god I voted for him. -going to inherit 3 properties from my parents \_ If you're inheriting properties from parents, don't worry. There's a law protecting that. \_ Why should this be "protected"? \_ It's written into the Prop. It was part of the selling package. Sold as "preserving" neighborhoods and avoiding "poor kids inherit pricy house - must sell" scenario. \_ Where do people get the idea that government has a right to endlessly tax your house, and raise those taxes without limits? Imagine paying $24K for your house in 1970, as my parents did, now their house is worth $600K. If they paid property taxes on 600K as they would without prop 13, they would be spending 100% of their retirement income on those taxes alone. -ax \_ They're sitting on $600K in equity and you don't think they can afford, what, $5K/year? And of course, the services they receive from property taxes still cost the same as they did in 1970. -tom \_ When the premise of your argument is that we aren't taxed enough, I give up and walk away right there. -ax \_ The premise is that the *wrong people* are taxed. -tom \_ Under what conditions should someone escape taxes? Shouldn't retired poor people pay the least amount of taxes, if any? You want a flat tax? -ax \_ I think it's fair to say that property owners should be taxed more than non-property-owners. The beneficiaries of Prop 13 are almost exclusively not retired poor people. -tom \_ I'd like to see the numbers. I know a lot of retirees in my neighborhood benefit from Prop 13. You call them rich because they own a $700K house free and clear, but the reality is they have very little income and would have nowhere to go if they sold. By the way, if you raise taxes on property owners then guess who will eat that? Owners will pass the costs on to the renters anyway. \_ Look, it's pretty simple. The proportion of tax paid by property owners after prop 13 is less than before. This is trivially obvious even if you account for rents rising to pay property tax. Therefore, non-owners pay a greater proportion than they used to. And it is also trivially obvious that poor retirees who own their own homes are a tiny portion of all property owners in CA. -tom \_ It is not trivially obvious that the beneficiaries of Prop 13 are almost exclusively not retired poor people. Young people tend to move much more often. It is also not obvious that non-owners pay more now than they did. Essentially, the same people pay either way (the wealthy landowners) whether it is in the form of income tax or property tax. Renters can pay more rent (w/o Prop 13) or more in other taxes (w/ Prop 13). Sales tax is a red herring, because it is about as high even in states w/o Prop 13. At issue is whether the state is collecting enough, not who is paying for it. The poor are never paying for it, unless you consider the poor retirees who would pay if Prop 13 is repealed. Given state revenues, I think the state is collecting more than enough as-is. \_ OK, given that the state is in deficit, and two-thirds of the budget is schools and health care, what do you think should be cut? -tom \_ Whatever we've pumped money into recently. The State spent a lot of money in the <DEAD>dot.com<DEAD> years when we were flush with cash. What did we spend it on? I also guess I am not opposed to raising, say, income taxes or the VLF. I just think going after Prop 13 is barking up the wrong tree. Here's the budget: http://tinyurl.com/ckduv If you look at previous years you see we spent now than before, so it's not that anyone wants to 'cut education' but instead change how we spend some of the money allocated to it. years you see we spend more now than before. Why? \_ Because of increasing education and health care costs, mostly. -tom \_ Health care costs are rising faster than inflation, but what about education? Why would that be true? \_ Because we're comparing against historically low (abysmal) school spending from the Wilson years. -tom \_ What about before that? Prop 13 was around a long time before Wilson. \_ Equity is meaningless until you sell your home. When you sell your home, you don't need to pay property tax. \_ Umm, the whole economy is currently being powered by cash-out-equity financing. Don't forget there is always the reverse mortgage for old folks. So equity is NOT meaningless until you sell your home. \_ So you get to determine how much someone can pay? In a city that has normal property turnover, aggregate taxes will go up. That doesn't give gov't the right to decide what property values are and then tax you on it. \_ Alright. No do you feel the same way about commercial property? I.e., would you oppose something that specifically repealed prop 13 with regards to commercial property alone? -- ulysses \_ YES. A general pholosophy of taxing: Taxing on real gains, fine. Taxing on paper gains, NOT GOOD. My fater recently sold his business's building for about 2x what he paid. But if property tax kept going up on PAPER gains before he sold it, it would have been a significant additional expense. \_ Alright. Now does that same approach apply to the massive land value appreciation of, say, the Shorenstein- owned buildings in downtown San Francisco or the hundreds of square miles developed into office parks by Kaufman and Broad - which have, incidentally, made outfits like these the most powerful political players in the State? \_ It is a NECESSARY evil when you get bubbles in the market. I'm all for taxes on real gains and real property, but being taxed on paper gains is, emm, problematic. Would you like to be like my friend in Virginia who's property tax went up by $5000 a year because his rather modest suburban townhouses' appraised value went up by ~$200k? \_ I think it is fair to be taxed $5000 a year. It's called natural forces of capitalism. If you have to pay more, you work harder. If you can't afford it, then you leave so that someone else more capable or more desperate can take your place. Look at Silicon Valley. Half of the inhabitants are tech-related workers but can't afford housing, thanks to land investment companies that lock down land, or people who locked properties from generations and generations even though they have nothing to do with the local industry they're in. You either help with progress, or inhibit progress. \_ I think it's fair if you are taxed $100000 a year. It's not natural forces of capitalism, because the person didn't sell their property. It's an artificial reassessment by the government who then tells you to hand over more cash. Doesn't sound fair to me. \_ My issue with granting immunity to land owners is that often times they own a huge amount of land and lock them down for things that are not necessarily good for the people. For example, a Sunnyvale nursery built 100 years ago, now surrounded by young working people who are desperate to find housing in one of the most expensive places in South Bay. This is not helping everyone. \_ Actually, in spite ofyour communist rant about 'helping everyone' it might be nice to have things like a nursery within a 100 mile drive of your house, right? Some of those old mom and pop businesses are valuable to the community. Tearing them all up for (what exactly?) doesn't sound good to me. \_ What if the property-owner enjoys letting the field lie fallow and unused? \_ You gonna tell him how to use his land, comrade? \_ Not me, but that fellow a few posts up ("My issue with...") sounds like he's got a few ideas. -pp \_ Well, the law could build in some hysteresis and do the increase as an increment every few years based on the difference or sth. But permanently exempting prop owners from tax reassessment is bullshit when those taxes are what's used to support community services that all use. It makes the rates higher for the rest of us. (And doesn't the tax base get transferred on an inheritance? And of course to rental investment properties.) If values go up like crazy then at some point that tax rate should be cut also, since services costs probably don't go up linearly. Not wanting to pay taxes in general isn't a good enough reason. \_ Prop 13 doesn't exempt property owners from reassessment. It limits the amount the assessment can be raised each year. Also, if you do something like improve your home you will trigger a reassessment on the new construction. In short, I think people opposed to Prop 13 are whiners. The government doesn't tax you on stocks until you sell, so why tax on property? My coworker just received a 'special assessment' of $40K from his city in order to upgrade the sewer even though he has a septic tank which he just installed a few years back. He has no choice but to pay. This is fair? If shit like this happens with Prop 13 in place can you imagine what will happen without Prop 13? Every time the city or county needs money they will take it rather than make the necessary cuts. In LA, even with Prop 13, there was an unexpected windfall because of property taxes. Most people sell after ~7 years. If Prop 13 is ever repealed the CA economy will be screwed. \_ I paid plenty of AMT tax on stocks I didn't sell, so the statement that the government doesn't tax you on stocks until you sell doesn't work for stock options. \_ Sure it does. Did you exercise the options or not? If you didn't then you shouldn't have owed any tax. You mean you exercised them and then didn't sell the stock afterward. Not quite the same. \_ Exercising is not the same as selling. You can exercise the stock, the company can go bankrupt and not be able to sell the stock ... You've now paid taxes on paper value only. The statement was "The government doesn't tax you on stocks until you sell" -- I didn't sell and still paid tax. This is not advanced logic here, the statement is simply WRONG. \_ He said "stocks". Not "stock options". No matter how bitter you may be, he is right. \_ When you exercise an option you are 'selling' the option. A transaction has taken place. People are taxed (generally) on transactions. If you don't exercise you don't pay tax. Same idea. \_ Thx for overwriting my response. And the argument here is about SELLING stock you don't SELL options. You \_ Of course you can buy and sell options. http://www.cboe.com \_ Funny I sat through hours of stuff and my company never mentioned selling my options, because that doesn't apply here. And matters not since I'm not selling the option anyhow. \_ You made a categorical statement that was factually incorrect. \_ Ok I probably should have said "I couldn't sell MY options" can exercise an option and not be able to sell the stock. You may never be able to sell the stock. The statement was "The government doesn't tax you on stocks until you sell" -- NO STOCK SALE HAS OCCURRED! Exercising options and selling stock are totally different things, unless you believe that BUYING stock and SELLING stock are the same thing. And I'm not bitter about anything, I did quite well. However, I know many who had to declare bankruptcy because of AMT taxes on now worthless stock. \_ I'm opposed to AMT on stocks as well. \_ Well, stock taxes aren't the same as yearly property taxes. It almost sounds like you're opposed to those at all. Basically I stand to benefit from this stuff because my parents inherited some property, and I stand to inherit that same property eventually, and I don't forsee ever doing anything to trigger a tax reassessment. But I still think it's unfair. They rented this prop out and I probably would end up doing the same. Other thing are bullshit like depreciation writeoffs, exemptions from taxes on gains, etc. I believe all taxes should be very clear and straightforward, not a myriad of special rules that people manipulate and that interfere with the free market. I also think it's bullshit that tax rules are voted on in general propositions and the legislature is crippled. \_ Prop. 13 came during a housing bubble akin to what is happening today. The initial proponents were small goverment conservatives who saw the backlash against the huge rise in property tax as a chance to "starve the beast" by limiting property tax increases and reassessments to a minimal level. As such CA has become more dependant on income and sales tax and fees for it's budget. Unfortunately, those sources of revenue are not as reliable nor as progressive as property tax, so you get CA's socially liberal stance clashing with it's constant budgetary problems and failing infrastructure. until you sell doesn't work with stock options. \_ I believe prop 13 is a good thing. Without prop 13, a lot older retired and soon to be retired people will be forced to leave, because there's no way they could afford to pay property tax that's more than their retirement income. Raising property tax without a limit is NOT FAIR any way you cut it. Forcing people out of their homes because the market has gone up (especially in a crazy time as now) is not fair. Capping the gain is a reasonable compromise. I suppose you are also against prop 60/90 that allows seniors to carry over the current property tax to their new place. I pay a premium now on my property tax, but knowing that it will not grow without limit and I can have a comfortable retirement life later in life sounds pretty fair to me. I made a wise choice buying a home a few years ago, the savings I get on property tax now is my reward, plain and simple. Just like I have no problem with people making millions because they bought Microsoft 10 years ago. It's their reward and they earned it. There are other ways to solve the housing shortage problem. Most retired people does not want to sell because they have no place to go and anywhere they go they cannot afford the new property tax. Prop 60/90 is a step in the right direction. \_ Your reasoning is flawed. Seniors are by far the richest age segment today and most likely to afford increases in taxes. Before Prop. 13, you could have your property reassessed or apply for property tax relief. Those imaginary poor old people being "forced" out of their houses? The state would have had them jump through a few hoops, but they wouldn't have to pay anything close to the full amount. This is how it works in other places. Your whining about having to pay property taxes is nothing more than more self-interest. It's always amusing to hear people speak of the downfall of American communities and society, and yet when it gets down to brass "taxes," forget it. It's all about the individual. \_ I don't think anyone is whining about paying property taxes. Prop 13 doesn't eliminate that. What it *does* do is set a reasonable rate that taxes can be raised. You might think seniors are the wealthiest, but they are not, by the way. They might have high net worths if they happened to own a home (which many do not) but their incomes are low in any case and much of the income they do have goes to medical care. If this real estate bubble crashes many seniors won't have any money at all beyond Social Security. In fact, many people depend solely on Social Security as it is. I am going to guess that you are either a wealthy limousine liberal (in which case you can afford to fund the government's waste) or else someone who doesn't own any property and thus doesn't care. |
2005/7/24-26 [Politics/Domestic/California, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:38795 Activity:very high |
7/23 50% of Americans think that the the Atomic bombing of Japan was a bad idea: http://csua.org/u/ctr Take the poll again in another 20 years and most of the people alive during WWII will be dead, then it will be 70%. I'll bet in 1945 that number was a lot lower. What percentage of Japanese think bombing Pearl Harbor was a good idea? -ax Put that in your pipe and smoke it emarkp -ausman \_ My anonymous troll has a name! -emarkp \_ On the flip side, this is what Japanese think of the Pearl Harbor invasion: http://photobucket.com/albums/y105/LordAzrael/Az/slanted.jpg \_ The exhibit gets some key points wrong, but there does seem to be some indication that FDR allowed Pearl Harbor to happen despite some knowledge of a Japanese attack in order to rally America behind a war that he WANTED to join. \_ Oh gawd, the exhibit fucking sucks. \_ Oh gawd, the exhibit fucking lies. \_ Yeah, and the FDR forced Japan to commit Nanjing Massacare, atrocities of Unit 731, and all the other good stuff it did to other Asian countries. Oh, or was it the Chang Kai-Shek of the Chinese govt that forced Japan to do those things? Also, Japan was already at war with Britain even before Pearl Harbor. FDR could have used the same excuse to declare war on Japan \_ 50% of Americans voted for W. \_ That, and the below bit about "not being able to find Japan on a map" are my sentiments exactly. I'm glad someone's using their brains tonight. -John \_ What about Americans who were actually around back then? \_ 50% of Americans can't find Japan on a map. The other 50% don't know what a map is. Thanks to the teacher's unions for the quality public schools that brought us here. \_ thanks to the california senate which doesn't allocate enough funds to the public school system and the people who voted for prop 37. \_ Schools are the biggest line item in the budget and CA teachers are among the highest paid anywhere. There's money. It's not a money issue. \_ Even if it was the case the CA teachers are the highest paid in the country, why would anyone want to teach in CA? You wouldn't be able to make a decent living. \_ Isn't California like 43rd on average spending per pupil? Of course it is about the money. You can't totally scrimp on spending like that and have a good outcome. Teacher salaries are high, but not on a purchasing parity basis (adjusting for California's high cost of living). http://www.rand.org/publications/MG/MG186 \_ The average spending per pupil number is not meaningful. The fact is that CA spends almost 60% of all tax revenues on education. Should it increase to 90%? The fact is that the urban areas of CA are difficult to teach in. Throwing money at the problem won't help. King/Drew in LA has some of the highest paid doctors and a large budget and yet it provides far worse service than other hospitals. The same principles are at work in education. \_ California used to spend 4.5% of state income on education, now we spend 3%. Not surprisingly, the quality of the education has gone down. We need to raise taxes. \_ Uhm... Doesn't the state law say they have to spend 40% of outlay on education, minimum? \_ Where are you getting these crazy numbers? \_ From the Rand report cited above. "In the early to mid-1970s, California spent about the same share of its personal income on public education as the rest of the country did, about 4.5 percent. However, in the late 1970s, the share of personal income that Californians devoted to their public schools fell to about 1.2 percent below the national average and remained well below the national average through 2000." \_ http://www.pacificresearch.org/press/opd/2005/opd_05-03-03li.html \_ http://tinyurl.com/7vxl7 \_ Ok that's nice n all but has nothing to do with total state outlay to education. The State is paying 40% of the total budget at a minimum, by law. How much more of the budget would you like to spend on education in this state? At what level of budget spending do you think we'd magically have a real school system again? You're just playing with statistics that favor your "pay my mom more money!" position. I've *never* heard or seen anyone, reputable or not, use a "percentage of personal income" measurement to determine anything before. Ever. Join the rest of us using a useful number and we'll talk. In the meantime, the evil teacher's unions can take a hike. \_ Exactly. CA has a higher income. Why does the % matter? Likewise, spending per pupil. If I have a school district of 10 and a school district of 100 they both need, say, an administrator. The district of 10 is going to pay more per pupil for that administrator, but they are not getting anything more for it. You can't argue this with teachers, though. They just like to bitch. \_ Prior to prop 13, California had some of the best public schools in the nation. Post prop 13, it ranks near the bottom. It is at least a very strong data point. \_ Once judges ruled that local money couldn't be spent locally, Prop 13 was inevitable. \_ Getting rid of Prop 13 won't help anything. Don't believe the propaganda. \_ Yeah, prop13 was so great. The schools were just awesome... for anyone not getting taxed out of their home and forced to move out of state. \_ Spoken like either a true union cultist or someone who has no idea how the teacher's unions work in this country. \_ spoken like someone who went through public schools and saw almost every helpful and effective program for connecting with students fought and eventually dissolved because of financial reasons. Spoken like someone who has family working in public education being jerked around by an administration focused on standards based assessment and transfered or laid off at least once a year due to financial reasons. \_ yes, everyone in teaching is just like your anecdotal experiences. go look at how the unions behave and come back and shed a bitter tear about all those poor teachers who just want to educate the next generation. \_ actually, every teacher I know winds up spending hundreds to thousands of dollars each year on books and office supplies that the school system refuses to pay for. \_ They can deduct this on their taxes. It sounds to me like they need to take this up with their school district. The money is there, but teachers are such pathetic whiners I can't blame most districts for tuning them out at this point. \_ The same article says: "Two-thirds of Americans say the use of atomic bombs was unavoidable" So it was unavoidable BUT it was still a bad idea? Hmm. So it was unavoidable BUT it was still a bad idea? \_ The same article says a number of other things but taking a single line out of context makes some people feel good. \_ Okay here is some context. Preceding lines: "President Truman decided to try to end the war by dropping atomic bombs ... Those bombings led to Japan's announcement on Aug. 15 that it would surrender." And then the article says 2/3 of Americans felt that the use of the bombs of unavoidable - ie there was no way to end the war OTHER than to use the A-Bomb. The line following says that 20% of Japanese agreed that use of the A-Bomb was the only way to end the war while 75% felt that the war would have ended w/o the A-Bomb. Then comes the sentence so promiently quoted above. I find it inconsistent to not approve of something that you find was the ONLY possible option. \_ A lot of Japanese don't even know about Pearl Harbor. Japanese textbooks only talk about Hiroshima and Nagasaki. \_ Do Americans now about the crippling naval blockade that made the Japanese to attack Pearl Harbor? \_ But Japan attacked without declaring war. \_ yea, America should continue to supply Japan with the resources to undertake more Nanjing Massacres. \_ The point was that it was something foreseeable. \_ If not others, the 1970 Hollywood movie "Tora! Tora! Tora!" by 20th Century Fox talked about all that. |
2005/6/23-25 [Politics/Domestic/President/Bush, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:38254 Activity:high |
6/23 Supreme Court rules cities may seize homes http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1428929/posts?page=1,50 \_ More like "SC upholds ED as is." \_ Can we get a non freeper link about the same subject? I'll start: http://tinyurl.com/bepw2 (forbes.com) \_ Here is the opinion: http://straylight.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/04-108.ZS.html \_ anyone find a url for the dissent? \_ It's all here: link:csua.org/u/chm (pdf file) \_ The cornell page has links to the dissents as well. \_ what's so new about imminent domain? \_ When eminent domain is used to acquire land for private development, the potential for abuse is large. A politically conected businessman can 'suggest' that the city use eminent domain to help build a new retail or office development. The city uses its power to acquire the land for a value which is much less than if the developer had to sweet-talk homeowners to sell. -dgies, !op \_ Because this isn't eminent domain. This is a greatly expanded and never seen before abuse of the power. Any developer can now come into any area and tell the city council how much more tax revenue they'll get from a new Walmart and it is now legal to tear down any homes in the way. This is entirely new which is why the SC had to rule on it. You're just trolling, right? \- While I see the potential for abuse, I find it odd to see STEVENS as a corporate tool and THOMAS and RHENQUIST as the defender of the "little guy", so I think some closer reading on this case may be in order. \_ Ok, you tell us what you find that says this isn't a new huge expansion of ED and isn't easily abused. We both read the same article. Go see O'Connors quote in the text. She has it right on the money. It's about the money. Mr. Developer promises new tax renevue from flattening a bunch of homes and it's legal. Period. Please link to the further reading you find that says this isn't the case. \_ 1981: Poletown Neighborhood Council v. City of Detroit: http://csua.org/u/chd (law.berkeley.edu). It's not "new." It's re-establishing something old. key grafs: MAJORITY: "The power of eminent domain is to be used in this instance primarily to accomplish the essential public purposes of alleviating unemployment and revi- talizing the economic base of the community. The bene- fit to a private interest is merely incidental. If the public benefit was not so clear and significant, we would hesitate to sanction approval of such a project." DISSENT: "With regard to highways, railroads, canals, and other instrumentalities of commerce, it takes little imagination to recognize that without eminent domain these essential improvements, all of which require particular configurations of property - narrow and generally straight ribbons of land -would be "otherwise impracticable"; they would not exist at all... [I]t could hardly be contended that the existence of the automotive industry or the construction of a new [GM] assembly plant requires the use of eminent domain." -!pp \_ Ok, did you miss below where someone posted this was over turned later? Maybe you have something else to link to that shows this isn't a new and dangerous ruling expanding ED to places it has never been? \_ A PDF version of the Connecticut State Supreme Court's decision on the appeal: link:csua.org/u/che (300k) This is LONG, and I'm not going to summarize. It bears reading, as the appellants' challenge has a lot to do with interpretation of the phrasing of state law. A large number of documents were filed on this case: http://csua.org/u/chf (Findlaw.com) Hope that helps. --erikred \_ very interesting (che link). Thanks. -nivra \_ Precedent for this application of eminent domain was established in 1981 in Poletown, MI: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poletown Detroit seized 1300 homes & 140 businesses to build a GM plant. The 1981 decision was overturned in 2004: http://csua.org/u/chc. What I don't understand is wtf was going on in the intervening 23 years? Didn't houses get razed for the GM plant? Was the plant never built? The overturn happened in MI SC by 4 very conservative judges. In this case, conservatives are arguing for private property rights, and liberals are arguing for "public good," including economic development. The public good for economic development policy's glaring drawback is the vulnerability to corruption: city planners can easily be bought by greedy developers. Wiki link on eminent domain: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eminent_domain \_ The solution to government corruption is to stop the corruption not try to stop government from functioning. \_ I'm pretty liberal, why oh why does the Supreme court keep making rulings that make me agree with the rightwing of the court? \_ Yup, all the liberal justices are fighting for the little guy! \_ yah... I think my principles also steer me towards preferring the conservative side of this one. If the corporations want to the dissent on this one. If the corporations want to develop the land, make the tenants 2x or 3x fair market price for the land. -nivra for the land. -nivra [edit: I misused cons/lib labels] [Note: On 2nd reading, I agree with majority, see below] \_ See, this shouln't be a conservative/liberal issue. It's about private property. This ruling basically says there's no such thing as private property. A free society shouldn't accept this. -emarkp \_ This is a conservative/liberal issue. It is an issue of who decides what is best - the state or the people? Liberals generally want to take things out of the hands of the people and stick them in the hands of the state. Look at the opinion - it basically says the state said this was a good idea, who are we to second guess the state. Conservatives (real ones) would prefer to leave things in the hands of the people - Let the developer PAY Ms. Kelo the amt of money she wants in order for her to willingly sell. \_ This is simplistic and ridiculous. I'm a liberal who believes in private property, individual responsibility, freedom of religion, and government non-interference in reproductive rights. Liberal and conservative are labels that do not accurately reflect the level of complexity needed here. --erikred \_ Eh, it doesn't say there's no such thing as private property. The City still had to pay compensation, so it still falls under Eminent domain. I don't agree with the ruling (as i currently see it), but I wouldn't go so far as the above. -jrleek \_ If I can't determing the selling price for my property (whether anyone wants to buy at that price or not), how is it that it's mine? -emarkp \_ Uh.. You can determine an asking price. A selling price, no. Now, if you lose bargaining rights, that sucks. \_ By that reasoning the constitution never protected your property rights at all. "nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation." Doesn't say you get to decide what is just compensation. -jrleek \_ And if you think it's not just, you petition for redress. \_ The fact that the onus is on you in the first place is evil and fucked up. -John \_ Compensation doesn't take into account things like subjective value in the property. In this particular case Ms. Kelo family has lived in the same house for many years, the house has a very nice view of the Thames river, &c. The assessed value of the house isn't that high and no where near enough for her to afford to buy another river front home. What give some rich ass yuppie who works for Pfizer more rights to that river view than Ms. Kelo? If he wants Ms. Kelo's home he should be prepared to pay what SHE feels is a proper price for the property, not what the assessor thinks. Under the Kelo regime it seems that the only way to have private property is to be willing to lay down your life to defend it. (At least they won't be able to take your home while you are alive). \_ this is a totally different issue: ie. how to determine "fair market value" or "fair compensation." The issue at hand is one of viable use of eminent domain clause and what constitutes "public use." -nivra \_ I was just pointing out that compensation in this case will likely not be adequate. BUT, if anything can qualify as a public use (and anything the city says is a pub use seems to qualify under the Kelo view) compensation becomes VERY important. If the city can just walk up to a perfectly good home and say that it is taking it b/c some yuppie is willing to pay more for it and just pay some pittance where is the justice? \_ Re: the ad-absurdia claim that "there is no private property." The Conn. SC said: "This claim, while somewhat incalescent, affords us the opportunity to reiterate that an exercise of the eminent domain power is unreasonable, in violation of the public use clause, if the facts and circumstances of the particular case reveal that the taking specifically is intended to benefit a private party. Thus, we emphasize that our decision is not a license for the unchecked use of the eminent domain power as a tax revenue raising measure; rather, our holding is that rationally considered municipal economic development projects such as the development plan in the present case pass constitutional muster." -nivra \- again it does sound like there have been some iffy uses of eminent domain recently, but i havent read about them in depth. but the world is a complicated place. see again something like the pruneyard v robins case. property rights arent absolute or always trumps. similarly, simple "common sense" principles like "coming to a nuisance" dont always make the most sense. see e.g. spur v. del webb, and Guido Calabresi and Melamed: Property rules, liability rules and inalenability: one view of the cathedral, from the harvard law rev. --psb \_ There are two underlying principles to this decision: 1. Property should be put to the best possible use 2. The law should be allow rsrcs to be allocated in the manner that maximizes their use From a certain pov Ms. Kelo's use of the prop. was not the most profitable (ie best possible use) of the land; the property could be put to better use by Pfizer (or their proxies). Once the city decided that Pfizer could make better use of the land than Ms. Kelo, the duty of the cts is to see that this decision is implemented UNLESS it can be shown that the decision will not maximize the use of the property. If this is the view then Ms. Kelo bore the b/p to show that her use was as good or better than the proposed use - she could not show this, so her b/p was not met, so the city's wins. Case closed. Everyone go home - except Ms. Kelo, she doesn't have a home. \_ What? You actually believe those 'principles' and what follows from them? \_ Absolutely not, but that is the only way that I can make sense of this garbage. \_ This may need a Constitional amendment, from a first reading. -moderate \_ Yes, the majority ruling is constitutional and I agree insofar as this is correct within what's currently legislated. But, law doesn't provide for what's "ample and reasonable compensation." An amendment should probably address that to favor excessive recompense for the "condemned properties." After perusing the pdf opinion from the Conn. SC erikred posted, I agree that (1) public use for economic development should be allowed. (2) limits on this are a flexible and changing issue, and need to be determined case-by-case via the legislative and judicial system. In this case, the economic development in question was planned by the city for a large economic develop- ment zone, which happened to include Pfizer offices. There's also a marina, park, etc. Eventhough some of the specific land in question may be sold to a private entity(Pfizer), the plan, in whole, is justified under "public use." -nivra \_ You want case-by-case. I think raising the bar higher via Constitutional amendment is something which should be seriously considered. -moderate \_ I think recompense should be increased, but the correctness of interpreting "public use" --> "public purpose" is valid. case-by-case allows the correct judgment to be made in borderline public good/private benefit situations. If the recompense to the existing property owners is aug- mented, I don't see why "raising the bar" is needed. -nivra \_ Like I wrote before, a Constitutional amendment is something which should be seriously /considered/. I'm not sure the American people believe being paid "more" is sufficient for an interpretation of eminent domain that goes beyond transportation and military bases. -moderate \_ I parse "raising the bar" and "wider interpretation of eminent domain" as two different issues. Raising the bar is increasing the burden of proof that the economic development is public use. "wider interpretation" is changing the definition of "public use" -nivra \_ Let's just change the Constitution so it qualifies "for public use" with "limited to improving transportation infrastructure or in the interests of national security". -moderate \_ Opinion: This is bullshit. Eminent domain is one of those issues where I set the bar REALLY REALLY high for the government to even have a right to get involved directly. -- ilyas \_ In your opinion, which side is more strict constructionist -- interpreting the Constitution as it is written, as opposed to following the spirit of it as a loose constructionist? \_ Is this a joke? -- ilyas \_ No. \_ Your question is a tautology. -- ilyas \_ This discussion reminds me of something a guy I knew from the Caribbean said. He asked, "How come Americans can't own land?" Huh? "Well, do Americans have to rent the land from the government or something?" Uhhh.. no. "But you pay property tax. How can you say you own something when you have to pay someone to keep them from taking it from you?" Uhhhh... \_ This ruling is a disaster. Now any tract of land anywhere in the country is up for development, all a wealthy developer has to do is to pay off a city council, and the city council can make a case that the development will benefit the public by creating jobs or whatever, and you can kiss your house and your neighborhood goodbye! \_ Realistically speaking, I wonder how much an average Joe would have to spend to fight a dubious eminent domain claim in the courts? Could be a lot, I think. I'd just sell and forgo my rights, unless nice GOP people gave me money. \_ see ad-absurdia claim above. -nivra |
2005/6/23-25 [Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:38253 Activity:nil |
6/22 Rent or buy? You decide: http://tinyurl.com/9ll3u (cbs news) \_ The calucalator does not take Prop 13 into account, so the numbers are way off, especially near the end of 30 years. \_ I assume the calculator is National, not CA. How do you think prop 13 should skew it? Doesn't prop 13 hold the tax rate steady? You can set the rate on the calc. \_ It locks the tax to a percentage of the purchase price, not the current assessed value. |
2004/9/24-25 [Politics/Domestic/California, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:33742 Activity:very high |
9/24 I am annoyed by the Chron's sloppy reporting on the UC admission GPA increase. http://csua.org/u/971 In one paragraph, they talk about "4900 fewer students in the eligibility pool". In another paragraph, they talk about the smaller number of each racial group who would be admitted, but they do this trick that confuses members of the eligibility pool with the students actually admitted. (I imagine not that many 2.8 GPA students were admitted into UCB.) What I really want to know is how the policy would actually affect admissions, say by looking at admission statistics of the last several years. But the Chron deliberately, lazily, or misleadingly does not provide that information. Does anyone know? \_ I was admitted with a 2.8 highschool gpa. I agree that it's probably rare. There were also minimum SAT score requirements which were higher the farther your gpa was below 3.0, iirc. \_ You mean "the Chron's sloppy reporting." period. \_ I am not usually bothered by the Chron since I use other news sources most of the time. Thinking about it more though, I am somewhat worried that there are people who depend on it for their primary "in depth" news source. \_ I don't understand. If conditions are bad at your school, shouldn't it be easier to get a high GPA? \_ Easier given the same amount of effort, but if you've ever been to a bad school you'd understand why this is not necessarily true. Lots of kids are trying to survive, not get a high GPA. \_ Generally those kids aren't too worried about going to a UC either. \_ Which is the sad part, because they should be. To compare Beverly Hills High to Crenshaw High in terms of GPA is silly. It's probably *harder* to get a high GPA at a place like Crenshaw, despite less competition. \_ I agree with you there. Which is why we need to fix the schools, not make it easier to get into college. Then it's already too late. \_ What's that? The public schools are broken? But ... how can that be? Aren't they overseen by the ALMIGHTY STATE? WHAT WENT WRONG? It must be the greedy private interests that fucked up our schools! \_ In fact it was. Prop 13. \_ BWAHAHAHA! \_ Not Prop 13. Check out: http://makeashorterlink.com/?A18D12E59 [disguised wingnut link] \_ Read: http://www.ppic.org/content/pubs/R_1003HRR.pdf "Despite Proposition 13 and other limitations, state and local government spending in California in in line with spending in other states. In 1999-2000, state and local government spending per capita in California exceed the average of all other states by 9%." The lack of tax money is not a problem. What is a problem is how we choose to spend it. \_ is that adjusted for things like local cost of materials/cost of living? \_ Doesn't look like it. Nor the teachers' salaries, for that matter. \_ Ah, but what's spending as % of GDP? \_ California had good public schools before Prop 13. I am old enough to remember. \_ And free junior colleges. We REALLY need to reexamine. \_ And CA ranks near the bottom of the US in state spending per student \_ I don't think most people are against spending more on schools, if there was any chance of it getting better. Have you seen the schools? They're run my complete morons! \_ Have you considered working in the schools? It's terrible! The pay is shit, the hours are long and you have medeling from nosy parents and a school-board run by junior politicians. It's no wonder they can't attract good people! \_ Wow... how can this travesty happen with a STATE-RUN INSTITUTION? Surely, there must have been some sort of shadowy special-interest involvement from greedy multinational corporations that caused this! \_ Okay, think about it this way. How often have you received good service at a Denny's, or some shop at the mall, or first level tech support from a big company. If you don't pay enough, the good people won't stick around "for the love of it." \_ It is not relevant that CA had good schools before Prop 13. CA has plenty of tax revenue. The reason CA spends less on education is because we spend a smaller % of tax revenue on education (22% for CA versus 25% elsewhere). Read the PPIC article. Prop 13 is just a scapegoat. In the 1970s sale tax was 3% and houses cost $35K (i.e. property values far outstripped inflation). More taxes is not the answer. \_ What does California spend it tax money on then? I am genuninly curious. Do you have a reference? \_ Yes. THE LINK ABOVE TO PPIC says that. If you want to know everything broken down look here: http://makeashorterlink.com/?Q25E25F59 BTW, CA has the highest paid teachers in the nation. \_ they make TWO hunks of dirt a day! \_ http://www.edsource.org/sch_ca_us_pupil_xpn.cfm California lags far behind the rest of the nation in per pupil expenditures. \_ Try looking at: Serrano v. Priest |
2004/7/30-31 [Reference/RealEstate, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:32601 Activity:very high |
7/30 How do you try to save money? \_ The big things are obvious. It's the little things that add up real fast. My big pet peeve is credit cards and debt in general. I have never had a CC that had any sort of monthly/yearly/etc fees associated with simply holding it unused. I pay off my entire bill every month so I don't pay interest. I things I need. I buy very little crap that I merely want. A new ipod, cell phone, mega digital camera, faster computer, etc doesn't bring happiness. And lastly, the first thing my wife and I did after getting jobs was to immediately put all extra cash into paying off school loans and now we try to put extra cash against the mortgage which is our only remaining debt. \_ Eat out less! Including lunch. That's the biggest one for me. Get a copy of quicken or something and really keep a budget for a month or two. It sucks, but stick at it. Really look at what you are spending. Then you can try to devise a budget that trims some stuff that is excessive. If you are a gadget freak think about cutting down on your gadget budget, or having a gadget budget if you currently just sort of buy when you like. Oh and yeah, get a fixed amount from the bank every few days and try to pay for things in cash. It really does make you pay attention to how much you are spending on crap. \_ fuck money! money's a tool of the Man to keep us tied down to jobs we hate and toys we don't really need! we should tear down the banks and credit card agencies and revert to direct trade of goods and services. \_ Hi Paolo! \_ hey! that was me! -sax \_ Calculate your monthly expenses. Autodeposit this to your checking. Autodeposit some other amount into a Mutual Fund/Brokerage account where you don't see it and won't spend it. The rest is yours to spend \_ Make most purchases with cash, withdraw a fixed amount from the ATM once a week. Have to make the cash last the week. \_ sounds like it worked for you. did you have to cut back on expenses? what did you cut? \_ Eat out less at expensive places. When I get the craving, I cook something really nice for myself. Also, fewer impulse purchases and you start to thing of the credit card as only for major purchases so you don't just whip it out for some new shiny toy. Oh, and stay off online shopping sites, especially eBay. \_ direct deposit some money to a special account. \_ housing is ~1/2-1/3 of your salary. Once you've figured out how to reduce that cost, you've saved a lot. \_ The motd has previously established that owning real estate is A Good Thing; although you shouldn't buy more space than you need \_ just wait till the bubble pops... \_ Then what? I'll have a fixed rent I can afford and a house that falls all the way back down in value to what I paid for it - except my interest rate is lower now than it was then. How scary is that? \_ Uh, there's a thing called "property tax" that's based on the worth of the house, moron. People keep forgetting to factor the cost of that in. \_ Right....so when the bubble pops, you get a reappraisal and your prop. tax goes down... \_ Don't try to argue with the bitter renters. \_ Hey, if it makes you feel better about your shitty investments to think that all renters are bitter, then hey! Go for it! \_ You think you're reminding a homeowner about property tax? Writing those massive checks twice per year is a pretty good reminder, I think. \_ Don't have family, don't have a car, share your appartment/house with other roommates. \_ that worked 1 year after we graduated. But then my roomate got a gf. She told him to move out, and move out he did. Then they got married. Bought a house. Had a kid. Doesn't play computer games and doesn't hang out with his buddies. Does laundry and lawn and backyard work every weekend. Me? I'm still paying a shitload of rent in my apartment. At least no one bosses me around. Oh well. -getting old \_ Why don't you get a new roomate? \_ I went through a few, but they either moved out, got a gf, or both. Getting old. -getting old, 30 something \_ On average, how much of your time does it take to get a new roomate? And on average how much money do they end up paying you before they move out? How much is your time really worth? You must 'make' hundreds per hour when looking for a roomate! \_ But you can't run around naked when you have a roommate! And when having sex on the kitchen counter you gotta always keep one ear on the front door. \_ that's why it's good to have your roommate be the person you have sex with on the kitchen counter. then you can save money *and* listen to motorhead while having sex on the kitchen counter. \_ A car should last 10 years easily. Buy a 2-3 year old car, take good care of it and drive it into the ground. You only need a new car if your job depends on your image, and if you're a Sodan it probably doesn't. \_ I don't think that has much to do with sodans -- I think that's just generally true. CSUA is a surpisingly diverse crowd -- it's too bad that, as a group, we've all allowed the 9-5 suit types and ex-fratboys to define our self-image. I'm not sure what's worse: that we've bought into the stereotype of computer tech people as overweight, socially clueless, stinky people - or the type of people that we're bought into that image from. \_ The peole who's jobs depend on having a new car are people \_ The peole whose jobs depend on having a new car are people like car dealers, real estate agents and plastic surgeons. \_ you left out drug dealers, pimps, and lawyers. \_ I get lots of h0t aZn ch1x with my new car. \_ You get Ac-ur-Uh Integ-rah hah?!!!!1! \_ Why do you let other people define you? Either you're a smelly geek with no social skills or you're not. If you are then someone else calling you that is just the truth. Deal. If you're not, then who gives a shit what they say? \_ Maxing out my 401(k) and ESPP. Making extra payments to my mortgage principal when my bank account has a high balance. \_ don't make extra mortgage payments if your interest rate is low. You could make more income with your extra money. \_ yea, after tax deductions a 30-year 6% interest becomes like 4%. Not that hard to beat it by investing. \_ Just play the stock market and earn big bucks like me. \_ Get married. It worked for me. \- you know i think prior to everything else is to "profile" your spending. if you spend $50/week on drinks in bars, that's better place to optimize than "dont buy the da vinci code, get it at the library" if you amazon budget is $300/yr --psb |
2004/3/2 [Politics/Domestic/California/Arnold, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:12483 Activity:very high |
3/2 Today is super tuesday. Don't forget to vote. Here's the obPoll: Kerry: .. (lemmings) Edwards: . Kucinich: .. Sharpton: . Neither: .. yes on prop 55: ..... no on prop 55: .. yes on prop 56: ... no on prop 56: ... yes on prop 57: .. no on prop 57: ... yes on prop 58: .. no on prop 58: .... yes on Measure 2: . no on Measure 2: . tired of polls: .. don't care: . \_ not so. there are several other very important issues on there even if you think the primary is over. \_ votes formatted not because I'm anal, but because I'm so incredibly bored. :-) \_ No open primaries this year. This sucks if you are an independent but want to actually have a say in what your choices for the prez vote are. \_ You can still vote for Nader... \_ If you want to have a say, you should have registered as a Dem for this election, then switched back before November. If you can't figure out how to game the system, you have no place whining about it. \_ Not true. You can request a Democrat ballot if you want. I am an independent and I voted for a Democrat in the primary. \_ Yeah, those damn parties thinking they should base the primary on who the party members choose... \_ Let the parties hold their own elections then instead of having the government foot the bill. \_ The independent in front of me in line asked for a republican ballot. There's nothing contested in any election for the republicans. Why would he ask for that instead of the democrat ballot where he can make a difference? \_ Which prop is about raising the bridge tolls? I'm so ignorant. \_ Measure 2, comes with good things and bad things. Translink would be great, but ferries are a waste of money as is extending BART to Byron. \_ The problem with M2 is it raises the bridge toll but uses the funds for many other unrelated projects. So it taxes a small number of people but asks a larger number of people if it is ok to tax that smaller number for the larger group's benefit without cost to that larger group. This is the worst form of taxation possible. I voted against it merely on those grounds even though we need to improve the transit system. And no, I don't drive the bay bridge regularly. Maybe twice a year. \_ I agree that ferries suck, but BART builds slowly and it makes sense to build in the direction of future growth, which is to the east. \_ BART is a ridiculous boondoggle, far too expensive and slow to cover the distances it's trying to cover. The more we extend BART, the longer it will be until we have a decent transit system in the Bay Area. That said, I begrudgingly voted for RM2. -tom \_ Slow? 32min from Hayward to downtown SF during morning commute hours seems pretty fast to me. Can't beat that even if you're carpooling with two passenges. \_ you *can* beat that if you're using a train system in any major city in Europe or Japan. And the ride from Byron is likely to be more than an hour. -tom \_ How often do those train systems stop? Thanks. Let's get some apples/apples here. Put away the oranges. \_ Heavy-rail systems with stops at similar distance to East Bay BART are much, much faster; top speeds 50-100% higher than BART. In dense areas, systems like the London Underground do just as well in comparison. -tom \_ And cost how much? Are you seriously saying we should replace BART with a new system that will cost more to run and run louder through all the neighborhoods? \_ No system will cost more to run than BART--standard rail costs quite a bit less than non-standard rail. And have you ever actually been to another country? The trains are quieter than BART. -tom \_ Have you ever been to New York? You don't have to go to another country to beat BART. \_ How many trains have to go by before you can be pushed into one in the Tokyo area? \_ let me get this straight--BART is better because it's really slow, so no one uses it, so the trains aren't as crowded? -tom \_ No, more like people use trains because the population density is so insanely high they live like rats. Is that what you want? \_ How long does it take to get to the station and find parking in the morning? \_ There are always more than a hundred empty spaces in the parking structure even at 9am everyday. \_ Which parking lot are you at? If I'm not there by 8:30, it's completely filled. \_ 32 minutes? I'm a bit further out on that line and it isn't 32 minutes for that part of it. \_ Glen Park BART is 12 minutes to Montgomery, which is faster than you can drive that route on a fast motorcycle. I know, I have tried. -ausman \_ How is a proposition different from a measure? \_ Prop=Statewide, Measure [1-9]=County, Measure [A-Z] = City \_ Why are they trying to fund healthcare with a sales tax increase? It's regressive taxation and falls whenever the economy is in trouble. Not to mention it harms the local economy more than an income or property tax because it's easier for people to shop somewhere else than to move or change jobs. \_ Because nothing but a sales tax increase will ever pass county wide. Any policymaker worth their spit would prefer an income or property tax but they are generally impossible to pass in CA. \_ with good reason. taxes are already too high. \_ Where are they trying to do this? \_ Alameda county. Proposed sales tax increase to 8.75% It's a worthy cause, being funded in one of the most ass-ways possible. \_ So for the "yes on 55" folks, why do you want to add a $12B bond with $12B interest to the CA finance mess? \_ Because it is an investment for the future, because I think education is usually money well spent, because CA spends less than it should on education, because we are in a recession and I believe in Keynesian economics. Yeah, I know we will probably not still be in a recession by the time the money is spent, but the CA finance mess is not a good reason to not spend money on worthy causes, since the economy will be better sooner or later, probably sooner. \_ We already spend more on education/pupil than most states and get the least for it. Education doesn't need more money. It needs a structural overhaul. \_ Somewhat untrue: Education in CA needs more money AND they need to spend it more wisely. \_ I don't think it's a case of "spend it more wisely" but restructure the entire educational system. The people in charge from the top all the way down plus the teacher's unions all have to go. Until that happens, no amount of money will improve CA education. \_ Wrong. California ranks 33rd in per pupil spending. We spend like a poor Southern state and wonder why we get crappy results. CA needs to spend more on schools. http://www.edsource.org/sch_expend.cfm \_ Dump the illegals and then recalculate, or get a chart that shows absolute numbers which your chart is hiding or better yet, do both. \_ Prop 55 includes a $300m grant to build more charter schools. On this basis alone, I cannot, in good conscience, support it. \_ Building schools makes no sense when the kids at the current schools don't even have books or teachers. This is money poorly spent in the name of education. \_ For the "yes on 56" folks, why do you want to lower the number of legislators needed to increase taxes to 55% from 2/3? \_ The state budget has been in chaos over not being able to return tax rates to an equitable level. Giving the legistature the ability to actually do their job sounds like a good idea, unless you are one of the many in CA who doesn't like paying for what we have here. \_ If you paid the taxes *I* pay you'd think they're already too high. Go get a real job and pay that shit yourself for a few years and we'll see what you think "equitable" looks like. \_ I for one think welfare queens should start paying their fair share. \_ What percentage of the state budget is spent by your so-called "welfare queens"? Do you even know? \_ I already pay more than my share for what "we" have here. \_ If you really fell that way, why not leave? \_ The weather which is not something improved by increased taxes. \_ Because it only takes 51% to lower them. \_ Is that true? I thought *all* tax legislation had to be passed by the same amount. \_ and when was the last time your state taxes were lowered? \_ It's sad how easy y'all get brainwashed by right wing talk radio. \_ When was the last time taxes were lowered? \_ Last fall, by Herr Gropenator. \_ Case in point. Look for a reference to a "car tax" before, oh, '96. \_ No taxes were lowered by the Governor. http://www.igs.berkeley.edu/library/htCAVehicleLicense2003.html \_ I wonder how it feels to be you and be wrong about everything, all the time. \_ I see a fee being lowered after it was raised earlier. Where is your tax? Do you think I was unaware of the VLF being lowered? You're not even remotely as clever as you think you are. \_ In real dollars, property taxes go down every day. Thanks, prop 13. \_ Until you move. \_ Yes, thanks prop 13 or I couldn't afford to own a home. My parents would already be in the street. \_ Prop 13 doesn't do anything to help new homeowners; it only helps people with hundreds of thousands of dollars of equity in their homes keep from contributing to the community. The idea of people losing their homes over property taxes is a myth. \_ A myth? I was here and saw it happen. It is real life to me, not some history book lesson. I lived in pre-prop 13 CA. Did you? \_ Yeah, I was here too. We used to have good schools before Prop 13 dried up the revenue for them. CA has been on a slow downward spiral ever since it was passed. \_ Yeah, the state was better bankrupting families so they'd leave and take their kids with them. Who wants to spend money educating all those middle class kids? \_ Uh huh. Without Prop 13 my taxes would be up 40% over the last two years. Since they are already $5K now that's another $2K. I wouldn't lose my house, but I'd suffer. Eventually, I might lose my house if the taxes double/triple. \_ So? Suffer away. It's market economics. You could always move instead. Also, without prop 13 the burden would be spread everywhere. \_ It's not market economics. What good does it do me if my house is worth 20x what it used to be? I should pay tax on it when I sell and not before, like with stock. \_ I think Mr. I Hate Prop 13 is just a bitter apartment dweller who gets off every night thinking tomorrow will be the day the housing bubble bursts and he can finally afford a house. \_ property taxes pay for the services which support the value of your house, like police, fire, and roads. The analogy to stocks is totally missing the point. -tom \_ So if my house is worth 20x what my neighbor's house is worth then I should pay 20x more for this? \_ I think so. -!tom \_ Even if it doesn't cost 20x to supply services to his house? He uses the same amount of road, fire, police and other services. His more expensive house does not put a bigger drain on the local services. Let me guess, you're not a home owner and don't work yet, either? \_ I am a homeowner, and have been working for 15 years. Try again, anonymous coward. -tom \_ You 'work' for UC and live in Oakland. \_ How much more will you lose if your block goes up in flames? Or if property values crash because of high crime and shitty schools? -tom \_ He's getting the same service as the shitty house next door. Will the local fire department make his fire a priority when both houses catch fire at the same time? Not a chance. Will the cop go to his house first? Nope. \_ Because it is past time that California raised its taxes. \_ no its past time California lowered its expendatures. \_ Okay, where? (And no, deleting my question does not count as a win.) \_ I wasn't here when your question was deleted. Where? 2 things for starters: revamp the educational system, and stop spending money on illegal aliens, then we'll have a chance to see what The People's real needs are and go from there. \_ California already spends less on education than most states. This has been the case for a very long time. \_ I didn't say spend less. I said revamp. The entire system is broken and needs to be redone. \_ None of this really matters as long as the e-voting machines can be shown to be easily compromised and voters are not required to show ID in order to vote. Aargh! \_ I had to show ID this morning. \_ Where did you vote? (City, County) \_ Dublin. They asked everyone for ID. \_ When I was voting this morning I saw an old person asking about paper receipts and audit trails. It made me happy. \_ In San Francisco, we vote by filling in lines with a pen on a piece of paper, which is then read by an optical scanner. This seems like an ideal solution - not prone to error or fraud, easy to understand for everyone, leaves a permanent record for recount, and not labor intensive for the precincts. Why do other counties insist on using such awful solutions like Diebold? \_ Who keeps the piece of paper, the voter or the polling station? If it's the voter, this system is highly vulnerable to verifiable vote-selling. If it's put in a lock-box at the polling place, you're in much better shape. \_ The actual ballot with the pen markings is fed into the optical scanner by the voter themselves - after this it is locked away for safekeeping. The voter keeps only the receipt torn from the top of the sheet. See here: http://www.fairvote.org/administration/votetech.htm Scroll down to "optical scanning." \_ Wow, that rocks! Thank you! Now if only Alameda County would implement this. |
2004/3/2 [Politics/Domestic/California, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:12482 Activity:very high |
3/2 Does anyone know how long can you drive with an expired vehicle registration sticker? This morning I realized my car has an expired Feb sticker, and I wonder if I will get ticketed. But I paid registration fee but haven't received the sticker. \_ I had a friend who had Michigan tags that were expired for more than a year. He got pulled over, ticketed for speeding but the cop never realized that he had expired tags. I'm not sure they're that observant. \_ until you get caught. Youmay be able to argue that it is paid and only get a fix-it ticket for not having the sticker. \_ I went all of last year without one (had it but put it on in February, after it expired) and I still don't have one for this year. I've been pulled over once for speeding but the cop said nothing. It's an old car, maybe they're taking pity on me? \_ you can drive as long as you want, but you're eligible to be ticketed the instant it expires. if it's expired for more than 6 months, they can impound your car if they want to. \_ Same situation happened to me and I got pulled over for speeding. Cop can look up your registration and verify it's paid. Still got the speeding ticket though. \_ I always pay late. You can avoid the ticket up to a couple months in but after a while the cops and esp. chp get anal about it. If you don't drive on the highway much you might be able to get away with it. However, your car might be missing if you leave it on the street and they decide to tow. \_ In California, it's standard practice to get one month's grace. If your sticker says FEB, it's policy to ticket you on April 1. Parking enforcement left two tickets for me over two weeks in L.A., but they also make a business of ticketing residents who park on the wrong side of the street during street-cleaning days. \_ Depending on the city they will pull you over just for expired tags, I have gotten tickets in SJ and Castro Valley. -oj I have gotten fix-it tickets in downtown SJ and Castro Valley, from a cop who was directly behind me when I was stopped at a light. e/2 Today is super tuesday. Don't forget to vote. Here's the obPoll: Kerry: .. Kerry: .. (lemmings) Edwards: . Kucinich: .. Sharpton: . Neither: . yes on prop 55: ..... no on prop 55: . yes on prop 56: ... no on prop 56: .. yes on prop 57: .. no on prop 57: ... yes on prop 58: . no on prop 58: .... tired of polls: . \_ Don't care -- the primary have already been decided so there's no more point in voting. don't care: . \_ No open primaries this year. This sucks if you are an independent but want to actually have a say in what your choices for the prez vote are. \_ Not true. You can request a Democrat ballot if you want. \_ You can still vote for Nader... \_ If you want to have a say, you should have registered as a Dem for this election, then switched back before November. If you can't figure out how to game the system, you have no place whining about it. \_ Not true. You can request a Democrat ballot if you want. I am an independent and I voted for a Democrat in the primary. \_ Yeah, those damn parties thinking they should base the primary on who the party members choose... \_ Let the parties hold their own elections then instead of having the government foot the bill. \_ Don't care -- the primary have already been decided so there's no more point in voting. \_ Odd...my poll responses were overwritten. Or maybe the censor is enforcing the fact that nobody cares? \_ Which prop is about raising the bridge tolls? I'm so ignorant. \_ Measure 2, comes with good things and bad things. Translink would be great, but ferries are a waste of money as is extending BART to Byron. \_ I agree that ferries suck, but BART builds slowly and it makes sense to build in the direction of future growth, which is to the east. \_ How is a proposition different from a measure? \_ Prop=Statewide, Measure [1-9]=County, Measure [A-Z] = City \_ Why are they trying to fund healthcare with a sales tax increase? It's regressive taxation and falls whenever the economy is in trouble. Not to mention it harms the local economy more than an income or property tax because it's easier for people to shop somewhere else than to move or change jobs. \_ Because nothing but a sales tax increase will ever pass county wide. Any policymaker worth their spit would prefer an income or property tax but they are generally impossible to pass in CA. \_ Where are they trying to do this? \_ Alameda county. Proposed sales tax increase to 8.75% It's a worthy cause, being funded in one of the most ass-ways possible. \_ So for the "yes on 55" folks, why do you want to add a $12B bond with $12B interest to the CA finance mess? \_ Because it is an investment for the future, because I think education is usually money well spent, because CA spends less than it should on education, because we are in a recession and I believe in Keynesian economics. Yeah, I know we will probably not still be in a recession by the time the money is spent, but the CA finance mess is not a good reason to not spend money on worthy causes, since the economy will be better sooner or later, probably sooner. \_ Prop 55 includes a $300m grant to build more charter schools. On this basis alone, I cannot, in good conscience, support it. \_ Building schools makes no sense when the kids at the current schools don't even have books or teachers. This is money poorly spent in the name of education. \_ For the "yes on 56" folks, why do you want to lower the number of legislators needed to increase taxes to 55% from 2/3? \_ The state budget has been in chaos over not being able to return tax rates to an equitable level. Giving the legistature the ability to actually do their job sounds like a good idea, unless you are one of the many in CA who doesn't like paying for what we have here. \_ I for one think welfare queens should start paying their fair share. \_ What percentage of the state budget is spent by your so-called "welfare queens"? Do you even know? \_ I already pay more than my share for what "we" have here. \_ If you really fell that way, why not leave? \_ Ah. "Love it or leave it." If they make me pay even more for what "we" have then maybe I will. Lots of Californians are. \_ Because it only takes 51% to lower them. \_ Is that true? I thought *all* tax legislation had to be passed by the same amount. \_ and when was the last time your state taxes were lowered? \_ It's sad how easy y'all get brainwashed by right wing talk radio. \_ Last fall, by Herr Gropenator. \_ Case in point. Look for a reference to a "car tax" before, oh, '96. \_ In real dollars, property taxes go down every day. Thanks, prop 13. \_ Until you move. \_ Because it is past time that California raised its taxes. \_ no its past time California lowered its expendatures. \_ Okay, show me where. \_ None of this really matters as long as the e-voting machines can be shown to be easily compromised and voters are not required to show ID in order to vote. Aargh! \_ When I was voting this morning I saw an old person asking about paper receipts and audit trails. It made me happy. \_ In San Francisco, we vote by filling in lines with a pen on a piece of paper, which is then read by an optical scanner. This seems like an ideal solution - not prone to error or fraud, easy to understand for everyone, leaves a permanent record for recount, and not labor intensive for the precincts. Why do other counties insist on using such awful solutions like Diebold? \_ Who keeps the piece of paper, the voter or the polling station? If it's the voter, this system is highly vulnerable to verifiable vote-selling. If it's put in a lock-box at the polling place, you're in much better shape. \_ The actual ballot with the pen markings is fed into the optical scanner by the voter themselves - after this it is locked away for safekeeping. The voter keeps only the receipt torn from the top of the sheet. See here: http://www.fairvote.org/administration/votetech.htm Scroll down to "optical scanning." \_ Wow, that rocks! Thank you! Now if only Alameda County would implement this. |
2004/3/2-3 [Politics/Domestic/California/Arnold, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:12481 Activity:high |
3/2 Can any car/bike racing enthusiasts recommend which nearby track is better (i.e., Laguna Seca vs. Sears Pt)? \_ Don't forget Thunderhill \_ Is that a recommendation? \_ Thunderhill is the one I would recommend if you are running and not just watching. It is a great place to learn and has a lot of run off room. \_ seconded. Thunderhill is cheaper than Laguna Seca, and safer than Sears/Infineon. --jwang, ex-AFM#911 e/2 Today is super tuesday. Don't forget to vote. Here's the obPoll: Kerry: .. (lemmings) Kerry: ... (lemmings) <-- whatever Edwards: . Kucinich: .. Sharpton: . Neither: .. yes on prop 55: ..... no on prop 55: .. yes on prop 56: ... no on prop 56: ... yes on prop 57: .. no on prop 57: ... yes on prop 58: .. no on prop 58: .... yes on Measure 2: . no on Measure 2: . tired of polls: .. don't care: . \_ not so. there are several other very important issues on there even if you think the primary is over. \_ votes formatted not because I'm anal, but because I'm so incredibly bored. :-) \_ No open primaries this year. This sucks if you are an independent but want to actually have a say in what your choices for the prez vote are. \_ You can still vote for Nader... \_ If you want to have a say, you should have registered as a Dem for this election, then switched back before November. If you can't figure out how to game the system, you have no place whining about it. \_ Not true. You can request a Democrat ballot if you want. I am an independent and I voted for a Democrat in the primary. \_ Yeah, those damn parties thinking they should base the primary on who the party members choose... \_ Let the parties hold their own elections then instead of having the government foot the bill. \_ The independent in front of me in line asked for a republican ballot. There's nothing contested in any election for the republicans. Why would he ask for that instead of the democrat ballot where he can make a difference? \_ Which prop is about raising the bridge tolls? I'm so ignorant. \_ Measure 2, comes with good things and bad things. Translink would be great, but ferries are a waste of money as is extending BART to Byron. \_ The problem with M2 is it raises the bridge toll but uses the funds for many other unrelated projects. So it taxes a small number of people but asks a larger number of people if it is ok to tax that smaller number for the larger group's benefit without cost to that larger group. This is the worst form of taxation possible. I voted against it merely on those grounds even though we need to improve the transit system. And no, I don't drive the bay bridge regularly. Maybe twice a year. \_ I agree that ferries suck, but BART builds slowly and it makes sense to build in the direction of future growth, which is to the east. \_ BART is a ridiculous boondoggle, far too expensive and slow to cover the distances it's trying to cover. The more we extend BART, the longer it will be until we have a decent transit system in the Bay Area. That said, I begrudgingly voted for RM2. -tom \_ Slow? 32min from Hayward to downtown SF during morning commute hours seems pretty fast to me. Can't beat that even if you're carpooling with two passenges. \_ you *can* beat that if you're using a train system in any major city in Europe or Japan. And the ride from Byron is likely to be more than an hour. -tom \_ How often do those train systems stop? Thanks. Let's get some apples/apples here. Put away the oranges. \_ Heavy-rail systems with stops at similar distance to East Bay BART are much, much faster; top speeds 50-100% higher than BART. In dense areas, systems like the London Underground do just as well in comparison. -tom \_ And cost how much? Are you seriously saying we should replace BART with a new system that will cost more to run and run louder through all the neighborhoods? \_ No system will cost more to run than BART--standard rail costs quite a bit less than non-standard rail. And have you ever actually been to another country? The trains are quieter than BART. -tom \_ Have you ever been to New York? You don't have to go to another country to beat BART. \_ NY is much better than BART, but it's not particularly fast or quiet. -tom \_ How many trains have to go by before you can be pushed into one in the Tokyo area? \_ let me get this straight--BART is better because it's really slow, so no one uses it, so the trains aren't as crowded? -tom \_ No, more like people use trains because the population density is so insanely high they live like rats. Is that what you want? \_ How long does it take to get to the station and find parking in the morning? \_ There are always more than a hundred empty spaces in the parking structure even at 9am everyday. \_ Which parking lot are you at? If I'm not there by 8:30, it's completely filled. \_ 32 minutes? I'm a bit further out on that line and it isn't 32 minutes for that part of it. \_ Glen Park BART is 12 minutes to Montgomery, which is faster than you can drive that route on a fast motorcycle. I know, I have tried. -ausman \_ How is a proposition different from a measure? \_ Prop=Statewide, Measure [1-9]=County, Measure [A-Z] = City \_ Why are they trying to fund healthcare with a sales tax increase? It's regressive taxation and falls whenever the economy is in trouble. Not to mention it harms the local economy more than an income or property tax because it's easier for people to shop somewhere else than to move or change jobs. \_ Because nothing but a sales tax increase will ever pass county wide. Any policymaker worth their spit would prefer an income or property tax but they are generally impossible to pass in CA. \_ with good reason. taxes are already too high. \_ Where are they trying to do this? \_ Alameda county. Proposed sales tax increase to 8.75% It's a worthy cause, being funded in one of the most ass-ways possible. \_ So for the "yes on 55" folks, why do you want to add a $12B bond with $12B interest to the CA finance mess? \_ Because it is an investment for the future, because I think education is usually money well spent, because CA spends less than it should on education, because we are in a recession and I believe in Keynesian economics. Yeah, I know we will probably not still be in a recession by the time the money is spent, but the CA finance mess is not a good reason to not spend money on worthy causes, since the economy will be better sooner or later, probably sooner. \_ We already spend more on education/pupil than most states and get the least for it. Education doesn't need more money. It needs a structural overhaul. \_ Somewhat untrue: Education in CA needs more money AND they need to spend it more wisely. \_ I don't think it's a case of "spend it more wisely" but restructure the entire educational system. The people in charge from the top all the way down plus the teacher's unions all have to go. Until that happens, no amount of money will improve CA education. \_ Wrong. California ranks 33rd in per pupil spending. We spend like a poor Southern state and wonder why we get crappy results. CA needs to spend more on schools. http://www.edsource.org/sch_expend.cfm \_ Dump the illegals and then recalculate, or get a chart that shows absolute numbers which your chart is hiding or better yet, do both. \_ Prop 55 includes a $300m grant to build more charter schools. On this basis alone, I cannot, in good conscience, support it. \_ Building schools makes no sense when the kids at the current schools don't even have books or teachers. This is money poorly spent in the name of education. \_ For the "yes on 56" folks, why do you want to lower the number of legislators needed to increase taxes to 55% from 2/3? \_ The state budget has been in chaos over not being able to return tax rates to an equitable level. Giving the legistature the ability to actually do their job sounds like a good idea, unless you are one of the many in CA who doesn't like paying for what we have here. \_ If you paid the taxes *I* pay you'd think they're already too high. Go get a real job and pay that shit yourself for a few years and we'll see what you think "equitable" looks like. \_ I for one think welfare queens should start paying their fair share. \_ What percentage of the state budget is spent by your so-called "welfare queens"? Do you even know? \_ I already pay more than my share for what "we" have here. \_ If you really fell that way, why not leave? \_ The weather which is not something improved by increased taxes. \_ Because it only takes 51% to lower them. \_ Is that true? I thought *all* tax legislation had to be passed by the same amount. \_ and when was the last time your state taxes were lowered? \_ It's sad how easy y'all get brainwashed by right wing talk radio. \_ When was the last time taxes were lowered? \_ Last fall, by Herr Gropenator. \_ Case in point. Look for a reference to a "car tax" before, oh, '96. \_ No taxes were lowered by the Governor. http://www.igs.berkeley.edu/library/htCAVehicleLicense2003.html \_ I wonder how it feels to be you and be wrong about everything, all the time. \_ I see a fee being lowered after it was raised earlier. Where is your tax? Do you think I was unaware of the VLF being lowered? You're not even remotely as clever as you think you are. \_ In real dollars, property taxes go down every day. Thanks, prop 13. \_ Until you move. \_ Yes, thanks prop 13 or I couldn't afford to own a home. My parents would already be in the street. \_ Prop 13 doesn't do anything to help new homeowners; it only helps people with hundreds of thousands of dollars of equity in their homes keep from contributing to the community. The idea of people losing their homes over property taxes is a myth. \_ A myth? I was here and saw it happen. It is real life to me, not some history book lesson. I lived in pre-prop 13 CA. Did you? \_ Yeah, I was here too. We used to have good schools before Prop 13 dried up the revenue for them. CA has been on a slow downward spiral ever since it was passed. \_ Yeah, the state was better bankrupting families so they'd leave and take their kids with them. Who wants to spend money educating all those middle class kids? \_ Uh huh. Without Prop 13 my taxes would be up 40% over the last two years. Since they are already $5K now that's another $2K. I wouldn't lose my house, but I'd suffer. Eventually, I might lose my house if the taxes double/triple. \_ So? Suffer away. It's market economics. You could always move instead. Also, without prop 13 the burden would be spread everywhere. \_ It's not market economics. What good does it do me if my house is worth 20x what it used to be? I should pay tax on it when I sell and not before, like with stock. \_ I think Mr. I Hate Prop 13 is just a bitter apartment dweller who gets off every night thinking tomorrow will be the day the housing bubble bursts and he can finally afford a house. \_ property taxes pay for the services which support the value of your house, like police, fire, and roads. The analogy to stocks is totally missing the point. -tom \_ So if my house is worth 20x what my neighbor's house is worth then I should pay 20x more for this? \_ I think so. -!tom \_ Even if it doesn't cost 20x to supply services to his house? He uses the same amount of road, fire, police and other services. His more expensive house does not put a bigger drain on the local services. Let me guess, you're not a home owner and don't work yet, either? \_ I am a homeowner, and have been working for 15 years. Try again, anonymous coward. -tom \_ You 'work' for UC and live in Oakland. \_ How do either of these points matter to the discussion? And why do you put "work" in quotation marks? Because I didn't get laid off with the rest of the dotbombers? -tom \_ How much more will you lose if your block goes up in flames? Or if property values crash because of high crime and shitty schools? -tom \_ He's getting the same service as the shitty house next door. Will the local fire department make his fire a priority when both houses catch fire at the same time? Not a chance. Will the cop go to his house first? Nope. \_ You didn't address my point. If property values drop by 50%, Mr. Expensive House will lose a lot more money than Mr. Cheap House; therefore, Mr. Expensive House has more personal interest in services which support property values. -tom \_ You think this relationship is linear? When the house price doubles, does the cost of these services also double? \_ Because it is past time that California raised its taxes. \_ no its past time California lowered its expendatures. \_ Okay, where? (And no, deleting my question does not count as a win.) \_ I wasn't here when your question was deleted. Where? 2 things for starters: revamp the educational system, and stop spending money on illegal aliens, then we'll have a chance to see what The People's real needs are and go from there. \_ California already spends less on education than most states. This has been the case for a very long time. \_ I didn't say spend less. I said revamp. The entire system is broken and needs to be redone. \_ illegal alien is a federal issue, not state one. I think it's unfair to ask California to bear the burden of Federal government's failure to guard its borders. \_ None of this really matters as long as the e-voting machines can be shown to be easily compromised and voters are not required to show ID in order to vote. Aargh! \_ I had to show ID this morning. \_ Where did you vote? (City, County) \_ Dublin. They asked everyone for ID. \_ When I was voting this morning I saw an old person asking about paper receipts and audit trails. It made me happy. \_ In San Francisco, we vote by filling in lines with a pen on a piece of paper, which is then read by an optical scanner. This seems like an ideal solution - not prone to error or fraud, easy to understand for everyone, leaves a permanent record for recount, and not labor intensive for the precincts. Why do other counties insist on using such awful solutions like Diebold? \_ Who keeps the piece of paper, the voter or the polling station? If it's the voter, this system is highly vulnerable to verifiable vote-selling. If it's put in a lock-box at the polling place, you're in much better shape. \_ The actual ballot with the pen markings is fed into the optical scanner by the voter themselves - after this it is locked away for safekeeping. The voter keeps only the receipt torn from the top of the sheet. See here: http://www.fairvote.org/administration/votetech.htm Scroll down to "optical scanning." \_ Wow, that rocks! Thank you! Now if only Alameda County would implement this. |
2003/10/6-8 [Politics/Domestic/California/Arnold, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:10486 Activity:high |
10/5 Arnold's Enron Secret http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=16902 \_ That guy sounded compelling except a) no references and b) the "Hitlerian mustache" comment at the end. \_ and umm, isn't the state budget deficit more like 36 billion? \_ Thanks to cuts, cuts, cuts, and the car tax, we're passing $8 billion to next year. \_ I believe there were something like $11B in loans to get through the year. That's going to hurt, especially with the piss-poor bond rating CA has now. \_ The courts over turned the loans as illegal. No loans to carry over into next year. The budget is busted. Now they *must* raise taxes or cut all the stuff they added in last 5 years. If we have 1994 levels of income we should roll back spending to the same level. End of story. \_ They're doing this in Alabama. Its great! High school kids are paying textbook fees and they've fired half the bailiffs in the state, among many other instances of "fraud and abuse" ferreted out. \_ Kids here already didn't have books. They need to break the teacher's union so the money being dumped into education will actually get to the kids. \_ GAH! More like they need to break the text book oligarchy's stranglehold and move to free Internet-published text books. Need chapter 7? Print it out on recyclyed paper. \_ Yeah, we all know how accurate the information on the Internet is. \_ You'd be surprised at how bad some textbooks are. \_ If the state can dictate curriculum, why can't it write and publish online text- books? \_ Do both. I had forgotten about the textbook industry's crimes. Bust the teacher's union and the textbook industry as well. Works for me. --guy you replied to about unions \_ Just raise property tax to levels similar to other states. \_ Then the only people left in the state would be the rich you hate so much and the illegals tending their gardens and raising their children. The only way to pay property tax on a home that's gone up in price in a state where income increases don't match housing value increases is to sell your home and leave the state. That's why we had prop 13 in the first place. I'm trying not to be overly rude here but other states don't have our whacked out property value rate of increase vs. income rate increase #s. \_ That income and property values are so out of whack is indication that something is wrong with the property values. Don't worry, lots of people would move in from out of state to take over once the property values go down. Stupid Californians fucked up their state. They don't deserve to run it anymore. Get the heck out. \_ More people are already moving in, right now. That's what makes property values so high. It isn't something you can legislate away and any _public_ official who tried to destroy property values would be hung in public and rightly so. \_ Actually there is a net outflow of people to other states. \_ But total increase in population due to immigration. \_ Property values held up well in all the US metropolitan areas even though they have higher property taxes. Seems like there is a lot of worry about property values in California. Smells like a bubble to me. It's going to be pricked one way or another. Crappy economy, high crimes, lousy educational system, lack of business investments, high income people from other states not moving to California because of expensive houses, and high income taxes, etc., bankrupt state government. None of the above will help with property values \_ So many times people have predicted this for the very same reasons, since at least the early 60s. So many times they have been wrong. \_ If that happened probably 1/2 the state would have to sell their houses tomorrow and go back to renting.. property values would plummet plummet, markets would crumble crumble... sorry, Hudson Hawk moment. But it's true. \_ Raise property tax while reducing income tax. Burst the housing bubble. This will attract lots of high income people from out of state to come to the state, and attract business investments too. \_ Reduce income tax? How exactly is that going to help all the old people living in their home for the last 40 years which is now worth so much on paper that their social security can't cover even a small part of the tax without prop13 laws to protect them? You either weren't here when prop13 was passed, you're too young to remember, or you're a mean vicious person who wants to destroy people's lives. I prefer to think you're just young. It makes me feel better to think the least worst thing about you. \_ Arnold and Buffett are going to repeal prop 13. \_ Heard of home equity loan? What about old people who rent, or who live with reason I will not vote for him. there's just too many others. their relatives and are still working to make ends meet? Or old people who depend on their children (who pay income taxes) for support? \_ I heard about it last week. Sounds credible but that's not the reason I will not vote for him. there are just too many others. The main reason is that he's clueless based on what he said he will do. For example, he wanted to open the book and audit everything. That sounds good to uninfomed Californians, but CA already has independent auditors to do that (according to SF Chronicle) and the state budget is online for anyone view it Second example, he wants to repeal the VLF. (It's nice for me, since I drive an expensive car.) The problem is he couldn't explain how he'll get the $4B to replace the VLF. Repealling the \_ they should roll back to 1994 population, housing prices, gas prices, etc. sources of revenue to fill it. Arnie will provide. VLF is devasting to the local governments if he can't find other sources of revenue to fill it. \_ Don't worry your pretty lil head about such complex things. Arnie will provide. \_ You misspelled "hooters." \_ If you're truly concerned about the economy, you should be voting for Tom. \_ Guess how much of California's energy Enron supplied during the summer of 2001 - less than 4 %. \_ I don't see how that makes them any less sleazy, or how it changes Arnold's intent in participating. \_ There was no fraud accusations against Enron until the fall, the company was solvent. Gray Davis had many of these these meetings with Enron, as he should have, Enron was the largest energy company in the nation. Davis has yet to return 100's thousands from Enron. \_ I'm sure there's a lot more to the story than this. There were several suppliers taking advantage of the badly-deregulated system to gouge us. |
2003/9/29-30 [Politics/Domestic/California, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:10372 Activity:very high |
9/29 My father told me over the weekend that he had told the RNC to take his name off of all their lists, and that he was changing his voting registration to undeclared after 40 years of registering R. This is a man who was in the Navy 25 years, and is very proud of his service. He has become disgusted with the current administration, not to mention the circus that is California. I'm astounded that the conservatives speaking here have not been more introspective themselves about their convictions, and where their alignments lie. --scotsman \_ I cannot speak for other conservatives, but I gave up discussing political issues on the motd because it was impossible to have a decent conversation due to the censors, trolls and flamers (right and left are both guilty of this). BTW, your father isn't the only Republican who is upset with the current state of the party and its leadership. My family has voted Republican since we first immigrated to this country (~ 30 yrs ago). For the last year or so we have been considering changing our registration to undeclared. \_ Wesley Clark is also proud of his service. What that has to do with R or D is beyond me. --dim \_ Clark's history as a Democrat goes back about 6 months. I don't count that against him, and I'd vote for him if he were nominated, but I'm just saying. If you're considering Bush, you need to really look at what has happened in a 4 year term. \_ you're dad is a twit \_ This one's truly beautiful. --scotsman \_ Why do you assume that being introspective "about [your] convictions, and where [your] alignments lie" means we'll come to the same conclusion as your father? While I don't think he's a twit, I'm rather surprised at his conclusions. \_ I'm not saying you should arrive at the same conclusions, but the responses I see here are kneejerk, lopsided, and often uninformed. I think there's a lot to think about that many here have rejected flat out. --scotsman \_ I see the same among the liberal views here except they're more emboldened. Practically every conservative response in the motd or wall is just an invitation for a pile-on. We thinking conservatives have given up putting our comments up for the inevitable liberal spin/lie/pile-on that follows. And of course there are also the outright deletions. Please don't make the (very poor thinking) assumption that the motd is a realistic slice of the philosophical spectrum. \_ Funny that the deletions I've seen come shortly after a salient point by a lefty gets posted. I think there are people on both sides lying to themselves. --scotsman \_ I think *both* sides get deletions. \_ How in the world can he blame CA on the RNC? Democrats hold *every* statewide office, and have dominated for decades. \_ Mmm.. logical leaps. Look at prop 13. \_ I think he meant more the current electoral joke. --scotsman \_ What electoral joke? Hint: just because some call the recall a joke doesn't mean that it is. The number of people signing the petition is a massive showing of democracy in action. \_ Massive? perhaps when we get a turnout >30% in an election, you can call it a "massive showing of democracy". \_ Massive? perhaps when we get a turnout >30% in an election, you can call it a "massive showing of democracy". Anyway, I'm the one calling it a joke. Take it or leave it. --scotsman \_ son of a twit \_ When have you ever seen ~2x10^6 people sign a petition? It's amazing. Please detail why you think it's a joke, and why you yourself are not a twit. \_ Did you sign it? Are you voting yes? Why? --scotsman \_ After carefully reading your comments, I've concluded that you're a twit. And so is your dad. \_ Then I'm glad we'll likely never meet. --scotsman |
2003/5/19 [Politics/Domestic/California, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:28485 Activity:very high |
5/18 Thank you Gray Davis, who increased state employement by 30%, and who rewards his primary contributor, the Prison Unions, with fat pay raises. Vehicle-tax plan praised - Fee hike would spare drastic local cuts http://www.recordnet.com/daily/news/articles/051803-gn-4.php \_ I'm really tired of all this budget bullshit. Is there not a single state that believe in fiscal responsibility? Any state that require balanced budget in their constitution? \_ The last time California ran budget surpluses during a boom time, we had a "taxpayers revolt" and ended up with Prop 13. We get what we deserve here. Every recession is like this. Remember Pete Wilson's big round of tax increases? \_ No, we had prop 13 because people were losing their houses. I was here and I remember it. \_ People were not losing their homes. That was all bullshit. \_ Idiot. I was there. Get out of the ivory tower and join the real world where real people are hurt or helped everyday by the real decisions real politicians make. \_ I was there too. Everyone wants to pay less taxes, but the money for things like schools has to come from someplace. School quality in California, which had been in the top 10% of the country, plummeted and has stayed low since. How old were you when this happened? No way can you remember what was really going on. If you go back and look at the newspaper archives, you will find one or two people on fixed incomes who supposedly lost their homes, out of a state with a population of 20M. You live in a fantasyland. \_ Yeah all the neighbors who put their houses up for sale and left the state were just figments of my deranged and aged mind. CA has many reasons for being at the bottom of the school rankings, not teaching the "three Rs" anymore is the primary reason. \_ And now people are losing their houses because they can't afford the property tax that's subsidizing the people who are benefitting from prop 13. Irony is delicious. Munch. \_ The problem with prop 13 is that while it was motivated by a need to protect a primary residence from fluctuations in the real estate market, it was written to include *all* property. For humans, frozen contribution rates on a primary residence are a good way to apportion the total tax burden over the life of the taxpayer. For coporations and other entities that never die, Prop 13 is a nightmare that has only just started crushing our economy. \_ Actually it's been crushing it a while. Each economic downturn just emphasizes it. When the economy recovers, it'll be forgotten again. After you finish the cookie, you'll feel right as rain. \_ Can someone explain what prop13 is? \_ Quickie version: In 1978, property taxes assessed according to 1976 prices with a max +2% change until prop sold. Then it's reassessed and taxed at current price. Note 2% is below COLA and certainly way below real estate increase. Plus, to raise taxes takes 2/3 vote of the legistlature. \_ Only because we learned the term "double digit inflation" under Jimmy Carter. In any sane world, the COLA would be about 2%. \_ Communist! \_ Ford invented double digit inflation. Carter just carried on the tradition. \_ Ford? Oh pleeeeeaaaaase. It's the only thing the news talked about for his entire term. Oh yeah, that and the Hostage Crisis. |
2003/1/17-18 [Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:27137 Activity:high |
1/16 There was talk about prop 13 and how the property tax is based on the selling price of the home. Is the following legal? I have a 1 million dollar house I want to pass on to my kids, I sell it to them for $100 bucks or some other artificially low number. Their property tax would then based on this $100 transaction. Would this also be a way around inheritance taxes? If I sell all my property to my kids at below market value? \_ http://www.irs.gov has all your answers. \_ of course it's not legal. don't be a moron. -tom \_ Hey tom, Tolkien named a troll after you. \_ and so the logical question is, who determines how low a price one can sell? Houses sell for below appraised price all the time. Is there a law saying that one cannot sell $X amt below appraised price if it's to a family member? I can see loop holes if I use a third party. I sell to a friend for below market value. He then sells to my kid for an even lower amt. So on and so forth. \_ it doesn't matter how much you sell it for, it matters how much the house is appraised for \_ Exactly right. The city/county assessor does this task. In CA, when the property changes ownership, it gets reassessed. \_ the difference between appraised value and sale value in these case is treated as a gift and subject to the gift tax. i think this would imply that you (and your spouse) can sell the house for $10k/20k under market to your children. \_ You can give even more than that, but it counts against your estate tax limit later. \_ only if you subtract from your Unified Credit limit. \_ Appraisers (at least in CA) are licensed and certified. And are liable if their appraisal of a home turns out to be way out of line with the "true" market value. \_ Would this work? You add your kids' names to the house, so you and your kids are co-owners. Then some years later before you die, you remove your name, so only your kids alone are the co-owners. Would this avoid re-assessment in CA? |
2003/1/15-16 [Reference/Tax, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:27108 Activity:insanely high |
1/15 Anybody lived and worked in Nevada (or another state that has no income tax?) I'm wondering if it's just a gimmick and they get your money in some other way. E.g., higher property tax or payroll tax, etc. Does one really come out ahead compared to CA? I'm thinking of moving to another state to escape the perpetual fiscal nightmare CA experiences. Thanks. \_ I worked in Alaska. There are no taxes of any kind except \_ In terms of overall tax burden, CA is about average. If you want to be taxed move to Massachusetts. --dim \_ California is unique because of Prop 13. Long time property owners see their tax burdens drop over time in real dollars. So it is a relatively expensive state to be young or new in, but much less not some kind of ascam. there just aren't many people and expensive (tax-wise) to grow old in. \_ URL? \_ http://www.taxfoundation.org/statelocal01.html \_ This isn't believable. Oregon has no sales tax yet this claims the state/local tax burden is over 9%. \_ Yes, genius. There are other state/local taxes, like taxes on gasoline and property tax. --dim \_ Ok then this *isnt* the total tax burden and does *not* answer the OP question about other gotchas and hidden fees/taxes/whatevers which California is just chock full of. This isn't a middle of the road tax state. It's a high tax state and your little chart hides the fact. --Genius \_ Yes, it is the total tax burden. Oregon also has an income tax. Please go away. --dim \_ CA has both a sales and an income tax. Oregon does not. Your link is just wrong. --Genius \_ Please refer to the URLs below. You need to use your brain to combine a few different sources of data here. I know you can do it. Think. Sales tax is 8%, but what percent of your income is spent on sales tax? --dim \_ Hmmm, let's see... I pay out over 40% of my income in taxes, I put another 20% away and the rest is spent. So ~1/12th of 60% is roughly 5% of my income. And what value does this have to this topic? \_ You can't even do simple math, moron. \_ Uhm, ok, whatever you say. \_ How much is 100 - 40 - 20? Hint: it's not 60. \_ Hint: I pay taxes on the 20% put into savings. I don't put it under my pillow. \_ you don't pay taxes on that 20%, already inc in 40% and wouldn't be sales tax. None on rent or food too. http://www.ncsl.org/programs/fiscal/sltxlvls/index.htm http://www.vermontgop.org/tax_burden.shtml http://www.daveross.com/taxburden.html \_ I worked in Alaska. There are no state taxes of any kind except I think Anchorage may have some city taxes. In fact, if you live in Alaska, you get a check every year, as a sort of negative tax. on the other hand, the cost of living is above average in alaska. and no, the tax thing is not some kind of a scam. there just aren't many people and oil pays for alot. \_ I think Nevada is a special case because of the massive revenue influx due to gambling. \_ Yep, gambling & mining. When I lived there most other taxes (sales, etc.) were lower than California. \_ Still, New Hampshire apparently has the lowest overall tax burden. Maybe they include taxes on corporations? \_ Most states get tax income from business tax, property tax, sales tax, income tax, and a whole bevy of fees. CA's big problem is property tax. It's figured by the local city or county assessor. Thanks to Proprosition 13, that assessment is only done when a building is built and when the property changes ownership. The push was to save LOLs living in the same place for 30+ years from being forced out (ie. fixed income). It also means that companies in the same location don't pay higher prop taxes. Poof. Less tax for the state. Note: You can always ask to have your property reassessed if you think it was listed too high a price, so you can pay less tax. \_ I was here when prop 13 passed. It wasn't just LOLs that were losing their homes. Roughly 40% of my middle class neighborhood was getting killed and was forced to sell. Kill Prop 13 and you'll kill the state for good. There's a damned good reason for Prop 13 to exist. \_ When was it passed? \_ 1978 \_ The problem was inflation. Local governments assessed property whose worth was climbing 12-13% due to inflation. Thus, much higher property taxes. Prop 13 forced a solution that should have been dealt with on a local level (ie. lowering property taxes in the face of high inflation). \_ I know a few people who moved to Nevada before they cashed out their options to avoid CA income tax. \_ tangent, would this be feasible: own home/residence in NV, have all HR related things sent there, but live in rented apt in CA? \_ you make too much money \_ no such thing. he earns it. \_ More than feasible. There are a good number of professionals in SV that live in Portland, AZ, CO, NV who fly in, work 10, then take 4 days off (or do the 4x10 work week). The problem lies with the dealing with flying and family. It can suck... CA.gov figured this out. You still have to pay CA income tax for work done here, despite your residence. \_ I knew a guy working at Intel who had multiple homes around the country, including Oregon. When he wanted to cash out his options, he'd change his primary home address to the one in Oregon. \_ Oops, I meant Washington. He had a home in both, in addition to few others. \_ I wonder if it is worth it to him in this economy to continue with this behavior? Did he rent out the fake primary homes or are they empty when he doesn't live there? \_ I think these were his vacation homes and were left empty. \_ I know a guy who moved to Seattle several years ago to avoid state tax. He was making so much money from stocks (not his own options) that the pre-tax salary from his engineer job couldn't even cover his tax. And that was before the dot-com boom even started. |
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