youtube.com— economic stimulus package = bring $1 Trillion, per year, back home.and he will cut all federal taxes on gasoline for immediate relief.
Jan 23, 2008View in Crawl 4
i know. that's what i thought. she just advertised for free that there's a documentary that finds that the income tax is illegal. how about that s**t? i hope she doesn't get canned.
Is that gas tax cut just temporary, to give the economy a boost to ward off recession, or permanent? If permanent, does he have some other way to address the problem of externalities causing gas prices to be lower than they should be, which prevents the efficient allocation of resources toward alternate energy sources?There are basically two ways to deal with the situation when you have a good (such as gas) that has large externalities that prevent a free market from allocating resources efficiently. One is to tax it sufficiently to make up for the externalities, and the other is to subsidize the cost of substitutes for that good. For an anti-tax, anti-spend candidate, what options are left in his toolbox to deal with this?
temporalistJan 23, 2008
Watch and learn America!People are starting to figure it out!
amazindyesJan 23, 2008
Maybe Rude E understands "blowback" now!Go Ron Paul!!!
aksteveJan 24, 2008
The freedom train is gaining momentum. Go Ron Paul!!
shootdashitJan 25, 2008
i know. that's what i thought. she just advertised for free that there's a documentary that finds that the income tax is illegal. how about that s**t? i hope she doesn't get canned.
harlowsmonkeysJan 29, 2008
Is that gas tax cut just temporary, to give the economy a boost to ward off recession, or permanent? If permanent, does he have some other way to address the problem of externalities causing gas prices to be lower than they should be, which prevents the efficient allocation of resources toward alternate energy sources?There are basically two ways to deal with the situation when you have a good (such as gas) that has large externalities that prevent a free market from allocating resources efficiently. One is to tax it sufficiently to make up for the externalities, and the other is to subsidize the cost of substitutes for that good. For an anti-tax, anti-spend candidate, what options are left in his toolbox to deal with this?