https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/mark...w6Z?li=BBnb7Kz
   
                                            What was the greatest trick ever pulled? Was it the devil  convincing the world he didn’t exist, as Charles Baudelaire said and  Keyser Söze repeated? Or maybe it was Soviet Socialists and their  acolytes persuading the world that National Socialists were right wing?  Perhaps it was one of those. But in America for several decades, it is  surely Democrats tricking people into believing they’re on the side of  the little guy.
     © Provided by Washington Examiner     President Joe Biden touts his proposal for another $5.5 trillion of  welfare spending, saying it’s “an ambitious plan to create jobs, cut  taxes, and lower costs for working families — all paid for by making the  tax code fairer and making the wealthiest and large corporations pay  their fair share.”
             
 The White House website makes the president seem like Robin Hood  taking from the rich to give to the poor. The claim is so laughable that  there should also be a picture of shrunken Joe in forest green doublet  and hose just to make the joke clear.
The idea that Biden’s  policies help ordinary people by digging deeper into the pockets of the  wealthy is a crock. As Phil Gramm, former chairman of the Senate Banking  Committee, and Mike Solon 
wrote in the 
Wall Street Journal  recently, Democrats want the wealthiest to be able again to deduct the  sky-high taxes levied by the profligate governments they elect in blue  states and slough them on to other federal taxpayers and into public  debt. If Biden really planned to prevent the best-off taxpayers using  sophisticated accounting to avoid liabilities, he’d have proposed  restoring the Alternative Minimum Tax rather than lifting the cap from  State and Local Tax deductions.
Not that I’m a fan of the AMT; I’m  not, partly because wealthy Americans already contribute a bigger share  of tax revenues than their counterparts do in any other country. The  problem with our tax code is not that rates are too low, but they’re too  high and discourage wealth creation and job growth. It’s galling to see  glaringly false advertising by Biden and his colleagues as they try to  fool voters into believing they’re looking out for the poor and  downtrodden.
The tirelessly and tiresomely repeated claim that the  president’s plan would increase taxes only on people earning more than  $400,000 is false. It is already dipping deeper into the pockets of  everyone in this country, right down to those living below the poverty  line.
Here’s how. By handing out unnecessary federal checks,  supposedly to stimulate the economy, and by pressing for the biggest  increase in further spending in history, Biden is stoking inflation.  Because of him, more and more dollars are chasing goods that are in  shortening supply in part because there are a record 10 million job  vacancies nationwide.
Prices are rising faster than wages — 5.4%  year over year and more than 6% so far this year — which means that  unless you get a 6% pay raise, the value of your take-home check is  falling. As many economists — for example, Thomas Sowell — have pointed  out, inflation is essentially a tax and one that falls  disproportionately on the poor.
Federal taxes take buying power  out of everyone’s pocket and put it into the Treasury to pay for welfare  programs. Inflation, likewise, takes buying power out of your pocket to  pay for federal spending. What’s the difference? Only that that former  is official and the latter stealthy. But both intentionally do the same  thing.
Inflation is the most regressive tax of all. The “wealthy” —  those well off enough to benefit from SALT, for example — spend a  smaller proportion of their incomes on food and energy than the poor do.  They have capital investments, such as in homes, the prices of which  are rocket-boosted by inflation as the value of a dollar collapses.  Inflation is the borrower’s friend because it reduces the value of debt,  whether that be the debt piled up in Treasury paper by Biden & Co.  or the mortgage debt of the upper-middle and wealthiest classes.
 Inflation  doesn’t benefit people who live hand to mouth or those who don’t have  investments. Little guys do not own their own homes, or second homes,  and spend far more of their income on goods and services needed for  day-to-day living. So inflation hits them hardest. A government that  lets inflation rip, as Biden’s administration has, is not on the side of  the poor. It is taxing them even though it keeps insisting it isn’t.
Comment - teh DPST party administration Lies, Lies, and Lies
and teh DPST party minions and sheeples still lap up the Lies they are fed by teh LSM
So SAD - for America
Buck fiden
from my cold dead hands!