10 Faces Behind The Incredible Law School Underemployment Crisis

Business Insider:  “With law firms cutting back, thousands of law school graduates are still unemployed while stuck with six-figure student loan debt.  Some students have filed class-action law suits against more than a dozen schools alleging that officials misled them about their job prospects after graduation.  ‘The system of legal education is completely broken now,’ former Chicago-Kent College of Law student Richard Komaiko told us. ‘Almost everyone I know from law school is unemployed or seeking alternative employment.’  We wanted to hear the truth behind the crisis, so we interviewed several recent graduates, including those who have gone into entirely different fields, and one who is living just above the poverty line.”

Medical Marijuana and “Debilitating” Conditions

Arizona Department of Health Services: The Department of Health Services in Arizona is considering adding four new conditions to the approved list for “debilitating” conditions.  Apparently the health department has made it through the first phase of deciding whether to add (1) Post Traumatic Stress Disorder; (2) Generalized Anxiety Disorder; (3) Migraines; and (4) Depression.  A public hearing will be held on May 25 from 1-4pm regarding these conditions and whether they will be added.  Stay tuned…

The Buffett Tax Loss

The Wall St. Journal:  “The case for the Buffett tax keeps eroding. When President Obama announced the idea, he said it would help ‘stabilize our debt and deficits over the next decade.’ Then came the inconvenient revelation that the new 30% millionaire’s tax would raise only $46.7 billion over 10 years, and would leave about 99.5% of the deficit intact in 2013. It was a far cry from ‘stabilizing the debt.’  Now we learn that the Buffett tax the Senate is expected to vote on early next week will make the deficit worse. That’s because both Mr. Obama and Senate Democrats have made it clear that their new ‘fairness’ tax is to offset the revenue loss from another provision related to the Alternative Minimum Tax.

Busting Myths About Rich People’s Taxes

Martin A. Sullivan’s article “Busting Myths About Rich People’s Taxes” published in Tax Analysts on April 16, 2012, is a must read.  It dispels many commonly held myths about the rich and federal taxes.  Here are some statements from the article:

There are good reasons for the government to keep its hand out of the pockets of the wealthy. For example — and this will be a shocker to most liberals out there — it is a basic tenet of tax economics that an efficient system should eliminate all taxes on capital income. . . . That type of thinking recently led Kevin Hassett of the American Enterprise Institute to call the Buffett rule ‘‘the stupid rule.’’ ‘‘It’s basically just a back-door way to hike taxes on capital,’’ . . . To maximize growth, economists would set the tax rate on capital gains, dividends, interest, and all business profits at zero. . . .

Myth #1: The Buffett rule is largely a symbolic political ploy because it would raise only $5 billion a year. . . .

Myth #2: The United States cannot raise taxes on the wealthy because ‘‘there appear to be limits in the real world as to how much tax blood can be extracted from rich turnips’’ and ‘‘the U.S. has the world’s most progressive tax burden.’’

Myth #3: The United States has a progressive income tax.

How We Pay Taxes: 21 Charts

During these difficult economic times when our leaders are engaging in class warfare and attacking the top “1 percent” all Americans should be informed about federal taxes.  A good start is the information show in the 21 charts depicted on the two articles linked to below.

The Atlantic:  “If you care about national values, or the relationship of citizens to their government, or the way we choose to award and discourage behavior, there is nowhere better to start than the gnarled and fascinating world of levies and tax breaks. Tax week gives American families a reason to consider moving to Bermuda, but it also gives me an excuse to spend the day finding my favorite, most controversial, and most illuminating graphs about taxes. Here they are.”

See also “Top Ten Federal Tax Charts.”

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