top
US
US
Indybay
Indybay
Indybay
Regions
Indybay Regions North Coast Central Valley North Bay East Bay South Bay San Francisco Peninsula Santa Cruz IMC - Independent Media Center for the Monterey Bay Area North Coast Central Valley North Bay East Bay South Bay San Francisco Peninsula Santa Cruz IMC - Independent Media Center for the Monterey Bay Area California United States International Americas Haiti Iraq Palestine Afghanistan
Topics
Newswire
Features
From the Open-Publishing Calendar
From the Open-Publishing Newswire
Indybay Feature

Does Casino Billionaire Adelson Think He Can Buy The Presidential & Ohio Senate Races

by Populist
Who is Josh Mandel? A Republican Zionist senate candidate, a man who wants young American boys to continue to be sent into harm's way to kill Muslims for the agenda of the Israeli government, all to the profit of Chinese, Israeli, Swiss, British, Canadian and other bankers and governments to whom our warwaging government is trillions in debt. Mandel himself participated in the Bush 1 and 2 violation of Iraq.
902.jpg

How many millions is billionaire gambler Sheldon Adelson with casinos in Macao, Singapore and Nevada, a man who owns a Netanyahu supporting newspaper in Israel, giving to fellow Zionist and Republican Josh Mandel in the Ohio Senate race? Adelson has given 34 million and pledged 100 million to Mitt Romney.... Romney's tax plan would give Adelson a free pass on profits made outside the US. 90% of his casino profits are external to the US.

Mandel is running an ad saying he was elected in a Democratic district. He doesn't say that it was a district with many Jewish Americans.

Senate candidate Josh Mandel Sued For Not Releasing Office Records http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/09/26/josh-mandel-ohio-senate-sued_n_1917432.html

The Beacon Journal, a Republican Ohio newspaper, reported citizen anger about the excessive number of Mandel ads.

Mandel... were you part of the Highway of Death in which a quarter million refugees (old men and women, children, soldiers, donkeys, dogs and their carts were carpetbombed and then bulldozed into graves on the Kuwait Iraq border?



89% of Americans want these hellish illegal wars to end.

1.

Lying attack ads say 3 Republican and other newspapers... Politi Fact calls Mandel the most

lying candidate

http://joshmandel-is-lying.com/?gclid=CN6hjLq7zLICFYYWMgodjRgASQ

http://brown.senate.gov

2.

Mandel's hiring practices unethical

http://www.daytondailynews.com/news/news/national-govt-politics/treasurer-mandel-under-scrutiny-for-hiring-practic/nMzd7/

3.

Mandel family insider trading

http://thinkprogress.org/election/2012/07/27/590481/josh-mandel-shorting-treasury-bonds/?mobile=nc

4. Mostly false ad

http://www.politifact.com/ohio/statements/2012/sep/17/josh-mandel/josh-mandel-claims-sherrod-browns-campaign-attacke/

5. Mandel's claim that the rating on Ohio's fund increased is untrue

http://www.politifact.com/ohio/statements/2012/sep/26/sherrod-brown/sherrod-brown-campaign-ad-targets-josh-mandel-trut/

6. Mandel is receiving money from those who want war in the Mideast.

7. Mandel himself went to kill Muslims in an illegal war in Iraq.

8. Mandel has attended fundraisers in several places inside and outside the US while

running an ad criticizing Sherrod Brown's attendance record. Brown has a 96% attendance record.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/09/20/josh-mandel-fundraisers_n_1900452.html

9. Because of the Ohio Republican Party, Ohio is one of only 8 states still conducting barbaric executions which are outlawed in all European Union countries and in 88% of the world's countries

10. Josh Mandel like Romney wanted Detroit to go bankrupt and the Ohio United Auto Workers to continue to be out of work.

11. How much money is billionaire gambling and Israeli newspaper owner Sheldon Adelson giving to Mandel?



Senator Sherrod Brown's Experience (picture on left) Brown is one of the 5 best US senators

Senator, United States Senate, 2007-present
Representative, United States House of Representatives, 1993-2006
Ohio Secretary of State, 1982-1990
Representative, Ohio State House of Representatives, 1975-1982
Member, Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee
Member, Democratic Steering Committee



His opponent's experience:

city councilman

state treasurer

God prevent Sherrod Brown's opponent from buying his way into the Senate with vicious attack ads paid for by war profiteers

*****************

The following is from the Cleveland Plain Dealer's Politifact Ohio:

The Affordable Care Act "will likely go down as the biggest tax increase in history."

Josh Mandel on Thursday, June 28th, 2012 in a news release

Josh Mandel says Obamacare will ultimately be the 'biggest tax increase in history" Pants on Fire! Share this story:

The Supreme Court's decision on the Affordable Care Act settled the question of its constitutionality, but only seemed to intensify debate over the law.

Ohio Treasurer Josh Mandel joined other Republicans in calling for its repeal, saying the decision "sets the stage for the November election." He identified the law as a pivotal issue in his campaign to unseat incumbent U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown.

Mandel issued a statement on the day of the decision asserting that Brown had voted "for what will likely go down as the biggest tax increase in history."

That claim about the health care legislation has been a talking point opponents of the law, repeated many times since the ruling. But PolitiFact first examined it after Florida Gov. Rick Scott made the statement more than a year earlier.

The claim is wrong. Here’s why:

The federal Joint Committee on Taxation, a nonpartisan committee of Congress with a professional staff of economists, attorneys and accountants, gave members a detailed breakdown of the tax impact of the health care law from 2010-2019.

• A 10 percent excise tax on indoor tanning services that started in 2011 is expected to bring in $2.7 billion over 10 years.

• A new fee for pharmaceutical manufacturers and importers that started in 2011 is expected to raise $27 billion over 10 years.

• Starting in 2013, Medicare payroll taxes increase 0.9 percentage points for people with annual incomes over $200,000 ($250,000 for couples filing jointly). Also, people at this income level would pay a new 3.8 percent tax on investment income. The 10-year cost: $210.2 billion.

• Starting in 2013, a 2.3 percent excise tax on manufacturers and importers of certain medical devices starts. The 10-year total: $20 billion.

• Starting in 2013, the floor on medical expense deductions on itemized income tax returns will be raised from 7.5 percent to 10 percent of income. That's expected to bring in $15.2 billion over the next 10 years.

• Starting in 2014, a new annual fee on health insurance providers begins. Total estimated 10-year revenue: $60.1 billion.

• Starting in 2018, a new 40 percent excise tax kicks in on high-cost health plans, so-called "Cadillac plans" (over $10,200 for individuals, $27,500 for families). That's expected to bring the government a total of $32 billion in 2018 and 2019.

There also is money in the law going the other way. The plan includes government money, in the form of tax credits, to subsidize the cost of health insurance for lower-income people who don't get insurance through their employer. And there is a tax cut for some small businesses that allows them to write off a portion of the cost of providing insurance to their employees.

Combined with various other revenue-generating provisions, the Joint Committee on Taxation estimates the health law will bring in more than $437.8 billion by 2019. The government's nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimated the additional revenues coming in to the government to be $525 billion between now and 2019.

Does that translate to the biggest tax increase in American history?

There are many ways to define or measure the size of a tax increase. The health care tax provisions, for instance, take effect between 2011 and 2018, meaning the full effect of the legislation won't be felt until near the end of the decade. On top of that to compare the costs today with other years you have to adjust for inflation to measure the relative impact of a tax provision at the time it was enacted.

For our comparison, PolitiFact used a method perfected by Jerry Tempalski, an analyst in the Office of Tax Analysis with the U.S. Department of the Treasury. In 2006, Tempalski tried to determine the relative impact of major tax revenue bills from 1940-2006. He used revenue estimates from Treasury and the Joint Committee on Taxation and calculated the impact as a percentage of GDP.

For 1940-1967 calculations, he used a single-year snapshot of the revenue impact of the tax legislation. For more recent tax bills, from 1968-2006, Tempalski used a two-year average of the revenue effects. Tempalski wrote: "The comparison of tax bills for the first period should be examined with some caution, because the revenue estimates are from different sources and are not completely consistent. The comparison for the second period can be viewed with more confidence, because the estimates are relatively consistent."

As a percent of GDP, here are the top five tax increases from 1940-2006, according to Tempalski:

1. Revenue Act of 1942: 5.04 percent of GDP;
2. Revenue Act of 1961: 2.2 percent of GDP;
3. Current Tax Payment Act of 1943: 1.13 percent of GDP;
4. Revenue and Expenditure Control Act of 1968: 1.09 percent of GDP;
5. Excess Profits Tax of 1950: .97 percent of GDP;

And here are the top five tax increases from the "modern" era of 1968-2006:

1. Revenue and Expenditure Control Act of 1968: 1.09 percent of GDP;
2. Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982: 0.8 percent of GDP;
3 (tie). Crude Oil Windfall Profit Tax Act of 1980: 0.5 percent of GDP
3 (tie). Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993; 0.5 percent of GDP;
5. Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990; 0.49 percent of GDP.

The list does not include the health care law, which passed in 2010, and a spokeswoman for the Department of Treasury said it hasn't been updated. So PolitiFact calculated its own figure for percent of GDP. We used 2019 as our baseline because that's when all of the tax provisions of the law will be in effect. In 2019, the CBO estimates, the government will see increased revenues of $104 billion.

That $104 billion includes the penalty or tax that individuals might pay if they do not purchase health insurance -- a figure estimated to be $14 billion for 2019.

We then divided that number into the projected GDP for 2019, which according to the CBO economic forecast is $21.164 trillion. That would mean the tax increase provisions of the health care law would amount to 0.49 percent of total GDP.

That would mean the tax increases resulting from the health care law would be about the size of tax increases proposed and passed in 1980 by President Jimmy Carter, in 1990 by President George H.W. Bush and in 1993 by President Bill Clinton.

The health care-related tax increases are smaller than the tax increase signed into law by President Ronald Reagan in 1982 and a temporary tax signed into law in 1968 by President Lyndon B. Johnson. And they are significantly smaller than two tax increases passed during World War II and a tax increase passed in 1961.

We asked Mandel's campaign how his claim is supported. The most relevant source they cited was an editorial from the Wall Street Journal asserting that Obama "has imposed the largest tax increase in history on the middle class."

The Journal cited Congressional Budget Office projections that 76 percent of the people who will have to pay an annual penalty tax (because they do not have health insurance and are not exempt for, say, cases of hardship or religious belief) will have a household income of 500 percent of the federal poverty level or below. For a family of four, that comes to about $120,000.

But who pays the tax is a different question than whether it is the largest tax increase in history.

Mandel's camp also cited sources saying that the Affordable Care Act contains "the largest tax increase since 1993," which we noted earlier and which was not his statement.

And they cited a chart from FactCheck.org showing the Affordable Care Act producing the largest tax increase since 1968 in raw dollars. In the article the chart accompanied, however, FactCheck.org called raw dollars a "rather useless yardstick" and "a poor way to measure the size of a tax increase," because it makes no adjustment for inflation and takes no account of a population that is steadily rising.

The tax increases in the health care legislation do reverse a trend of federal tax cuts and represent the first significant tax increases since 1993. But they are not the largest in the history of the United States.

It would have to grow more than 10 fold to match the wartime tax increase from 1942. It would have to nearly double just to match the 1982 increase under Reagan. And that still wouldn’t crack the top 5 since 1940.

They are so far from the largest that it is not now possible, much less "likely," that they will "go down as the biggest tax increase in history."

On the Truth-O-Meter, Mandel’s claim rates Pants on Fire.
We are 100% volunteer and depend on your participation to sustain our efforts!

Donate

$170.00 donated
in the past month

Get Involved

If you'd like to help with maintaining or developing the website, contact us.

Publish

Publish your stories and upcoming events on Indybay.

IMC Network