Don't petition the White House, Use Change.org

Don’t petition the White House, Use Change.org

Nov 18, 2012 Aaron Krager No Comments
Secessionists. I first want to say thank you for finally learning something from history. The last time so many desired to rid themselves of a tyrannical president they declared war on the Union. Thus, your use of a peaceful means through petitions on the White House’s site is commendable. Furthermore, each state now finds themselves represented by a petition and signatures from people possibly wanting to secede from the United States. Texas leads the way with more than 100,000 people asking the White House to address the issue. This is the same state governed by Rick Perry who drummed up his base of supporters with calls for seceding prior to his Republican bid for President. The irony seemed lost on him. Governor Perry is obviously not a viable option to lead the cause. He hardly put up a fight against a weak group seeking his party’s nomination. I also question...
The Country Moved to the Left Last Night

The Country Moved to the Left Last Night

The whole campaign season did not just depend upon the presidential race that finally came to an end last night. Yes, the country voted clearly to give Barack Obama another four years in the White House. He received more than 50 percent of the vote and won handily in the electoral college. Yet, it is what happened down the ballot that shows the nation’s move toward progressive values. It appears that Democrats will pick up a couple seats in the lower chamber but the real change happened on the senatorial level. Voters said no way to Republicans Todd Akin and Richard Mourdock after they attempted to scapegoat women and downplay the trauma of rape and sexual abuse. Furthermore, women won in Massachusetts, North Dakota, Hawaii, and Wisconsin for their first terms. All four of them will be more progressive legislators than their predecessors. In Wisconsin Tammy Baldwin will be the...
Republicans, Rape, Life, and Control of Women

Republicans, Rape, Life, and Control of Women

Oct 24, 2012 Aaron Krager No Comments
During last night’s Indiana Senate debate the Republican candidate, Richard Mourdock, did more than stick his foot in his mouth. I believe life begins at conception. The only exception I have for to have an abortion is in the case of the life of the mother. I struggled with myself for a long time but I came to realize life is that gift from God, even when life begins in that horrible situation of rape. It is something that God intended to happen. Mourdock joined a club made exclusively of Republicans but a club that seems to be growing as the November election nears. Illinois Congressman Joe Walsh made a reprehensible comment about exceptions for the life of the mother following his debate. “There is no such exception. With modern technology and science, you can’t find one instance.” Complete crap as this woman explains. Of course who can forget Missouri...

Tax Enforcers Crash CME Emeritus Event with Tax Bill

The “99% Citizen Tax Enforcers” visited Evanston yesterday afternoon to present Chicago Mercantile Exchange Chairman Emeritus Leo Melamed with a tax bill and message. The group hoped Melamed would take it to the current chair, Terrence Duffy.

Melamed was a featured speaker on the Northwestern campus and invited to the ribbon-cutting ceremony of a new “trading room” in the Business Institutions Program. The enforcers did not have the opportunity to see Melamed but the bill did successfully enter the building as someone inside grabbed it in order to close the door.

The exchange became the group’s second target this week and the first local company. CME and Duffy came under fire after posting $2 billion in profits the prior year yet asking for tax breaks from the state. Actually, it was not really an ask but more so an extortion as Duffy said he would move the company to Indiana if the Illinois legislature did not pass the tax breaks totally about $1 billion over the next decade.

The enforcers once again wore their black suits and carried briefcases while an 8-foot tall puppet of Terrence Duffy followed behind.

On Monday the group attempted to deliver a tax bill to Exelon’s board members as they met in the Chase Building in the Chicago Loop. Corporations such as Exelon and CME have used their huge amounts of cash to lobby state and federal officials for better tax rates. A large campaign contribution, $200,000, from CME to Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel came prior to his push for the tax breaks that ultimately benefited the company.

Protesters have focused on the exchange over the last few months, resulting in victories for the taxpayers. Stand Up! Chicago and other organizations pushed CME to give back their $15 million in TIF money by publicly shaming the company. It didn’t help the exchange’s image by being linked to taking money from a cash-strapped city and spending it on luxurious improvements and equating to a golden toilet. The Chicago Tribune recounts the event:

Security guards in black suits stood by expressionless with radios in hand. “We have a situation,” one said as protesters chanted, “How do you put folks back to work? Tax, tax, tax the Merc.”

After numerous attempts to get Duffy, protesters marched away, leaving the golden toilet with a red ribbon and toilet paper in the lobby. Security scrambled for a few minutes to get maintenance to take the toilet away. A man in a blue uniform ran to the rescue, dropping the tank lid as he raised it.

“Where do you want it?” he asked.

“Anywhere,” someone said. Anywhere but the lobby was the undertone.

CME spokesman Michael Shore wouldn’t comment on the protest. “However, on the tax issue, the disparity in corporate taxes was debated, discussed and resolved in the state legislature,” he wrote in an email.

CME’s latest break would cut its tax bill by nearly half when it is fully implemented in the state’s 2014 fiscal year. Last year, CME, owner the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and the Chicago Board of Trade, threatened to leave the state after a tax increase that it said raised its bill to about $158 million in 2011 from about $108 million in 2010.

The state also faces a budget crisis and caved to the company’s demands despite needing the revenue. Many believed the threats to leave the city were a bluff. Ultimately, one that legislators did not want to call. Activists still want the company to pay its fair share. A call that makes sense if looking at through the prism of doing well in America means you do well by America.

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