Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

To: Grampa Dave
Say, Grampa, despite our energetic forays, let me tell my short, sad story.

AS a California native, a high tax paying native, I decided not to leave my home state. The question remained, how to deal with state and federal taxes that exceeded 55%. The answer came in the late night. Stop working. With the Stump ranch paid for, two grand in property tax would be easy. The rest of the "problem" issues would be dealt with one by one. Tobacco, quit or roll my own. Health insurance, discontinue. High liquor and banned products, Nevada. Dining out, discontinue. Trash collection, burn. High tax and registration auto costs, drive an old polluting clinker. Animal license fees, discontinue. Donations to little league, discontinue. Allow people to casually trespass and enjoy the Stump ranch, stop with threat of arrest, a result of greatly reduced homeowners policy.

I could go on, however law enforcement costs would go up. As California tax revenues decrease, user fees and confiscatory taxes by any name, increase. The governing bodies inflate their already bulbous, obese, necrotic appendages.

As you go about your daily parasitic routines, all the while augering deeper and deeper into the government womb, ask yourself, how did I get so far down. How many US citizens work for the growing tumor of big government? Who signs your check?

I'm not refering to Grampa, I'm refering to 40% of America!!

20 posted on 05/21/2002 9:35:04 PM PDT by golder
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 10 | View Replies ]


To: golder
Your piece of Tax Data here is why I quit consulting on a part time base besides the hassle of air travel even before 9/11.

I'm retired and had a pretty good gig as a part time consultant. The problem is exactly what you posted here: deal with state and federal taxes that exceeded 55%.

As an independent contractor, I started out putting into an escrow account 50% of each dollar I earned consulting for both sides of the FiCa tax, Fed and state Income taxes to pay my quarterly taxes. The last year I worked I kicked it up to 60%. I was clearing 40 cents on the dollar after taxes.

I had taken an early retirement program that lost 50% of its monthly income when I became 62 and eligible for Social Security. So when I turned 62, I went on Social Security.

After going on Social Security, a year and a half ago , my accountant explained to me how the penalty for working still applied to Social Security recipients under age 65. If I worked at the same level, I had before I turned 62, I would lose basically all of my social security benefits besides going into higher tax brackets for my wife and myself. Basically I would be working for nothing. My CPA called it very expensive money that only dummies without a life did.

After that session with my CPA, I had one more road trip with the people I had contracted with. I flew to LAX and got into the big bomb scare. My projector, slides and suit were in the plane's belly, and no one was able to get to them for hours.

I had my cell phone and got hold of Avis which sent a car within about a half mile of me. I walked and got the car, called the hotel where I was to sponsor a dinner focus group program and told them to start the dinner and that I would be late.

I was one hour late, in my short sleeve shirt and jeans with a pretty good beard growing since early that morning. I winged it fairly well. My luggage showed up at 3 am with a prescription drug for my high blood pressure and a respiratory drug that as needed at that time. I decided at 3:10 am that was my last trip and consulting jig. I did not reup for any contracts after that. The $500 gross pay for that day amounted to $200 after taxes, and it just wasn't worth it any more.

So I know where you are coming from.

21 posted on 05/21/2002 11:38:07 PM PDT by Grampa Dave
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 20 | View Replies ]

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article


FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson