[sparkscoffee] Re: Burger Abandons America

  • From: "" <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> (Redacted sender "Sblumen123@xxxxxxx" for DMARC)
  • To: sparkscoffee@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Mon, 1 Sep 2014 14:06:03 -0400 (EDT)

DR
Re-read what I wrote and reply to it.
 
Comrade B
 
 
In a message dated 9/1/2014 1:37:22 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
n1ea@xxxxxxxx writes:

Yes, but the "he" that you speak of does not exist, it is "we" the  
stockholders.  If management behaves poorly, we can abandon our  investment, 
sell 
our shares and reinvest in a corporation that we believe is  better. 
Or we can bring up behavior of Board or Officers upan Annual Meeting or  
fire them. 
Please Learn before you Think. 
73 
DR
On Sep 1, 2014 12:51 PM, "Redacted sender _Sblumen123@aol.com_ 
(mailto:Sblumen123@xxxxxxx)  for DMARC" <_dmarc-noreply@freelists.org_ 
(mailto:dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx) >  wrote:


DR
The consumer not only pays all the cost of productions including  corporate 
taxes but for profits
like dividens for you and others and for new factories and research and  
development and mega yachts
and executive Jets which all may be made in communist China  depending on 
the will of the captalist
whose motto is, profitism before patriotism. With left  over profits he can 
make a free speech contribution
to the legislators of his choice. Got the picture, think, think,  think.
 
Comrade B, Protectionist Socialist   
 
 
In a message dated 8/31/2014 9:20:11 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, 
_djringjr@gmail.com_ (mailto:djringjr@xxxxxxxxx)  writes:

Corporations are owned by people like me and you.  If I get a  bigger 
dividend for the money I have invested, I can buy something I need  or want. 
If a corporation buys a mega jet, they need crew for it, good jobsfor  
talented men and women 
If it were the old days they'd need a flight radio officer, maybe it  would 
be an ARA job! 
With more money corporations can build new factories, invest in  reseatch 
and development, buy a ship with R/O job. 
High tax rate promotes getting rid of net income by increasing  managerial 
pay so there will be no retained (taxable) earnings.  When  they do that the 
rich get richer and of course have to pay personal income  taxes, but it is 
better for corporation to retain eanings tax free. 
Everyone misses the point that Burger King will still pay 100% USA tax  to 
IRS for profit from each and every Burger King and USA Tim Horton's, so  all 
USA will lose is corporate tax. 
Do not attack things you do not understand, when people see you know  
nothing true, they will not vote for you. 
That's why many do not vote socialist, communist. 
73 
DR 
On Aug 31, 2014 3:30 PM, "Redacted sender _Sblumen123@aol.com_ 
(mailto:Sblumen123@xxxxxxx)  for DMARC" <_dmarc-noreply@freelists.org_ 
(mailto:dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx) > wrote:


DR
Are you nuts proposing the fat cats tax to be free so they can buy  bigger 
mega yachts, executive Jets
and have a little left over to make contributions to politicians of  their 
choice under the new free
speech gift? Even the Republicans don't say that.
 
Comrade B 
 
 
In a message dated 8/29/2014 6:18:33 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, 
_n1ea@arrl.net_ (mailto:n1ea@xxxxxxxx)  writes:

Another reason to reduce corporate tax to ZERO. 
You do that and there will be such an influx of prosperity and  income 
taxes in USA, your head will spin. 
Dumb Democrats just do not get economics. 
DR
On Aug 29, 2014 8:55 AM, "Ron Ristad" <_ristad@sprynet.com_ 
(mailto:ristad@xxxxxxxxxxx) > wrote:


As  Burger King heads north for Canada's lower corporate tax rate, we  
speak to Rolling Stone contributing editor Tim Dickinson about his  new 
article, 
"The Biggest Tax Scam Ever." Dickinson reports on how  top U.S. companies 
are avoiding hundreds of billions of dollars by  parking their profits abroad 
— and still receiving more  congressionally approved incentives. Dickinson 
writes: “Top  offenders include giants from high-tech (Microsoft, $76 
billion);  Big Pharma (Pfizer, $69 billion); Big Oil (Exxon&shy;Mobil, $47  
billion); investment banks (Goldman Sachs, $22 billion); Big Tobacco  (Philip 
Morris, $20 billion); discount retailers (Wal-Mart, $19  billion); fast-food 
chains (McDonald's, $16 billion) — even heavy  machinery (Caterpillar, $17 
billion). General Electric has $110  billion stashed offshore, and enjoys an 
effective tax rate of 4  percent — 31 points lower than its statutory 
obligation to the  IRS.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nIIr8JHgFYc

-RR















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