Saturday Reads Around The Internets - The Only Things Certain are Taxes and Death

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Welcome to the weekly roundup of great articles, facts and figures. These are the weekly finds that made our eyes pop.

Unemployment Increases Death

For those who try to dismiss people as human resources, numbers on a spreadsheet, think again. Lose just one job and your rate of dying prematurely increases 63%. From Job Loss May Increase Premature Death:

The researchers, who analyzed 42 studies with data on 20 million people regarding the relationship between unemployment and the risk of death, also found that the increased risk was greater for men (78 percent) than for women (37 percent). The overall study results reveal that the relationship between unemployment and mortality risk has remained constant for the past 50 years.

Tax Rates Since 1916

Credit WriteDowns reviews the top tax rates since 1916 in the United States and references the below Michael Hudson interview explaining how the U.S. income tax came about.

 

 

9 Things Rich People Don't Want You to Know about Taxes

David Cay Johnston exposes the 9 things rich people don't want you to know about taxes:

As millions of Americans prepare to file their annual taxes, they do so in an environment of media-perpetuated tax myths. Here are a few points about taxes and the economy that you may not know, to consider as you prepare to file your taxes.

Guess what is #1 on Johnston's list? Yes Virginia, poor people do pay taxes.

Treasure Islands

A new book, Treasure Islands: Uncovering the Damage of Offshore Banking and Tax Havens., exposes offshore accounts and tax havens. Video is available from Democracy Now.

As millions of Americans prepare to file their income taxes ahead of Monday’s deadline, we look at how corporations and the wealthy use offshore banks and tax havens to avoid paying taxes and other governmental regulations. "Tax havens have grown so fast in the era of globalization, since the 1970s, that they are now right at the heart of the global economy and are absolutely huge," says our guest, British journalist Nicholas Shaxson. "There are anywhere between $10 and $20 trillion sitting offshore at the moment. Half of world trade is processed in one way or another through tax havens." Shaxson is the author of the new book, Treasure Islands: Uncovering the Damage of Offshore Banking and Tax Havens. [includes rush transcript]

More Flawed Analysis on Trade

Public Citizen goes into detail on how the USDA analyzes trade agreements with faulty models. Nice huh, when even the models are corrupt.

Unfortunately, the USDA estimated the effects through a computable general equilibrium (CGE) model, which has a shoddy track record, to say the least. A 1999 U.S. International Trade Commission (USITC) study on the likely effects of China’s tariff offer for WTO accession used a CGE model to estimate that the U.S. trade deficit with China would increase by only $1 billion dollars due to China’s accession. In reality, the trade deficit with China skyrocketed by $167 billion between 2001 and 2008.

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Comments

bacteria resistant staff infected meat

You'll love this one, half of meat is full of bacteria and it's the strains which are antibiotic resistant.

Thanks for completing the circle

I think Killing Us Quickly made a credible case that the trend in legislation, Medicare in this case, is to get rid of citizens in an unambiguous way.  But the studies cited on the relationship between unemployment and death caused me to revise the theory a bit.  The initial effort to get us "off the payroll," as it were, occurs during various periods of job loss. If that doesn't work, then a life of unaffordable,  but much needed, medical care starting at age 65 is the fail safe.  These people are, if nothing else, relentless.

way - 

sure are, cut taxes for the rich, outsource jobs

It's all about turning the U.S. into a proletariat. What are the odds average live expectancy will drop at this point?