Archive for September, 2008

Another Reason to Vote for Obama

Posted in Uncategorized on September 18, 2008 by carolynswafford

 

NEWS-FEDERAL, 2008TAXDAY, (Sep. 18, 2008), Item #M.1, Presidential Candidates’ Tax Policies in a Nutshell

Presidential Candidates’ Tax Policies in a Nutshell

Whichever candidate is elected in November, there are likely to be big changes proposed to the tax code. The presidential candidates’ proposed tax policies include changes to individual and business income taxes, the estate tax and Social Security. For individuals, Sen. Obama would provide expanded credits for families, savers, homebuyers and clean vehicles; Sen. McCain would double the personal exemption to $7,000 and extend and index the increased alternative minimum tax (AMT) exemption amounts.

On the business side, both Obama and McCain seem to support reducing the corporate tax rate; McCain proposes a corporate tax rate of 25 percent. However, the candidates differ on the estate tax with Obama favoring the status quo, a top rate of 45 percent and a $3.5 million exemption, while McCain proposes a top rate of 15 percent with a $5 million exemption. The candidates also differ greatly on the issue of Social Security: Obama favors the current structure, with an increase in the payroll tax to pay for it, and McCain favors personal accounts for younger workers.

Individual Income Taxes

Obama proposes a $1,000 tax credit for families with incomes between $8,000 and $75,000 ($500 for individuals). He would extend the current marginal rates for the lower tax brackets and proposes to eliminate the federal income tax on seniors with incomes below $50,000. He suggests a universal mortgage credit of 10 percent, up to $800, a $4,000 refundable education credit, and expanding the existing Savers Credit to more taxpayers and making it refundable. He also proposes an expanded earned income tax credit (EITC), an expanded Child and Dependent Care Credit by making it refundable, and an expanded tax credit for clean vehicles. To pay for these tax breaks, he proposes restoring the 36- and 39.6-percent tax brackets, raising the capital gains and dividend tax rate to 20 percent for families with incomes over $250,000 ($200,000 for individuals) and restoring the phase-out for itemized deductions and exemptions. He also supports simplified tax returns for many filers and would also extend and index the increase in AMT exemption amounts.

McCain wants to make the Bush tax cuts permanent, including the lower marginal rates and capital gains and dividend rates. He also proposes gradually doubling the personal exemption amount to $7,000. He would pay for these proposals by eliminating congressional earmarks and with unidentified cuts in government spending. He has proposed simplified tax returns for many filers. He would also extend and index the increased AMT exemption amounts and has proposed an election for a separate and simplified alternative tax system.

Business Income Taxes

Obama generally supports corporate tax reform and hints of corporate tax rate reductions for domestic business activity tied to repealing other business tax breaks and closing loopholes to pay for the rate reductions. He also proposes to eliminate capital gains taxes on small businesses. Loopholes Obama has identified include clarifying the economic substance doctrine, increasing capital gains reporting, eliminating special tax breaks for oil and gas companies while expanding the renewable production tax credit, taxing carried interests as ordinary income, and what is described as the CEO pay loophole. He would also reform international tax loopholes and crack down on international tax havens. Further, he proposes making the research and development credit permanent.

McCain has proposed reducing the corporate tax rate from 35 percent to 25 percent, banning taxes on internet sales and cell phones, and permitting full first-year expensing for capital acquisitions. These tax breaks would be paid for with spending cuts or corporate loophole closers, identifying some of the tax breaks for oil and gas companies and repealing the domestic production activities deduction. McCain has also proposed expanding the research and development credit and making it permanent.

Estate Tax

Obama would preserve the estate tax as in effect in 2009: a 45-percent top tax rate and a $3.5 million exemption.

McCain wants to preserve the estate tax with a 15-percent top tax rate and a $5 million exemption.

Social Security

Obama would preserve the existing Social Security structure but help cover the growing deficit by imposing a payroll tax of four percent (two percent each from employer and employee) on incomes over $250,000.

McCain has proposed adopting personal accounts for younger employees, similar to proposals by the Bush administration.

Health Care

Obama proposes targeted health care tax credits including a health care credit for small business. He proposes a new health insurance exchange to provide health insurance, paid for by employers who do not provide employee health insurance.

McCain wants a refundable tax credit of up to $5,000 for families to be paid for by treating employer-provided health benefits as taxable compensation to the employee.

By Jeff Carlson and Stephen K. Cooper, CCH News Staff

 

Some Interesting Articles

Posted in Uncategorized on September 14, 2008 by carolynswafford

On Sarah Palin:

1.  MSN

2.  The Presidential Candidates Blog

Plugging Along

Posted in Knitting, etsy, life and whatnot on September 13, 2008 by carolynswafford

Okay, after that last post — severe crabbiness — I decided that I must stay positive and keep going.  I picked up the log cabin blanket and started a new stripe:

Here it is casually thrown on a chair (ha ha, totally planned is more like it):

I also started a new (squeak, squeak!) acrylic hat for Lainie (cheap, easy care, okay if it gets lost):

I finally figured out why my hats were too long before.  I was following a pattern that had 5″ or so of ribbing and then 2.5″ of stockinette stitch.  Well, when all you do is knit about an in of ribbing and then switch to stockinette — there’s no need to flip the brim up and so….you don’t need a full 7.5″!  Duh!  But I’m glad I figured it out.

And….I found a home for the toddler hat!  I’m going to send it to Robyn’s son, Sean (such a cutie!).  And if it doesn’t fit him, then it can go to her second cutie, little Mack.  They live in Canada so hopefully it will get some use!

I also realized that I’ve got a stockpile of stitch markers that need to be photographed for the shop:

We’ve had nothing but rain and gloomy skies for the last couple of days, so there’s been no chance to take pictures.

Craig went to his younger brother’s bachelor party today.  He left around 10:00 a.m. to spend the afternoon at the Arlington race track, then off to Chicago for dinner, drinks, and clubbing.  Stripper?  That wasn’t mentioned, but they are getting a hotel room…who knows?  And really, who cares? 

What’s been wonderful (and the people who know my husband will totally get this) is that the house is a disaster!  I let the kids leave their toys out in the living room!  I didn’t put the dishes in the dishwasher!  I didn’t vacumn today!  Now….there will be a mad rush in the morning to get it into shape, but I’m loving life right now.  The kids and I went to Pizza Villa for dinner, to Schnuck’s for $174.00 worth of groceries, and had popcorn and lemonade with Tom and Jerry cartoons before bed.  Awesome!

And I’ve decided to set a goal:  I will finish the second sock by the end of the month!  Hooray!

Pathetic

Posted in Knitting on September 11, 2008 by carolynswafford

I have worked and worked to get this latest hat done for my 8 year old son.  It’s in Brown Sheep wool, slides so nicely off the needles, etc. etc. 

At 11:00 p.m., I settled in with a coke, a cup of tea and a rerun of “Project Runway” and began to seam the hat (the weirdness of drinking hot tea and sugary pop is not lost on me.  It’s been a long week.)

And the result?  It looks like it’s going to fit a f-ing toddler.

See that writing on my tea cup?  Happy Hours my ass.

The Sandwich Fair – Part 1 (or: The Food)

Posted in life and whatnot on September 8, 2008 by carolynswafford

Well, we made it to the Fair.  Technically, it’s the DeKalb County Fair, but it’s in Sandwich, IL and is known as The Sandwich Fair.  Craig has been there every year since he was 5.  I’ve been there every year since 1992.  It’s a tradition that we never miss.  It’s always held the week of Labor Day – Tuesday through the next Sunday.

The Sandwich Fair is HUGE.  There are animals (bunnies, horses, cows, pigs, chickens, goats and sheep), tons of buildings with quilts, cakes, jellies, vegetables & flowers, photographs, handmade crafts, and lots of slick dudes selling rubber brooms.  There are carny rides for the kids, tons of carny games, lots of rv’s to walk in and out of, old steam machinery that runs all day shucking corn and whatnot, vintage tractors, horseshoe contests, all kinds of diggers….lots of stuff.  But what’s one of the most important things to me at the Fair?

THE FOOD.

Oh yes, folks.  That’s right.  I have my FAVORITE places and I go to them every year without fail.  Some years I might stray and get something different, but I always go to the following places:

First, we begin by stopping at this Pronto Pup stand (yellow one on the left, I was a little too far away) to get corndogs and lemon shakeups for Craig and Cole.  Ketchup only, please!  Lainie and I get popcorn from the stand to the right of it.  2 older ladies run the stand and they also sell doughnuts.

For lunch, we always (and I mean always) get Fay’s B-B-Q.  It’s not the Sandwich Fair unless we have Fay’s:

This is just the tent everyone eats in.  Here’s where you stand in line in the next tent behind this one:

You can get either chicken or pork chops (both are awesome) and then you dish yourself up cottage cheese, coleslaw, baked beans, applesauce and bread with butter.  You get a cup of lemonade or iced tea.  We are strictly a baked bean/applesauce/bread/lemonade kind of family.  Next to this tent is where they cook the meat over charcoal on these open pits that are as big as a trailer you’d pull behind your car.  Their chicken is to die for.

Cole, however, wanted another corn dog from (gasp) a different stand:

After that we get S&W popcorn when we take our train ride (there’s a replica steam engine but on a smaller scale), I get a coke from the Sandwich Rotary Club (as a fellow Rotarian, of course I have to go there!) and for dessert we get cotton candy and:

That’s right….an elephant ear.  Craig’s favorite.  These aren’t quite as greasy as a funnel cake, but delicious all the same.

**I will admit that the first year I went to the Fair, I got beef stew for lunch.  Craig still brings that up – 16 years later!  I will never live it down.**

On a knitting sidenote:  I finished hat #2 for Lainie and the orange stripe on the Log Cabin Blanket.  Hat #3 has been started for Cole (he’s getting gray wool this time— lucky child).  Pictures to follow!

I see hats everywhere

Posted in Knitting, etsy on September 6, 2008 by carolynswafford

Hats, hats, hats.  Mittens.  Scarves.  Fall is in the air and suddenly all I want to do is make sure my kids have enough hats.  I have knit three hats so far:

Cole gets blue and Lainie gets purple.  Somehow, though, I’ve managed to make all 3 of these long enough to fit an adult.  Sigh.  The kids assure me that they’re “great”, which is very nice of them.  But they’re way too big.  But I will carry on, knitting up more hats (hopefully smaller in length) with stash yarn:

Lainie picked out the orange and pink for a hat well over a year ago as well as the turquoise.

I wanted to show off the rest of the awesome notebooks I traded with Sandi for the cat bordhi markers.  Here they are:

Look at that cool Christmas notebook!  I’m going to put all of my Christmas ornament ideas into it.  I think this year I may do “felted sweater” ornaments.  Sandi also inserted pages from the magazine into the notebook:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tomorrow is the last day of the Sandwich Fair.  I don’t think we’ve ever waited to go until the last day of the Fair, but it’s been a busy week.  It’s one of my favorite events of the year!  More pictures to follow.