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August 30, 2009 at 9:33 PM in reply to: Birth Certificate suggest Obama may not be a natural born US citizen #450820August 30, 2009 at 9:33 PM in reply to: Birth Certificate suggest Obama may not be a natural born US citizen #451013ZeitgeistParticipant
Google him and you get a bunch of hits. He has been discredited in his accusations concerning Obama.
August 30, 2009 at 9:33 PM in reply to: Birth Certificate suggest Obama may not be a natural born US citizen #451354ZeitgeistParticipantGoogle him and you get a bunch of hits. He has been discredited in his accusations concerning Obama.
August 30, 2009 at 9:33 PM in reply to: Birth Certificate suggest Obama may not be a natural born US citizen #451426ZeitgeistParticipantGoogle him and you get a bunch of hits. He has been discredited in his accusations concerning Obama.
August 30, 2009 at 9:33 PM in reply to: Birth Certificate suggest Obama may not be a natural born US citizen #451619ZeitgeistParticipantGoogle him and you get a bunch of hits. He has been discredited in his accusations concerning Obama.
ZeitgeistParticipantMortgage deductions may change
Tops on the CBO’s hit list for housing: Slash deductions for homeowner mortgage interest from the present $1.1 million limit to $500,000, phased in with $100,000 annual reductions starting in 2013 and extending to 2019. Under current law, taxpayers can write off mortgage interest on their principal home debt up to $1 million, and on home equity debt up to $100,000.
Under the CBO’s option, that maximum mortgage debt amount would shrink yearly until it hit $500,000. Over a 10-year period, this change alone would boost federal tax collections by an estimated $41 billion.
ZeitgeistParticipantMortgage deductions may change
Tops on the CBO’s hit list for housing: Slash deductions for homeowner mortgage interest from the present $1.1 million limit to $500,000, phased in with $100,000 annual reductions starting in 2013 and extending to 2019. Under current law, taxpayers can write off mortgage interest on their principal home debt up to $1 million, and on home equity debt up to $100,000.
Under the CBO’s option, that maximum mortgage debt amount would shrink yearly until it hit $500,000. Over a 10-year period, this change alone would boost federal tax collections by an estimated $41 billion.
ZeitgeistParticipantMortgage deductions may change
Tops on the CBO’s hit list for housing: Slash deductions for homeowner mortgage interest from the present $1.1 million limit to $500,000, phased in with $100,000 annual reductions starting in 2013 and extending to 2019. Under current law, taxpayers can write off mortgage interest on their principal home debt up to $1 million, and on home equity debt up to $100,000.
Under the CBO’s option, that maximum mortgage debt amount would shrink yearly until it hit $500,000. Over a 10-year period, this change alone would boost federal tax collections by an estimated $41 billion.
ZeitgeistParticipantMortgage deductions may change
Tops on the CBO’s hit list for housing: Slash deductions for homeowner mortgage interest from the present $1.1 million limit to $500,000, phased in with $100,000 annual reductions starting in 2013 and extending to 2019. Under current law, taxpayers can write off mortgage interest on their principal home debt up to $1 million, and on home equity debt up to $100,000.
Under the CBO’s option, that maximum mortgage debt amount would shrink yearly until it hit $500,000. Over a 10-year period, this change alone would boost federal tax collections by an estimated $41 billion.
ZeitgeistParticipantMortgage deductions may change
Tops on the CBO’s hit list for housing: Slash deductions for homeowner mortgage interest from the present $1.1 million limit to $500,000, phased in with $100,000 annual reductions starting in 2013 and extending to 2019. Under current law, taxpayers can write off mortgage interest on their principal home debt up to $1 million, and on home equity debt up to $100,000.
Under the CBO’s option, that maximum mortgage debt amount would shrink yearly until it hit $500,000. Over a 10-year period, this change alone would boost federal tax collections by an estimated $41 billion.
ZeitgeistParticipantOr the new Dr. Death: Ezekiel J.
ZeitgeistParticipantOr the new Dr. Death: Ezekiel J.
ZeitgeistParticipantOr the new Dr. Death: Ezekiel J.
ZeitgeistParticipantOr the new Dr. Death: Ezekiel J.
ZeitgeistParticipantOr the new Dr. Death: Ezekiel J.
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