echelon1k1
New Member
no, my wife has a stack of about $10,000 holding over me for now.
edited for accuracy
no, my wife has a stack of about $10,000 holding over me for now.
no, i have a stack of about $10,000 holding me over for now.
Thats pretty slim pickins, you gonna make it through the winter?
i think i'll be OK, my indoor harvest is due in another few days. and that's just the spare bedroom.
i have almost triple the wattage in the garage and they'll be ready in another month after the spare bedroom harvest.
looking at about $2500 for the spare bedroom harvest and a little more than twice that for the garage.
beats the hell out of stamp collecting.
so your estimate is around a pound off the three 400's in the spare room?
Once again my $0.02: They said that Clinton's HUGE tax increase was going to ruin the economy. Look at what happened. It was the BEST one in eon's. Also the era that was considered to be the Golden Age of America had a top tax rate of 92%. Tell me again about ruining economies.
oh, so now it is a semantic difference.
your daddy gave you the boat, you didn't inherit it.
got it.
i'm thinking more like a pound and a half, but i'm trying to keep all my estimates very conservative. i may hit two, but i am not counting on it. there are 12 plants and from the looks of it, two ounces per plant is a safe estimate.
.5g/watt is nothing to write home about, i know. but i am not in this to break any world records, just to pay a few bills.
Not at all. I am merely providing you with factual evidence that "effective tax" was in fact slightly higher. Which was a direct conflict with what was mentioned earlier by Faux News rhetoric.
Take it as you will bro. No skin off my back.
Bush lowered taxes and revenue went down. What is your point?
Also.. once again, you are citing a far right leaning news organization. And that is an opinion article you just cited.
Try citing Reuters or AP.
True, the Bush tax cuts did reduce revenue, but most of the reduction (75% of it, if I recall the CBO report correctly) was attributable to changed economic conditions, not the tax cuts.
And what's wrong with reducing revenue.
It's ridiculous that the left think money in the government's hands (revenue) is some how better than money in the peoples hands, WTF
If the federal government would quit spending money it doesn't have, revenue would not be such an issue.
True, the Bush tax cuts did reduce revenue, but most of the reduction (75% of it, if I recall the CBO report correctly) was attributable to changed economic conditions, not the tax cuts.
The CBO projected a decrease in revenue but in fact, revenues increased every year after the Bush tax cuts in 03' to 09'. It surprised a lot of people. Human behavior is a bitch to predict. http://www.taxpolicycenter.org/taxfacts/displayafact.cfm?Docid=200
I was referring to the pre-tech-bust 10 year baseline which contained the trillions of dollars of fanciful surpluses. The narrative is always that the Bush tax cuts erased the surpluses; in reality, adjusting economic expectations to be realistic instead of irrationally exuberant explained the vast majority of the difference.
The point was that Clinton's revenue growth reflected a strong and healthy economy undergoing a technological revolution, not his relatively minor tax increases. Likewise, the reductions at the beginning of Bush's presidency reflected the deflation of an economic bubble that had built up in Clinton's time, not his relatively minor tax cuts.
True, the Bush tax cuts did reduce revenue, but most of the reduction (75% of it, if I recall the CBO report correctly) was attributable to changed economic conditions, not the tax cuts.
And what's wrong with reducing revenue.
It's ridiculous that the left think money in the government's hands (revenue) is some how better than money in the peoples hands, WTF
If the federal government would quit spending money it doesn't have, revenue would not be such an issue.
Be honest lefty, by infrastructure and education you really mean social programmes...The problem with that in my opinion is that when revenue is down, which I can argue is not a terrible thing... the defense budget was skyrocketing, leaving very little room for infrastructure and education, and the Bush administration made no effort to set a plan to do so.
The problem with that in my opinion is that when revenue is down, which I can argue is not a terrible thing... the defense budget was skyrocketing, leaving very little room for infrastructure and education, and the Bush administration made no effort to set a plan to do so.