Monday, July 23, 2012

Meet the Front Group Leading the Fight Against Taxing the Rich

http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2012/07/national-federation-independent-businesses



         While most Americans don't object to Obama's plan to raise taxes on the wealthy, they're less excited about raising them for family-owned barbershops and ice cream parlors. This may be why Mitt Romney often claims that collecting more taxes from high earners would hurt mom-and-pop employers whose profits are taxed as individual income. "This is a direct attack on small business," he declaredat a recent campaign stop in Virginia. His argument has the support of a powerful ally: the National Federation of Independent Businesses, a "nonpartisan" small-business advocacy group that has put defending the Bush tax cuts for the richest of the rich near the top of its political agenda.
Often cited as the leading voice of small business, the NFIB was founded in 1943 by a former U.S. Chamber of Commerce staffer who thought that business groups were neglecting the little guys. Today it claims 350,000 members, chapters in all 50 states, and a $95-million budget. In May, theWashington Post cited the NFIB to back up Romney's attacks on Obama's tax plan, reporting that the group had given an "F" to the portion of Obama's budget that deals with taxing the wealthy.
this group has the same game, just using another name.  their goal is the same as all rich they want more and don't want any legislation that will dampen them keeping the status quo.
The NFIB's defense of the rich offers handy political cover for the Lear jet crowd, but few among the legions of small business owners that it represents will benefit from its lobbying. Only 3 percentof small businesses net more than $250,000 a year, the lowest income that would be affected by Obama's tax plan. This is one reason why a variety of rival small business groups now accuse the NFIB of doing exactly what it was founded to prevent: Selling out small business owners to benefit the rich and powerful
They have proved themselves to be just a shill operation for big corporations," says Rick Poore, the owner of DesignWear, a 35-person screen printing shop in Nebraska and member of the Main Street Alliance, a business association that disagrees with the NFIB on many issues. "People just jump onboard because it has all the right sound bites, but in reality so much of it is against their own best interests."
don't continue to be fooled by right wing rhetoric whereever it come from, you can identify by it's denial of the Pres. regulating their advantage over the rest of America, and ultimately defense of not taxing, just they are pointing at the wrong group, mislead, misinform that lock is getting easier and easier to crack, most outrageous lies are.

 these are the types we could be beholden to for that proverbial "crust of bread and such, you can help yourself but don't take too much". (Blood, Sweat, & Tears)