Bill Greenwood wrote:
Cap, as I wrote, this past year as well as the last eight have been under the Bush tax rates and lower on corporations. If Exxon did not make a profit in the US, this was done under the lower rates, not Obama's proposed rates, so as I wrote those lower rates must not be too important and any guarantee.
As for Exxon not making a profit in the US,, I'd like to see details on that. No corp is in a 100% tax bracket, there is always going to be some margin left.
Much of what else you wrote is more than I can get into. However, two points. .You blame much of the mortgage market on a Clinton act 11 years ago. If it was so bad for all but two of the years the Bush republicans controlled Congress why wasn't it fixed? Even more, I have read that the vast majority of problem loans were not the ones made under some low income minority type program. I am not sure on this, but I have read that.
Bill - on ExxonMobil you can see it yourself -
http://www.exxonmobil.com/Corporate/Fil ... gs3q08.pdf. Specifically, read page 6 & 7 and then view the chart on page 9 (Attachment I). The highlights -
Total Revenue - 137.8 billion
Total Costs - 111.6 billion
Income before Taxes - 26.2 billion
Income Taxes -
11.3 billion
Net Income - 14.8 billion
Additionally -
Sales based taxes - 9.3 billion
All other taxes - 11.9 billion
Total Taxes -
32.5 billion
Then move to Page 10 (Attachment II) which discusses their Net Income -
Upstream revenue (US) - 1.9 billion
Downstream revenue (US) - 1.0 billion
Chemical revenue (US) - .3 billion
Total (US) -
3.2 billion
Compare this to the rest of the world (same Attachment) -
Upstream revenue (non-US) - 9.1 billion
Downstream revenue (non-US) - 2.0 billion
Chemical revenue (non-US) - .8 billion
Total (non-US) -
11.9 billion
So, they paid 11.3 billion in Income Taxes for 3.2 billion in Net Income in the US. So, the government got almost 3.5 times the money that they made in the US. So, who's rich?
THE GOVERNMENT!