Originally Posted by
kevinpate
Andy, with respect, the math doesn't work irrespective of where the numbers arise.
Generally when someone advances an alleged fact, there is a clear source of the information, not a suggestion to call X and PRESS X into telling you the person tossing around information for their agenda is correct in their interpretation.
Bottom line: math is math, and the payment of taxes are the payment of taxes. What's presented in the parody is a blatent falsehood used to advance an agenda.
Sales taxes are paid by residents, non-residents and businesses, in every universe, except perhaps the pseudo universe of those who choose to alter the truth.
The formulas used in the alleged paraody first drops one number out by conveniently, and dishonestly, excluding business and non-residents of OKC, which also pay the MAPs sales taxes.
Then the parody script advocates, oh, 'honest' time, non residents cover 30%, so let's take that out and then claim it's 1000 paid per person who is an OKC resident, or 4,000 for a family of four.
The parody script, which did not write itself, deliberately applies the rest of the collected sales tax solely to OKC residents.
The only words for doing that are ignorance or dishonesty.
The alleged avg. could only be considered an honest calculation if only OKC residents pay the balance of the sales taxes collected.
Of course, that is simply false, though perhaps many bsuinesses wish otherwise. However, local businesses also incur taxes on their purchases.
When someone's math wants to suggests an average family of four spends more on sales taxable purchases in a year's time than the total gross income of an avg. family of four, then there is either unintentional ignorance, or deliberate deception.
Given the past fuzzy math of one of the posters, who actually brought us this particular parody, it's not too difficult to rule out the first possibility.
Either way, it's not improper to call it out for what it is:
Poor math that ignores the reality of tax collection in favor of trying to advance a particular agenda.
Perhaps the Not This MAPs agenda would be better advanced on facts, not falsehoods. However, some of those advocates flinging around and defending the falsehoods via the parody does suggest a certain aversion to relying on facts.
Pity. Before a sense of desperation crept in, and the shift went to scare tactics 101, there were actually some decent arguments for that particular agenda.
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