Originally Posted by
zookeeper
How does it boggle your mind? I have thought about it. You think about the following...a fictional analogy away from your industry.
Let's say that Oklahoma City had a tax on everything sold at, say, WalMart, of 10% and this is the national median, the norm. WalMart pays 10% of everything to OKC.
Tulsa decides to tax everything sold at WalMart at 1%. WalMart pays Tulsa 1% of all sales. This is NOT the median - NOT the norm.
On every $1,000.000.00 of sales, Walmart pays OKC (and most other cities) their 10% or.......... $100,000.00
But in Tulsa, on every $1,000.000.00 of sales, WalMart pays only $10,000
WalMart pays Tulsa $90,000.00 LESS than OKC and most all other cities.
On what planet is this fictional sweetheart deal with Tulsa NOT called a giveaway?
To further illustrate the fallacy of your logic. You argue the same in your support of the tax break. If it's not helpful, if it doesn't pad the bottom line of your energy company in Oklahoma, why the support for it to continue? Because it's money in the bank you don't have elsewhere. We can play with the semantics forever, but a sweetheart deal that amounts to a giveaway, a handout, a "subsidy", an "incentive", is what it is.
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