Gasoline Alley by Jim Scancarelli for April 25, 2010

  1. Missing large
    mrbribery  over 14 years ago

    Can I get an amen somebody!

    If Melchizedek was King of Salem, does it mean he was a witch?

     •  Reply
  2. Missing large
    rotts  over 14 years ago

    Besides, NOBODY pays half of their earnings to the IRS.

    The current max IRS tax rate is 35%, but that’s only on the EXCESS of TAXABLE income beyond the 35% point, NOT on one’s entire taxable income.

    Come on, get real!

     •  Reply
  3. Tarot
    Nighthawks Premium Member over 14 years ago

    so , what this amounts to is a plea for more money…….sort of a pulpit pop up ad

     •  Reply
  4. Silverknights
    JanLC  over 14 years ago

    rotts: also add in state and local income taxes, etc. ad nauseum…..

     •  Reply
  5. Cicada avatar
    Dirty Dragon  over 14 years ago

    With all the controversy going on with the Catholic Church of late, I heard a story where in Germany you register your religion with the government, who then takes your 10% tithe right out of your paycheck to send to your church of choice. Kind of like a Union dues check-off policy.

    (The report was saying how many Germans had filed for reclassification to other churches, or to “none of the above”.)

    And “Pastor Present” is Pastis-worthy.

     •  Reply
  6. Missing large
    ankerdorthe  over 14 years ago

    To DirtyDragon: It is not quite 10 percent and it is not the same percentage in all German States (Germany is a federal republic consisting of 16 states). Aktually the it can be 8 or 9 percent depending on which state You are working in. Furthermore it is not calculated from Your income, but as a percentage of the incometax. With deductions for health insurance and old age pensions the nominal 42-55 percent actually dwindles to 10-15 percent unless You have an annual income of more than 120.000 Euros (more than150.000 USDollars) - of which You calculate 8 or 9 percent to be sent to Your church of choice. Below a certain income bracket You don´t pay church tax (or tithe) at all. If You are really wealthy more states have regulations that You can at the most be charged 3,5 percent of Your income. Your income then will be more than 500.000 Dollars a year and You should then be able to shoulder the burden. As an immigrant in the Germany I have opted for “no confession” (like about one third of the natives)

     •  Reply
  7. Missing large
    doublepaw  over 14 years ago

    Take all the idiotic political posts elsewhere. Maybe Lush Rumball’s forum……..

     •  Reply
  8. Axe grinder
    axe-grinder  over 14 years ago

    Time for Upton O. Goode to return…

     •  Reply
  9. Koala
    ransomdstone  over 14 years ago

    DirtyDragon, Thanks for your post. I missed the sign: ‘past or present’. He is definetly of the past.

     •  Reply
  10. Bth baby puppies1111111111 1
    kab2rb  over 14 years ago

    This is the most political I’ve seen on GA. Here I wondered how many others would fall asleep with the Pastor would talk. Our Pastor like audience to participate in some of his sermons. Where in the midst of Mark.

     •  Reply
  11. Cicada avatar
    Dirty Dragon  over 14 years ago

    Joe-Allen: I was referring to Stephan Pastis, the cartoonist in charge of “Pearls Before Swine”. Mr. Pastis is noted for elaborate puns in some of his strips.

    rundstyk: Thanks for the clarification, I just thought it was interesting that the state was collecting for the church in Germany.

     •  Reply
  12. Phil b r
    pbarnrob  over 14 years ago

    @Nabuquduriuzhur, et al: There is TimeBanking, where we contribute our talents and efforts to others and gain credit for things we need done, by others with those talents.

    Not everything needs to be measured in dollars, where bankers can rake their percentage off the top.

    There are other ways of keeping score.

    Our precious irreplacable time on this Earth gets traded in all too much, for dollars (or Euros, or Yen etc.) in this scheme to feed our children and keep our gadget score even with the Joneses.

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment