Big Love is taken to task by Henry Blodget in today's blog-post. If this is a (fair & balanced) case of one business sleazeball knowing another, so be it.
[x Business Insider]
Here's What I Think Romney Is Hiding By Refusing To Release His Tax Returns
By Henry Blodget
Tag Cloud of the following article
As the days tick by and Mitt Romney remains the only Presidential candidate in recent history (including his father) who refuses to release all relevant tax returns, the speculation is growing as to what Romney is hiding.
Some people think that Romney might have cheated on his taxes in some way, despite his assertion that he has paid every dime that he owed.
Some people think that Romney might have abused offshore accounts, shell companies, and other sophisticated tricks.
Some people think that Romney might have deducted some of the $35+ million he spent on his own Presidential campaign in 2008 as a business expense, something that would almost certainly violate rules (campaign donations aren't deductible).
And so on.
Romney boosters are quick to dismiss all this speculation as left-wing propaganda, but for anyone who isn't just "rooting" for a particular political team, this is ridiculous. Again, Romney remains the only recent candidate who refuses to release his returns (Romney's opponent, Barack Obama, in contrast, has released 11 years of them). Obviously, the Democrats are going to do everything they can to try to make hay out of this issue, but it is an issue that should have hay made out of it. The press absolutely should keep demanding that Romney release his returns because America deserves to see them.
Romney is running for President of the United States, not president of the local school board. Given that his primary policy plank is his business and financial expertise, Americans deserve to know more about that expertise. Specifically, Americans deserve to know what they have known about every other Presidential candidate in recent history namely, what's in their tax returns.
For what it's worth, my guess is that what Romney is hiding in his tax returns is not something that is clearly illegal or dishonest, but, simply the following reality:
In short, by not releasing his returns, I think Romney is trying to avoid calling more attention to the fact that he is a card-carrying member of the 0.01%, a group of Americans who deserve to be proud of their success but who are also understandably viewed with suspicion and frustration by most other Americans right now, especially when they argue that they're still paying too much in taxes.
That's what I think Romney's hiding.
And I can understand why some of his advisors are telling him he can just hold on and weather the storm--because they know it won't help him to have those details out there.
But it will help the country.
It will help us assess Mitt Romney as a Presidential candidate and a person.
It will also shed more light on just how much some of our tax laws favor the super-rich.
If those tax laws are reasonable, they should withstand such scrutiny--and Romney should proudly stand behind him.
And if those laws are unreasonable or unfair (which the "carried interest" exemption absolutely is), then maybe Romney's tax returns will help rally support to get them changed.
Either way, America deserves to see them. And what's in them will come out eventually, whether or not Romney chooses to release them. The only question is "when?" Ω
[Henry Blodget is co-founder, CEO and Editor-In Chief of Business Insider, one of the fastest-growing business and tech news sites in the world. A former top-ranked Wall Street analyst, Blodget is also the host of Yahoo Daily Ticker, a Yahoo Finance video show viewed by several million people a month. He is often a guest on CNN, MSNBC, NPR, and other networks. He has contributed to The Atlantic, Slate, Newsweek International, The New York Times, Fortune, New York, the Financial Times, and other publications. He is the author of The Wall Street Self-Defense Manual: A Consumer's Guide to Investing. Blodget is a graduate of Yale University. Full disclosure: Blodget was accused of securities fraud by the SEC and settled out-of-court and agreed to never engage in securities trading. ]
Copyright © 2012 Business Insider, Inc.
Get the Google Reader at no cost from Google. Click on this link to go on a tour of the Google Reader. If you read a lot of blogs, load Reader with your regular sites, then check them all on one page. The Reader's share function lets you publicize your favorite posts.
Sapper's (Fair & Balanced) Rants & Raves by Neil Sapper is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License. Based on a work at sapper.blogspot.com. Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available here.
Copyright © 2012 Sapper's (Fair & Balanced) Rants & Raves
Release or not release - "tis the question". Either way, his azz is grazz. If he doesn't realese them, the public will think he hiding something really 'shady'. If he releases them, the public will see something really 'shady'. He win this one, nor the presidency.
ReplyDelete