Excerpted from JSO. (Full article here: http://www.jsonline.com/story/index.aspx?id=713961)
Cry me a river, folks. Tell me about how "middle class" you feel when you take home, after taxes, four or five times as much as most of my neighbors here in Milwaukee. On a single income, no less, in the first case.
Suck it up. Maybe you would be happier if your family income was closer to Wisconsin's median---about $60K according to the article. Then you wouldn't have to pay all those awful taxes. Doesn't matter how much people have ... there's always reason to complain about not havng enough.
And the funny thing is, these folks will still fall into the group that gets the tax "rebate," according to the article, and both families admit that they don't plan to spend the money.
"I feel middle class. I wouldn't say I was affluent," said Eric Olsen, a human resources professional whose wife stays home with their four children, all under 11. His adjusted gross income was about $143,000 in 2006, much of it from investments. The rebate plan passed by the House would start to phase out checks when a family's adjusted gross income hits $150,000.
The Felerski family had about the same income last year. He is a self-employed manufacturers' representative and she is a medical technician. They have two young children.
"I don't feel we are rich by any means," Matthew Felerski said. "I consider us to be middle income, just working-class people."
The Felerski family had about the same income last year. He is a self-employed manufacturers' representative and she is a medical technician. They have two young children.
"I don't feel we are rich by any means," Matthew Felerski said. "I consider us to be middle income, just working-class people."
Suck it up. Maybe you would be happier if your family income was closer to Wisconsin's median---about $60K according to the article. Then you wouldn't have to pay all those awful taxes. Doesn't matter how much people have ... there's always reason to complain about not havng enough.
And the funny thing is, these folks will still fall into the group that gets the tax "rebate," according to the article, and both families admit that they don't plan to spend the money.



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