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It's a very divisive topic- owners want their tax breaks. bettyellen May 2017 #1
We don't want to look at where they come from, that's for sure. wildeyed May 2017 #3
Kills me when I hear local pols say renters dont pay taxes- the taxes come from our damned rent. bettyellen May 2017 #6
Working the polls for a Dem candidate, I overheard one of my fricking neighbors wildeyed May 2017 #9
oh wow, that is rough. as a woman, i have had bosses explain to me over and over agin why they paid bettyellen May 2017 #10
GOOD article ismnotwasm May 2017 #2
Reminds me of this post. muntrv May 2017 #4
I am not really understanding this. frankieallen May 2017 #5
80% of the tax relief goes to people making six figures or more. housing prices are propped up bettyellen May 2017 #7
families making six figures are far far from the "wealthiest Americans", two completely different frankieallen May 2017 #18
Wealthier/ wealthiest... If you have to make six figures to benefit, it's not for "working families" bettyellen May 2017 #23
30 year mortgages are front end loaded, meaning the MID helps with making those first years frankieallen May 2017 #24
I am saying that mythical family you mention doesnt deserve 80% more than the working class who make bettyellen May 2017 #27
I don't benifit from it, my home is paid for, I spent 22 years making payments and it was frankieallen May 2017 #29
you DID benefit, and it helped you get a leg up. A leg up offered to very few earners under 100K bettyellen May 2017 #30
I didn't make anything near 100K when i bought my home, or for the first 15 years frankieallen May 2017 #32
you never read the article, and celebrating when so many others were excluded from assistance- ugly bettyellen May 2017 #34
Ha, ok, I'm celebrating. Your just baiting me. frankieallen May 2017 #36
ahh, it;s fake news because you don;t like admitting it benefits the upperclasss. bettyellen May 2017 #37
I'm not understanding your not understanding dumbcat May 2017 #8
the bigger the mortgage, the bigger the tax break- 80% of this tax relief goes to people bettyellen May 2017 #11
I agree dumbcat May 2017 #13
oh sorry- I misunderstood you! Thanks. bettyellen May 2017 #14
An elimination of the mortgage interest deduction would simply lead to lower home prices taught_me_patience May 2017 #12
And it encourages people to purchase the largest, most expensive home they can afford. wildeyed May 2017 #15
30K of mortgage interest in a year? what do you live in a castle? frankieallen May 2017 #22
"The wealthiest of Americans do not pay mortgage interest, or very little. " NCTraveler May 2017 #17
Fine, cap it then. frankieallen May 2017 #20
One of the things discussed in the article. NCTraveler May 2017 #26
The article suggests capping the deduction, not getting rid of it altogether. wildeyed May 2017 #19
And i totally agree with capping it. frankieallen May 2017 #21
Sorry I mis-typed slightly. wildeyed May 2017 #28
In metropolitan areas, 600k is not much for a home, radius777 May 2017 #31
I'm a homeowner and business owner. wildeyed May 2017 #33
the deductions help to offset many of the costs and fees radius777 May 2017 #38
Agree completely, as do most actual Dem voters, radius777 May 2017 #35
"We need to stop the huge entitlements paid out to the wealthiest" NCTraveler May 2017 #16
And that's one of the reasons why California has Renter's Credit. haele May 2017 #25
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