I’m now well beyond being ready for the election season to be over. Last night we were watching [tag]Torchwood[/tag]. I have to paraphrase a bit, but this is close enough. Couple is in bed, the woman is a pilot. She says, “sex is better than flying.” I heard, “sex is better than voting.”
Category Archives: politics
Those wacky democrats
Every once in a while I stop obsessing over the horrors of a possible Huckabee presidency long enough to check on what the Democratic contenders are up to. The New York Times is reporting:
[blahblahblah woofwoofwoof read the whole article]
I’m not really sure what this means in terms of the Presidential race, I’m sure it’s momentous and all that. For me personally, it’s meant that Husband has had a busy weekend of unexpected work and has barely gotten to cook for me in the manner to which I am accustomed. He gets to do sound for Kennedys and Obama, though, so that’s nice for him.
My disorder is genetic
It’s true, my love of recreational tax code reading comes from my mom’s side of the family. My mom is actually a volunteer tax preparer. I keep telling her no one’s gonna buy the cow if they can get the milk for free, but does she listen? Noooo.
But I digress…
Tonight I was catching up on some reading with IRS Publication 526 Cat. No. 15050A: Charitable Contributions for use in preparing 2007 tax returns. I used to know the rules pretty well when I was gainfully employed, but haven’t really kept up over the last few years. I was skimming through the rules on what constitutes a charitable organization, rules on non-cash donations, and the like to see what’s new. And then I got to page 6: Expenses of Whaling Captains:
You may be able to deduct as a charitable contribution the reasonable and necessary whaling expenses paid during the year in carrying out sanctioned whaling activities.
You can find out more about this exciting new provision by reading Internal Revenue Bulletin: 2006-47; Rev. Proc. 2006-50.
Don’t get too excited and try to write off just any old whaling expenses. You must be recognized by the Alaska Eskimo Whaling Commission before you can even think about writing off expenses related to acquiring whaling accoutrements.
Reading further, I remembered that they finally closed the loopholes in the rules governing the donation of Taxidermy Property in 2006 as well:
If you donate taxidermy property to a qualified organization, your deduction is limited to your basis in the property or its fair market value, whichever is less. This applies if you prepared, stuffed, or mounted the property or paid or incurred the cost of preparing, stuffing, or mounting the property.
Your basis for this purpose includes only the cost of preparing, stuffing, and mounting the property. Your basis does not include transportation or travel costs. It also does not include direct or indirect costs for hunting or killing an animal, such as equipment costs and the costs of preparing an animal carcass for taxidermy.
Taxidermy property means any work of art that:
-Is the reproduction or preservation of an animal, in whole or in part,
-Is prepared, stuffed, or mounted to recreate one or more characteristics of the animal, and
-Contains a part of the body of the dead animal.
The previous rules had to be fixed because they’d created a loophole to the tune of $49 million a year in tax deductions for wealthy people who liked to shoot things, especially endangered species.
We Make Change
All this yapping from the Presidential candidates about change keeps reminding me of a Saturday Night Live parody of 80s bank commercials:
Music For America pulls up stakes
Music For America sent out an email announcing that they are joining the League of Young Voters. Mark has an explanation on the MFA site:
We are all, of course, sad to see MFA go. But we are NOT despairing. Why?
When MFA first started up in 2003, “politicking” inside concert walls was about as popular as panhandling. Mainstream musicians would take a bullet to the gut before taking a political stance. And the “youth vote” was mythically non-existant, like Bigfoot, the yeti or Canada’s beloved mountain sasquatch.
MFA changed all that, through 4 years of voter outreach and issue education at concerts across the country, every night, in all 50 states. We were a group of kids who wanted to make politics and civic engagement relevant to people’s lives the same way that Thom Yorke and Billie Joe Armstrong are relevant, and we were determined to have a blast while doing it. It didn’t hurt that Billie Joe and an army of musicians were down with the cause.
[read the whole letter]
This was a great group to work with and I’m glad their work is going to go on.