Daily Archives: February 23, 2010

Which states actually have the highest taxes?

This is a simple blog post from Michael Tomasky with the newspaper Gaurdian UK that shows which states in America pay the highest taxes.   There are a lot more things to consider other than taxes.

For Example,  here in California we taxes that are called “fees” and “assessments” that add an additional three to four percent of our income to that tax.

We all know that these are simply more taxes,  but the idiots up in Sacramento know that people are stupid,  and they have a much easier time swallowing fees and assessments over taxes.   JD

In the spirit of my post from a while back about the importance of information versus news, and after reading the comment thread on the last post where a couple of you are griping about California taxes, I offer this post.

Our topic: Actual tax rates of states. See this chart from the Tax Foundation. Interesting findings:

*California ranks sixth, with people paying an average of 10.5% on an average per capita income of $47,706 (in 2008).

*New Jersey is numero uno, 11.8% on $56,116.

*New York is second, 11.7% on $55,032.

*My adopted state of Maryland (by the way, Brits: MARE-uh-lund, not MERRY-land, ok?) checks in at a proud number four, 10.8% on $52,709.

*Massachusetts has a bad and unearned rep: it ranks 23rd, with 9.5% on $56,661.

Now, sure enough, tax rates tend to be lower in the south, but you have to look at incomes too. So in Mississippi, people pay just 8.9%, but on an average per capita income of only $31,836. Likewise Alabama; just 8.6% but on income of $36,372.

The national average, by the way: 9.7% on $44,254.

So, unsurprisingly, it’s a trade-off, just like everything else in life. You wanna pay lower taxes, then go move to a state where you’re also likely to earn much lower wages — and a state that offers fewer opportunities, less innovation, has fewer Starbuckses, et cetera.

Heaven for people like, say, Dick Cheney, who want to be left alone but still make a lot more money than average? Well, duh: Wyoming, where it’s 7% on $53,163. But Wyoming (especially non-Jackson Hole Wyoming) is of interest to a tiny proportion of the US population. There are reasons more of us like the coasts. I’ll stick with MARE-uh-lund.

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Iwo Jima Flag Flag Raising 65th Anniversary

Iwo Jima Flag RaisingLong before most people alive today were an itch in their daddy’s ball sack, there were men like my father that fought for the freedoms that we now enjoy today. Most of the idiots on the internet learn their U.S. history from CNN.com and TMZ.com, but there is more to this country than cheese burgers, I-Phones and porno. Perhaps today would be a good time to stop and remember those that died so you could watch porno. Bob

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Iwo Jima flag raising is one of the nation’s most recognizable statues.

Sixty-five years ago the Fourth and Fifth Marine Divisions were able to push inland, but the Japanese fought back hard. After four days of bitter fighting, the American troops reached the top of the mountain and raised the flag.

While the victory was iconic during World War II, for thousands of United States servicemen, Feb. 19, 1945 was the start of a deadly journey to the island of Iwo Jima.

Lloyd Grady doesn’t get around like he used to. He may not have as much hair, but his memory is still sharp when asked about his days as a Navy shipman in 1945.

“That island was a death trap,” he said.

Grady served two tours in the Navy, the second on a 10,000 ton ship, carrying tanks, trucks and troops toward the Japanese island of Iwo Jima.

Looking through his suitcase filled with memories such as dog tags, service medals and pictures of how it was during the war, Grady remembers a night on the ship when he was on watch duty. A flare went off and within minutes nearly a hundred young American men were dead, taken by surprise as they waited for daylight to board the vessel.

“Then I heard all kinds of screaming, cussing, fighting and hollering,” he said. “A group of Japanese swam up in the ocean and got behind the lines and got into a group of Marines with no ammo. Ninety-five were supposed to come on our vessel. We were going to raise them up at 9 in the morning and all 95 were killed.”

More than 25,000 Americans were killed or hurt on the eight-mile island.

Grady and his wife are celebrating their 60th anniversary this year.

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IHOP Free Pancake Day for Charity

What came first, National Pancake Day or Free Pancake Day at IHOP? These things are tough to track down, but I do know National Pancake Day 2010 is the fifth year in a row IHOP has handed out free pancakes on a certain day.

IHOP is giving away one free three-pancake short stack to every customer, but it gets even better. The restaurant is asking that in lieu of paying for pancakes, customers make a donation to Children’s Miracle Network. IHOP’s goal on the first National Pancake Day was to collect $5 million in five years. Over the past four years, IHOP has collected a total of $3.25 million.

Enjoy your pancakes, but be generous

Everyone loves the idea of free food, especially now that more people are seeking unsecured loans than ever before. However, for IHOP to reach its goal of $5 million, it will need to collect $1.75 million today, almost $2 million. So, when you go in for your short stack, at least give something, even if it’s $1.

If every person who takes advantage of free pancakes on National Pancake Day gives a little, it will do a lot of good for Children’s Miracle Network. If you can afford to give more, do so. I know it is tempting to just have your three free pancakes and be on your way without spending a dime, but your donation will go toward a good cause.

Children’s Miracle Network

Children’s Miracle Network is a non-profit organization dedicated to raising money for children’s hospitals. It supports about 170 hospitals throughout the country. IHOP will also give a portion of the donations to local charities in the communities surrounding the location that collects the donations.

National Pancake Day 2010 is a great day for pancake lovers and people who need a good breakfast after celebrating National Margarita Day. But with your help, it can be more than that. Give what you can and enjoy those tasty pancakes!

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Daily Aspirin Dangerous

If you’re taking a daily aspirin for your heart, you may want to reconsider.

For years, many middle-aged people have taken the drug in hopes of reducing the chance of a heart attack or stroke. Americans bought more than 44 million packages of low-dose aspirin marketed for heart protection in the year ended September, up about 12% from 2005, according to research firm IMS Health.

Now, medical experts say some people who are taking aspirin on a regular basis should think about stopping. Public-health officials are scaling back official recommendations for the painkiller to target a narrower group of patients who are at risk of a heart attack or stroke. The concern is that aspirin’s side effects, which can include bleeding ulcers, might outweigh the potential benefits when taken by many healthy or older people.

“Not everybody needs to take aspirin,” says Sidney Smith, a professor at the University of North Carolina who is chairing a new National Institutes of Health effort to compile treatment recommendations on cardiovascular-disease prevention. Physicians are beginning to tailor aspirin recommendations to “groups where the benefits are especially well established,” he says.

Doctors generally agree that most patients who have already suffered a heart attack or ischemic stroke, the type caused by a clot or other obstruction blocking an artery to the brain, should take regular low-dose aspirin. But for people without heart disease, the newest guidelines from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force spell out much more clearly than before when aspirin should be administered.

The guidelines, announced last year, suggest aspirin for certain men 45 to 79 years old with elevated heart-disease risk because of factors like cholesterol levels and smoking. For women, the guidelines don’t focus on heart risk. Instead, the task force recommends certain women should take aspirin regularly if they are 55 to 79 and are in danger of having an ischemic stroke, for reasons that could include high blood pressure and diabetes.

The panel urged doctors to factor in conditions that could increase a patient’s risk of bleeding from aspirin, which tends to rise with age. The group didn’t designate a dose, but suggested that an appropriate amount might be 75 milligrams a day, which is close to the 81mg contained in low-dose, or “baby,” aspirin. The task force didn’t take a position on aspirin for people who are 80 and older because of a lack of data in this age group.

Aspirin Advice

Doctors have been scaling back their aspirin recommendations for people who don’t already have heart disease. Here are the current guidelines from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force.

Other medical researchers dispute the idea that there should be different guidelines for men and women. Still, many experts agree that doctors may have been recommending aspirin to people for whom the risks might outweigh the benefits.

Aspirin acts as a blood thinner, which is believed to account for much of its benefit of protecting against heart attacks and strokes. But that same action, along with a tendency to deplete the stomach’s protective lining, can lead to a danger of gastrointestinal bleeding and possibly bleeding in the brain.

The task force issued its latest guidelines after reviewing the evidence from a number of studies on aspirin’s benefits and risks. The recommendations update the panel’s previous guidelines from 2002, which were more broadly written. Those suggested aspirin use for people of any age who were at elevated risk of heart disease.

“We would like doctors to re-look at their patients who are on aspirin and consider recommending stopping it where the chance of harm outweighs the benefit,” says Ned Calonge, a Colorado public-health official who serves as the task force’s chairman. He notes, however, that in studies of healthy people taking aspirin, the actual rates of bleeding and of prevented heart attacks were very low.

Not all patients accustomed to taking aspirin will want to stop. Maxine Fischer, 55 years old, recently figured out that under the new U.S. guidelines, she wouldn’t be encouraged to continue with the drug. Using an online calculator, which factored such data as her age, blood pressure and medical history, she learned she had just a 1% likelihood of a stroke in the next 10 years. Under the guidelines, only women in her age group with at least a 3% or higher stroke risk should take aspirin.

Ms. Fischer, who works as a manager for seniors’ lobby AARP in San Diego, has taken aspirin daily for two years after reading it could reduce the risk of stroke. For the moment, she says she’ll keep it up, partly because she’s more worried about strokes than ulcers. Strokes are “the big scary thing,” she says.

Other patients say they would stick with aspirin because of other benefits attributed to the drug; past research has suggested that regular aspirin may reduce the risk of colon cancer, for instance. Virginia Douglas, 64, a retired trade-association executive, takes aspirin a few times a week. In addition to the possibly reduced risk of stroke, Ms. Douglas hopes to avoid colon cancer, which affected her father and grandfather. “There’s always a new study with a new recommendation,” says Ms. Douglas, of Sacramento, Calif. “You have to do what’s best for you.”

In a separate analysis, published in medical journal Lancet last May, an international group of scientists reached a broadly similar conclusion as did the U.S. task force—that doctors may have been recommending aspirin too widely. “You really have to have a clear margin of benefit over hazard before you should be treating healthy people,” says Colin Baigent, a professor at Oxford University who coordinated the Lancet analysis.

Still, the Lancet authors disagreed with the U.S. panel on some important details, particularly about who should be taking aspirin. The two groups examined evidence largely from the same studies of the drug, although the international team analyzed the data differently. In the end, the international team of scientists, unlike the U.S. officials, concluded that aspirin’s effects on men and women were mostly the same.

Another disagreement between the two groups also emerged: The U.S. task force said that age is the biggest factor determining a person’s risk of internal bleeding from aspirin. But the international team said other factors, such as diabetes and high blood pressure, also play a significant role. Unfortunately, the scientists noted, the same factors that increase patients’ risk of bleeding also increase their risk of developing heart disease. This, in turn, can make it more difficult to calculate whether the benefits of aspirin would outweigh the risks of side effects.

The U.S. task force responded with a letter to the Lancet, defending its finding that men and women’s results did appear different. There is a “wealth of evidence that men and women have different cardiovascular disease manifestations and respond differently to aspirin,” the letter said. The panel also reiterated its position that bleeding risk is best parsed by age.

Amid the debate, some individual doctors are finding their own position. Rodney Hayward, who codirects a Veterans Affairs research center in Ann Arbor, Mich., says he’s not convinced that aspirin’s effects on men and women are so different. He says he continues to recommend aspirin for certain patients of both sexes with significant heart risk.

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Doctor Douglas Rank Arrested for Stabbing Woman

COVINGTON – A psychiatrist has been charged with stabbing a woman at his Covington office Sunday night.

Douglas Rank, 51, of Golf Manor, was being held Monday in the Kenton County jail where he is charged with first degree assault.

About 7:45 p.m. Sunday, Covington police responded to the third floor of 12 W. Pike St. for a report of an assault with injuries, said Covington Police spokesman Spike Jones.

When police arrived they found Misty Luke, 32, in the doorway with stab wounds to her chest, Jones said. She was taken to University Hospital with serious injuries, he said.

Rank was inside being held by witnesses, Jones said. He was taken into custody and police recovered a sword that they believe to be the weapon, Jones said.

Police were investigating the incident Monday and had not determined the relationship between Rank and Luke, Jones said. He did not know whether she was a patient.

Rank is being held in lieu of $50,000 cash bail. He is listed in jail records as living in Cincinnati, and Hamilton County Auditor records show he owns a home on Stover Avenue in Golf Manor.

According to the Kentucky Board of Medical Licensure, Rank’s license is active this week, but is it set to expire on Sunday.

He graduated from Baylor College of Medicine in Houston in 1984, according to state records.

Rank, who is also board certified in internal medicine, had his license to practice medicine restricted by the board in 2001 it found that after he prescribed “high doses of narcotic prescriptions” to one patient while practicing in Lexington.

The Board of Medical Licensure found that Rank given the patient 57 prescriptions over 14 months. Rank agreed to no longer treat the patient.

Rank also faced disciplinary action from the board in 2000 after he admitted he had sexual intercourse with another patient.

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