Tax Reform ATR believes that all consumed income should be taxed one time, at one low and flat rate. Link
Minnesota Public Radio covers Grover's visit and Gov Dayton's lame response: http://t.co/O0zJTPhO ^
joshuaculling
Grover prepping for a live hit on the local Fox affiliate. ^ http://t.co/JbHQ5McY
joshuaculling
ATR Opposes a Cigarette Tax Increase in Alabama http://t.co/0MbV3oqX
taxreformer
RT @KarlRove: Obama using regulatory uncertainty to stall jobs & private investment in economy. Read more from @digitalliberty: http://t ...
KarlRove
RT @joshuaculling: At White Bear Chamber of Commerce (Twin Cities) luncheon where Michele Bachmann is introducing @GroverNorquist.
joshuaculling
RT @GroverNorquist: Fun picture with Tokyo Tea Party leader at Wednesday meeting. http://t.co/PpmjLXTj
GroverNorquist
CoGC: Payroll Package Includes Excellent Spending Cuts http://t.co/TM53mtjw
taxreformer
ATR Supports H.R. 3630, the "Middle Class Tax Relief and Job Creation Act of 2012" http://t.co/dB6nr6Jr
taxreformer
RT @MDuppler: I'll be on @VarneyCo on @FoxBusiness at 10am EST^ We're discussing whether the US is modeling Greece's self-destruction (h ...
MDuppler
ATR believes regulatory policy should maximize the freedom of interaction between actors in the marketplace. Excessive regulation handicaps actors in the market by placing broad, capricious restrictions on their abilities to interact, limiting the faculties of productive industries and stifling consumer choice. Regulatory policy has typically been crafted behind closed doors, without public input and external expertise; aided by this bureaucratic opacity, the regulatory regime has grown immensely, costing taxpayers tens of billions annually. The cost of the regulatory burden, coupled with its stifling effect on a productive free market signals reform must be serious, expansive and expedient.