Constitutional Paulicy
07-16-2014, 09:24 PM
http://cdn-media.nationaljournal.com/?controllerName=image&action=get&id=40455&format=nj2013_10_columns
How to Renounce America and Still Be Called a Patriot
Her father is a senator, she's a CEO, and her company is forsaking its U.S. citizenship
By Ron Fournier July 16, 2014
This story is about a gilded class of people and corporations enriched by the new American economy while the rest of its citizens pay the tab. The protagonists could be any number of institutional elites, but this column happens to be about a Democratic senator from West Virginia, Joe Manchin, and his daughter, Heather Bresch, the chief executive of Mylan, a giant maker of generic drugs based outside Pittsburgh.
Her company's profits come largely from Medicaid and Medicare, which means her nest is feathered by U.S. taxpayers. On Monday, Bresch announced that Mylan will renounce its United States citizenship and instead become incorporated in the Netherlands – leaving this country, in part, to pay less in taxes.
This is the sort of story that makes blood boil in populists – voters from the Elizabeth Warren wing of the Democratic Party to libertarians who follow Rand Paul and including tea party conservatives. These disillusioned souls, growing in numbers, hate hypocrites who condemn the U.S. political system while gaming it.
Populists can't be happy with how this story was told by Andrew Ross Sorkin of the New York Times. Under the headline "Reluctantly, Patriot Flees Homeland for Greener Tax Pastures," Sorkin cast Bresch as a helpless victim of a system that has made her wealthy and her father powerful.
more here... http://www.nationaljournal.com/politics/how-to-renounce-america-and-still-be-called-a-patriot-20140716
How to Renounce America and Still Be Called a Patriot
Her father is a senator, she's a CEO, and her company is forsaking its U.S. citizenship
By Ron Fournier July 16, 2014
This story is about a gilded class of people and corporations enriched by the new American economy while the rest of its citizens pay the tab. The protagonists could be any number of institutional elites, but this column happens to be about a Democratic senator from West Virginia, Joe Manchin, and his daughter, Heather Bresch, the chief executive of Mylan, a giant maker of generic drugs based outside Pittsburgh.
Her company's profits come largely from Medicaid and Medicare, which means her nest is feathered by U.S. taxpayers. On Monday, Bresch announced that Mylan will renounce its United States citizenship and instead become incorporated in the Netherlands – leaving this country, in part, to pay less in taxes.
This is the sort of story that makes blood boil in populists – voters from the Elizabeth Warren wing of the Democratic Party to libertarians who follow Rand Paul and including tea party conservatives. These disillusioned souls, growing in numbers, hate hypocrites who condemn the U.S. political system while gaming it.
Populists can't be happy with how this story was told by Andrew Ross Sorkin of the New York Times. Under the headline "Reluctantly, Patriot Flees Homeland for Greener Tax Pastures," Sorkin cast Bresch as a helpless victim of a system that has made her wealthy and her father powerful.
more here... http://www.nationaljournal.com/politics/how-to-renounce-america-and-still-be-called-a-patriot-20140716