Well, I usually get a chance to listen to the SOTU address, but due to a late class last night, I didn't catch it. Maybe there will be a replay on C-SPAN later (I turned on to C-SPAN earler today looking for it, and low and behold, the members of our US Congress were taking up time giving speeches, while passing a resolution congratulating the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. It's bad enough that these guys weren't tending to more pertinent stuff, but it would have been nice if they had actually read their speeches before time and didn't include factual football errors. But I digress. ).
As far as Dubya on national defense, if he can actually produce tangible evidence to support a WMD program in Iraq, then get the bastard Saddam. Untill then, saying inane stuff like "the inability to find WMD is proof in itself that Iraq has them" won't cut it for me. I never liked Saddam, and Reagan should not have dealt with him earlier (had Reagan been a Democrat, you ditto heads would no doubt have brought this point up many times), and certainly shouldn't have given him chemicals to help wipe out his Kurdish enemies (not quite the "he gassed his own people" mantra, but obviously bad nontheless).
If Bush were really serious about national defense, he would immediately cease American dealings with Saudi Arabia untill credible assurances were given that they would stop supporting terrorist organizations that among many things, are in existence to adversely affect America. 15 of the 19 terrorists who were involved in the 9/11 attacks were Saudi's (none were Iraqi), and it's a well known fact that the Saudi's talk through both sides of their mouth (diplomatically, i mean ). I'm a little disappointed that so few people on the right care about this issue, and instead I tend to see an intellectual hero worship of all things George W. Bush, and virtually no criticism of him on even these important points. Instead of focusing so much on a guy who may have WMD and probably wouldn't use them against the US if he had them anyway, I'd say our main focus should be on a country we know is hurting us right now by their $2billion a year support of terrorism, mainly funded by money we give them for oil; lets focus on the Saudis. But of course, the oil interest of our country will preclude any such thing. Someone mentioned that Dubya will help fund research on alternative fuel. Well, I hope this is true, but I'll be skeptical on that untill I see real results in that area.
Now as far as taxes are concerned, the rich pay a fair percentage of the tax burden. Now, if the argument is that there is too much taxation, period, then I agree. The highest tax bracket shouldn't exceed about 30%, maybe even less, if the government didn't wastefully spend a great deal of money. However, if the top 50% control 95% of the wealth, then hell yeah they should pay the fair percentage of any taxes. I don't hate the rich (hell, I'm working hard towards becoming a member of that group ), but calling the mostly hard working lower income people lazy is uncalled for. Take it out on the government, not on the people who deservedly pay next to no taxes . Also, poorer people pay a disproportionally higher percentage of their income in "payroll taxes" than do the rich(social security taxes are only applicable to your first $89,000 worth of earned income, IIRC). Payroll taxes accounted for about $0.7 trillion of the total amount of taxes collected in 2001, while federal taxes accounted for about $1 trillion.
For total taxes and expenditures (that we know of ) in FY 2001 see:
http://www.house.gov/nicksmith/annualreport.pdf
Interesting report on income distribution, etc.:
http://www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/oss/oss2/98/bull0100.pdf
And wealth concentration:
www.faculty.fairfield.edu/faculty/hodgson/Courses/so11/stratification/income&wealth.htm