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10 Tax Questions the Candidates Don't Want You to Ask

10 Tax Questions the Candidates Don't Want You to Ask

List Price: $11.95
Your Price: $11.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Timely Analaysis of our National Tax Policy
Review: As the Presidential Campaign heats up with the rush leading up to the Democratic and Republican Conventions, the public gets deluged with a raft of Campaign-related books, monographs and articles. A must read for anyone who has a sincere interest and concern about our National income tax policy is John Fox's "10 Tax Questions The Candidates Don't Want You To Ask." It's less than 60 pages but chock full of timely and useful information and analysis interspersed with clever quips, cartoons and quotes. Any thoughtful citizen is missing the boat if he or she fails to read Fox's monograph.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: On Target
Review: Attorney, professor and commentator John O Fox has spent the better part of his professional life wrestling with the US Tax Code and knows whereof he speaks. In the spirit of pamphleteer Tom Paine, he talks common sense to his readers in 50-odd pages: 10 Tax Questions the Candidates Don't Want You to Ask is a provocative and lively adddition to Fox's growing body of work. Written for the interested layman,it is accessible and brisk and repays your investment handsomly. Would that the candidates would address tax issues as clearly as Fox does.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: On Target
Review: Attorney, professor and commentator John O Fox has spent the better part of his professional life wrestling with the US Tax Code and knows whereof he speaks. In the spirit of pamphleteer Tom Paine, he talks common sense to his readers in 50-odd pages: 10 Tax Questions the Candidates Don't Want You to Ask is a provocative and lively adddition to Fox's growing body of work. Written for the interested layman,it is accessible and brisk and repays your investment handsomly. Would that the candidates would address tax issues as clearly as Fox does.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: John Fox should write U.S. tax law
Review: Clear, incisive and entertaining, this is a book about an ordinarily mind-numbing subject, taxes, that's actually a page-turner. Headings make the issues covered even easier to understand and I didn't know tax law could have a heart until I read this book. John O. Fox should be writing U.S. tax law, not just writing about it. Judith Pacht, Los Angeles

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Brilliant, lucid tax book anyone can understand!
Review: If you're like me, hearing the word "tax" is almost as much a turnoff as paying one. Yet here in this slender book I learned not only what I should know and think about my own taxes but also what I should insist our government do about my taxes and everyone else's. A couple of examples -- I found a sane path to a health insurance program that would help me and most people I know; in six short pungent pages I saw how Social Security can be fixed; I learned what I should tell Congress to do about home equity, the poor, my single son's struggle to keep his head above the tax waters while he's building a career, my aunt's pension problems, the college loans that often hurt more than they help. I could go on and on but you get the idea -- this book is a must for virtually everyone I know. It's so true that tax policy is social philosophy, and John O. Fox has helped me understand this truth in a way I never before have.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Real Questions Represent Real Interests
Review: John Fox has it right! His "Ten Questions" represent the real interests of Americans -- from mortgages, home equity and property to health, childcare, social security and retirement. American have the right to expect better answers from elected officials about tax issues -- not just the usual boiler plate about tax cuts. This small volume frames the debate that should take place during this election year.


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