When I clicked the link in the text below I didn't immediately see the numbers involved or any description of them. I don't know if they are serious. But of course if that is some kind of per capita or per household breakdown for someone at $50,000 per year there is no way that $4,000 per year for corporate subsidies is anywhere close to be accurate. If you've got a set of Federal tax form instructions from 2012, pull it out. I'm looking at page 42 of a 1040EZ instructions book. It shows that "Social security, Medicare, and other retirement accounted for 37% of outlays. "Social programs accounted for 23%. So we're already at 60% and most of that went to benefits stuff. Then there was 24% for "National defense, veterans, and foreign affairs." 6% was spent on "Net interest on the debt." 2% went to Law Enforcement and general government. That leaves 8% for the only remaining category: Physical, human, and community development.
So where do you think "corporate subsidy" fits in? Maybe "Physical, human, and community development?" It's pretty obvious that there's no way we have a situation where government spends an amount on "corporate subsidy" that dwarfs expenditures on things like Medicare by more than 10 fold. It's ridiculous.
I know that liberals like to say that not taxing a person or business as much as liberals think they should be taxed is "subsidizing" them. It's not. But even if it were in some cases the idea that "spending" on "corporate subsidy" far exceeds spending on everything else combined is pretty darned absurd.
The only question is whether or not anybody was seriously trying to argue that or if it was a joke.
https://www.commondreams.org/view/2013/09/03" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
From your $50,000 per year salary:
$247.75 per year for defense
$3.98 per year for FEMA
$22.88 per year for unemployment insurance
$36.82 per year for food stamps
$6.96 per year for welfare
$43.78 per year for retirement and disability for government workers, civilian and military
$235.81 per year for Medicare
$4,000 per year for corporate subsidies
Your outrage isn't channeled very constructively....