Stephen Moore
Stephen Moore
Stephen Mooreis an Australian rugby union footballer, and current captain of the Brumbies and the Australian national team...
ProfessionRugby Player
Date of Birth20 January 1983
CityKhamis Mushait, Saudi Arabia
bit people performance republican seemed talked
I talked to people before we started and they seemed a bit demoralized at the performance of the Republican Party.
federal imposed past tax
What has been the fastest-growing federal tax imposed on middle-income Americans over the past 20 years?,
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We'll even have a drive-through distribution area set up by Wednesday,
answer billion companies create few incentive investment learning lesson lose people revenue stimulate whether work
We're learning the lesson that when we put people back to work and give companies an incentive to invest, it does create revenue-generating activities. More important than whether we will lose a few billion in revenue is whether this will stimulate more investment and more jobs, and the answer is that it will.
bulk cooking meals served serving start throughout
We'll start cooking at 5 a.m. daily, ... We'll probably end up serving continuously throughout the day, but the bulk of the meals will be served at the designated times.
came close debate earlier income
In the debate earlier in Austin, (Texas) came perilously close to getting an income tax.
bringing clinton favor insist market might money percent rate stock words
Clinton may insist on some more targeting, in other words he may be in favor of bringing the rate down 20 percent but it might be targeted, for example, you might have to re-invest the money in the stock market if you want the rate cut.
poor rich richer
The rich are getting richer but the poor are getting richer, too, in this expansion.
bunch club great proud
They're a proud club and a great bunch of blokes,
cent countries economies embraced europe far flat former germany growth including itself job mostly nations next per reaping russia soviet spain ten
Ten nations, mostly from the former Soviet Union, including Russia itself with its 13 per cent rate, have embraced a flat tax. And the economies of these countries are reaping their reward: they far outpace crusty old Europe in GDP growth and job creation. China, Germany and Spain could be the next dominoes to fall.