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What Caption Would You Give this Image?!


JIMMYTRON

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At my school, we're having a fundraiser, and a type of donation (I guess) is that students can pay $5.00 to make a tee-shirt of their liking.

 

I found this picture, but i can think of a good caption (You know, something that you would see on a LOLCat image)

 

[align=center]tigerDM0309_468x478.jpg

ALL CAPTIONS MUST BE UNDER PG-13!!

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2)People say pictures are worth a thousand words...but this one just says you're screwed.

 

I don't know... Seem a little bit too long...

 

I got another idea.

 

iBite(you/u)

 

The you part is an option.

 

I stopped reading and faceplam'd after the "i" in "iBite".

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[failedattemptatcentering]tigerDM0309_468x478.jpg[/failedattemptatcentering]

 

The health program adds to what is already a steeply progressive tax code by using the upper-income tax revenues to subsidize health care for people with incomes under $50,000 — the same group that currently pays little if any federal income taxes.In fact, thanks in part to Mr. Obama's "making work pay" tax credit enacted last year, only about 3 percent of families with incomes under $50,000 will pay any federal income taxes this year, although most of those will continue to pay Social Security payroll taxes, according to estimates by Deloitte Tax and the Tax Policy Center.Meanwhile, Mr. Obama's budget proposes letting the tax rate on people with incomes of more than $200,000 revert to Clinton-era levels between 36 percent and 39.6 percent at the end of the year when President George W. Bush's tax cuts expire. And a myriad of proposals have emerged in Congress to further tax the same group to pay for everything from education to clean energy. With taxes due Thursday, these statistics are enough to "make your blood boil" if you're in the top 53 percent, said Ned Brines, analyst at the Seeking Alpha market research Web site. "Id say 'the rich' are certainly paying their fair share." The nearly half of U.S. citizens who paid no federal income taxes last year is up from around 40 percent of non-payers just five years ago, suggesting that the long-standing trend toward tilting taxes toward the rich is gathering speed, he said. "At this rate of increase, by 2012 the majority of voters won't be taxpayers," yet many of them will be getting benefits from the government, Mr. Brines said.

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