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Throw in a little squeamish self-disclosure and blogging doesn't get any better. Let's use a chronological approach.
From The Rachel Maddow Show last night, this clip featuring Florida State Representative Scott Randolph. In response to the Florida legislature's unbelievable eighteen anti-choice bills presented in 2011 so far, Randolph confronted the state house with its small government for corporation/big government for the common woman hypocrisy.
The Florida ACLU's Incorporate My Uterus site (link to image above) offers an excellent incentive to incorporate:
Businesses get special treatment these days. If lawmakers and other politicians see your uterus and your body as a business, maybe they’ll work to get government out of the uterus regulation business as they do for every other company
Fast forward to today's WSJ and this article on Doug Stives, a New Jersey CPA, college professor, and self-proclaimed "Most Tax-Efficient Man In America," who offers lessons in incorporating your own consulting firm to avoid taxes and maximize income.
From the companion WSJ article,
You're with me so far, right? Tax breaks for body parts: at last, an equal-opportunity shot at the good life for middle and lower-class women and their families. All you've got to do is incorporate your womb and keep careful records. Don't forget the hot dogs. Check.
Doug Stives, a CPA from Red Bank, N.J., went skiing in Utah.
"I always dreamed of coming here for peak conditions," he said in mid-March between runs at Snowbasin Resort.
The trip is among the many perks that have accrued from his decision, in 2006, to become, in effect, The Most Tax-Efficient Man in America. The experiment has led to a new career, frequent travel and obsessive documentation of expenses, such as a $6 hot dog he recently bought in the Philadelphia airport.
And onward to this late-breaking change of tone on the breast cancer-hormone replacement therapy link from the NYTimes :
There's some news in there about non-effects for heart disease, colon cancer, etc., so please be a good info consumer and read the whole thing. It's probably the first good news I've heard in weeks, but what's that got to do with tax deductions? Well, first of all, one third of us over fifty can't participate in the uterus incorporation tax deduction! Somebody needs to inform the ACLU, because that's what they're there for. Don't link away; I did that part for us already.In a finding that challenges the conventional wisdom about the risks of some hormones used in menopause, a major government study has found that years after using estrogen-only therapy, certain women had a markedly reduced risk of breast cancer and heart attack.The research, part of the landmark Women’s Health Initiative study, is likely to surprise women and their doctors, who for years have heard frightening news about the risks of hormone therapy. But most of those fears are related to the use of a combination of two hormones, estrogen and progestin, which are prescribed to relieve hot flashes and other symptoms of menopause, and have been shown to increase a woman’s risk of breast cancer.The new findings, reported Tuesday in The Journal of the American Medical Association, come from 10,739 women in the Women’s Health Initiative study who had previously had a hysterectomy, the surgical removal of the uterus. Nationwide, about one-third of women in their 50s have had a hysterectomy. (my emphasis)The estrogen-only group was not given progestin, which is prescribed only to protect the uterus from the harmful effects of estrogen. Although all the women in the estrogen study stopped using the treatment in 2004, the investigators have continued to monitor their health, as is typical in large clinical trials.The most surprising new finding relates to breast cancer. The women with hysterectomies who used estrogen alone had a 23 percent lower risk for breast cancer compared with those who had taken a placebo. This is in stark contrast to the higher risk of breast cancer shown in the estrogen-progestin part of the trial.“The decreased risk of breast cancer in this group is something we totally didn’t expect when we started the W.H.I. hormone therapy trials,” said Andrea Z. LaCroix, the study’s lead author and a professor of epidemiology at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle.
Squeamish self-disclosure: I'm one of those third. When my kids were four and seven, a very nice Air Force gynecologist at Langley AFB relieved me of my unmentionable body part. He was thinking cancer, so we were both gratified when all he had to do was finesse my decision about a third child. Due to the nature of the problem, I woke up to raging menopause that couldn't safely be treated with HRT for a YEAR. Mother Nature did not mean for woman to deal with an icing-melting hot flash while she was serving up Room Mommy cupcakes to a classroom of kindergarteners. Although, come to think of it, teachers probably have to do it all the time. Gosh, we need to pay them more.
Anyway, when the doc finally gave me my script for Premarin (estrogen derived from pregnant mare's piss)--with the explicit instructions: You will need to take these the rest of your life--I could have kissed his feet. And, when they later told us all that those years of HRT were going to doom women like me, I felt cheated. I feel better now, but I'm going to miss out on those incorporatemyuterus.com deductions. Life is so unfair.
So I've decided to incorporate my Uteral Deficit. After all, there's lots more research ahead on this subject of estrogen-only HRT and no data yet on what happens when a gal who's just following instructions winds up taking it for twenty-five years. I figure I can contribute to science and take deductions on air-fare back and forth to various medical research facilities in exotic places like Seattle, New York City, Houston, and San Diego.
That way I improve my financial bottom line and make a contribution to science. If I need medical care, I can take advantage of the top facilities in the nation and bill it to Medicare. By a complicated mathematical formula familiar to Republicans, I've also figured out how my un-uterus incorporation tax deduction plan will reduce the national deficit and piss off Paul Ryan all at the same time. And blogging just doesn't get any better than that.
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| The face of the 2011 government shut-down. |
"A nervous breakdown on paper.” - Rep. Emmanual Cleaver

I've heard that some of the best unmentionable body part clinics in the world are in Paris and Rome. Seems like a reasonable write-off to me.
ReplyDeleteMr. C,
ReplyDeletePerfect! I could flaunt my deduction on the Spanish Steps.
You know I actually avoid a huge segment of the daily news now, insanity is spreading like some sort of comical zombie virus and the results greatly confuses this simple country boy.
ReplyDeleteDoug Stives, a New Jersey CPA, college professor, and self-proclaimed "Most Tax-Efficient Man In America," who offers lessons in incorporating your own consulting firm to avoid taxes and maximize income.
I know a few of these leeches and I have a hunch that the minute Doofus Stives might damage his expensive car on some pot hole it would only take him seconds to be on his cell cussing some low-paid public employee demanding road crews fix that hole that day.
I really need to leave the country.
Hmm... probably can't take depreciation on a body part that isn't around. But you could take a loss... no, there's probably a tax-code equivalent of the statute of limitations...
ReplyDeleteYou know, a farmer can get a subsidy for land that lies undeveloped (but not fallow) - I wonder if you can work that in there somewhere. Might take a little explaining, but still...
Just in time...I haven't done my taxes yet!
ReplyDeleteDang. My UBP is still intact albeit with ligation -- can I at least get a partial write off? LOL
ReplyDeleteYou know, I say-go ahead and incorporate. Who's going to check anyway? Hmmm?
ReplyDeleteTalk about a win-win. And if anyone gives you grief about incorporating your Uteral Deficit, Nance, I think you could raise a cognizable equal protection argument. Women acting in good faith on their doctors' advice -- well, if you're not part of a protected class you should be, dammit.
ReplyDeleteIf we can't talk sense into these elected village idiots who want to regulate the hell out of unmentionable female body parts, let's litigate the hell out of them until they surrender from pure exhaustion.
Beach Bum,
ReplyDelete"I really need to leave the country."
I know, honey. I feel that way every other day. Then, something happens--like this little incorporation opportunity--and I'm as fired up and giggly as Maddow. Maybe tomorrow will be a better day.
Nameless Cynic,
"..get a subsidy for land that lies undeveloped (but not fallow)" This is gonna require some research, but it beats the hell out of my missed chance at getting paid for being young and cute.
#1 Nana,
It's too late for 2010, but you and I can take our incorporated uteri and do some consulting in Tuscany next fall. Whaddya say?
Kay,
"..albeit with ligation." I feel sure we can find someone to litigate your ligation. It's a whole new world.
KGMom,
"Who's going to check anyway? Hmmm?" Let 'em try. I'll charge them with trespassing and theft of corporate secrets.
CogDiss,
".. if you're not part of a protected class you should be, dammit." LOVE the way you think. I have a position in my corporation for a marketing director and you're at the top of my list.
small world, i'm taking a break from doing my taxes and relaxing with a cup of tea. my foreign business and non business income along with foreign withholding tax from your fair country is driving me nuts. i'm about to say screw it, smoke a little something, go for a bike ride and take a nap.
ReplyDeleteevery year at this time after writing another check to the government i go out and buy some gold. it's turned into a positive financial accident.
So it appears that, as I am male, I cannot avail myself of the tax breaks from incorporating my uterus because I don't have one? Did I understand that correctly? I'm not good at doing taxes.
ReplyDeleteBrilliant job of pulling this all together, Nance! I still have mine, along with the ice-melting... which makes me wonder if my inner-corporation must be fully functioning to qualify for tax breaks. I'm going to have to consult my accountant on this. I suspect it might be tricky, but well worth my time and $$. ;)
ReplyDeleteI love how you pulled all of this together! I finally figured out why Paul Ryan annoys me; he looks exactly like my neighbor, who is a complete a**. You are brilliant!
ReplyDeletebilly pilgrim,
ReplyDelete" i'm about to say screw it, smoke a little something, go for a bike ride and take a nap."
You might want to read this Time.com article first.
Robert the Skeptic,
Maybe you could incorporate your heart valve, as long as you consider your blog a consulting job. Now, all we gotta do is get paid for this.
Jayne,
"..makes me wonder if my inner-corporation must be fully functioning to qualify for tax breaks." So many questions we never thought to ask, which is why we're still people who pay our taxes--silly us.
Meg,
"..he looks exactly like my neighbor, who is a complete a**." There IS something so annoying about this guy, sort of a rat dog look. Dead wrong and very energetic. I've seen him photo-shopped as Pugsley Addams, of The Addams Family. Something about the expressions and the hairline.
Wikipedia: "For his part, Pugsley was largely oblivious of the harm his sister tried to inflict on him, or an enthusiastic supporter of it, viewing all attempts as fun and games. In his first incarnation in the New Yorker cartoons, Pugsley was depicted as a diabolical, malevolent boy-next-door."
omigod, and I just finished our tax return! Yikes, is there still time to incorporate and refile? I always swore they'd have to peel the hormone pills from my dying hands, but that was before they found a link to ALZ. The cancer and CAD connection didn't scare me, but I wasn't ready to give up my brain for my unmentionable. With your plan, I should be able to get my mojo running, along with a tax break! Have I died and gone to heaven?
ReplyDeletepaula,
ReplyDeleteYou are right on time to incorporate for 2011.
You know, I found it odd that my female doctor didn't panic about all the bad news studies of the past few years. She moved me to a low dose bio-equivalent and we pressed on. Most of the male doctors I know of immediately yanked all their female patients off hormones based on the first study. Of course, about a month later the major antidepressant manufacturing houses reaped a huge profit on that! We marriage counselors got a bump off it, too.
Nance. Beautifully written. Too late for me but maybe I can find another body part to incorporate.
ReplyDeletetnlib,
ReplyDelete"maybe I can find another body part to incorporate."
Your brain seems like the obvious candidate, but those flying fingers deserve a nomination.
i'm not sure but i think i've heard that alcohol and prescription drugs may have a few drawbacks too.
ReplyDeletebilly pilgrim,
ReplyDelete"Nothing is worth doing unless the consequences may be serious." - George Bernard Shaw
"I tell you, we are here on Earth to fart around, and don't let anybody tell you different." - Vonnegut
Shhh, it's nearly 6am and my son knows not where his notebook is while he (peacefully?) cuts Zzzzzzz's, while I, continuing in my bad electrical karma stage hope this thing does not fizzle under my apparently negatively charged energy.
ReplyDeleteYou are so coherent you have inspired envy in me :}
Once again all parts of the universe converge in your landscape. Uteri of the World Unite! Can I incorporate mine even if I live in an unincorporated area? Can mine have its own logo and jingle?
ReplyDeletea/b
You are much too modest, woman. You're a complete genius at pulling together disparate news stories like this.
ReplyDeleteI'm sure you heard the FL Legislature's GOP leadership's reason for admonishing Rep. Randolph: there are too many youthful (sub-18) pages and messengers on the House floor, and they should not be subject to such language without the consent of a parent or guardian.
It drives The Missus and me crazy to read the paper here in Tallahassee every day...
[P.S. and off-topic: I've restored our home Internet connection. MatLand is the first site I've visited from her in almost a week!]
P.P.S., and even further off-topic: that should be "...from here in almost a week." Ha!
ReplyDeleteEntre Nous,
ReplyDeleteEverybody has been having computer issues lately. Every time I turn around, one of us is having to go through a recovery process, hearts a-pounding. Glenn Beck is not as busy as usual, so maybe he can help us sort out the conspiracy that's clearly afoot.
A/B and JES,
Whew, thanks guys! I've kept this post on top forever, unable to move on until I'd heard from you. I fear that's diagnosable.
A/B,
A uterus jingle! The lyric search engine blows a fuse and the mind reels.
JES,
Let me take this in: The pages on the Florida House Floor will be offended to learn that Mr. Randolph's wife has a uterus. What, the legislators think they've got a temple for vestal virgins, there? Those virgins have more to fear from their bosses than anatomy lessons. Sounds like the best argument imaginable for continued funding of Planned Parenthood.
Oh, dear, this is full of such great stuff. I can't help but take notice that you are combining wieners and uteri (is that the plural, really?). Genius.
ReplyDeleteI would point out to your male readers that when the government starts to give equal scrutiny to their comparable male organs, only then would it be fair to consider an incorporation right for said organs. So far, anyway, I don't see those (mostly male) lawmakers proposing equally intrusive legislation to their own-ahem!-wieners.
I think you've overlooked one important matter. Ryan is doing away with Medicare, or giving lump sums to insurers who will, of course, administer the health coverage at a much lower cost. That's code for health rationing and I'm sure unless a woman is of child-bearing age and intending to "produce" they aren't going to pay for any kind of uterus or none-uterus care 'cause by then you're "old" and useless whatever your age. If there are any funds for organ care I'm confident they'll be re-directed to male "enhancement" -- heaven only knows based on the spam in my email there are plenty of "health" sources selling such products -- just what every old widow lady needs.
ReplyDeleteNance, you are absolutely brilliant! I think that you should run for the U.S. Senate. Your major campaign issue will be all about incorporating your uterus or incorporating your uteral deficit. I volunteer to be your campaign manager. Of course we need a campaign slogan, maybe "Use Your Uterus, Incorporate!"
ReplyDelete