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Noem grinned. "How much more?" she asked. Then it was off to meet, not with senators but their staffs -- and not in the Capitol but in offices across the street. Progress was not made, by all accounts. A meeting with an aide to Sen. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., opened with his aide announcing that the senator believes the wealthy pay more taxes than their fair share, according to one of the millionaires, Matthew Palevsky, a consultant and founder of the Council on Crime Prevention. "We defined it as not paying our fair share," Palevsky said of the 20-minute chat. "It was clear we were coming from different points of view." In a meeting with Rep. Ralph Hall, R-Texas, the congressman faux-proposed
-- apparently -- to an aide to the millionaires. She declined. Then it was off, on a bus not a limo, across town to see Norquist. Why were they bothering with him? "That's what I asked this morning," said one of the millionaires, Frank Jernigan, a former senior software engineer for Google. "It's a media hook," offered another, Guy Saperstein, a retired lawyer and former president of the Sierra Club Foundation. Such candor is not the norm in these parts. For his part, Norquist said he was ready for the group with a tongue-in-cheek Torah lesson: Maimonides and his "eight degrees of charity." That's what Norquist says the millionaires are essentially proposing with their tax-me-more pitch. Perhaps there should be a ninth, Norquist suggested. "Nobody's holding them back" from donating money to the federal government, he said as he prepared for the group's arrival. "They're saying, `Gee, I'd sure like to write a big check to the federal government, if someone would just stop stopping me.'"
[Associated
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