have been taxed already
Quite the contrary, you have ignored the fact that corporations get reliefs, incentives, abatements, subsidies, financial inducements, and other forms of preference items.
You forgot the part about the corps are expected to employ hundreds (or possible thousands), spend 100's of millions in the local economy and risk this capital over many years...
A small little exclusion, but pretty important all the same
Thus, the taxes they pay (if any, and we have already discussed innumerable times the fact that many corporations do not pay taxes),
Fine, but don't punish every single corp entity because of a few.
are paid on NET income, not gross. This means corporations get to take off all kinds of deductions, many of which include padded up expense accounts but do not include government handouts, and some don't even pay taxes. We have discussed this so many times but you keep ignoring these facts.
Padded expense accounts? That's your silver bullet?
Doesn't the IRS audit those things?
As for the 'handouts' - excepting a few examples of such (sports teams comes to mind), what do you think the fallout will be of eliminating all of those write-downs without having a corresponding reduction in the tax rate?... You want all the bennies from one side of the equation to remain unchanged but beef-up the costs on the other side.
In the end, I could care less how the US decides to organize their tax system; but in the event that your suggestions were to be implemented, the US would become the ultimate consumer society and produce next to nothing (read: there would be absolutely no trade balance).
That said, where do you think that the money to run your economy will come from?.. Gvt just printing more bills each day?
Hint: That didn't work so well for the Wiemar Republic nor for Zimbabwe recently.
you get as an individual to write-off the financing charges for your home
That is a change of subject and is inconsequential for this topic since it does not directly involve corporations. However, just to add to the point, whenever some home owner deducts interest charges on their tax return, it serves as an incentive for some to take investment or home loans. This ultimately benefits bank and other lending institutions.
No further use in you trying to debate this matter as it is an argument you cannot win.
It has everything to do with the topic.... It is a form of 'welfare' is it not, and what's worse, the wealthy also get to take advantage of that heinous loophole!