McWood,
Your analysis is totally correct. And worse, Obama's definition of who is "rich" is any family (not person) making more than $220,000. This covers hundreds of thousands of two-earner families in the large urban areas (NY, NJ, LA, DC, Atlanta suburbs etc.), where husband and wife both get up at 5 am, both commute an hour to work, both work till six in the evening, both commute home an hour from work, and don't get home or see their kids till 7 in the evening (if no traffic jam). They pay city, county, state and federal income taxes, and try to pay off their own student loans, and try to put their kids through college without getting government loans, and try to save five or ten thousand a year in a retirement fund so they won't have to live off of the government when they can't work any more.
It also covers the blue collar guy down the street, who owns a small heating and air business, or a plumbing business, with 3 trucks and 6 employees, and has spent his life trying to build it up to something a little bigger. He is being taxed to death, and if his income taxes are raised in any amount, he won't be able to afford to hire anyone else (create a new job), and will likely have to lay someone off or fail to pay any raises.
These are the "evil rich" that Obama has specifically gone after. In other words, people of moderate success who have worked their entire lives to try to pursue the American Dream. They didn't get to where they are by sitting on their ass's. And they are now being stretched to the absolute limit.
Sure, raises their taxes, and they will stop going out to restaurants except on special occasions, stop going on ordinary vacations, stop going to the dry-cleaners, stop giving decent tips, stop buying new kitchenware, houses, lawn equipment and cars. They will be totally tapped out, and the folks in the economic levels below them will suffer badly. And, raising their tax rate won't put the slightest dent in our fifteen trillion dollar deficit.
Mannyrock