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Yes - a little "sacrifice" - but the two younger groups both sacrifice some - and its not a perfect solution - could be tweaked - but you get the general idea. The issue here is that the left is pushing "fairness" idea without ever defining what fairness really is. The rich pay the lions share - how much more is "fair". The amounts keep changing. So we hear for days and days about hte "buffet" rule - wasting days of time on something that pays for 11 hours of government spending.... see the inefficiency? Its a political ploy, not a serious attempt at solving the nation's fiscal problems. I am not against getting rid of loopholes. I am not against redoing the tax code. I am against people making a political herring out of something while ignoring the problems of this country. THAT is what the buffet rule is about - distracting the populace and trying to score political points on "fairness" instead of dealing with real issues. |
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http://econlog.econlib.org/archives/...s_mandato.html Using the term "entitlement spending" the way you are is using rhetorical tricks to push your side's agenda, either willfully or not. |
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Why is it that when someone just points out facts that you can't dispute - they are immediately on some "side"? The Democrats had Congress and the Presidency for 2 years, they have had half of Congress and the Presidency for a further 1.5 - how is calling them out for their utter refusal to deal with the real problems we face automatically "partisan"? "Team R" did the same thing - and the American people held them accountable in 2008. Talking about it then wasn't partisan - but because your side is now the one catching heat, it is? Cmon..... The buffet rule is a farce - its totally like "SQUIRREL!" from the movie up - hey everyone - look over here and don't think about the important stuff. You know it as well as I do - in fact - you have not even denied it. So lets stop the partisan attack/defend crap and agree that BOTH sides need to stop with trying to score political points and instead focus on digging the country out of the whole they have all put us in.... Can we do that? |
Just because you refuse to accept the definition of a term and prefer your own, doesn't mean that you've changed the definition of the term.
And the term "entitlement spending" is a loaded one, used mostly by those espousing the desire to cut spending on people like the "entitled," the "lazy" and the "welfare queens." If it walks like a duck, and uses terms like "entitlement spending" like a duck... Quote:
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Anyway, I don't see how taxing the 1% more or less is going to have much impact on me. I don't receive government aid. Maybe we'll get bigger libraries... If we are going to make the tax system really fair, it should be a straight percentage across the board for all income, no deducations, no exceptions. Everybody contributes their 20%. |
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So instead of dealing with the fact that our government spends 1/3 more than it takes in (on many things that need cutting), despite the fact that I am for cuts in lots of areas and not just "entitlements", as well as the reality that you could "fair" the rich away - just take every dime and thing they own and it still wouldn't solve the problem - much less this 11 hr pay "fairness" idea - you'd rather continue to obfuscate and ignore the real problems facing this nation. This is why we are in the shape we are in - because some people - and you in this case mookie - are more about the partisan crap than you are about solutions that must occur if we are to fix the problems. Why not answer the questions outright as they have been asked of you already? With the rich already paying the lion's share of taxes - how much is enough? August or Aramike asked that - you ignored it. I asked why are we spending days and days on something that pays for 11 hours of government when we are spending 1/3 more than we make as a country - you won't touch that one either. When someone points out a position or facts you don't like - its all because they have a "side". If someone says "lets pretend" to remove all the entitlements for the sake of proving a point regarding how much we overspend - that immediately makes them be using rhetorical tools to push an agenda.... Cmon - your better than this. I get your left and your not happy that your side is catching flak. But your not responsible for that - and you can't seriously argue that those in control of your chosen party are acting responsibly while governing. I mean - no budget from the senate in 3 years? A presidential budget he tells the party to vote against? You sure do like to make fun of the people who swallow "truth" from Glen Beck, but your not using your own brain to break ranks with those who are doing absolutely nothing useful in governing this nation. Your throwing out the fairness talking points and getting defensive instead of just looking at the facts and (likely) coming to the conclusion that most people in this nation are moving to - that those in government (regardless of "side") are more of the problem than the solution. Seriously, stop defending the indefensible, and lets start talking solutions. And sorry, an tax increase that pays for 11 hrs of government (with untold economic consequences to boot) isn't any kind of a solution. |
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And you want to lay the budget passing problem at my feet? Republicans throw in some of the most egregious garbage into the budget, and then complain when the other side balks and tries to pin it on them. It doesn't work that way, bubba. Do a bit of light reading of last year's budget, and you may come up with some startling revelations. Quote:
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Oh and the riders are great. The "Screw You Michelle Obama" rider: Quote:
The "Make sure we cover up any evidence that anything Obama passed is doing any good for infrastructure, so we can keep using the 'omg no shovel ready projects!' line" Quote:
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Trying to increase tax rates on the rich up past a certain point is useless since it is too easy to shift income and taxes to offshore tax havens/low tax jurisdictions so you actually wind up losing tax revenues. Raising taxes on capital gains (which is what the Buffett rule in fact proposes) also does not make sense (past a certain point) since it would cause capital to again flee to no/low tax jurisdictions. The federal long term capital gains tax rate in the U.S.A. which has hovered between 15-20% is actually within international norms, in Canada it is between 19-25% depending on the province. A flat tax of 20%, which many people see as an ideal, is actually no simpler than the current system (sorry Neal), since you still have to define what is the "income" subject to the tax. For example what do you do about business expenses, business losses, charitable donations, etc. Sharp tax lawyers/accountants would quickly drive this down to a much lower effective rate. :D Having said all that, there would be room to increase overall tax rates by a few points which can be done by either raising rates or closing loopholes. You guys will have to do something eventually about your deficit. |
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20% for a multi-millionaire is something he does not even feel. You cannot drive more than one Ferrari at a time, you cannot live in more than one villa at a time. For the same reason I argue in favour of financial penalties for offences no longer being set as total numbers, but in percentages from the offenders income. You ride your car, and exceed the speed limit. You're an ordinary man with a usual income, and you have family - those 200 dollar (or whatever your fees are :) ) are just this: 200 dollars, and might hurt him. The millionaire driving a Ferrari and while sleeping earning 100,000 per month just from his stocks - for him 200 dollars mean nothing. The punishing value, the aversive stimulus or pain from the penalty, is not the same for both men. The one may cry in financial agony - the other is just laughing, and just jumps the traffic light after the cops let him go, just to show them how little he cares for their little papers leaflets. However, there are limits to taxation, of course, there must be. Some British known name - forgot who it was, some film actor I think - said that once you need to give away more than 49% of your incomes to taxes, SS and such things, it is time to leave the country. I would agree with what direction he aims at. I see a limit somewhere in the low 40%-range for non-average high incomes. I simply feel like that if you work, the majoirty of your income should be yours, that'S why I see those 50% indeed as the adamant barrier. The socialist candidate in France, Hollande, who seems to be able to defeat Sarkozy so far, wants a 75% tax on the wealthy. That is insane. (He also means plenty of finacial misery for Germany, over his ideas on how to run the Euro crisis.) Hollande already has ruined French economy once, under Mitterand. Obviously the French have forgotten that. In Germany, real net loans for employees - by real buying power - have dropped over the past 20 years, while the overall total costs Germans had to pay to the state and social wellfare, have reached an all-time high last year. Never has Germany earned so much in taxes. And never has it made so many debts, I think. The European social wellfare state model has failed. It has become unaffordable. Politicians try to hide that from the public - at the price of delaying action and thus increasing the damage. Ifd there is any action left that would help. |
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The lord and the church only ask for 10%, so what makes the government think it is mightier than the lord, thinking it needs more than 30%, if 10% is good enough for the lord it should be good enough for the government, the dept of energy spent 60 million dollars on their fleet of cars now they don't know how many they have, it's around 15,000, but who's counting it's not like it's their money, I get link later.
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The first 10% is only one portion of one of the taxes for the "Lord". Besides which if you want to leave out the old scripture which you got completely wrong and go with the new covenant then just pay up in cash to the government what they ask 'cos that carpenter fella said it don't matter none.:yeah: |
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...20 years later the Canadian GST Code is as large and complex as the Income Tax Act so we now have TWO huge tax codes to deal with and tax evasion is at an all time high.... :timeout: There is no such thing as a "simple" solution when it comes to taxes. http://img52.imageshack.us/img52/104...1204191454.jpg |
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20% is 20%. It's the same for everyone. While the guy making $10,000 a year will not like seeing his $2000 go to the government, the guy making $10 million will not like seeing his $2 million go either. And $2 million is a whole lot more than $2000. That rich guy is contributing the same total as 1000 poor guys. People seem to think rich people don't deserve their money and property. As long as they did not get it by illegal means, it's not your business. If you don't like making $10,000 a year, America gives you ample opportunity to do something about it. No one is stopping you from doing better. |
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And to continue our example - your 20% tax rate on a guy making $10,000 a year may mean that he only spends $100 on clothes because he still has to buy food and pay rent, and have transportation to his job. If you increased the tax rate to 25% or 30% on the rich guy, he's still going to have the ability to spend $2000 on clothes without seriously impacting his lifestyle. Like Skybird said, there's only so many cars and houses one person can consume. You get more economic bang for your buck by stimulating the middle class (if you believe that lower taxes are stimulative, which is another whole post in itself.) than the fractionally smaller upper class. Quote:
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And that's just scratching the surface. http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/05/us...pagewanted=all |
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