8/30/2012 1:26:20 PM
8/30/2012 2:43:57 PM
8/30/2012 2:49:40 PM
^^I don't know what eyedrb would say, but I would say no for several reasons.If you force people to put money into private accounts I can assure you that there will be shitloads of crony capitalism and government manipulation of those investments. There will be lists of "approved" accounts and funds which will be based not on security or ROR, but on who bribes congress the best or who funds the elections the most. Look at how badly mismanaged government pensions are, they become venture capital machines for government pet projects or as a large monetary club for social engineering.Secondly, I think you would be better off telling employers that the current % that they pay towards an employees SS must be put into a pension or other retirement vehicle, whether that's an employee directed 401(k), a brokerage account or something similar. That guarantees investment without forcing the individual to sacrifice any current pay.At the point when SS is disbanded, if you don't save for retirement then tough shit.
8/30/2012 2:56:08 PM
8/30/2012 3:04:27 PM
8/30/2012 3:18:22 PM
8/30/2012 3:26:44 PM
since you took the time to do some really hard-hitting wikipedia research, why not copy the rest of the section you quoted?
8/30/2012 3:31:30 PM
^ Because you said you've never heard of a reason. So I took that as an opportunity to spend 10 seconds to educate you since you hadn't done it yourself.
8/30/2012 3:33:02 PM
^i said a compelling reason. how many seconds will it take to educate you as to what that word means?
8/30/2012 3:42:57 PM
i'm 24 and i've been paying SS taxes since i was 16i would gladly forfeit all that i've paid in if they'd just let me opt out (without becoming Amish)if i get old and can't afford healthcare, then just let me die.
8/30/2012 4:03:02 PM
Back in the day, people could work until they died, because they died earlier. Now, people can continue living but are, fair to say, unable to work (unable to be productive) for whatever reason. So now they can live on for 30 years off of Medicare and SS until they die at 95.
8/30/2012 7:19:35 PM
yeah, i understand the difference between back then and now, but he seemed to be defending SS as it was originally designed. when i said that it fucked folks over that way too, he said i was wrong. i do not understand.
8/30/2012 8:40:30 PM
Well, I think people should break down "Social Security." Anything you don't understand about the intent of the program can be gleaned simply from the name of the program.
8/30/2012 8:54:49 PM
8/30/2012 9:07:18 PM
If you could opt out, that would defeat the purpose. The whole point is that you are not allowed to opt out. The government has a gun to your head, and the people running it have no problem taking the money it removes from your paycheck and spending on unrelated shit.
8/30/2012 10:37:29 PM
8/30/2012 11:29:09 PM
I think the thing that most people argue is that the widening wealth gap and inequality is hurting the majority of Americans. For the last 30 years wealth has been accumulating at the top. If the top earners weren't taking home so much of the money and seemingly playing on a different playing field, then sure, I think that argument would be viable. But since things are moving in the wrong direction, a progressive tax system is one way to balance the inequality. Pretty much every other developed country in the world has settled on this policy, but we can't do that here cuz we're Merica.
8/30/2012 11:43:16 PM
8/31/2012 1:50:59 AM
1) If you're on a deserted island and you don't make an effort to feed yourself, should you die?2) If you're on a populated island and society makes an effort to make food for themselves while you don't make an effort to feed/produce yourself, should you die?3) If you're on a populated island and society makes an effort to make food for themselves while make an effort to feed yourself BUT CAN'T for whatever reason, should you die? Should society help you?[Edited on August 31, 2012 at 3:31 AM. Reason : 3/4 questions]
8/31/2012 3:25:58 AM
8/31/2012 10:23:22 AM
8/31/2012 2:51:24 PM
The easy solution for that would be to raise capital gains tax.
8/31/2012 4:33:59 PM
Here is some interesting reading for you flat tax supporters.If you start counting up the different taxes that we pay, most of which are much more regressive when compared with the federal income tax, then we already have pretty close to an overall flat tax system:http://ctj.org/ctjreports/2012/04/who_pays_taxes_in_america.phpSo when when you argue that we need a flat federal income tax, you are also arguing for a regressive overall tax system, which I just don't think is defendable.[Edited on August 31, 2012 at 5:33 PM. Reason : friendlier wording]
8/31/2012 5:33:06 PM
8/31/2012 7:13:51 PM
Capital gains should be taxed as ordinary income.
8/31/2012 8:03:33 PM
The real issue is how you tax capital gains. There was an article on Huffington Post recently recommending a minimum capital gains tax of 30% or something.I guess people assume that you either treat it as a static tax or treat it as income so it falls under a progressive tax. The high static tax idea of 30+% is a horrible idea especially when looking at someone paying that and they don't make that high earnings. Regular Joe's will likely stop investing as much IMO.
8/31/2012 8:46:40 PM
The real issue is how you tax capital gains. There was an article on Huffington Post recently recommending a minimum capital gains tax of 30% or something.I guess people assume that you either treat it as a static tax (think 3 brackets?) or treat it as income so it falls under a progressive tax. The high static tax idea of 30+% is a horrible idea especially when looking at someone paying that and they don't make that high earnings. Regular Joe's will likely stop investing as much IMO. I might have misread the article, maybe the 30% was the highest earnings bracket.Rather than treating it as 100% income tax, you can treat a % of it as an income tax like Canada does:
8/31/2012 8:48:38 PM
I would support a progressive capital gains tax where people who make less than $500,000 pay no tax at all. $500,000 to $5m pay 15%. I'm not knowledgeable enough about upper income levels to go all the way up, but if you're like David Koch and you make $200m from capital gains every year, I would have absolutely no problem taxing that at like 50%. This might make the economy grow less quickly, but it would also increase long-term stability greatly because people would be more likely to hold onto their stocks for a period of time instead of having a bunch of Gordon Gekkos running around daytrading economically critical corporations up and down like they're fucking odds on the Super Bowl or something.
9/1/2012 12:06:36 AM
Wait, you realize that only holdings kept for a year or longer get the 15% rate, right?Day-trading earnings are taxed at your marginal rate.[Edited on September 1, 2012 at 2:21 AM. Reason : Also, short-term trading bolsters liquidity][Edited on September 1, 2012 at 2:32 AM. Reason : ]
9/1/2012 2:20:50 AM