^ what? you didn't prove anything, except that the top earners are paying more taxes. It doesn't say anything about how much more they're making. The top earners are paying more taxes because they're making more, not because taxes are being unreasonably burdensomely shifted onto them. Meanwhile, the majority of workers have barely seen their wages rise at all[Edited on March 26, 2009 at 3:21 PM. Reason : .]
3/26/2009 3:17:09 PM
I'm pretty sure I adequately addressed the fallacy you presented below:
3/26/2009 3:35:26 PM
3/26/2009 3:38:47 PM
^
3/26/2009 3:43:59 PM
If the rich find their immensely privileged position under current capitalism burdensome, I encourage them to renounce the system and strive for anarchist revolution. As comrades and equals, they won't have to worry about paying a disproportionate share of taxes.
3/26/2009 3:54:48 PM
3/26/2009 3:59:46 PM
Hmm...looks like some real serious owning going on here. With facts and shit too.
3/26/2009 4:02:23 PM
3/26/2009 4:08:35 PM
3/26/2009 4:09:06 PM
Technically, it doesn't look as if the poor are getting poorer from those numbers. Rather, they're getting richer very slowly. (Six percent growth in twenty-five years. Wow.)
3/26/2009 4:10:46 PM
3/26/2009 4:12:18 PM
^^^ Let me preface my response by letting it be known I think Bush was a terrible president.That said, yes, I believe his "soft conservatism" was a primary cause of greater progressiveness. There were a number of measures he put forth: lowering the initial tax brackets from 15 percent to 10 percent, expanding the refundable child tax credit and enacting refundable earned income tax credit (EITC).[Edited on March 26, 2009 at 4:14 PM. Reason : .]
3/26/2009 4:14:30 PM
3/26/2009 4:28:20 PM
3/26/2009 4:33:29 PM
3/26/2009 4:34:21 PM
^^ yeah, that's not "wealth redistribution" necessarily, as I previously noted.If anything, we're redistributing from the middle class.http://i143.photobucket.com/albums/r131/Bruta1ity/Blog%20Picts/IRStaxchart3.gifBut, as I also previously noted, most of that spending is deficit spending.You seem to be trying really hard to NOT understand this issue though. You can't just throw around terms like class warfare and wealth redistribution and think you're sounding intelligent.[Edited on March 26, 2009 at 4:45 PM. Reason : ]
3/26/2009 4:43:04 PM
3/26/2009 4:43:06 PM
I wonder how the "growing dependency on the government" relates to increased outsourcing and manufacturing jobs the rich sent overseas.
3/26/2009 4:55:22 PM
3/26/2009 4:56:25 PM
3/26/2009 4:57:52 PM
I dunno, Im just throwing the question out there.I personally feel that roughly from 1990 to the present an increasing amount of manufacturing jobs and other similar jobs (decent pay/benefits but not necessarily highly skilled) have been sent to other parts of the world so that corporations could reap even bigger profits.its no wonder that government help has increased as decent jobs have slowly disappeared.the situation is obviously more complicated than the poor are lazy and the rich dont deserve to be taxed more for their laziness
3/26/2009 5:06:20 PM
If you define a job as decent by compensation alone, those jobs stopped existing when they became cheaper to export.If you define a job as decent by the actual work performed, then I dont think most of those jobs were ever decent. If the government wants to give these people who lost those jobs better jobs with better pay, then they should invest in education. Spending money to try to keep shitty jobs here is pointless. Make the workers better instead.
3/26/2009 5:10:22 PM
3/26/2009 5:30:58 PM
3/26/2009 5:35:30 PM
Wealth is being redistributed from them. I think I see where you are going with the debt angle. Let me try to explain better with an analogy. Suppose four friends go out to dinner. The four decide to put their $1000 bill on a credit card. They decide they cannot afford to pay the entire credit card bill today, so only pay down $500. If they decide it is only fair that the two friends with the highest-paying jobs pay $400 while the two with median income-paying jobs pay only $100, the former two are effectively transferring their wealth to the latter two. Assuming they each pay the same proportion of the second $500 installment next year, the same transfer of wealth occurs. In other words, there is still redistribution occurring even though a portion of our current expenditures are debt financed. Further, when that debt-financed portion is finally paid, as long as it is funded disproportionately by one group over another, redistribution of wealth takes place.[Edited on March 26, 2009 at 5:58 PM. Reason : /]
3/26/2009 5:57:05 PM
3/26/2009 8:29:57 PM
3/26/2009 8:54:11 PM
repeating those questions over and over isn't going to do you any good if they're based on a false premise. I can ask you all day if you enjoy beating your wife, but that doesn't mean you have to answer if it's not a legitimate question.
3/26/2009 10:27:48 PM
3/27/2009 6:33:27 AM
agentlion, your figures claim to measure 'income', but it is unclear to me whether this includes all forms of compensation such as health insurance and retirement contributions? If not, then it is possible a large chunk of the disparity would decrease since skyrocketting health insurance rates do not differ substantially for the rich and therefore gobble up a larger share of lower incomes than higher incomes.Plus, the period of time in question experienced a slashing of top-margin tax rates. As such, it is unclear how much of the disparity was due to growing inequality and how much was due to taxing previous tax-avoided incomes and incomes of small businesses which previously filed as corporations but, due to lower rates, now file as individuals. [Edited on March 27, 2009 at 9:06 AM. Reason : .,.]
3/27/2009 9:02:49 AM
so, you're arguing the premise that "the rich are getting richer". ok, check. duly noted. This will help in the future when I see one of your posts that makes me question your grasp of reality.
3/27/2009 9:41:55 AM
Hmmmm Tax Fairness. Let's take a look.The top 5% of income earners pay 60% of all federal income taxes.But they need to pay more of their "fair-share", right?The bottom 50% of income earners pay 3% of all federal income taxes.and Obama wants to give them a "tax-cut" Now does that seem fair?
3/27/2009 10:22:29 AM
3/27/2009 10:51:43 AM
We just need a flat tax of say 22% on income with an exemption on the first 12K dollars (additional exemptions for dependants) for all income levels.This is the fairest in my opinion. The rich still pay the most taxes since 22% of 200,000 is > than 22% of 40,000. Yet everyone chips into the system that provides the services that low/no income earners cry about needing. The exemption amount starting at 12K (inflation adjusted), I think is more than reasonable to appease the lower class and altruistic liberals who cry that a flat tax is not fair since low income earners pay a higher proportion income towards necessities.($5/meal * 3meals/day *365 days) + ($400 rent/month) = $10275 + $1725 (other expenses) =$12000 tax freeI do not cry at night that the top 5% of income earners pay 60% of the income taxes. What bothers me is that the lowest two quintiles ~40% pay near nil income taxes; yet they are the ones that need/want the gov't to fund their retirement, pay for their healthcare services, gov't subsidized housing, food stamps, welfare checks (beyond what is reasonably needed for those between unemployment or unable to work), etc[Edited on March 27, 2009 at 11:12 AM. Reason : a]
3/27/2009 11:07:04 AM
how exactly is the government going to have any money to do anything if we implement that?
3/27/2009 11:47:14 AM
^ i think that's step 2 of their plan. step 1) implement "fair tax", claiming it is the only fair way to tax the citizensstep 2) act surprised when gov't revenues fall like crazy and use that as a reason to eliminate all entitlement spending, cut education resources, cut R&D, etc. But claim this is all for the better because it's the only "fair way" to do it
3/27/2009 11:54:15 AM
3/27/2009 12:04:28 PM
3/27/2009 12:07:23 PM
^ You don't actually seem to be reading this thread.
3/27/2009 12:12:31 PM
3/27/2009 12:14:16 PM
3/27/2009 12:24:42 PM
3/27/2009 12:28:10 PM
3/27/2009 12:32:26 PM
3/27/2009 2:16:56 PM
3/27/2009 2:32:27 PM
3/27/2009 4:25:24 PM
3/27/2009 4:58:30 PM
3/27/2009 5:10:31 PM
3/27/2009 8:56:13 PM
I wonder just how many cases like that exist across the country. Sounds like a rather specific instance where someone can sometimes work sometimes can't.The average person I'd expect to be in that situation is someone well up in age that is probably just going to be stuck on medicaid until they are done.
3/27/2009 9:32:52 PM