7/26/2008 5:05:25 AM
7/26/2008 10:23:59 AM
7/26/2008 11:15:52 AM
taxing the "rich" is silly.keep your hands off my money. it's that simple. i'm not paying more just b/c it makes some idiot feel better.
7/27/2008 3:40:23 PM
I agree don't tax anybody
7/27/2008 3:41:27 PM
Well, if the government was sufficiently sensible, it is conceivable for a free society to support its government through voluntary donations. For example, many non-profit universities have built up massive endowments which they can use to cover a significant portion of annual operating expenses. Had we had a donation based government, the gift of estates, land, and gold would leave today's government with a vast array of property it could leverage to earn its own money, such as charging for entry to parks, to drill or log on government lands, or to buy land near urban areas outright. It would also have a large portfolio of assets earning it interest every year. It would also be a check on bad behavior, as offending the sensibilities of the populace would cut off the flow of donations. [Edited on July 27, 2008 at 4:59 PM. Reason : .,.]
7/27/2008 4:49:28 PM
7/27/2008 5:09:05 PM
Well, I doubt any volutarily funded government would ever get as large as our current government, as most of its current functions would be being performed by separate charities or for profit businesses, such as care for the poor (some of which are elderly), and retirement insurance. That said, the government would be spending or investing money that was given to it voluntarily. If it uses the money poorly then people are unlikely to give it more. Either way, the individuals to manage all that property would be chosen by democratic election, I suspect, just like now. The only difference I envision is removing the government's right to confiscate what others earned legally. [Edited on July 27, 2008 at 5:31 PM. Reason : .,.]
7/27/2008 5:30:13 PM
I'm guessing that you would still tax gasoline to build the roads. I don't think anyone wants to pay for those out of good will, and there are other similar examples that would be thought to be 'fair' if paid by a 'user' fee, as any other funding scheme would constitute people who don't use an infrastructure item paying for people who do use it. That, or it would be a competition to see who in the neighborhood could put up with the pot holes for the longest.If you did implement sparse taxes for such stuff, it wouldn't be a big problem to work into your idea. And it would be shocking similar to what the founding fathers had in mind.
7/27/2008 7:32:00 PM
7/27/2008 8:02:56 PM
7/28/2008 11:16:47 AM
except when u use any marginal spare income on drugs like heroin that re-wire the pleasure center of the brain the motivation to get "new" stuff is eliminated.
7/28/2008 1:06:35 PM
which is why paper money should be eliminated
7/28/2008 1:15:48 PM
7/28/2008 2:16:17 PM
So I guess no ice cream place actually sell ice cream.
7/28/2008 2:23:12 PM
In Rich America, Third-World Inequality
7/31/2008 11:57:05 AM
Funny read. What do you propose we do about it? We should raise min wage to 20/hr, then you would see how many poor people that would create.The truth is, its very hard to fail in this country if you work hard and make good decisions.Arent most min wage earners teens living at home?
7/31/2008 12:23:22 PM
I like public works projects tbqh
7/31/2008 12:41:43 PM
me too. Beats welfare
7/31/2008 1:00:12 PM
Yeah I don't think anyone's arguing that welfare is better than public works. I know I'd like to see a renewed commitment to improving infrastructure.And yes it's trure that the majority of minimum wage workers are under 25 but there are a still a lot of people who have jobs and still have a hard time making ends meet even if they're making a few bucks above minimum wage, especially if they have any kind of medical emergency come up.
7/31/2008 1:07:35 PM
no, they would probably qualify for medicaid.
7/31/2008 1:38:04 PM
Construction laborers earn an average of $14.88 an hour, substantially more than the minimum wage. As such, more public works would do nothing to produce work for the poorest of the poor which lack the skills to work construction jobs. We need to find work for the poorest, not the middle class. Mandating a higher minimum wage does not do that; if anything, it destroys their work. http://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nat.htm#b47-0000
7/31/2008 2:03:53 PM
"Minimum-wage laws, an icon of the political left, are particularly damaging to low-income workers. Many are locked out of jobs. The Employment Policies Institute figures that the first 50 cents out of the $1 hike in the minimum wage in 1996 through 1997 cost 645,000 jobs." "People in minimum wage jobs do not stay at the minimum wage permanently. Their pay increases as they accumulate experience and develop skills. It increases an average of 30 percent in just their first year of employment, according to the Cato Institute study. ""Most minimum wage earners are young -- 53 percent are between the ages of 16 and 24.Furthermore, only 5.3 percent of minimum wage earners are from households below the official poverty line; 40 percent of minimum wage earners live in households with incomes of $60,000 and higher, and over 82 percent of minimum wage earners do not have dependents."I don't agree with minimum wage laws.
7/31/2008 3:14:26 PM
Milton Friedman talks about minimum wages at the beginning of this old school interview http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JfdRpyfEmBE.I love the line about the well-intentioned welfarists: "I admire them for the softness of their hearts...but it often extends to their head as well." lol
7/31/2008 3:24:56 PM
^^Simply place a minimum job requirement on every company based on revenue. BAM. problem solved.
8/7/2008 12:07:34 PM
8/7/2008 12:09:02 PM
elaborate
8/7/2008 1:52:55 PM
8/7/2008 3:05:35 PM
Not to a direct degree then. There are enough profits with most big corporations to double employment and still make a profit while keeping the same wages. Also many companies outsource jobs overseas. These jobs could easily stay in America and decrease the profits of some of these greedy companies. Corporate profits are through the roof right now, at the expense of the American people.
8/7/2008 3:10:15 PM
8/7/2008 4:59:37 PM
You're asking me to be an economist right now which isn't fair when we all know what the deal is anway. Sign of you losing right there.
8/7/2008 5:20:08 PM
I'm asking for evidence behind your baseless argument.
8/7/2008 5:23:53 PM
Just look at incomes from 2007 of the fortune 500 ceos
8/7/2008 5:29:02 PM
So, redirecting CEO salaries would provide enough to double most companies' current headcount?
8/7/2008 5:51:30 PM
No but that is the evidence you were asking for. a good representation of how much money is going to big fat pockets in management that could easily be chopped down a little througout providing more balance.
8/7/2008 5:54:17 PM
No, I was requesting evidence to your assertion that most companies have the resources to double their headcount.
8/7/2008 6:03:17 PM
8/7/2008 11:36:27 PM
The desire for profit is not corrupt in itself but excessive profits should be limited. I'm not an economist but if one was given the idea I'm sure a formula could be drawn up to determine when profits reach an exception level and limit these profits by regulating employment, wages and prices.[Edited on August 8, 2008 at 10:03 AM. Reason : prime]
8/8/2008 10:02:45 AM
In a perfectly competitive market, unhindered by government involvement, there would never be sustainable, "excess profits." "Economic profit does not occur in perfect competition in long run equilibrium. Once risk is accounted for, long-lasting economic profit is thus viewed as the result of constant cost-cutting and performance improvement ahead of industry competitors, or an inefficiency caused by monopolies or some form of market failure."http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Profit
8/8/2008 10:45:29 AM
8/8/2008 11:03:05 AM
Exemption for small companies would obviously be written into the formula as well as any other type of obvious reason for exemption.
8/8/2008 12:45:06 PM
Then I guess we are in agreement. It would be a waste of time as it would have no impact, but a law which exempts everyone would at least do no harm.
8/8/2008 1:08:53 PM
^^ So how do you define small business? Income? Profits? Profit margins? Employees? Public or private ownership? Is a privately owned franchise like say a Chik-fil-a a small business but a corporate owned Hardee's not?
8/8/2008 1:17:55 PM
^All would be factors going into the formula for determining exemption and degree of exemption. ^^ Everyone would not be exempt but my guess is less than 1% of companies would be mostly affected. The method for this could probably be implemented through the stock market as well.
8/8/2008 4:16:33 PM
wethebest, you read me explain why that would be a perverse incentive, right? And all for what, so you can get a warm-fuzzy feeling about how you wrecked the profits of rich people? They might just have the last laugh as they simply move their business to Ireland.Afterall, if we assume there are two types of business, those that are hit by your law and those that are not, Americans will simply specialize in the latter and foreigners will specialize in the former. The drop in American wages would not be severe as long as the former was only 1% of companies. [Edited on August 8, 2008 at 5:27 PM. Reason : .,.]
8/8/2008 5:21:41 PM
8/9/2008 1:48:05 AM
wethebest your reasoning is everything that is wrong with the country already.Not only do you have no idea what you are saying or the implications of what you are saying...You also fail to realize our tax code already has similar provisions that all help produce the inefficiency and rent seeking jobs (accountants, lawyers, lobbyists, etc *ahem*) that are bankrupting this country at the expense of the middle class population.
8/9/2008 11:42:26 AM
8/9/2008 11:55:11 AM
8/11/2008 12:32:16 PM
i hope that i make enough to complain about this
8/11/2008 12:37:13 PM