Easyhttp://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2010/11/13/weekinreview/deficits-graphic.html?choices=w3xl45lsBasically we are seeing the same thing that happened to the british empire. Its time to scale back the foreign imperialism and fix our budget without gutting our people. Taxes have to go back to how they were when clinton was in office (o those terrible times) and cuts to medicare and social security can't happen in any way. Those are the most vulnerable people. We also can't cut government research or jobs as they move us forward.I balanced the budget without doing anything drastic but if it was up to me I would have cut foreign aid by 90%. Stop aiding countries that don't need it and stop aiding oppressive regimes. Stop giving subsidies to fossil fuels. That wasn't on there but that would generate all sorts of revenue and also fuel incentive for solving our energy problem making the cuts to foreign aid (middle east) painless. End the wars and reduce the military reach. Its not helping us. Sure, every now and then we can save some people from a natural disaster but its just too costly. If only we could go back to 2000 and take the war money and invest it in the country. High speed rail linking every major us city, the fastest broadband, homeland security, energy independence, single payer healthcare and no deficit would all likely be today's alternate reality.
2/22/2011 12:45:04 AM
hahaha
2/22/2011 12:50:27 AM
Your solution is to ignore the programs that are eating up the bulk of our budget and growing at unsustainable levels, raise taxes during a tenuous economic recovery, cut back virtually all foreign aid when the rest of the world is suffering worse than us, end oil exploration and development subsidies at a time when gas prices are once again spiraling out of control, slash the military during wartime, increase federal spending on shit like high-speed rails when we have a $1.5 trillion deficit, and switch to a single-payer healthcare system that the majority of Americans hate.Interesting. It doesn't sound like you really thought this one through.[Edited on February 22, 2011 at 1:48 AM. Reason : 2]
2/22/2011 1:46:49 AM
2/22/2011 3:38:30 AM
Wouldn't work. I don't entirely understand why, but it does seem to make logical sense, but you cannot raise revenue in this country. Many have tried and failed. You can raise tax rates to where they were under Clinton, but you won't get much more revenue. http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-_onfhuU9ehI/TWEtJIcTEaI/AAAAAAAAO_0/lXv00nZ4Nr0/s1600/tax3.jpg
2/22/2011 8:54:45 AM
Because the top income bracket can afford to evade taxes. Duh. That's why nominal upper class and business class taxes may appear to be high, but effectively they are very low. It's the market finding a solution for a problem by neutralizing government policy.
2/22/2011 9:10:27 AM
2/22/2011 9:49:17 AM
yea. income taxes are the dumbest way to try to tax the wealthy. cash is way to fluid to pin down.You'd need some kind of progressive sales tax/VAT and/or a progressive property tax.Progressive VAT would probably work pretty well considering most higher end items have much larger markups meaning much higher VAT collections. While produce and other common every day items have lower markups. The problem would be with low income earners who currently pay little or no taxes who would essentially get taxed more via VAT. You'd either have to elimiate the VAT on common household items or do some kind of prebate thing. The main advantage of the VAT is its pretty inescapable. Essentially at every point an item passes through the supply chain it gets taxed. So no matter what state you bought the end product in, the taxes have already been paid.
2/22/2011 10:00:26 AM
^^corporate taxes are a stupid joke. They're regressive and pointless.Tax goods, services, and property, not liquid assets.and they do "actually collect taxes" but the tax system is so bad that nothing works[Edited on February 22, 2011 at 10:04 AM. Reason : .]
2/22/2011 10:03:18 AM
2/22/2011 10:11:10 AM
2/22/2011 10:14:43 AM
i dont think anyones disagreeing. non-discretionary spending on entitlements and the military need the largest cuts.
2/22/2011 10:14:56 AM
the us trying to collect taxes on foreign companies is awful and retarded. Corporate taxes in any instance are stupid, regressive, and pointless. trying to enforce them on non-american entities is laughable
2/22/2011 10:16:27 AM
2/22/2011 10:17:05 AM
I mean i completely agree that cutting a few million from welfare or education is a total joke and a terrible idea, but I disagree that the problem is entirely defense spending or that corporate/income taxes are the solution. Another thing that would be a good idea is to get rid of all production subsidies (farm/corporate/manufacturing/oil/etc...). Also remove limits on liability.The goal should make the system self correcting instead of trying to single out individual potential problems.^Most corporations dont pay taxes because they get credits and deductions, not because they're doing illegal things. Its really a fucking stupid system and corporate taxes/deductions/credits should all collectively be abolished[Edited on February 22, 2011 at 10:22 AM. Reason : a]
2/22/2011 10:21:23 AM
2/22/2011 10:31:34 AM
How are corporate income taxes regressive? Is it because more profitable corporations are more easily able to take advantage of loopholes, some of which they lobbied Congress for?
2/22/2011 10:40:48 AM
^they can hold money in countries that have better tax structures. Not evil or surprising.I think a couple simple changes would help balance the budget. Changing the taxcode over time will help. Doing away with people who receive a profit from their tax returns, end that. If you paid in 2k and there is a credit for 3k you qualify for, you only get 2k back, not a 1k profit.Paul ryan has a pretty interesting plan on helping with medicare's growth rate. Just have medicare issue vouchers, so the liablity becomes defined. Pretty good idea, I think.
2/22/2011 10:50:21 AM
corporate taxes are regressive because they are always passed on to consumers. they are essentially a consumption tax. consumption taxes are inherently regressive.also the thing you pointed out. Small businesses are less likely to have the same credits/deductions, although its not as bad for them as you'd think. Any business can hire a tax firm to come in and find all the deductions and its worth the cost. There may be some highly specific credits in certain industries, but the comparison of big business taxes vs small business taxes isn't as different as rich vs middle class individuals[Edited on February 22, 2011 at 11:01 AM. Reason : .]
2/22/2011 10:52:01 AM
2/22/2011 11:28:07 AM
[Edited on February 22, 2011 at 12:02 PM. Reason : /.]
2/22/2011 11:53:36 AM
2/22/2011 12:07:27 PM
2/22/2011 3:15:02 PM
2/22/2011 3:16:10 PM
hahaha. how is it wrong?"Hmm im a business and heres this added cost. Shall I eat it or just pass it to my consumers???"
2/22/2011 3:19:30 PM
oh but its separate on the balance sheet! that must mean it never factors into prices!
2/22/2011 3:20:37 PM
Goods are already priced at the highest the market will allow.Do you think CEO's just reserve potential profit margin in case a new tax passes?Like seriously do you think when pricing an object they just inch it up a little past operating costs?[Edited on February 22, 2011 at 3:22 PM. Reason : .]
2/22/2011 3:21:44 PM
everyone is affected by the tax so its a cost for everyone and doesnt factor into competitiveness.new tax comes out, prices are adjusted to maintain desired profit margins[Edited on February 22, 2011 at 3:23 PM. Reason : .]
2/22/2011 3:23:13 PM
CEO: "OH NO A NEW TAX! We'll have to raise the price of our product by a dollar. I really didn't want to do this, now our customers might not buy it!"*a month later*CEO: "We're still in the black, that was a close one. Good thing we decided to go for a slim profit margin when we originally priced it!"
2/22/2011 3:23:16 PM
You think that the price of goods is a direct factor of costs that's really adorable. Tell me, how much do you pay for text messages? How much do you think it costs your provider to send one?[Edited on February 22, 2011 at 3:25 PM. Reason : .]
2/22/2011 3:24:48 PM
more likeCeo: "taxes are going up for everyone, better increase prices"*a month later*Ceo: "people are still buying our goods. good thing we increased prices to preseve these profits"
2/22/2011 3:25:13 PM
fixed costs are always a factor in prices. if fixed costs go up for everyone in your industry then everyone in the industry prices products higher. i dont see how its hard for you to understand that.
2/22/2011 3:26:09 PM
2/22/2011 3:26:43 PM
no you dont fucking get it you retardthe product was viable at price Xnow costs have gone up FOR EVERYONEEVERYONE NOW PRICES PRODUCT AT X+Yconsumers pay X+Y because no one sells it for X anymore
2/22/2011 3:27:41 PM
in your world apparently gas prices stay the same when oil prices go up, right"?
2/22/2011 3:28:59 PM
Text messages are viable at $0.0001 apiece.All of the major cell phone providers offer $.01 per text message options for people who don't want a plan.Do you understand why they would possibly price something at 1000% of its operating cost?[Edited on February 22, 2011 at 3:31 PM. Reason : .]
2/22/2011 3:31:13 PM
text messages are priced at .05 cents for people with no plan and incur about .03 per message in operating costs.you can bet your behind that if costs went up to .04 so would the cost of messages[Edited on February 22, 2011 at 3:33 PM. Reason : a]
2/22/2011 3:32:32 PM
SMS is an awful system thats a massive pain in the ass for every carrier. it operates on slim profit margins with very very very very high volume[Edited on February 22, 2011 at 3:34 PM. Reason : e]
2/22/2011 3:34:12 PM
Are you insane?A text message is about 165 characters of information, encoded digitally, not even consuming a kilobyte of information. A single second of digital audio contains orders of magnitude more than that.$.03 per message? Maybe if they were using carrier pigeons to transport them. Please, just for laughs, what's your source indicating that text messages cost $.03 apiece?
2/22/2011 3:34:31 PM
yes if you dont know what the fuck you're talking about you can make up whatever numbers you want.SMS is a horrible protocol and there are litterally thousands of phones that all handle it in different ways that your system has to fix before sending it to other carriers. and those carriers all do things differently. plus you have to deal with 3rd party SMS gateways sending garbage.It all about manhours in support, its not pure bandwidth costs
2/22/2011 3:36:09 PM
http://gthing.net/the-true-price-of-sms-messages
2/22/2011 3:37:40 PM
you're the fucking moron because you dont understand where the cost is coming from. again
2/22/2011 3:41:14 PM
Man hours in development and support for sending 170 character messages between phones that regularly transfer hundreds of megabytes in digital audio, web pages, email, netflix movies.Are you even thinking about what you're posting?[Edited on February 22, 2011 at 3:42 PM. Reason : .]
2/22/2011 3:42:05 PM
2/22/2011 3:46:03 PM
Stop for a moment and briefly consider the possibility that a business might set their prices according to the laws of supply and demand, and not just add 1 cent to their operating cost.
2/22/2011 3:46:24 PM
again. since you have no fucking clue how SMS works or how bad the system is i can see how its hard to understand why support+development costs for it are so high.I mean you're right. it should be really cheap but because its such a poorly designed system with so many hacks and so many inconsistencies its not that cheap.basically you're coming in here and saying "hurrr bandaids costs 50 cents to make why to doctors get paid so much!!!"
2/22/2011 3:48:17 PM
2/22/2011 3:50:35 PM
For items where high margins are the norm (luxuries) theres much more wiggle room when dealing with taxes. But commodities like gas and text messages are already priced as low as the business can go while still maintaining a profit margin. New taxes would destroy that margin if prices were not increased. therefore prices increase.
2/22/2011 3:50:48 PM
2/22/2011 3:56:50 PM
One source that indicates text messages are priced anywhere near marginal operating costs. One source is all I ask.
2/22/2011 3:58:12 PM