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1   Tenpoundbass   2014 Aug 8, 4:50pm  

I got more money than you assholes now get over it. In a less than a year, I'll be calling you up to cover my rent. Nothing in this life is promised, the last fucking thing I need is some asshole trying to take what I worked my ass off to get a firm hold of.

2   Vicente   2014 Aug 8, 5:38pm  

CaptainShuddup says

the last fucking thing I need is some asshole trying to take what I worked my ass off to get a firm hold of.

You should run for governor.

3   yup1   2014 Aug 8, 6:52pm  

CaptainShuddup says

I got more money than you assholes now get over it. In a less than a year, I'll be calling you up to cover my rent. Nothing in this life is promised, the last fucking thing I need is some asshole trying to take what I worked my ass off to get a firm hold of.

Oh you thought that article was about you and your tiny fortune........

4   tatupu70   2014 Aug 8, 11:49pm  

CaptainShuddup says

I got more money than you assholes now get over it. In a less than a year, I'll be calling you up to cover my rent. Nothing in this life is promised, the last fucking thing I need is some asshole trying to take what I worked my ass off to get a firm hold of.

lol--you wouldn't have to worry Cap.

5   indigenous   2014 Aug 9, 1:57am  

Ugh Krugman

"But how is that possible? Doesn’t taxing the rich and helping the poor reduce the incentive to make money? Well, yes, but incentives aren’t the only thing that matters for economic growth. Opportunity is also crucial. And extreme inequality deprives many people of the opportunity to fulfill their potential."

Yet no mention of the demise of opportunity at the hand of the well intentioned regulations. We don't need a recital of the now you are supposed tos by overpaid parasites who's only real purpose is to collect a 6 figure salary.

"Think about it. Do talented children in low-income American families have the same chance to make use of their talent — to get the right education, to pursue the right career path — as those born higher up the ladder? Of course not. Moreover, this isn’t just unfair, it’s expensive. Extreme inequality means a waste of human resources."

Yet the spending drain in public education has dumbed down the public as a result of unionized teachers and centralized dumb/arrogant ideas.

But favorite line is "Think about it." Ironical if only he would take his own advise.

"And government programs that reduce inequality can make the nation as a whole richer, by reducing that waste."

Funny it was just a few weeks ago that Krudman endorsed Pikkety's theory about inequality being caused by inflation. Yet a few weeks later he is back to the problem is not enough government control... He seems to practice a sort of mental masturbation totally divorced from reality.

6   Bellingham Bill   2014 Aug 9, 2:16am  

"Doesn’t taxing the rich and helping the poor reduce the incentive to make money"

that's just it though, "making money" is not what is going on here.

Nobody "makes money" other than the Fed, and banks if it's true they can lend money out of thin air and not their capital+deposits.

One of out of three income dollars in this economy is being raked out by the top 5%.

This is why things are so unbalanced here. I'd prefer we tax the rent-seeking directly -- in health, real estate, imports, banking -- before we just blindly go after the rich in general, but the typical GOP defense of wealth (see above!) is what's killing this country, not high taxes.

7   indigenous   2014 Aug 9, 2:20am  

Bellingham Bill says

This is why things are so unbalanced here.

Not true, that is a symptom NOT a cause.

And once again we see the ubiquitous graph that "explains everything"

8   Bellingham Bill   2014 Aug 9, 2:26am  

No, the immense rent flows from the 99% to the 1% is not a symptom, it is the problem.

Health care + housing expense / wages

"Symptom" my ass!

Rent-seeking here is off the hook, and corporate america is also getting a free ride compared to the rest of us. Their taxes should be doubled if not tripled.

9   indigenous   2014 Aug 9, 2:36am  

NO, to quote Krudman "think about it"

What changed that increased the inequality? Your graph does nothing to show the cause.

Are you saying that the tax law changed to create this effect? In that case show me a citation.

10   Bellingham Bill   2014 Aug 9, 2:55am  

The Four Horsemen of our economy are:

1) Housing, and real estate in general

2) Health care

3) Our Trade Deficit

4) The skim of the Financial Services sector

the commonality of these 4 areas is that they are raking TRILLIONS out of the paycheck economy each year, via housing rents, sky-high health costs, $500B/yr trade deficit,

and the 5-10% skim finance and insurance is taking.

All this money is simply collecting at the top:

since the rich do not spend much of their incomes back into the paycheck economy, from where they GET their income in the first place.

The rich don't "make" their money from the mines of Zanzibar or the bottom of the sea, they pull their trillions OUT of the backs of working Americans.

11   indigenous   2014 Aug 9, 2:59am  

Nope that is not a citation nor does it show cause. IOW that is NOT the cause.

12   Bellingham Bill   2014 Aug 9, 3:06am  

How we got here isn't that mysterious. It's been a long, slow grind:

We used to have 22M mfg and info jobs:

Now we're 8M short, even though our working-age population has risen 40M (50%) since 1980.

NAFTA and "free trade" with China has ripped the guts out of our own wealth-creating economy, making us consumers and not producers.

The only thing keeping the game going is our immense government redistribution:

real per-capita gov't spending

but that's not a "cause" just an bandaid on the sucking chest wounds of our economy.

13   Bellingham Bill   2014 Aug 9, 3:10am  

We are a nation of children being sold down the river by neoliberal trade policy, the dismantling of the mid-20th century protective state -- when we had government willing to intercede on labor's behalf.

We lost that in the Nixon/Ford years, and everything accelerated under Reaganism of the 1980s and the Republican Congress of 1995-2006, 2011-now.

The U.S. net international investment position at the end of the first quarter of 2014 was -$5,539.3 billion (preliminary) as the value of U.S. liabilities exceeded the value of U.S. assets (table 1). At the end of the fourth quarter of 2013, the net position was -$5,383.0 billion (revised). The $156.3 billion decrease in the net position reflected a $108.3 billion decrease in the value of U.S. assets and a $48.0 billion increase in the value of U.S. liabilities.

http://www.bea.gov/newsreleases/international/intinv/intinvnewsrelease.htm

14   indigenous   2014 Aug 9, 3:16am  

reasoning.Bellingham Bill says

The only thing keeping the game going is our immense government redistribution:

Closer, you have an addiction to graphs, at the expense of deductive reasoning.

15   Bellingham Bill   2014 Aug 9, 3:21am  

Graphs show the trends.

What's been going on is clear enough; we let corporate america take over this place.

http://reclaimdemocracy.org/powell_memo_lewis/

Conservatism has totally taken over the GOP and has made major inroads into the Dems. 99% of Congress is to the right of Bernie Sanders (as is ~80% of the population for that matter).

And our corporate media has bamboozled enough people to set the parameters of our national discussion such that the Clintons and Obama are declared to be the limit of what's passably "Left", vs. the vast tranches of ideological space the right enjoys now, all the way out to the randroids of Paul Ryan and Rand (!) Paul himself.

Leftism hasn't destroyed this country -- it's working well in the nordic states and Germany at least -- but conservatism has.

Free trade, laissez-faire in housing policy, allowing corporations to create our laws

http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=American_Legislative_Exchange_Council

16   indigenous   2014 Aug 9, 3:27am  

The real cause in the changes in the US current account were due to Nixon taking us off of the gold standard coupled with Friedman's floating exchange rate with a targeted 3% inflation. (the MMTs are no better that Ks) This coupled with the ability to borrow by selling treasuries meant that spending could exceed taxes.

17   indigenous   2014 Aug 9, 3:29am  

Post number 15 is irrelevant.

18   Bellingham Bill   2014 Aug 9, 3:35am  

cause, effect, or symptom, it is what it is, and we're going to need more government not less to beat these corporatocratic fuckers back.

Central problem being the muddled middle that isn't going to figure things out until it's too late.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_they_came_...

19   indigenous   2014 Aug 9, 3:50am  

Bellingham Bill says

we're going to need more government not less to beat these corporatocratic fuckers back.

Fuck no, dumb ass.

How much has government grown in the past 40yr? go get a graph for that.

We have the BIGGEST centralized government in the history of the world. And it AIN'T WORKIN.

20   indigenous   2014 Aug 9, 4:34am  

You are getting further away from the truth not closer...

Germany and Canada's government act more for justice and what is right rather than the tyranny of the democracy.

21   anotheraccount   2014 Aug 9, 4:43am  

Speaking of health care, make sure to support prop 45 this year in California http://www.consumerwatchdog.org/focusarea/regulating-health-insurance-rates

Health insurance companies already contributed 45M to a campaign against it (Kaiser, Anthem)

Update: better link: http://justifyrates.consumerwatchdogcampaign.org/

22   mell   2014 Aug 9, 6:35am  

Bellingham Bill says

"Big government" is working well, or better, for Germany and the nordic states. Canada too.

Very difficult comparison, Police state and privacy wise, Germany is much smaller government. Tax wise it's roughly equal once you add up US federal, state and municipal taxes, maybe it's a little bit more. Compared to the services everybody (rich and poor) gets in return the deal is better though, e.g. super low tuition fees for everybody. I do think it's way too complex though, so I don't want to cheerlead it, just clarify some. The problem is that in the US tax money is immediately diverted to the parasitic sectors (defense, health care, RE, banking, insurance) and most net paying people (wage slaves) never see a dime of it.

23   Bellingham Bill   2014 Aug 9, 6:43am  

mell says

diverted to the parasitic sectors (defense, health care, RE, banking, insurance) and most net paying people (wage slaves) never see a dime of it.

. . .

cut DOD ~$500B to Germany's levels -- $238B/yr -- and hundreds of local economies dependent on Uncle Sugar would self-implode, kinda like 1990s LA (after they lost aerospace), but much worse.

So clearly our DOD expense isn't just vanishing into a black hole.

Similarly, health is one of the few dynamic sectors of the economy.

so of course there's lots of redistribution going on there (as gov't pays so much of it). PPACA's 3% tax on investment income, distributed to working class health insurance premium subsidies, is a beautiful thing! Should be 10%, LOL.

24   mell   2014 Aug 9, 6:52am  

Bellingham Bill says

So clearly our DOD expense isn't just vanishing into a black hole.

Similarly, health is one of the few dynamic sectors of the economy.

True, but health care is always in demand and I don't think fixing price-fixing for drugs, health insurances, bringing back price discovery and transparency and such would dampen the need for nurses and other workers much, it would definitely cut down on some of the insane profits though. WRT to defense, they can use the money otherwise spent going to war to take care of those who are depending on the sector for the transitional phase. In effect they are not adding much to the economy, because the perpetual war machine feeds on itself and is paid by the taxpayer. Doesn't mean they should give up research and technology in defense.

25   Bellingham Bill   2014 Aug 9, 9:22am  

mell says

it would definitely cut down on some of the insane profits though

Sure. But the eurosocialist paradises demonstrate that if you can control profits in health care, the additional consumer surplus is soon used in bidding up housing costs instead.

Same dynamic with Japan I guess.

In effect they are not adding much to the economy, because the perpetual war machine feeds on itself and is paid by the taxpayer

defense is great because it doesn't feel like welfare. Look at me, I'm a big bad warrior defending the nation from all enemies foreign and domestic.

In the scheme of things it'd be much more economical to devote hundreds of billions more to capital improvement projects everywhere they're needed, but that's communism or something.

the important thing is to keep money circulating within what I call the paycheck economy. There's too much parasitical loss out of it, via rents in housing, healthcare, FIRE, and our trade deficit.

26   Dan8267   2014 Aug 9, 1:29pm  

indigenous says

This is the tyranny of the democracy at work

This is the tyranny of capitalism at work. Everything's about profiting right now, screw the future. Why do you think we tolerate pollution? Polluting is eating all the food right now.

27   indigenous   2014 Aug 9, 1:36pm  

Dan8267 says

This is the tyranny of capitalism at work. Everything's about profiting right now, screw the future. Why do you think we tolerate pollution? Polluting is eating all the food right now.

As usual you miss the point...

28   Shaman   2014 Aug 9, 1:40pm  

After his blatant disregard of facts, unwillingness to make cogent arguments, and unreasoning stupidity, I'm downgrading indigenous to status of "schill."
My advice would be to pay no attention to this pawn of the bankers and wealthy elite.

29   Strategist   2014 Aug 9, 1:45pm  

Dan8267 says

indigenous says

This is the tyranny of the democracy at work

This is the tyranny of capitalism at work. Everything's about profiting right now, screw the future. Why do you think we tolerate pollution? Polluting is eating all the food right now.

What car do you drive Dan? that nice red convertible looks like a high polluting guzzler.

30   indigenous   2014 Aug 9, 1:48pm  

Quigley says

After his blatant disregard of facts, unwillingness to make cogent arguments, and unreasoning stupidity, I'm downgrading indigenous to status of "schill."

My advice would be to pay no attention to this pawn of the bankers and wealthy elite.

Projecting, care to point out where I have done that on this thread?

31   anonymous   2014 Aug 9, 2:39pm  

Flat consumption tax is the only fair way to tax the people. Income taxes are completely unfair since you're discriminating against those that make more money.

32   Bellingham Bill   2014 Aug 9, 2:49pm  

The "tyranny of democracy" requires that at least 50% of the electorate goes along with the program.

plutocracy -- one dollar one vote -- doesn't even have that low bar to clear, and we got enough of that both here in the US and in Europe over the centuries.

though of course without democratic processes any system will quickly devolve into one bullet one vote, since violence is a more effective lever of power than mere money, wealth, etc.

"Many forms of Government have been tried, and will be tried in this world of sin and woe. No one pretends that democracy is perfect or all-wise. Indeed, it has been said that democracy is the worst form of Government except all those other forms that have been tried from time to time." -- Churchill, speaking as leader of the Opposition, 1947.

33   indigenous   2014 Aug 9, 2:50pm  

debyne says

Flat consumption tax is the only fair way to tax the people. Income taxes are completely unfair since you're discriminating against those that make more money.

debyne says

Flat consumption tax is the only fair way to tax the people. Income taxes are completely unfair since you're discriminating against those that make more money.

Taxes are not creating the inequality

34   Bellingham Bill   2014 Aug 9, 2:51pm  

indigenous says

Projecting, care to point out where I have done that on this thread?

LOL

35   indigenous   2014 Aug 9, 2:55pm  

Bellingham Bill says

Indeed, it has been said that democracy is the worst form of Government except all those other forms that have been tried from time to time." -- Churchill, speaking as leader of the Opposition, 1947.

A Republic is better. Churchill was not all he was cracked up to be...

The speaker in the video that not one of you mutts will watch brought up that very point and said that the Chinese Politburo was better.

36   indigenous   2014 Aug 9, 2:57pm  

Bellingham Bill says

LOL

Except it is, in fact it is not even coherent.

37   HEY YOU   2014 Aug 9, 5:22pm  

indigenous says

reasoning.Bellingham Bill says

The only thing keeping the game going is our immense government redistribution:

Closer, you have an addiction to graphs, at the expense of deductive reasoning.

Deductive reasoning is not a requirement to follow or comment on Patnet. rofl

38   tatupu70   2014 Aug 10, 12:06am  

debyne says

Flat consumption tax is the only fair way to tax the people. Income taxes are completely unfair since you're discriminating against those that make more money.

All taxes are unfair. Fairness is completely irrelevant. The tax structure has to be designed to create a healthy economy.

39   indigenous   2014 Aug 10, 12:48am  

HEY YOU says

Deductive reasoning is not a requirement to follow or comment on Patnet. rofl

It is if you want to separate the wheat from the chaff.

40   anonymous   2014 Aug 10, 4:01am  

tatupu70 says

All taxes are unfair. Fairness is completely irrelevant. The tax structure has to be designed to create a healthy economy.

Now that's a central planner talking if I ever heard one. Screw individual rights and let's do what "I" think is best for the greater good.

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