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Do you believe in the Constitution? The Founding Fathers answered that question quite conclusively.
This isn't a question about the founding fathers opinion, it's about the fairness of people who don't contribute to the tax system being able to vote themselves other people's money.
you
you
you
Please try to stick to the point being argued, and not make it about the person.
No problem. Please enforce said rules on everyone and not just those that differ in political viewpoints.
I've always (for the last 10 years) said I don't think we should have an income tax or a sales tax at all, but only a tax on land values.
Would you support private AR15 ownership if the 2nd amendment were repealed? Non-criminals, non-psychos. Would you support it?
So, your guess is better than my true data from actual gun and dog owners?
Liberal Logic at it's best.
Yes you did.
Was Vietnam/Afghanistan solid proof that armed militia can withstand a national army through the use of small arms and IEDs? 16 years going and Afghanistan is still in turmoil?
You think the 2nd amendment really has no value?
The top 20% of income earners pay 95% of the tax burden in the United States.
So... current situation:
1- An increasing amount of money go to the rich vs poor (increasing inequalities)
2 - Rich people (Trump) have just cut taxes for themselves while increasing spending
3 - the main bottleneck of the economy is poor end-demand (outside debt) due to poor people not having any money
Goran's conclusion: poor people decisions on tax policy is a problem so important we need to debate it in a thread.
For example:
The top 20% of income earners pay 95% of the tax burden in the United States.
It would be interesting to find these numbers for other countries.
So you believe for example Facebook should pay less in taxes than a farm operation, in spite of earning order of magnitudes more money?
The key point to remember here is that the reason for that is the incredible income inequality in the US right now. When all the money is in the hands of 20% of the people, the taxes MUST be collected from them.
You can't get blood from a turnip.
If you want to even the tax burden, reduce inequality.
1 - Income inequality is a fake problem. We had this conversation already. The economy is not a zero sum game.
HappyGilmore saysDo you believe in the Constitution? The Founding Fathers answered that question quite conclusively.
We didn't have an income tax when the Constitution first became law of the land and didn't until temporarily during the Civil War and later permanently around 1917.
Part of the beauty of Georgism is that land values appropriately reflect the economic activity taking place on them, more or less.
It would be interesting to find these numbers for other countries.
Actually it IS a zero sum game. Real growth in the US is measured by productivity growth. That is a couple percent a year. So, for all intents and purposes it is a zero sum game.
Income inequality is, by far, the biggest problem in the US economy right now.
It had the support of six out of 10 voters in the COUNTRY (this would mean all people making over $188,000 USD would give up 75% of their income to the government).
The US used to have a top rate of 90% and the country prospered.
No it didn't.
A 90% tax rate today would completely annihilate U.S global competitiveness.
The top 20% of income earners pay 95% of the tax burden in the United States
Goran_K saysThe top 20% of income earners pay 95% of the tax burden in the United States
Does not include social security and medicare taxes that all poor people pay.
1 - Income inequality is a fake problem. We had this conversation already. The economy is not a zero sum game.
2 - The tax cut hits everyone across the board not just the rich.
3 - "the main bottleneck of the economy is poor end-demand (outside debt) due to poor people not having any money" WTF?
There are no farms where Facebook is, and no Facebook where the farms are. The tax rates would be orders of magnitude different.
Do you believe in the Constitution? The Founding Fathers answered that question quite conclusively.
HappyGilmore saysDo you believe in the Constitution? The Founding Fathers answered that question quite conclusively.
Oh, NOW we actually like the Constitution...
Didn't seem to be the case in "repeal the 2A" thread.
Here's a table with the best GDP growth years and their corresponding top tax rate. Sure seems like higher tax rates HELP growth.
The chart in the OP says INCOME TAX, not medicare or S.S.
Do you believe in the Constitution? The Founding Fathers answered that question quite conclusively.
Sniper saysThe chart in the OP says INCOME TAX, not medicare or S.S.
The chart says that. Goran explicitly uses the words "tax burden" which is wrong.
Tax burden does not include sales taxes that all poor people either.
Actually it IS a zero sum game. Real growth in the US is measured by productivity growth. That is a couple percent a year. So, for all intents and purposes it is a zero sum game.
Income inequality is, by far, the biggest problem in the US economy right now.
1- An increasing amount of money go to the rich vs poor (increasing inequalities)
2 - Rich people (Trump) have just cut taxes for themselves while increasing spending
3 - the main bottleneck of the economy is poor end-demand (outside debt) due to poor people not having any money
Comments 1 - 40 of 90 Next » Last » Search these comments
The top 20% of income earners pay 95% of the tax burden in the United States. Poor people overwhelmingly take back from the tax system in terms of benefits (they are not a net contributor to the system). Middle class people tend to wash when it comes contributions vs taking.
My question, is this fair? It seems to me the most fair system would be a simple flat tax across the board with no modifications up or down based on income level.
Should the poor be allowed to vote other people's money to themselves via the government? For instance support for universal health care according to Pew Research was nearly 100% for income levels below $50,000, but only enjoyed a 40% favor with income levels above $200,000. That makes sense, but is it fair?