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Why We Need Higher Taxes on the Rich


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2011 Oct 8, 10:37am   18,808 views  191 comments

by HousingWatcher   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

I was just reading DailyKos and saw this banner ad on the website. It's a good reason why the rich should pay higher taxes:

http://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/imgad?id=CKX61rre5fuVmwEQrAIY7wEyCMfe-Yn05dvX

That's right.. $12,000 for a 2 hour plane ride from NY to Florida. $6,000 an hour!

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152   Reality   2011 Oct 13, 8:24am  

david1 says

This is my last response and if you respond how you just did you are going on ignore.

Don't you wish you had thugs at your beck and call? Just remember the Night of Long Knives mutual slaughter among totalitarians.

I never idealized Nazism. I merely pointed out that the Nazis took Germany from the Weimar Republic to a economic production machine that was almost capable of conquering the world inside of 20 years. Fascist governments like Nazi Germany are detrimental to plutocracies like we have.

Utter hogwash. The Nazis never made Germany into an economic powerhouse . . . any more than Mongol Hordes was an economic powerhouse. The Nazis were never even remotely close to conquering the world. What military successes they did have on about 1% of the planet's surface area (that's what half of Europe amounts to; the other half of Europe being Britain, unconquored soviet territory and the neutrals) was due to military tactics, not economic development. In fact, a big reason for Hitler launching the war was that Germany was economically falling behind the neighbors due to Nazis' own mismanagment, and that became a security issue for him.

Even if I let you have everything on your numerated reply, the 3.1, 2011 budget, black ops, everything - it still does not support your argument that the GDP to government expenditures ratio is 50-65%. Since it has not increased two to threefold as you argued

Okay, here's how the numbers pan out: the current government budget for 2011 (not including black ops and secret items) is $3.8T. The cumulative 1% per year error since early-mid 1990's due to understatement of inflation index has added up to a 20% overstatement of the GDP number, which unlike the budget is not calculated from adding the components up but derived by sampling and applying the inflation adjuster. Take out that 20% from the BLS $14.5T nominal GDP, the revised GDP should be about $11.5T, which would approximate the GDP using BLS methodology before hedonic adjustment introduced in the early 1990's.

$3.8T / (11.5T - 3.8T) = 49%

Remember, this $3.8T does not include black ops and secret budgets or the $1.5T or so state and local government spending.

your premise that government spending is the reason why wealth and income have become more concentrated at the top 1% (most specifically, top .001%) since the 1960s is pretty flimsy at best.

On the contrary. Every time government spends money, it goes to a narrower pool of recipients than the free market place would have sought out. Government exacerbates wealth concentration almost every single time it spends money . . . because unlike the private competitive economy, government spending is monopolistic not competitively search for lower cost at every turn.

I am 100% honest on my political leanings and readings in 2007.

So which one of them, Neoclassical, Friedmanite or Paulian, told you that Nazis had a great economic program? All of them are vehemently against Nazi-style central planning. You either never read them or have serious reading comprehension problems.

153   corntrollio   2011 Oct 13, 9:18am  

Bap33 says

So, you now must read this:

There is not one interpretation of the constitution. People disagreed and compromised. That's why judges publish dissents.

Did no one take an elementary/middle school social studies class? The lower house of Congress (the House of Reps) and the upper house of Congress (the Senate) are direct compromises between populous states and unpopulous states.

The Bill of Rights was a compromise. Some people believed it wasn't necessary because the Constitution already enumerated what the powers were, and stated the people's rights as if they needed to be numerated necessarily made them seem limited when they weren't intended to be. Still, people compromised, so we had the Bill of Rights.

Trying to say the constitution espouses one particular thing is generally a flawed argument. In fact, anyone who is not in a court room or law school and still talking about the constitution is probably making a worthless argument. Most people who have studied constitutional law know it's stupid -- constitutional jurisprudence is far more results-based than principles-based. The people who overemphasize its importance are usually either ideologues or people trying to sell you something. Sending biased ideological links around is more of the same.

Even in the ideological link you sent, it acts like the Federalist Papers were something everyone agreed upon. Not the case.

154   Bap33   2011 Oct 13, 9:52am  

this from the guy that shared his opinion of what the FF did/said as golden fact?? Really?? I win.

Don't be a sore loser. Have a great night. Thanks for the easy "W" on this one.

155   corntrollio   2011 Oct 13, 10:15am  

Bap33 says

this from the guy that shared his opinion of what the FF did/said as golden fact?? Really?? I win.

Where did I ever say anything about the founding fathers as fact? Here's what I said earlier (look above!):

corntrollio says

You are wrong. There's nothing that indicates the founding fathers believed that. In fact, very few things people say "the founding fathers" believed are true. People constantly forget that the Constitution was a COMPROMISE and that there were people who disagreed vehemently but were able to agree on a minimal set of common principles. Trying to ascribe one particular view to all the founding fathers is naive at best and intellectually dishonest at worst.

Nice try. :) Seems like you're being intellectually dishonest.

156   Bap33   2011 Oct 13, 12:22pm  

corntrollio says

You are wrong. There's nothing that indicates the founding fathers believed that.

Bap33 said p>this from the guy that shared his opinion of what the FF did/said as golden fact

winning, it's so much fun.

157   david1   2011 Oct 13, 12:38pm  

Reality says

which unlike the budget is not calculated from adding the components up but derived by sampling and applying the inflation adjuster.

I know I said I was done, but where did you get this? The nominal GDP is calculated in one of three ways, all of which should give the same result, and none of which incorporate the GDP deflator. Again, Nominal GDP does not use the GDP deflator. Real GDP does.

The simplest nominal GDP calculation is by summing consumption, investment, government spending, and net exports. What I am saying is even if what you say about understated inflation is true, it does not matter because inflation has nothing to do with a nominal to nominal ratio comparison. And not to nit pick here, but even if it did, you still fell short of your 50-65% statement. 49% is close but you were nitpicking 3.0 vs. 3.1, which I am sure you are looking at real budget when again I am looking at nominal budget.

And finally, to answer your question, none of Freidman, Paul, or Smith and Menger or Mises "told" me that the Nazis had a great economic program. I said I was a believer of the above a few years back and that is all. My views have obviously changed, just as your will when you really start to think on your own. I also never said the Nazis had a great economic system - i merely pointed out that their fascist system allowed them to transform their economy from Zimbabwe to South Korea in less than 20 years. I did this after you called me a fascist. Its all up there ^ in case you need reference.

Like I said i think you are a pretty smart guy, you are just making the smart guy mistake of not thinking there may be smarter guys out there than you. Just so you don't get confused there, I am not saying that I am that smarter guy...I am just saying you aren't bringing anything to the table that hasn't been said before here and the data doesn't support it unless you start to believe in conspiracy theories and start pulling numbers out of thin air. Which is exactly what you are doing...which you already know...and when you stop kidding yourself you'll start to come over to the good side. And that is why I said what I said about Paul et al..I know because I have been where you are right now. The are many things that Dr. Paul says that i still believe in..for example..why don't we have a full audit of the federal reserve? If it doesn't matter and there is nothing to see then what is the big deal?

159   Reality   2011 Oct 13, 2:16pm  

david1 says

The simplest nominal GDP calculation is by summing consumption, investment, government spending, and net exports. What I am saying is even if what you say about understated inflation is true, it does not matter because inflation has nothing to do with a nominal to nominal ratio comparison.

Do you really believe the BLS adds up all the consumption, investment and net exports in this country item by item??? Where would they even get all the numbers to every transaction? Even if you are gullible enough to think they get the numbers from tax filings, how did they get the quarterly data when you file tax annually? BLS has to rely on sampling instead of actual counting to arrive at GDP change from previous time period. It is from this change that the new GDP number is derived. In order to keep this sequential change relevant, the GDP deflator is applied whenever GDP has to be calculated. The understatement in GDP deflator is where the over-statement in GDP comes from, even for nominal GDP. Government spending OTOH is actually counted from itemization, unlike the GDP measurement being derived from integrating changes.

And not to nit pick here, but even if it did, you still fell short of your 50-65% statement. 49% is close but you were nitpicking 3.0 vs. 3.1, which I am sure you are looking at real budget when again I am looking at nominal budget.

As I explicitly pointed out the 49% does not include any budget items that are not line item listed, such as black ops and budgets that require security clearance. Also not included in that 49% is state and local spending.

I said I was a believer of the above a few years back and that is all. My views have obviously changed, just as your will when you really start to think on your own.

That's complete baloney. One does not forget the clearly explained detailed analysis of Nazi and soviet central planning in those books and go back to some sophomoric nonsense that you wrote and continue to write about the Nazi economic program.

i merely pointed out that their fascist system allowed them to transform their economy from Zimbabwe to South Korea in less than 20 years.

The Nazis were only in power for a total of 12 years (1933-1945), the last three of which were in utter tatters as they were losing the war on all fronts. Even the first 9 years' economic record was horrendous. When Nazis came to power in 1933, Germany was nothing like Zimbabwe hyperinflation. The Weimar hyperinflation was over nearly a decade earlier, in the winter of 1923-24! Nazi Germany was also nothing like South Korea. Unlike the highly productive export power house that is South Korea nowadays, Nazi Germany couldn't export squat except for its marauding armies, which was a disaster for the rest of the world and for Germans alike (even to those inside the German military). The fascist government-corporate cartels ensured that production cost in Germany was much higher than the rest of the world. Even German consumers preferred buying Ford.

I am just saying you aren't bringing anything to the table that hasn't been said before here and the data doesn't support it unless you start to believe in conspiracy theories and start pulling numbers out of thin air. Which is exactly what you are doing.

That's really rich for someone who keeps bringing fantasy tales about Nazis that stink of Nazi-apologist. You are indeed an advocate for fascism, just as I suspected. You will do well start reading some of the books that you claim to have read in 2007. Heck, perhaps some writings by Locke, Jefferson and (Adam) Smith before even that.

160   Reality   2011 Oct 13, 2:37pm  

marcus says

Robert Reich - 7 Lies

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mM5Ep9fS7Z0

The Truth About Robert Reich:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mXm4j2ORYcg

The real miserable trickle-down economics is hoping government spending and bailouts would trickle down to the debtors in hock to banksters. It doesn't trickle down because the banksters get the money first, and their speculations distort the economy even further and make the debtors' lives even more difficult.

162   Reality   2011 Oct 13, 4:40pm  

David1,

If you had actually read the books that you claimed to have read back in 2007, you'd know that GDP/GNP is a very poor indicator of actual well being of the economy/society in question. Even the inventor of GDP/GNP, Simon Kuznets, warned that it is not an indicator of economic well being. Because it counts every dollar (or Mark) of government spending/waste, it is better thought of as an indicator of debt service capacity in the native currency units. John Maynard Keynes' hijacking of the indicator and equating it to real economy is at the very foundation of Keynesian statist folly. Your simplistic assumption in accepting that number as representative of real economy goes to show that you were lying when you said you actually studied Neoclassical, Friedmanite and Paulian/Austrian economics. You are a sophomoric Keynesian through and through.

In the forward to the German edition of his "General Theory" in 1935, Keynes wrote that his policiy recommendations would be easier carried out in a totalitarian state like then existed in Germany than in a western democracy. In other words, Keynes was kissing up to the Nazis. Nazis were already implementing Keynesian policies before he even wrote the book. The run up in GNP/GDP was simply the artifact of Nazi government wasting money overpaying for roads that few had cars to drive on and overpaying even more for military re-armament. None of the goods delivered much benefit to the people, but they added to the GNP/GDP count.

163   david1   2011 Oct 13, 11:17pm  

Hey at least I have made the jump from fascist to sophomoric Keynesian.

Reality says

In the forward to the German edition of his "General Theory" in 1935, Keynes wrote that his policiy recommendations would be easier carried out in a totalitarian state like then existed in Germany than in a western democracy.

Do me an honest favor. Go get your German language copy of "General Theory" and make a photocopy of the text. If you have a German copy of "General Theory" lying around I will give in. I suspect you got your information from some right-wing blog somewhere that linked the webpage I just found by typing this subject into google. Perhaps you are the original author of that web article...in which case you read German editions of economics text and I am certainly outmatched.

My point is this: if you didn't read it yourself and only get your information from a website, how is that any different that or better than what I have done in pulling government statistics from goverment websites and believing them to be fact?

I knew enough about Neoclassical Economics and Monetarism to know where I have heard your arguments before...

Kuznets said that the "welfare of a nation can scarcely be determined from a measure of its national income" - welfare is not economic well being only but is more general well being. That is, economic well-being does not include things like destruction of the rain forests to build a coal power plant and how that effects the general well-being.

And I think you mean GDP and GNI, not GNP.

164   Reality   2011 Oct 14, 1:23am  

david1 says

Do me an honest favor. Go get your German language copy of "General Theory" and make a photocopy of the text. If you have a German copy of "General Theory" lying around I will give in. I suspect you got your information from some right-wing blog somewhere that linked the webpage I just found by typing this subject into google. Perhaps you are the original author of that web article...in which case you read German editions of economics text and I am certainly outmatched.

http://tmh.floonet.net/articles/foregtgm.html

"Trotzdem kann die Theorie der Produktion als Ganzes, die den Zweck des folgenden Buches bildet, viel leichter den Verhältnissen eines totalen Staates angepaßt werden als die Theorie der Erzeugung und Verteilung einer gegebenen, unter Bedingungen des freien Wettbewerbes und eines großen Maßes von laissez-faire erstellten Produktion. Das ist einer der Gründe, die es rechtfertigen, daß ich meine Theorie eine allgemeine Theorie nenne."

Translation into English:

"The theory of aggregated production, which is the point of the following book, nevertheless can be much easier adapted to the conditions of a totalitarian state [eines totalen Staates] than the theory of production and distribution of a given production put forth under conditions of free competition and a large degree of laissez-faire. "

My point is this: if you didn't read it yourself and only get your information from a website, how is that any different that or better than what I have done in pulling government statistics from goverment websites and believing them to be fact?

You are the one mis-construing the statistic numbers to mean God-authenticated size of the economy (whatever that means). The government websites only gave the number and gave the statistic methodology involved. It is your responsibility to figure out what that methodology produces; i.e. what the BLS GDP number means. Of course, the Keynesian brainwashing you experienced earlier in your life did contribute to the leap of faith based on text-string match.

I knew enough about Neoclassical Economics and Monetarism to know where I have heard your arguments before...

So you are retracting from the earlier lie that you read all those books.

Kuznets said that the "welfare of a nation can scarcely be determined from a measure of its national income" - welfare is not economic well being only but also general well being. That is, economic well-being does not include things like destruction of the rain forests and how that affects the general well-being.

And I think you mean GDP and GNI, not GNP.

GDP is derived/evolved from GNP, a concept that Kuznets invented. GDP simply applied GNP to all payments/production within borders regardless ownership of facility. GNI is utter nonsense. Value is subjective. Marginal utility is ordinal not cardinal. It is impossible to aggregate value / well-being across different people to any meaningful degree of precision. Kuznets did not invent GNP/GDP to account for "well being." He invented the concept to calculate a nation/economy's debt servicing capacity in local nominal terms. Keynes was the one mistakenly tried to fudge debt servicing capacity into some kind of aggregate "well being." As for GNI, it's even more non-sensical as it tries to refine measurement of a non-cardinal phenomenon while throwing a bunch of subjective values of the authors themselves.

165   mdovell   2011 Oct 14, 2:26am  

O sweet Lord...ok if you must site economic conditions post/during/after world war two then I suggest examining Tragedy & Hope. It's about 1300 pages long....this does have a index but not a chart/graphic index (not that there's much for graphics)

If you want to talk about wholesale price indices they are on page 341.

Relative to 1913 prices did inflate during the 20's but to suggest it was zimbabwe would be a mistake. France and Italy had much higher inflation.

But out of US, UK, France, Italy and Germany US, UK and Germany price wise by 1937 germany fared the best in that it was only up 6%

then again it went form 97 in '33 to 106 in '37 so the leap was maybe 10% or so..

166   david1   2011 Oct 14, 2:41am  

This has to be a world record for Strawman arguments.

Reality says

So you are retracting from the earlier lie that you read all those books.

Not anywhere did I say I read any book. Here is what I said first:
david1 says

I used to be where you are back in 2007, getting excited about neo-classical economics, Monetarism, Milt Freidman, and Ron Paul. Well I kept reading, did some research for myself, and here I am.

Then I said:
david1 says

And finally, to answer your question, none of Freidman, Paul, or Smith and Menger or Mises "told" me that the Nazis had a great economic program. I said I was a believer of the above a few years back and that is all.

In short, I claimed to read no books. No books claimed to be read, no lie about reading them.

Then there is the "Nazi-apologist" strawman you have used.
Again, what you argue against is not what I said.

You have been trying for two days to get me into some kind of flame war; labeling me a Fascist, calling me sophmoric, etc., etc. I know you are smart enough to know that you can get your point across without this...and I utterly refuse to go down to your level.

Lets just use a little algebra here and see if you can explain this to me.

The GDP deflator (D) is Nominal GDP/Real GDP.
Here are your words for how the GDP is derived by the BLS:

Reality says

BLS has to rely on sampling instead of actual counting to arrive at GDP change from previous time period. It is from this change that the new GDP number is derived. In order to keep this sequential change relevant, the GDP deflator is applied whenever GDP has to be calculated.

So from this statement you say Nominal GDP = sampling1 * D + sampling2 * G +...
This is Nominal GDP = (sum of samplings) * G.
Now by substitution in the GDP deflator formula, G = ((sum of samplings) * G) / Real GDP

So Real GDP = sum of samplings.

Hmm..I always thought it was the other way around, that Nominal GDP is the sum of the samplings and Real GDP is GDP in constant dollars.

I am going to let you have the last word here..It's pretty clear this horse is dead and we aren't bringing it back on the merits of the argument and the only way it goes from here is more personal attacks. You are clouded by belief in some large scale government conspiracy to conceal its true power in our economy through statistical manipulation. I'm not even going to bring up the fact that during the 30s when government spending was reigned in economic output and unemployment soared once again and did not recover until demand was increased by the governments need to arm in WW2. The data just doesn't back the theories you claim and the only way you can resolve it is to come up with some conspiracy about black ops spending and misrepresented inflation...even though it is pretty clear that nominal GDP is not affected by inflation...

Bye.

167   leo707   2011 Oct 14, 3:28am  

Bap33 says

corntrollio says

You are wrong. There's nothing that indicates the founding fathers believed that.

Bap33 said p>this from the guy that shared his opinion of what the FF did/said as golden fact

winning, it's so much fun.

Hmmm... I am sorry, but I am just not seeing the win here.

1. Where again did corn say that what the FF did/said was a golden fact? I am not seeing it.

2. You have not provided evidence that you were correct in that the FF were opposed to welfare. I provided a FF quote that directly supported not only welfare, but a much more extensive welfare system than what we have today. You provided a quote where the FF said that the "general welfare" was a requirement of government. Then you go on to interpret general welfare to support you point; when as corn pointed out general welfare could just as easily be --perhaps more easily-- interpreted differently. That is no where near an "Expressly" made comment by the FF.

If I am missing something here on your "win" please let me know.

168   corntrollio   2011 Oct 14, 4:11am  

Bap33 says

winning, it's so much fun.

How is that a "golden fact"? i.e. that the founding fathers didn't collectively believe a particular proposition? Anyone who is trying to use the founding fathers as a group for any particular proposition is off their rocker. That's all I said, and you don't seem to understand it and are now basically trolling because you have no counterargument.

169   Reality   2011 Oct 14, 4:30am  

david1 says

Well I kept reading, did some research for myself, and here I am.

david1 says

In short, I claimed to read no books. No books claimed to be read, no lie about reading them.

So what did you read? did you come to the conclusion that they were just all wrong? As what you have expressed is the exact opposite what they would have advocated.

Then there is the "Nazi-apologist" strawman you have used.
Again, what you argue against is not what I said.

You have been trying for two days to get me into some kind of flame war; labeling me a Fascist, calling me sophmoric, etc., etc. I know you are smart enough to know that you can get your point across without this...and I utterly refuse to go down to your level.

I'm not interested in a flame war. However, you are a wannabe Fascist, or at least an advocate of Fascism. You even went so far as to praise the Nazi's Fascist economic central planning program. Nazi's economic program was Fascist. There's actually one point you and I agree upon: Fascism is nearly identical to today's "Progressive Agenda." Where you and I part company is that you use that similarity to defend Fascism whereas I cite that similarity to criticize the "Progressive Agenda."

Lets just use a little algebra here and see if you can explain this to me.

The GDP deflator (D) is Nominal GDP/Real GDP.

It is important to understand that the GDP deflator, despite its definition, is not caculated from Nominal / Real, but through price surveys . . . simply because neither Nominal GDP nor Real GDP are known until the final number is calculated using the GDP deflator.

Sampling is carried out on a set of companies/industries that do have quaterly numbers, then apply the GDP deflator to get the real growth in aggregate private sector earnings. From that some non-linear birth/death (of companies) guestimates are applied. Then the whole thing gets fed through the GDP deflator in reverse to arrive at nominal private sector aggregate earnings. That is then added to government spending (which is not sampled but from actual spending numbers) and net export (which is also from actual trade records according to custom declarations, which is of course an incomplete picture). That's how nominal GDP is arrived at . Then the deflator is used again to arrive at "Real GDP"

You are clouded by belief in some large scale government conspiracy to conceal its true power in our economy through statistical manipulation.

The very definition of GDP, and its methodolgy, shows that it's an indicator of debt service capacity, not economic well being or size of economy or any such thing. Every dollar that the government wastes is counted as GDP.

I'm not even going to bring up the fact that during the 30s when government spending was reigned in economic output and unemployment soared once again

The cause of the 30's decline was the raising of taxes . . . which is precisely what some are trying to do now (see the headline of this discussion). The real dichotomy of government monopolistic resource allocation vs. private sector competitive resource allocation was and is being intentionally obscured by a debate between "balanced budget" vs. deficit spending; i.e. constrain the public discourse into choosing between two harmful fake choices, one would raise tax and shrink the competitive sector of the economy, whereas the other would expand the monopolistic sector of the economy (also at the expense of the competitive sector). The real solution is reduce taxes and reduce government size: shrink the monopolistic sector and let the competitive sector allocate resources.

and did not recover until demand was increased by the governments need to arm in WW2.

Just like the Nazi's fascist economy, even as unemployment dropped and GDP number went up, the real standards of living declined. All sorts of daily necessities became rationed as government war programs took precedence.

170   david1   2011 Oct 14, 5:12am  

Reality says

Sampling is carried out on a set of companies/industries that do have quaterly numbers, then apply the GDP deflator to get the real growth in aggregate private sector earnings. From that some non-linear birth/death (of companies) guestimates are applied. Then the whole thing gets fed through the GDP deflator in reverse to arrive at nominal private sector aggregate earnings. That is then added to government spending (which is not sampled but from actual spending numbers) and net export (which is also from actual trade records according to custom declarations, which is of course an incomplete picture). That's how nominal GDP is arrived at . Then the deflator is used again to arrive at "Real GDP"

Here is what you are saying algebraically:

Let A be aggregate real consumption (earnings you said), f(x) is the non-linear birth/death function, G is GDP deflator, and S is the sampled data.

So you are saying A = sum(S * G * f(x)), aggregate nominal consuption is then C = A/G.
By substitution, You can get the same Aggregate Nominal Consumption estimation by omitting G altogether, C = S * f(x).
The only way the deflator needs to be applied then backed out is if it is dependent on the other variables (ie it changes when the sample or function changes) This isn't true because the prices of the goods (of which the you said deflator is calculated) is already baked into the samples.

171   Reality   2011 Oct 14, 6:05am  

david1 says

Here is what you are saying algebraically:

Let A be aggregate real consumption (earnings you said), f(x) is the non-linear birth/death function, G is GDP deflator, and S is the sampled data.

So you are saying A = sum(S * G * f(x)), aggregate nominal consuption is then C = A/G.
By substitution, You can get the same Aggregate Nominal Consumption estimation by omitting G altogether, C = S * f(x).

What the heck is "x"? The non-linear birth/death function is

f(dS/dt, G) ! where "d" denotes a differential or delta if dealing with discrete time series, t is time.
S is multi-dimensional data sampling, G is essentially a function of dP / dt, where P is price level

i.e. birth/death (of business) is a non-linear function of adjusted income growth in the sampled data as well as the deflator/inflation rate. Different parts of sample also have different weights.

BTW, in the earlier post you introduced G in the middle of discussion using D as deflator. I know Keynesians are enamored with their 5th grade math. If you want to pretend to have some mathematical rigor, at least keep the variable representations consistent. The dump-a-load-of-garbage-arithmatics-and-pray-the-other-guy-will-just-go-away approach doesn't work with me.

172   Bap33   2011 Oct 14, 10:47am  

leo,
I said the FF didn't want welfare, and that the Federalist Papers supported that. Corn said there was "nothing that indicated that the FF believed that (no welfare)". So, that statement means that corn believes the FF said something else ... that something else I coined, "golden fact", just for fun. I then showed links that had the original texts and meaning and proof that I was right, along with a nice story about Davy Crockett - who was only one generation off of the original FF document when he was refusing to allow the taxpayers funds to be used like a personal account that Gov can hand out to folks they deem worthy. A simple man knew it was wrong then, and I am a simple man that knows it is still wrong.

@Reality,
You are blessed with the common sense to be conservative, the amazing mind to defend your points so well, and the patients of Job. Refreshing. Thank you for participating.

173   tatupu70   2011 Oct 14, 11:48am  

Bap33 says

I then showed links that had the original texts and meaning and proof that I was right

Your link showed a man's opinion about what the founding fathers meant by "general welfare". Which is fine. He is entitled to his opinion, as are you.

But they are most certainly NOT facts.

Nice try, but I don't think you won...

174   marcus   2011 Oct 14, 11:52am  

Bap33 says

Don't be a sore loser. Have a great night. Thanks for the easy "W" on this one.

I thought that was the closest to a concession I had ever heard from Bap.
I was thinking well done Corntrolio, that you got that out of him.

175   Bap33   2011 Oct 14, 3:15pm  

corn,
if you read this: http://gopcapitalist.tripod.com/constitution.html

and some how came up with your last post, then I guess we have no more whacks to give this steed. We can move on, good game!

marcus,
you've been more angry and agressive than your normal self. Eat more fiber. Be happy.

176   corntrollio   2011 Oct 17, 4:22am  

Bap33 says

Corn said there was "nothing that indicated that the FF believed that (no welfare)".

Yes, there may have been individual founding fathers who may have believed one thing or the other, but as I've mentioned several times, it's mostly idiotic to think that the founding fathers collectively believed one particular ideology. That's all I said there, and I've said this several times consistently, and I'm still not sure what "golden fact" nonsense you're pointing at.

177   david1   2011 Oct 17, 7:07am  

Reality says

What the heck is "x"?

As you quite obviously know, f(x) was used to denote some unknown function with unknown variable input, x.

As you have now identified this function to contain two variables, dS/dt and G, let's examine:

What you have said MAY BE TRUE about G effecting the Nominal GDP numbers provided:

1. G is actually understated.
2. G has a negative correlation with the nominal GDP (an understated G means an overstated birth-death function result and hence, overstated nominal GDP)
3. The birth death model is actually incorporated in nominal GDP calculations and contains input variable G

What I am saying is, well, I can't find anything BLS anywhere that specifically states that the birth death model is used to calculate nominal GDP, nor anything that states G is a variable used in the birth death model.

I would be most curious to see this, becuase to me, if we break it all down, what you are saying is nothing is really measured, ever, anymore. Simply compared to prior unmeasured calculations and such. I would like to see these formulas, the models, etc. In the business world models are constantly compared to the actual data to test the validity of the model, and BLS does a good job showing that their models test well with the actual data, but I cannot find where they specifically show the model itself.

Since BLS tests the models vs. the actual data and it appears the models have little error or bias, one would have to assume that the actual data is a lie for your main thesis to hold anyway...that inflation..and therefore..the GDP deflator..are understated. The testing shows the model holds according to their website.

Anyway, good show even though you are an egomegamaniac and I still won't get into a flame war with you.

178   Honest Abe   2011 Oct 18, 4:13am  

The real solution is to increase taxes on those who advocate tax increases.

179   leo707   2011 Oct 18, 4:54am  

Honest Abe says

The real solution is to increase taxes on those who advocate tax increases.

How is that a solution?

180   Honest Abe   2011 Oct 18, 9:09am  

There can never be fiscal sanity until those who are the advocates of largess of the public treasury feel the pain of their advocacy. Kinda simple, isn't it?

Without massive taxation (which negatively affects primarily the rich) and inflation (which negatively affects primarily the poor) we could never afford all the wars that our Nobel Peace Prize winning President has us entangled in.

181   HousingWatcher   2011 Oct 18, 9:10am  

And in case nobody has noticed, we are now engaged in a 4th war in Uganda. Happy travels...

182   Bap33   2011 Oct 18, 10:32am  

where's Code Pink and when will they be at Barry's house to chant and protest and count dead soldiers?

183   bob2356   2011 Oct 19, 2:48am  

Honest Abe says

There can never be fiscal sanity until those who are the advocates of largess of the public treasury feel the pain of their advocacy. Kinda simple, isn't it?

Where is the part where all the advocates of going to war without paying for it feel the pain of their advocacy?

184   Honest Abe   2011 Oct 19, 4:52am  

Its the part where most people ignore the fact that war is supported by borrowing, inflation, taxation, or some combination of them. Liberals don't have a problem with those things.

War and empire building could not occur without continued borrowing, continued inflation, and "taxing the rich".

Do you want less war? Then demand a decrease in borrowing, eliminate inflation and lower taxes. That way the government could not afford war and empire building. Its that simple. (AKA limited, constitutional government) Ron Paul 2012.

Today's book recommendation: Surviving Civil War II - Preparing for Economic, Social and Political Collapse by Daxton Brown.

185   corntrollio   2011 Oct 19, 6:39am  

Honest Abe says

War and empire building could not occur without continued borrowing, continued inflation, and "taxing the rich".

Seems like a big flaw in your argument. The rich have a huge ability to influence government. If their taxes are going to useless wars that don't benefit them, then you can bet they'd put a stop to it.

186   bob2356   2011 Oct 19, 11:54am  

Honest Abe says

Its the part where most people ignore the fact that war is supported by borrowing, inflation, taxation, or some combination of them. Liberals don't have a problem with those things.

Seems to me a guy called Bush and a group called the neocons got us into the latest war paid by borrowing. I didn't realize that was a bunch of liberals. My error.

187   Honest Abe   2011 Oct 20, 4:09am  

Bush was then, Obama is now. Time to get your head out of your past. Continued warfare is a result of BOTH parties. If you're really interested in stopping war you need to starve the beast (aka government).

To starve the beast simply quit borrowing, stop inflating the currency, and lower taxes. Wa-laa, the beast no longer can afford to pay for war. Problem solved.

May I suggest you read and learn more of Ron Pauls philosophy. He clearly outlines these types of solutions.
Ron Paul 2012.

188   bob2356   2011 Oct 20, 5:01am  

Honest Abe says

Bush was then, Obama is now. Time to get your head out of your past. Continued warfare is a result of BOTH parties. If you're really interested in stopping war you need to starve the beast (aka government).

So if the problem is BOTH parties then why do you say

Honest Abe says

Liberals don't have a problem with those things.

Do you have a problem saying conservatives don't have a problem with those things either? Didn't someone called Reagan talk about "starving the beast" right before he borrowed 4 trillion dollars?

My point is that conservative philosophy is just as bankrupt as liberal philosophy, just a lot more hypocritical. Anyone who goes around screaming "its all the liberals fault" is just a hypocrite. Look in the mirror lately?

189   david1   2011 Oct 20, 5:18am  

bob2356 says

My point is that conservative philosophy is just as bankrupt as liberal philosophy, just a lot more hypocritical. Anyone who goes around screaming "its all the liberals fault" is just a hypocrite. Look in the mirror lately?

Ignoring idealogies, lets talk about what conservatives do when in power vs. liberals.

Conservatives increase military spending. Conservatives decrease taxes. Both contribute to the deficit.

Liberals increase spending on social programs (stimulus, Obamacare). This increases the deficit.

Neither cuts spending.

Neither increases taxes (except Clinton briefly). The last Democrat to increase taxes before Clinton was FDR.

Any questions of why we are in debt? Now, who has benefitted the most from decreased taxes?

Ask yourself - how did Obama beat Hillary, and who benefitted from it? (That was the real election in 2008, btw. Everyone knew the winner there was slaughtering whoever the Republicans put up)

Hillary might have been able to pull off raising taxes...Bubba did.

190   tatupu70   2011 Oct 20, 5:46am  

Honest Abe says

To starve the beast simply quit borrowing, stop inflating the currency, and lower taxes. Wa-laa, the beast no longer can afford to pay for war. Problem solved.

I don't get this theory. We couldn't afford the war in 2002. It didn't stop us then. Why would it be different now?

The solution to a revenue problem is not reducing revenue...

191   Vicente   2011 Oct 20, 6:19am  

tatupu70 says

The solution to a revenue problem is not reducing revenue...

It is if you are a moron who believes the solution for your obesity, is to toss all your food in the trash and force your entire family to forage.

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