REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

We should be THANKFUL that our dear leader is gettin' jiggy and partyin' it up!

POSTED BY: AURAPTOR
UPDATED: Thursday, June 24, 2010 13:29
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Wednesday, June 23, 2010 2:24 PM

ANTIMASON


Quote:

Originally posted by Niki2:

Given that wealth can’t be created, Bush TOOK money from the middle class and poor and GAVE it to the rich, Wall Street, the military-industrial complex and oil companies, in the form of war toys, tax cuts, deregulation, etc. He did NOT use it to rebuild infrastructure, increase the buying power of the vast majority of Americans, increase job growth or anything else constructive to the American people.



that's not true that Bush stole from the poor and middle class. the rich in AMerica pay more in taxes some years then many in the lower class pay in a lifetime. but lets just say that were true.. lets agree that 'theft' is wrong. why is it right for Obama to steal from the middle class and rich, to give to the poor?

the Tax cuts were good, the problem was spending has been growing exponentially, which has overwhelmed the visible incentives and benefits of the cuts. and inflation, the increase in money supply, caused by deficit spending, has and will always hurt the poor and middle classes the most

Quote:

Bush designed his tax plan when the economy was booming. He made a campaign promise to the GOP faithful and its aim was to cut taxes for the wealthy, not spur the economy. As a result, the Bush Tax Plan widened the gap between the rich and poor, led to an economy where wages couldn’t keep pace with inflation, and grown our national poverty rate each of the eight years he was in office.


Bushs tax cuts were not responsible for this alleged disparity, government spending and inflation are.

tax cuts incentivise investment, which creates jobs, and wealth, and more taxable income. raising taxes creates the opposite effect, of stifling investment and reducing potential growth in taxable income or revenue. its economics 101, i dont know how else to get through to you, without posting my own sources, link for link, boring everybody here to death. you need to reexamine the tax cuts under Harding/Coolidge, Kennedy and Reagan, and be honest enough to accept the findings

Quote:

So Obama is stuck with huge debt, rotting infrastructure, Wall Street gone wild, two wars and the biggest gap between rich and poor we’ve ever seen.


and he's set to make it worse, by perpetuating all the failed ideas of economics that Keynes and the collectivist have tried for a century, to no avail. and dont talk to me about Wall St, Tarp, which Obama voted for, and the democrat financial reform bill, were pushed on behalf of Wall st- so dont kid yourself

Quote:

Thus I ask you and JS: If not by methods he is trying to employ, and being REALISTIC, how exactly do YOU propose he fix those things? If you tell me by “cutting taxes”, the favorite cry from the right, because it didn’t work.


cut taxes, cut spending, and reduce government regulation and intervention in the economy. thats the only way the economy will recover, and we can cut off at the neck the stranglehold that lobbyists have on government in washington. let the producers keep the fruit of their labors, and spend it as they see fit! let businesses and people fail or go bankrupt- quit subsidizing risk and loss! its really quite easy



Quote:

Cutting the top tax rate does not lead to economic growth. which shows that Cutting the top tax rate does not lead to economic, income or wage growth, nor does it increase job creation. So propose something else that you believe is viable.


ok, so raising taxes creates growth? seriously, raising taxes, on anyone, is productive.. how?

i beg to differ, and for anyone looking for the other side of the story, i refer you to his pretty good article i read recently, which refutes just about everything Niki is trying to propogate :

http://www.heritage.org/Research/Reports/2004/06/The-Laffer-Curve-Past
-Present-and-Future


"President Kennedy proposed massive tax-rate reductions, which were passed by Congress and became law after he was assassinated. The 1964 tax cut reduced the top marginal personal income tax rate from 91 percent to 70 percent by 1965. The cut reduced lower-bracket rates as well. In the four years prior to the 1965 tax-rate cuts, federal government income tax revenue--adjusted for inflation--increased at an average annual rate of 2.1 percent, while total government income tax revenue (federal plus state and local) increased by 2.6 percent per year (See Table 4). In the four years following the tax cut, federal government income tax revenue increased by 8.6 percent annually and total government income tax revenue increased by 9.0 percent annually. Government income tax revenue not only increased in the years following the tax cut, it increased at a much faster rate."


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Wednesday, June 23, 2010 4:56 PM

FREMDFIRMA



From Heritage ?
HAHAHAHAHAHAHA!

Umm, you do realize there's this leeetle credibility problem there ?

Just sayin...

-F

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Wednesday, June 23, 2010 8:15 PM

ANTIMASON


yeah.. but you can get the same information from the Cato or Mises institutes. this will forever come down to austrian, free market economics, versus keynesian economics. liberals will always believe that FDR and the federal governments New Deal policies rescued us from the great depression, while we will always maintain that they prolonged the depression. the facts are their for anyone to see, if they just have an open mind

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Wednesday, June 23, 2010 10:31 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

that's not true that Bush stole from the poor and middle class. the rich in AMerica pay more in taxes some years then many in the lower class pay in a lifetime. but lets just say that were true.. lets agree that 'theft' is wrong. why is it right for Obama to steal from the middle class and rich, to give to the poor?
I have an idea. The rich don't pay higer taxes. We just get rid of profit.

How's that?
Quote:

this will forever come down to austrian, free market economics, versus keynesian economics.
Why do you insist on repeating the same experiment over and over and over and over...? Going back in history as far as they eye can see... concentration of wealth = depression.

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Wednesday, June 23, 2010 10:51 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

Originally posted by Jongsstraw:
Signy, It's always much easier to criticize and complain than to offer viable solutions to complex problems. Until one sits in the Oval Office you really cannot fully understand all the facts and multiple nuances of any situation, so it is quite difficult for me or anyone here to know exactly what they're talking about when it comes to offering solutions to problems.



Jonggstraw, I guess I'm at least as interested in your list of "problems" as I am in your list of solutions. Most right-wingers on the board focus on stupid stuff- Obama's supposed Kenyan birth, his "muslim" religion, his jug ears, his supposed worshippers, his "gettin' jiggy" (no racism there!) ... It's hard to get a bead on what is REALLY bothering people bc those complaints aren't real, they're just chaff that people toss up to hide their REAL issues!

I suspect that your view of where we went wrong is vastly different from mine. We would both prolly start off with "The deficit..." and after that there'd be nothing in common.

So... in your opinion... what needs fixing? Whether or not you think there's a solution.

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Thursday, June 24, 2010 12:46 AM

KANEMAN


Niki : "Given that wealth can’t be created, Bush TOOK money from the middle class and poor and GAVE it to the rich, Wall Street, the military-industrial complex and oil companies, in the form of war toys, tax cuts, deregulation, etc. He did NOT use it to rebuild infrastructure, increase the buying power of the vast majority of Americans, increase job growth or anything else constructive to the American people."

Hey, I agree with you a bit. All government spending is bad. It is taking from person "A" and giving it to person "B". When does Taxation lead to an increase in Buying power? I'd suggest doing a little research on Austrian economics. Start at Lew Rockwell or Mises institute. When Obama(or any prez) create money out of thin air it causes inflation. Inflation hits the middle and lower class first and the hardest(Think fixed income elderly..inflation lowers buying power but money stays the same)...Inflation is a TAX on the lower and middle class. Why do you think the dollar is worth 7cents compared to a 1917 dollar?

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Thursday, June 24, 2010 5:38 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


JONGSS, I hope you see my question "What is wrong?" because I would sincerely like an answer from a reasonable person on the other end of the spectrum. Like I said, I think we would both blurt out "The deficit..." and then it would turn into babel. But my curiosity is piqued.


KANEMANN... you forgot to re-login in as Antimason! But, to respond to your comment
Quote:

Hey, I agree with you a bit. All government spending is bad. It is taking from person "A" and giving it to person "B". When does Taxation lead to an increase in Buying power?
As you said, when it applies Keynesian economics.
Quote:

I'd suggest doing a little research on Austrian economics.
Been there, done that, and still not convinced. (And by the end of his term, neither was Greenspan). Now, let's see if YOU can make a cogent argument, on your own, and defend each point as you bring it up, because you have failed so far. All you do in point and wave your hands, but you don't seem to understand how or why it's supposed to work.
Quote:

When Obama(or any prez) create money out of thin air it causes inflation. Inflation hits the middle and lower class first and the hardest(Think fixed income elderly..inflation lowers buying power but money stays the same)...Inflation is a TAX on the lower and middle class. Why do you think the dollar is worth 7cents compared to a 1917 dollar?
Not true.

If the government creates money and spends it on programs which increase productivity (such as roadways, highways, electrification, communication etc) inflation does not result because the production of goods keeps pace with the increased money supply. (The classic definition of inflation is "Too much money chasing too few goods.")

If the government redistributes money to create more parity, then aggregate demand goes up. And since economies are pulled by demand more than they are pushed by investment, economic activity goes up.

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Thursday, June 24, 2010 8:57 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


JS, to clarify: I wasn’t speaking to you specifically, my bad for not being clearer. I meant the RWAs here, and we have several, who cannot miss the chance to generalize about libs, dems, etc. That’s why I SAY RWAs specifically...I try not to lump Republicans or Conservatives, tho’ I’m sure my bias gets through sometimes. Mostly when I’m talking about Republicans I’m talking about Republican POLITICIANS, and I guess to be fairer about it, I should add “politicians”, which I will endeavor to do in future. I TRY not to lump, but sometimes—as with the Tea Party—it’s hard not to. Nonetheless, I was wrong to respond to your post without caveating that it was reading “you libs” which brought it to mind, not specifically your use of it. Apologies.

Just to be clear, it doesn’t “hurt” me, it just pisses me off a bit. That is mostly because the RWAs on this forum use it so much, so inaccurately and so vociferously that it’s stupid and makes debate or discussion impossible. JMHO

I wish you WOULD post more; you’re one of the few intelligent Conservatives we CAN discuss/debate with, and we need more. It’s frustrating that the only people we have reflecting your side are those who cannot carry on a discussion, merely spout talking points and idiocies. I can certainly understand your not being willing to endure the slings and arrows of the less civil of us here, but I’m sad you feel the way you do. I do try to put up threads about many different things; I also admit freely that my feelings about Republicans/Conservatives/Tea Partiers are extremely biased at the present time...as I’ve said before, partly resulting from eight years of insanity, partly because the statements here from that side are so unpleasant and wrong or so slanted as to be ridiculous.

But I do think you’d find much more civil responses to your posts from the left than we do from the right. After all, we lefties ARE bleeding-heart wooses. That has been my experience, anyway. Also, I post anti-right stuff partly because so MUCH anti-Obama, anti-Dem, anti-Left is put up here. THAT cuts both ways, too. Given Mike is more interested in snarks than in putting up threads, and I don’t THINK we have any other “liberals” per se here, I speak for the party with which I am most closely aligned. IF there were more middle ground, you wouldn’t see nearly the amount of “fighting back” from me.

Anti, dunno why I bother, but it won’t take long to cut and paste.
Quote:

tax cuts incentivise investment, which creates jobs, and wealth, and more taxable income
I disagree:
Quote:

1. Cutting the top tax rate does not lead to economic growth.

This graph shows the fluctuations of the real GDP growth rate over the period, indicating the performance of the U.S. economy as a whole. It is true that growth increased drastically after the 1982 tax cut, reaching as high as 7.3% in 1984. However, as the Reagan-Bush, Sr. administrations went on and taxes for the rich were slashed even further, growth fell to negative levels during 1991, at the heart of the last recession. And, two of the three years with the highest growth were during the 1950s, when the top tax rate was 91%. Overall, there seems to be no close relationship between the top tax rate and the GDP growth rate, and statistical analysis backs this up: the correlation coefficient between the two variables is 0.03, meaning that there is essentially no connection. (If tax cuts were strongly related to GDP growth, we would see a coefficient close to -1.) So much for upper-class tax cuts boosting the economy; now it's on to median income growth.

2. Cutting the top tax rate does not lead to income growth.


Again, we see inconclusive evidence for the power of tax cuts. We do see small peaks in median income growth, a good measure of how the average American household is doing, after top-bracket tax cuts in the mid-1960s and early 1980s, but we also actually see income decreases after the tax cuts of the late 1980s, and strong growth after the tax increase of 1993. It is true that in the year with the worst median income decrease (3.3% in 1974), the top tax rate was 70%. However, it was also 70% in the year with the highest median income growth (4.7% in 1972)! Once again, the lack of connection between the two measures is backed up by a correlation coefficient near zero: 0.06, to be exact. And yes, yet again, the coefficient is positive, indicating that income has gone up slightly (though negligibly) more in years with higher taxes. Two strikes. How about hourly wages?

3. Cutting the top tax rate does not lead to wage growth.


Not surprisingly, we have mixed results yet again! Growth in average hourly wages did increase during the 1980s following the first Reagan tax cuts, albeit two years after the cuts took effect. But, just like GDP growth and median income growth, hourly wages decreased following the late 1980s tax cuts, and spiked upwards after the 1993 tax increase.

Furthermore, wages grew at a level of at least 1%, and usually much more, all throughout the period when the top income tax rate was 91%. In fact, it isn't until 1972 that we see a wage growth rate of less than 1%. However, if we look at the 19 years of the study period when the top tax rate was 50% or less, we see that 8 of the years saw an increase in wages of less than 1%. Thus, it seems that hourly wages grew more when taxes were higher - indeed, the correlation coefficient is 0.34, indicating a mild positive relationship between higher taxes for the rich and higher hourly wages. This finding flies in the face of the conservative theory. As if that's not enough, now let's see about what President Bush claimed would be the biggest result of tax cuts - job creation.

4. Cutting the top tax rate does not lead to job creation.
Here, we see the change in the unemployment rate laid against the top tax rate from 1954 to 2002. Thus, negative values signify a decrease in unemployment -- in essence, job creation. Once again, while the top tax rate trends downward over the period, the annual change in unemployment doesn't seem to trend at all! Although the largest increase (2.9%) did occur in 1975, when the top marginal tax rate was 70%, three of the four largest decreases in unemployment occurred in years when the top rate was 91%. The mixed results do not bode well for those who see tax cuts for the richest as a sparkplug to incite job growth. The correlation coefficient between the variables here is 0.11 -- meaning that there have been slightly more jobs created in years with lower top tax rates, but this pattern is negligible -- nowhere near strong enough to signify a relationship.

Overall, data from the past 50 years strongly refutes any arguments that cutting taxes for the richest Americans will improve the economic standing of the lower and middle classes or the nation as a whole. To be sure, the economic indicators examined in this report are dependent on a variety of factors, not just tax policy. However, what this study does show is that any attempt to stimulate economic growth by cutting taxes for the rich will do nothing -- it hasn't worked over the past 50 years, so why would it work in the future? To put it simply and bluntly, Bush's top-bracket tax cut is an ineffective attempt at stimulus that will not cause any growth -- unless, of course, if you're talking about the size of the deficit.

http://www.faireconomy.org/research/TrickleDown.html

That is my argument in response to your statement. Unfortunately, I can’t take Heritage very seriously either; if you would provide a less biased source, I would be happy to read it. For me, after searching and eliminating the more biased material, I found the above made sense and presented good facts and figures, so I find it valid.

Also unfortunately, I don’t think you have an open mind, so spending time beyond the above isn’t worth the return.

Sig’s suggestion made me smile. And the rest of what she said IS proven out by history. Her remarks about
Quote:

Most right-wingers on the board focus on stupid stuff- Obama's supposed Kenyan birth, his "muslim" religion, his jug ears, his supposed worshippers, his "gettin' jiggy"... It's hard to get a bead on what is REALLY bothering people bc those complaints aren't real, they're just chaff that people toss up to hide their REAL issues!
express exactly how I feel and why my language oft times gets more harsh than I’d like; frustration finds an outlet, but I’d much rather discuss/debate with people who actually have something to say.

As to taxing the rich “increasing buying power”:
Quote:

In the 1950s the marginal tax rate on those earning more than $3 million a year (in today's dollars) was 91 percent. By 1990 it was 28 percent. The IRS says that the top 400 richest tax filers actually paid a rate of just 16 percent in 2007 (the latest numbers we have). Yep, the richest earners -- people who took in an average of $343 million each -- probably paid a lower rate than you did.

By the way, those 400 people who do so well on tax day have a combined net worth of nearly $1.37 trillion. (According to Forbes Magazine their wealth has gone up on average by more than 16 percent over the past year -- the worst economic year since the Great Depression during which 29 million Americans are without work or forced into part-time jobs. )

How do we even wrap our minds around a number so large? Here's the example that brings it down to earth for me. If we had progressive taxes that reduced their wealth to a trifling $100 million each, we'd have enough money to set up a trust fund whose interest could provide tuition-free higher education for students at every public college and university in perpetuity. Imagine that. Our kids could actually leave college without carrying tens of thousands of dollars of debt on their backs.

Could those 400 special people be able to get by on just $100 million a year? I think they might. So why are we so fearful of taxing the super-rich? Here are the arguments I've heard.

1. They've earned it.
Really? The concept of "earning" is murky when you consider the array of corporate welfare programs we provide. Oil companies have their depletion allowances. Big sugar farmers have their sweet subsidies. The health insurance industry is exempt from anti-trust laws.

2. Redistribution of Income is Un-American.
We already live in a world of massive redistribution. Only it's from the bottom to the top. We still hear about how poor folks game the system and mooch off our hard earned tax dollars. They go to emergency rooms and don't pay. They get Medicaid for free. And many don't pay any taxes at all (mostly because their incomes are so impossibly low). But all of that is chump change compared to the gaming going on at the other end of the economic scale.

Just think of all the scams corporations and the rich are running: ever-rising credit card fees, predatory mortgages, usurious interest rates, check cashing ripoffs, monopoly pricing. They turn income into lower taxed capital gains, find offshore tax shelters, collect subsidies for their runaway shops. And then they netted the big one: Wall Street bailouts. Post-baillout, these too-big-to fail companies are getting even bigger. It all adds up to a major redistribution plan -- from the many to the few.

During the post-WWII boom we had one of the fairest income distributions in the world. Not anymore. Today the gap between rich and poor is wider than at any time in U.S. history. Here's a telling statistic: In 1970 the compensation ratio of the top 100 CEOs compared to the average worker was 45 to one. By 2008 it was 1,071 to one. You think they got that much smarter?

3. If we tax the wealthy, we'll hinder investment and kill jobs.
In theory this sounds good. But we tried this experiment, and it didn't work. When we cut taxes on the super-rich, we got a different kind of investment boom than the politicians and economists had promised. The wealthy literally ran out of investments in factories, equipment and even services. So they flocked to financial investments -- which were supposedly safer and more profitable anyway. The super-rich laid their money down in the Wall Street casino, and helped puff up bubble after bubble. Profits in the financial sector soared. In 1960, the sector accounted for about 15 per cent of all corporate profits. By 2008 (before the crash, that is), it was almost 40 percent. The financial sector crased as the direct result of tax cuts for the super-rich and Wall Street deregulation

4. Government's too big already. We should be cutting the public sector, not raising taxes to expand it.
Many people (like those in and around the Tea Party) dislike tax scams by the wealthy, but dislike government even more. Cutting state and local payrolls would actually add to our economic woes. If we fire public sector workers, they'll stop paying taxes -- which will only add to the tax burden on those people who still have jobs.
Laid off public sector workers -- and even those whose wages and benefits have been cut -- don't buy as many goods and services. This drop in demand triggers layoffs in the private sector -- and a further slide in tax revenues. In short, public sector cutbacks contribute to an economic death spiral: plummeting tax revenues and ever more cutbacks.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/les-leopold/why-are-we-afraid-to-tax_b_4
96302.html


Yes, it’s HuffPost, but I happen to agree with it; the facts, figures and argument makes sense to me. Number 4 responds to Kane’s statement about gvernment spending.

As to Free-Market, Sig’s right again. Greenspan finally saw the light and abandoned free-market; I’ll let you two hash that out if you will, but you won’t. I’ve read enough of what you’ve posted to again recognize that you’ll never abandon the concept, whatever the facts may be. So I’ll let it lie.

Sig pretty much responded more concisely and accurately than I could, so I’ll let that stand to. But here’s one on JUST taxing the rich.
The fact is, without ANY of the tax loopholes and credits corporations and the rich use (some of which include sending money OUT of the country), the disparity is huge. For example, Warren Buffett:
Quote:

Quote:

Mr. Buffett compiled a data sheet of the men and women who work in his office. He had each of them make a fraction; the numerator was how much they paid in federal income tax and in payroll taxes for Social Security and Medicare, and the denominator was their taxable income. The people in his office were mostly secretaries and clerks, though not all.

It turned out that Mr. Buffett, with immense income from dividends and capital gains, paid far, far less as a fraction of his income than the secretaries or the clerks or anyone else in his office. Further, in conversation it came up that Mr. Buffett doesn’t use any tax planning at all. He just pays as the Internal Revenue Code requires. “How can this be fair?” he asked of how little he pays relative to his employees. “How can this be right?”

The typical US taxpayer earns most of his income from salary, wages, and tips. It's what the IRS calls "earned income" - the income you get from actually having a job and doing the stuff that job requires, or earning it the old fashioned way. This is how most middle class, and even upper middle class, families earn their income. It's also the highest taxed form of income.

The typical "rich" person, on the other hand, receives mostly "unearned income". This is basically any income that you don't have to work for: interest, capital gains, dividends, rent paid on real estate, etc.

Interest is taxed basically the same as earned income. It kind of stinks for the average saver, because your typical bank account interest rate is fairly low anyway, and it gets taxed the same as normal income.

Capital Gains and Dividends, on the other hand, get classified entirely separately on your tax return, and get taxed at entirely different - and much lower - rates than your normal income. There are also a number of ways in which you can make a *lot* of money in capital gains without paying any taxes at all.

Best of all (from a tax perspective) is real estate. Theoretically, it's taxed as capital gains. But you can make a lot of profit on real estate and pay almost no taxes at all, if you're smart about what you're doing.

Furthermore, corporations themselves are taxed in a totally different way than individuals, making it possible for business owners to give themselves all kinds of incredible perks tax free (or nearly so).

http://philosophers-stone.typepad.com/my_weblog/2006/11/how_the_rich_d
o.html


So if the rich are paying FAR less, percentage-wise, on their income than the common working stiff, where do you go frm there?


Hippie Operative Nikovich Nikita Nicovna Talibani,
signing off


To our President: “Mr. President, you're a god damn, mother fucking liar. Fuck you, you cock sucking community activist piece of shit.... oh, go fuck yourself, Mr. President” ...Raptor

To Anthony, unquestionably the most civil person on this forum: “Go fuck yourself. On this matter, make no mistake. I want you to go fuck yourself long and hard, as well as anyone who agrees with you. I got no use for you. ...Raptor

To Frem: “You miserable piece of shit.” ...Raptor

To Niki: “My guess is it won't just be your ugly face you dislike.....Well, it's true......if you had a soul.” ...Raptor

To Kwicko:" You're the putrid slime which oozes between troll's toes, you're so low.” ...Raptor

...Remember, remember, the ugliest member...

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Thursday, June 24, 2010 12:55 PM

ANTIMASON


you are distorting my position. i think ive said pretty clearly, many times, that tax rates should be cut across the board. do you agree with that, or are you in favor of progressive taxes that punish success?

the 50s were prosperous, despite the top tax rate, because the Truman and Eisenhower eras still passed significant tax cuts! and its simply alloying people to keep more of what they earn, and letting them choose how to spend it. its clear according to your graph that there are peaks after tax cuts. the overall growth fluctuates according to many other different market forces, including political influences. that is the concept youre neglecting, that no government beurea can distribute wealth as effectively as a free market. taxing certain classes of people more, to allow government to spend the money is what creates the bubbles! its the malinvestment and false incentives they give.

why should we pay for an ever growing government, at the expense of our own personal desires? government already spends 44% of our GDP a year, but our deficit is approaching 100% of our GDP. this is all unsustainable. and the inflation that results is what destroys the middle class and creates this disparity between rich and poor.

on a side note, look at this article i found the other day. how do we sustain a government taking 50% of private earnings, and intend to gradually pay public workers more then comparable private sector work? isnt that the dilemma Greece and a few other European countries are experiencing?


Quote:


http://www.usatoday.com/money/workplace/2009-04-09-compensation_N.htm

The pay gap between government workers and lower-compensated private employees is growing as public employees enjoy sizable benefit growth even in a distressed economy, federal figures show.
Public employees earned benefits worth an average of $13.38 an hour in December 2008, the latest available data, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) says. Private-sector workers got $7.98 an hour.

Overall, total compensation for state and local workers was $39.25 an hour — $11.90 more than in private business. In 2007, the gap in wages and benefits was $11.31.

The gap has been expanding because of the increasing value of public employee benefits. Last year, government benefits rose three times more than those in the private sector: up 69 cents an hour for civil servants, 23 cents for private workers.

Labor costs account for about half of state and local spending, according to BLS and Census data. Benefits consume a growing share of that, now 34%.

Illinois state Sen. Chris Lauzen, a Republican, says government benefits are unsustainable and unfair to taxpayers who earn less than civil servants. "People will become angrier and angrier when they learn the difference between their pay and benefits and what we give to public employees," he says.

Jennifer Porcari of the American Federation of Teachers, a union representing 1.4 million educators and state employees, says BLS figures that show government employees earn higher wages are misleading because jobs aren't comparable. Government jobs, such as teaching, often require more education.

Some states are asking unions for help with budget problems. New Mexico employees will pay an extra 1.5% of salary toward pensions for two years, cutting the state's share. Ohio's unions will take unpaid furlough days to save the state $440 million over two years. In the third year, workers will get most of the money back.

The wage gap between government and private workers has stayed roughly the same since 2002. Benefits are a different story.

For every $1-an-hour pay increase, public employees have gotten $1.17 in new benefits. Private workers have gotten just 58 cents in benefits for every $1 raise. The difference: Companies have ended most traditional pension plans and increased workers' share of health care costs. Government paid an average of $8,800 annually toward employee medical insurance. Private companies paid $4,100.

A full-time government worker receives benefits worth an average of $27,830 per year. A private worker's benefits are worth $16,598.






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Thursday, June 24, 2010 1:29 PM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Sorry, to me you have no valid argument.
Quote:

tax rates should be cut across the board. do you agree with that, or are you in favor of progressive taxes that punish success?
Given "success" doesn't necessarily mean "earned income", the latter. It doesn't "punish" either, as now they pay relatively MUCH less than they used to.
Quote:

The top 5 percent pay well over half the income taxes.
Now, compare
Quote:

During eight years of the Bush Administration, the 400 richest Americans, who now own more than the bottom 150 million Americans, increased their net worth by $700 billion.
So. 400 richest Americans INCREASED their net worth by $700 million, as opposed to 150 MILLION Americans whose wagest in large part went DOWN. Those 400 people INCREASED their wealth by $17.5 million EACH. Also
Quote:

In 1955, IRS records indicated the 400 richest people in the country were worth an average $12.6 million, adjusted for inflation. In 2006, the 400 richest increased their average to $263 million, representing an epochal shift of wealth upward in the U.S.

In 1955, the richest tier paid an average 51.2 percent of their income in taxes under a progressive federal income tax that included loopholes. By 2006, the richest paid only 17.2 percent of their income in taxes.

In 1955, the proportion of federal income from corporate taxes was 33 percent; by 2003, it decreased to 7.4 percent. Today, the top taxpayers pay the same percentage of their incomes in taxes as those making $50,000 to $75,000, although they doubled their share of total U.S. income.

http://www.consortiumnews.com/2009/070409a.html

Sorry, but given those figures, you BET I think they owe more taxes!!! Across-the-board taxation wouldn't do shit about the increased disparity between rich and poor, which the rich DID NOT EARN.

I realize you're only in favor of redistribution of wealth UPWARD. We disagre. 1955 tax rates were more equitable and gave the rest of us at least a SHOT at a decent life!

Now? It's a joke!


Hippie Operative Nikovich Nikita Nicovna Talibani,
signing off


To our President: “Mr. President, you're a god damn, mother fucking liar. Fuck you, you cock sucking community activist piece of shit.... oh, go fuck yourself, Mr. President” ...Raptor

To Anthony, unquestionably the most civil person on this forum: “Go fuck yourself. On this matter, make no mistake. I want you to go fuck yourself long and hard, as well as anyone who agrees with you. I got no use for you. ...Raptor

To Frem: “You miserable piece of shit.” ...Raptor

To Niki: “My guess is it won't just be your ugly face you dislike.....Well, it's true......if you had a soul.” ...Raptor

To Kwicko:" You're the putrid slime which oozes between troll's toes, you're so low.” ...Raptor

...Remember, remember, the ugliest member...

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