Obama's 'Redistribution' Constitution

For discussion of life's issues: current events, social trends and personal opinions.

Moderators: Tunnelcat, Jeff250

User avatar
AlphaDoG
DBB Admiral
DBB Admiral
Posts: 1345
Joined: Sun Dec 25, 2005 10:35 am
Location: Mt. Vernon Illinois

Re:

Post by AlphaDoG »

Bet51987 wrote:
AlphaDog.. Paving the roads, picking up the garbage, providing police and armed forces, and regulating commerce, takes money which the government gets from taxation. Then there are the individual states who collect their own taxes for the same thing.
It's called infrastructure. I WANT my tax money to go to INFRASTRUCTURE. Plain and Simple I WANT a return for MY tax dollar. Those are the THINGS needed by a civilized society.

Bet51987 wrote: But what happens when the people who pay those taxes are being squeezed to a breaking point like what is happening right now. People out of jobs because the manufacturing base is leaving for Asia for cheap labor and lower taxes. Greed is a big problem and these corporations know how to get it.
Are YOU being squeezed?


Bet51987 wrote:This is the part that I don't know enough about. Who is to blame; How can it be fixed?

Bee
Bee at this point, it can not be fixed. Sorry! We messed up in earlier electoral processes. Our bad!
User avatar
Bet51987
DBB Alumni
DBB Alumni
Posts: 2791
Joined: Sun May 30, 2004 6:54 am
Location: USA

Re:

Post by Bet51987 »

AlphaDoG wrote:
Bet51987 wrote:
AlphaDog.. Paving the roads, picking up the garbage, providing police and armed forces, and regulating commerce, takes money which the government gets from taxation. Then there are the individual states who collect their own taxes for the same thing.
It's called infrastructure. I WANT my tax money to go to INFRASTRUCTURE. Plain and Simple I WANT a return for MY tax dollar. Those are the THINGS needed by a civilized society.
I never said I didn't. :?

AlphaDoG wrote:
Bet51987 wrote: But what happens when the people who pay those taxes are being squeezed to a breaking point like what is happening right now. People out of jobs because the manufacturing base is leaving for Asia for cheap labor and lower taxes. Greed is a big problem and these corporations know how to get it.
Are YOU being squeezed?
No, but I'm voting for the person who is.
AlphaDoG wrote:
Bet51987 wrote:This is the part that I don't know enough about. Who is to blame; How can it be fixed?

Bee
Bee at this point, it can not be fixed. Sorry! We messed up in earlier electoral processes. Our bad!
Which is why I'm voting for Obama. :wink:

Bee
User avatar
Will Robinson
DBB Grand Master
DBB Grand Master
Posts: 10136
Joined: Tue Mar 07, 2000 3:01 am

Re:

Post by Will Robinson »

Bet51987 wrote:....
AlphaDoG wrote:
Bet51987 wrote:This is the part that I don't know enough about. Who is to blame; How can it be fixed?

Bee
Bee at this point, it can not be fixed. Sorry! We messed up in earlier electoral processes. Our bad!
Which is why I'm voting for Obama. :wink:

Bee

Are you? Or are you voting for the one who said things to make you feel like you were?
Obama's campaign wrote:Barack Obama's senior advisers have drawn up plans to lower expectations for his presidency if he wins next week's election, amid concerns that many of his euphoric supporters are harboring unrealistic hopes of what he can achieve.

The sudden financial crisis and the prospect of a deep and painful recession have increased the urgency inside the Obama team to bring people down to earth, after a campaign in which his soaring rhetoric and promises of "hope" and "change" are now confronted with the reality of a stricken economy.
User avatar
CUDA
DBB Master
DBB Master
Posts: 6482
Joined: Thu Jun 07, 2001 2:01 am
Location: A Conservative Man in the Liberal bastion of the Pacific Northwest. in Oregon City. Oregon

Post by CUDA »

Bet51987 wrote wrote:But what happens when the people who pay those taxes are being squeezed to a breaking point like what is happening right now. People out of jobs because the manufacturing base is leaving for Asia for cheap labor and lower taxes.
isn't this what the left is blasting the right about. that we give tax breaks to Corporations???????.

Your absolutely right. with the second highest corporate tax rate in the world we leave business's NO CHOICE but to go over seas for labor, they are after all trying to run a business and one of the first rules of business is control your expenses. cut the taxes on corporations and individuals.

1. you will lower the cost of doing business, drawing more companies into the largest consumer market in the world and stimulate the economy.
2. people will have more income to spend there fore they will buy more goods, which will intern draw more business's to the us to manufacture and again stimulate the economy.
3. Buy stimulating the economy the Government will collect more taxes just by the shear volume of the income spent.

It is not the employer who pays the wages. Employers only handle the money. It is the customer who pays the wages.
Henry Ford
"Only the little people pay taxes."
Leona Helmsley
Communism has never come to power in a country that was not disrupted by war or corruption, or both.
John F. Kennedy
“Capitalism and communism stand at opposite poles. Their essential difference is this: The communist, seeing the rich man and his fine home, says: 'No man should have so much.' The capitalist, seeing the same thing, says: 'All men should have so much.'”
User avatar
woodchip
DBB Benefactor
DBB Benefactor
Posts: 17865
Joined: Tue Jul 06, 1999 2:01 am

Post by woodchip »

So what governmental system, built a wall to keep it's people in and shot them if they tried to leave? what governmental system has great medical care and yet it's people are willing to swim 90 miles to leave it? What governmental system to a country that was a net exporter of food, distributed the wealth to the poor and whose people are now starving with the govt. trying to feed them by importing food? What system of government sits just across a no mans land, was once a unified country so the two populations are ethnically identical, yet the govt. provides for it's people by the charity of other govts.?
What Major communist/socialist country's saw the light and introduced capitalism, since which the peoples standard of living has risen significantly?
So go ahead and vote for Karl Obama, who is not really bright enough to see socialism does not provide anything the people want, yet wants all of us to allow his great economic model be given a chance. I guess I am one of the selfish ones who want to keep what they earn and if enough is left over, donate to what charity I want to.
User avatar
Will Robinson
DBB Grand Master
DBB Grand Master
Posts: 10136
Joined: Tue Mar 07, 2000 3:01 am

Post by Will Robinson »

The problem a lot of otherwise bright people have when seeking to legislate \"economic justice\", as Obama calls it, is they start from the foundation of a successful capitalistic economy and government and then try to overlay the good parts of a socialistic system on top of the existing one. It is short sighted to think you can just blend in some socialism into the mix without disturbing the whole recipe.

Case in point, the subprime mortgage fiasco. They thought they could just dictate to banks that loans to people who are unlikely to be able to pay for them need to be made to create economic justice. To make the banks go along they backed the system with government promise to pay if trouble arises using Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, so the two giant brokers of mortgage paper acumulated tons of bad paper and sold it into the capitalist system...into our economy and beyond into the worlds economy!
Now we see the government having to cough up over a trillion dollars so far with no end in sight in an attempt to make socialism and capitalism mix.

The authors of this horrendous recipe are the democrats going back to Carter, then accelerated by Clinton, then protected and exploited by democrats in congress today. Somehow the media decided electing Obama is too important to tell the truth so there are people like Bet who buy the lies that it is republicans fault and Obama who will save them from it. It's like Bizzarro World.

Sure there have been republican leaning speculators and investment brokerages who tried to take advantage of the new laws and regulations to make a profit but there were also the same people who lean democrat that cashed in. There are vultures from both sides of the political spectrum feeding on the carcass of the mistake.
But they weren't the ones who made road kill of our economy. they aren't the ones who created the problem! Why would anyone want to vote for the guys who created the problem?

\"Economic justice\" is sort of an oxymoron. Economic opportunity is the best a free market and free society can expect from their government, anything more comes with a lot of hardship and injustice and is usually controlled by an oppressive government.
User avatar
dissent
DBB Fleet Admiral
DBB Fleet Admiral
Posts: 2162
Joined: Thu Oct 28, 2004 12:17 pm
Location: Illinois

Post by dissent »

AlphaDog.. Paving the roads, picking up the garbage, providing police and armed forces, and regulating commerce, takes money which the government gets from taxation. Then there are the individual states who collect their own taxes for the same thing. But what happens when the people who pay those taxes are being squeezed to a breaking point like what is happening right now. People out of jobs because the manufacturing base is leaving for Asia for cheap labor and lower taxes. Greed is a big problem and these corporations know how to get it.

This is the part that I don't know enough about. Who is to blame; How can it be fixed?
Bee, have you ever taken any kind of finance coursework. You’re posts scream of the typical kind of economic ignorance that a large number of Americans share. I think more so among your demographic – the young (college-aged). Here, let me help you.
That's fine but everyone can't cross the gap for obvious reasons. However, some people are perfectly happy picking coconuts for coconut wages while others need to be executives which gets them executive coconuts. Everone is happy and each lives within their means.

Debatable. Some would argue that Americans insistence at trying to live beyond their means (high debt levels, excessive credit card usage, etc.) is part of the reason that we have some of the economic issues we have today.
The problem is when the executives get greedy making it harder and harder for the little guy to live on the smaller coconuts he now gets. He's hurting and to make matters worse the government needs more coconuts so places higher coconut taxes on the little guy while allowing the executive to keep most of his.
a) Bee, everybody wants more money.
b) Do you know what a tax bracket is?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tax_bracket

The “little guy”’s, employees at lower salary levels, are already paying lower taxes than the “rich (greedy) executives”
http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/07/16/business/tax.php
Recent calculations by the Congressional Budget Office of U.S. tax rates show a highly progressive system. (The numbers are based on 2004 data, but the tax code has not changed much since then.) The poorest fifth of the population, with average annual income of $15,400, pays only 4.5 percent of its income in federal taxes. The middle fifth, with income of $56,200, pays 13.9 percent. And the top fifth, with income of $207,200, pays 25.1 percent.

At the very top of the income distribution, the CBO reports even higher tax rates. The richest 1 percent has average income of $1,259,700 and forks over 31.1 percent of its income to the federal government.

One might wonder how Buffett gets away with a tax rate of only 17.7 percent, while a typical millionaire is paying so much more. Most likely, part of the answer is that Buffett's income is made up largely of dividends and capital gains, which are taxed at only 15 percent. By contrast, many other top earners pay the maximum ordinary income tax rate of 35 percent on their salaries, bonuses and business income.

The distinction is crucial for understanding how much the rich pay. Indeed, the share of top incomes coming from capital is much lower now than it has been historically. According to Emmanuel Saez, an economist at the University of California, Berkeley, for the richest Americans - those in the top 0.01 percent of the distribution - the percentage of income derived from capital fell to 25 percent in 2004 from 70 percent in 1929.

If your image of the typical rich person is someone who collects interest and dividend checks and spends long afternoons relaxing on his yacht, you are decades out of date. The leisure class has been replaced by the working rich.

Another piece of the puzzle is that Buffett's tax burden is larger than it first appears, because he is a major shareholder in Berkshire Hathaway.

When the CBO studies the tax burden, it includes all federal taxes, including individual income taxes, payroll taxes and corporate income taxes. In its analysis, payroll taxes are borne by workers and corporate taxes by the owners of capital. For the richest 1 percent of the population, 9.3 percentage points of their 31.1 percent tax rate comes from the taxes that corporations have paid on their behalf. The corporate tax would undoubtedly loom large if the CBO were to calculate Buffett's effective tax rate.

None of these calculations, however, say whether the rich are paying their fair share in the United States. Fairness is not an economic concept. If you want to talk fairness, you have to leave the department of economics and head over to philosophy.
And, here’s a nice little question and answer dialog that puts some recent numbers into perspective.

Here’s some more viewpoint.

I’m not going to defend executive compensation packages; clearly there have been abuses. Corporate boards are supposed to provide the governance and oversight on this issue, within the current rule of law. Both law and board oversight probably need to be improved.
Worse still is when the executive lays off the coconut picker because the asian market is cheaper....but the government still chokes him.
We’re living in a world economy. Recent reports are that since the Christmas seasonal demand from the US is low, they’ve had to close about half the toy factories in southern China. Supply and demand – that’s how market economies work. Indeed, the boom in China’s economy is slowly leading to the fact that they will no longer be to cheapest source of labor, and some jobs will go elsewhere.

But you keep coming back to government being part of the problem. That’s good. Hold that thought.
I don't mind Obama taking more of those coconuts from the executive and taxing him for defecting overseas. The bottom line, as I see it, is that the little guy is broken from making the executive rich in the first place so I think it's payback time.
See the links above; you are sorely underinformed by whatever has led you to this conclusion. Not to mention the fact that the government could offer incentives to make it more attractive for companies to keep their activities here. But, according to you, it’s better if Obama just beats them with a stick instead. Yeah, that’ll make ‘em feel better about it.

Obama wants to raise capital gains tax rates – he should have a chat with Bill Clinton, who lowered them.
Look at Exxon's record profit today.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/27453305/
Gosh, OK, let’s take a look at oil company profits.

Bee, I don’t know what the heck you are reading that you would cause you to bring this up at this point, but let me point you to one of the places I like to go for some informed, level-headed opinion – the R-Squared Energy Blog

I just did a search on Robert’s blog with the terms “exxon record profits”, and got this result - http://i-r-squared.blogspot.com/search? ... rd+profits

Although I highly recommend that you read ALL of the blog postings there (you won’t regret it, and you will in short order become more knowledgeable on energy issues than both Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid, and all of their Oil Watchdog friends), scroll about halfway down this long page to the June 28, 2007 posting titled “Energy Policy Insanity”. Please, please, please, read this post and any accompanying links. In particular,

Professor Perry then points out that private oil companies actually don't own much in the way of worldwide oil reserves:
In fact, more than three-quarters of the world's oil reserves are owned by national oil companies from such problematic and potentially unfriendly countries as Saudi Arabia, Venezuela, Russia and Iran.

Only 6 percent of the world's oil reserves are held by private, investor-owned oil companies like ConocoPhillips and ExxonMobil.


But of course we can always sue OPEC. I mean, have you ever heard of a more idiotic idea? The OPEC countries are not depleting their natural resources fast enough to suit our insatiable demand, so we are going to sue them. Can you imagine if the Japanese passed laws allowing them to sue U.S. timber suppliers, because we aren't giving them the amount they want at the price they want? How about if Africa sues U.S. corn growers because ethanol demand has driven up corn prices? After all, they are no longer getting corn at the prices they were accustomed to.
It doesn't make economic sense that our own American privately owned oil companies are so vilified and viewed so differently from other industries. In 2006, the average profits for all manufacturing industries were 8.2 cents per dollar of sales, whereas the average oil-industry earnings were 9.5 cents on each dollar of sales, a penny higher.

More to the point: Oil companies reinvest profits in energy development to support the American economy and make huge capital investments regardless of whether profits are high or low. Between 1992 and 2006, U.S. oil companies invested more than $1 trillion in long-term energy projects.
Those arguments fall on deaf ears. I never understood, if the majority of the public thinks oil companies are making a killing, why more people don't just invest in oil company stocks. (I guess one reason is that the U.S. savings rate is abysmal). Of course one must wonder, if these companies are really printing money, why they trade at 8 or 10 times earnings. The bottom line is that companies that are investing hundreds of billions to trillions on their business have to make multi-billion profits to justify those investments.
.

So if Nancy and Harry and their acolytes want to continue to their blissfully ignorant and pandering ways, I would encourage you not to. Profits are not evil. If your business does not make a profit, then you do not have the money to expand it, hire more workers, update your infrastructure, pay for improve pollution controls, comply with other new government mandates, etc. Not to mention that, if you are a publicly traded company, that you have a responsibility to make money for your investors . That is why investors give you money – they anticipate that you operating your business, providing whatever goods and/or services you do, will also provide them with their investment portion of the profit you make.

And this, from here
Well, the reason why we don't penalize companies just because they make a lot of money is because that would be insane. As the Journal notes, it's hard to make the case that Exxon's profitability is excessive. In 2007, its profit margins were 10%, in-line with the industry average. The oil company's margins were worse than firms in the chemicals industry, pharmaceuticals, beverages and tobacco, the paper said.

Bee wrote: I don't know what to say. I only know what I read because I don't have any real work experience yet. What you say Spidey was true in the industrial age but it's different now. Everything has changed from the industrial times I read in school and what I see now. What are the true costs that your generation is inflicting on mine or my future children.

Bee, in the heat of an election, politicians (of ALL parties) will say a lot of things; some are true, some are false, and a lot are half-truths. Pandering to emotional issues is epidemic. The only cure is to educate yourself as much as possible. And remember, if something sounds to good to be true, it very often is. Be especially concerned when some politician is really, really excited about some new policy of theirs being THE answer to your problem du jour. That’s a tip that you need to do some extra homework to check the veracity of their claims.

And thanks for the links, btw.
User avatar
dissent
DBB Fleet Admiral
DBB Fleet Admiral
Posts: 2162
Joined: Thu Oct 28, 2004 12:17 pm
Location: Illinois

Re:

Post by dissent »

Foil wrote:In an economy with massive unemployment and foreclosures, ...
what "massive unemployment" - it's now a little over 6 %.
See this Bureau of Labor Statistics page.

Now, use the dropdowns to extend the chart to earlier years. The rate was around 7.5% in 1959 and 1992 and was above 10.5% in 1982.

Unemployment going up is not a positive economic indicator, but 6% is not "massive" unemployment.
Gooberman
DBB Alumni
DBB Alumni
Posts: 6155
Joined: Mon Mar 15, 1999 3:01 am
Location: tempe Az

Post by Gooberman »

dissent wrote:Recent calculations by the Congressional Budget Office of U.S. tax rates show a highly progressive system. (The numbers are based on 2004 data, but the tax code has not changed much since then.) The poorest fifth of the population, with average annual income of $15,400, pays only 4.5 percent of its income in federal taxes. The middle fifth, with income of $56,200, pays 13.9 percent. And the top fifth, with income of $207,200, pays 25.1 percent.

At the very top of the income distribution, the CBO reports even higher tax rates. The richest 1 percent has average income of $1,259,700 and forks over 31.1 percent of its income to the federal government.
People often use percentages as the fairest scale to see who is paying more. I disagree.

Take away 30% of Bill Gates salary. Would his life change in anyway? Would he even notice?

Take away 30% of a Teacher making $28,000 a year who has a child to feed. Ouch.

Goods and services cost fixed rates. The less you make the more important each percentage becomes. I'm not harping on your post, in fact I think some of your economic posts are wonderful reads. But statistics of this nature like "a poor bracket pays 4% the rich pay 25%" or "the top 1% pay xx% of the taxes," etc, while accurate, seem to trivialize this fact.

You look at it as how much one citizen has to give up, I look at it as how much one citizen is being asked to sacrifice.

And on that scale, the percentages are no where equal in this country -- or in favor of the rich.
User avatar
Will Robinson
DBB Grand Master
DBB Grand Master
Posts: 10136
Joined: Tue Mar 07, 2000 3:01 am

Re:

Post by Will Robinson »

Gooberman wrote:...

People often use percentages as the fairest scale to see who is paying more. I disagree.

Take away 30% of Bill Gates salary. Would his life change in anyway? Would he even notice?

Take away 30% of a Teacher making $28,000 a year who has a child to feed. Ouch.

Goods and services cost fixed rates. The less you make the more important each percentage becomes....
You are correct it hurts them less but having the giant ever morphing tax code wielded as a weapon for politicians to exploit the poor for votes, the middle class, either for votes or to increase the revenue, and the rich and corporate interests to harvest campaign donations is not anywhere near the best way to tax the overall wealth producing populace.

The Fair Tax will make sure the rich pay the most, that the poor pay none and the middle class only pay a reasonable amount and it takes away the ability of politicians to exploit the system! Which is the best part of it. It will take a giant grassroots effort to get it passed into law since it requires congress to vote against their power source but if enough voters are threatening to vote them out if they don't join us then they will do it.

Everyone should really look at this closely, it really is a great thing and not some scam from one party or the other...it doesn't favor any class of people it simply makes taxation a revenue source for the government that they can't bastardize into a corrupt thugs tool. The economic jump start it would give us by making the switch is pretty damn impressive too!
User avatar
Bet51987
DBB Alumni
DBB Alumni
Posts: 2791
Joined: Sun May 30, 2004 6:54 am
Location: USA

Post by Bet51987 »

Dissent...

I appreciated the links and the time you took to post them and I did read some. I skipped the first link since I know what a tax bracket is but in the second link about business tax, it states \"...the billionaire investor Warren Buffett said that rich guys like him were not paying enough\". Then the article trys to explain why Warren Buffet is wrong. Forgive me, but when a super rich man like Warren Buffet comes out and says he pays very little tax, I tend to believe him. :) The third link you gave me... \"The American\", and it's internet site wreaks of bias because it's owned and operated by republican lobbyist James K. Glassman. I was getting turned off.

Anyway, the economy isn't hurting me like it is other people, but regardless, it's not the only issue I have with the candidates. It's no secret that I hate the Taliban and the entire Islamic and Muslim terrorist group so I don't like Obama when he says he wants to make peace with them. In that respect I rather have John McCain. However, what stops me from even considering McCain is Sarah Palin for the reasons I've already given.

So, as someone on this forum told me when I wasn't sure I wanted to vote at all, that I should vote for the lesser of two evils which I will on Tuesday and it will be interesting to see how many of us \"young ignorant :wink: college-aged Americans\" do.

Bee
Gooberman
DBB Alumni
DBB Alumni
Posts: 6155
Joined: Mon Mar 15, 1999 3:01 am
Location: tempe Az

Post by Gooberman »

Will, there are three things certain in life: Death, Taxes, and both being used for political gain.
Bet wrote: However, what stops me from even considering McCain is Sarah Palin
Me too. It really was a horrible choice. The social conservatives who she fires up, are the same people who would of come out to vote against Obama anyway.
User avatar
Will Robinson
DBB Grand Master
DBB Grand Master
Posts: 10136
Joined: Tue Mar 07, 2000 3:01 am

Re:

Post by Will Robinson »

Gooberman wrote:Will, there are three things certain in life: Death, Taxes, and both being used for political gain....
OK, I'll buy that but because the FairTax removes all but two numbers the politicians can play with and changing either of those two change things for everyone at once so you can't offer one group a favor to get their vote and there is no way to offer corporations anything.

So take any scenario you can name that is in use today by any politician to use the tax code to manipulate peoples behavior or to trade it for votes or contributions and then replace the current code with the FairTax and tell me how certain it is that the same abuse can still take place. You'll find 99% of their opportunity to use taxes for political gain is gone. That is the best damn improvement anyone has ever proposed and unlike most promises this one is a reality and could be implemented easily!
User avatar
Spidey
DBB Grand Master
DBB Grand Master
Posts: 10809
Joined: Thu Jun 28, 2001 2:01 am
Location: Earth

Post by Spidey »

Ok. I finally looked into the fair tax, I have been advocating that kind of thing for years…bravo.

I didn’t check out all the little details, so I can’t endorse it for now, but it’s sure got my attention.

The “progressive” part of it kinda scares me tho…will have to read more about it when I have time.
User avatar
Will Robinson
DBB Grand Master
DBB Grand Master
Posts: 10136
Joined: Tue Mar 07, 2000 3:01 am

Re:

Post by Will Robinson »

Gooberman wrote:...The social conservatives who she fires up, are the same people who would of come out to vote against Obama anyway.
The theory was that they were going to stay home because McCain wasn't one of them. His numbers and turnout and campaign contributions improved drastically after she was introduced. She's probably the reason he has a chance right now.
I think you may be paying attention to noise from within the D.C. beltway that she's a drag on his campaign but that isn't backed up by any data it's just conservative pundits trying to save their social life when Obama wins so they will be seen as the reasonable ones.
User avatar
dissent
DBB Fleet Admiral
DBB Fleet Admiral
Posts: 2162
Joined: Thu Oct 28, 2004 12:17 pm
Location: Illinois

Re:

Post by dissent »

Gooberman wrote:Take away 30% of Bill Gates salary. Would his life change in anyway? Would he even notice?

Take away 30% of a Teacher making $28,000 a year who has a child to feed. Ouch.
Of course, that's why the marginal rate for the teacher is significantly lower than that for the billionaire.
You look at it as how much one citizen has to give up, I look at it as how much one citizen is being asked to sacrifice.
The government is not "asking". ;-)
http://docs.law.gwu.edu/facweb/jsiegel/ ... untary.htm
And on that scale, the percentages are no where equal in this country -- or in favor of the rich.
Bee wrote:The third link you gave me... "The American", and it's internet site wreaks of bias because it's owned and operated by republican lobbyist James K. Glassman. I was getting turned off.
So, do you get turned off by liberal sites because of their bias, or do you only get turned off by sites that have a bias that is different than your own.

How about if we just discuss the facts and arguments presented on their merits, or lack thereof. Gooberman brought that up. I have nothing against discussing the rate at which lower income earners should be taxed. Let us just not pretend that economic decisions have consequences to the flow of capital. There is plenty of data to argue about. That is what economists do for a living.

edit -
Bee wrote:]"...the billionaire investor Warren Buffett said that rich guys like him were not paying enough". Then the article trys to explain why Warren Buffet is wrong. Forgive me, but when a super rich man like Warren Buffet comes out and says he pays very little tax, I tend to believe him.
As for Warren, even 10% of Warren income is still a heck of a lot of money, not "a little". If Warren wants to give his money away there are plenty of great causes that would be happy to get his check. (I have relatives in Omaha that grouse that the "Oracle of Omaha" hardly does anything for the local economy. I have no idea if this is true or not; that's just what they told me.)

The government doesn't have to be the solution to all of our problems.
User avatar
Will Robinson
DBB Grand Master
DBB Grand Master
Posts: 10136
Joined: Tue Mar 07, 2000 3:01 am

Re:

Post by Will Robinson »

dissent wrote:...

The government doesn't have to be the solution to all of our problems.
amen! In fact it can't be because one mans problem is another mans opportunity.
User avatar
dissent
DBB Fleet Admiral
DBB Fleet Admiral
Posts: 2162
Joined: Thu Oct 28, 2004 12:17 pm
Location: Illinois

Post by dissent »

hmm, that dissent person should be more careful when he posts; he meant to say -

\"Let us just not pretend that economic decisions have no consequences to the flow of capital.\"
Post Reply