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Old 07-27-2007, 09:11 AM   #41 (permalink)
 
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Location: Washington DC
Quote:
Originally Posted by aceventura3
... Why not have everyone with a Washington DC zip code pay for the program? Remember it is for the children.
ace...there are more than 500,000 people with a Washington DC zip code who have NO voting representation in Congress at all.....so we are paying for every federal program without having a voice.
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Old 07-27-2007, 12:29 PM   #42 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by dc_dux
ace...there are more than 500,000 people with a Washington DC zip code who have NO voting representation in Congress at all.....so we are paying for every federal program without having a voice.
Yes, I know. It is unfair. Our government should not have a segregated group of citizens based on where they live denied full participation in our representative democracy. The majority in the rest of the country has no incentive to act to correct the situation. Our apathy says it is your problem, just move.

I also think it is unfair to excessively tax smokers. Our government should not have a segregated group of citizens based on a habit or behavior arbitrarily paying for services to others. I accept taxation based on increased government/society costs due to a habit or behavior. Taxes for special services should be based on general taxation policies using a common objective standard of taxation equally applied to all. Otherwise the majority not affected by the tax has no incentive for fairness. Our apathy says it is the smokers' problem, just quit.
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Old 07-30-2007, 05:36 PM   #43 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aceventura3
Yes, I know. It is unfair. Our government should not have a segregated group of citizens based on where they live denied full participation in our representative democracy. The majority in the rest of the country has no incentive to act to correct the situation. Our apathy says it is your problem, just move.
I agree as well. I've tossed about a number of solutions to this, but I'm not sure how best to handle it. Statehood for DC is a simple approach but probably not best. Remember there are also Puerto Rico and the other territories, as well as perhaps certain military or government employees who really don't have proper representation in the legislature. Perhaps an umbrella "state" that covers all these groups by giving them all the apparatus of the states that the rest of us have as an integral part of our federal-state system? In the end I believe all citizens ought to be treated the same by the federal government, whether you are speaking laws, taxation, benefits, or representation.

Quote:
Originally Posted by aceventura3
I also think it is unfair to excessively tax smokers. Our government should not have a segregated group of citizens based on a habit or behavior arbitrarily paying for services to others. I accept taxation based on increased government/society costs due to a habit or behavior. Taxes for special services should be based on general taxation policies using a common objective standard of taxation equally applied to all. Otherwise the majority not affected by the tax has no incentive for fairness. Our apathy says it is the smokers' problem, just quit.
I do agree that taxation ought not to target specific groups, especially just because they are politically expedient to target. On the matter of 'special services' though, I don't know that I agree. The nature of 'special' services seems to indicate services which only benefit a select group of citizens, but I really don't believe that those kind of things are what the government should be involved in, and thus they shouldn't be taxing for them either. Services that the government does provide where the benefit is to us all, but for some the benefits are direct and others indirect, shouldn't be taxed off of the direct beneficiaries alone.

In short: If a program's benefits are to the society at large than the society at large should bear the cost of that program. If a program only benefits a select group of citizens, it probably is not something that the government should be providing.
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Old 07-31-2007, 08:53 AM   #44 (permalink)
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I agree with your points in principle. My fear is that special interest programs and pork barrel spending issues are so entrenched into our government that we will never be able to go back to a condition of truly fair taxation.
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Old 07-31-2007, 09:02 AM   #45 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aceventura3
I agree with your points in principle. My fear is that special interest programs and pork barrel spending issues are so entrenched into our government that we will never be able to go back to a condition of truly fair taxation.
That may well be the case, you are right, unfortunately. It does probably mean that fundamental 'ground-up' reform to basically recreate the system in a fair manner, would probably have the effect of a nuclear bomb in the economy. It might be better in the end but the price would be high for the moment.

So how do we go about ratcheting back on improper spending and at the same time reapportioning the tax code in a fair manner, while at the same time keeping changes from being so violent as to kill the patient?
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Old 07-31-2007, 10:23 AM   #46 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by joshbaumgartner
That may well be the case, you are right, unfortunately. It does probably mean that fundamental 'ground-up' reform to basically recreate the system in a fair manner, would probably have the effect of a nuclear bomb in the economy. It might be better in the end but the price would be high for the moment.

So how do we go about ratcheting back on improper spending and at the same time reapportioning the tax code in a fair manner, while at the same time keeping changes from being so violent as to kill the patient?
ace and joshb....aside from a progressive income tax heavily weighted against the those making the highest incomes (the top ten percent already own 70 percent of all US wealth), and by inheritance taxes on million dollar plus estates,
how would you fairly tax the folks detailed in this post...
http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/showpos...2&postcount=21 ?

Neil Bush, GHW Bush, his brother, William Bush, their lawyer, James Baker, the VP Dick Cheney, GW Bush's buddy, Joe Allbaugh, and the CNP millionaire and Blackwater founder and sole owner, Erik Prince, as the post at the link above informs us, all made appreciable sums as a direct result of their connections, and the opportunities from the war in Iraq.

Progressive income taxes and inheritance taxes will return to the government some of what their unique connection/influence driven opportunities have brought to them....will return some of "their money" fo the original source where it came from....our tax dollars, appropriated for war and foreign policy objectives.

Can you point to any comparable "fairness" and offset to the rest of us, compared to the profits that my linked post shows went to these guys, that would be included in your tax "reform"?

If you support "reform" which taxes everyone equally, will it be as fair as the current system is to the rest of us, compared to how it treats the Bushes, Cheney, Baker, and Prince, and compared to the current system, which already results in the top ten percent owning 70 percent of everything, won't your "reform" lessen the obstacles to men like this, soon owning much of the remaining 30 percent of all wealth, too?

Isn't what these men did during a time of war, extreme, and isn't so few owning such a high percent of the wealth, now, extreme for , too, and isn't calling for "reform" that is even more friendly to the wealthiest, incoherent and self defeating?

Isn't it incumbant on the 90 percent of us who have little but our voting numbers to offset the other ten percent's wealth, power, and influence, to use that vote to counter all of their advantages, or use it to increase their advantages at our further expense....

Sheesh...it seems so obvious....but we are seeing these "let's be fairer in the way we tax those who have paid to convince us to tax them "fairer", opinions, coming from those who would seem to have no inclination to possess them.

Last edited by host; 07-31-2007 at 10:26 AM..
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Old 07-31-2007, 10:26 AM   #47 (permalink)
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I thought a good first step would have been to privatize social security. It simply makes so much sense for young wage earners. Certainly we have to keep our promise to those currently on social security and those near obtaining it. And for people like me (40ish) having some kind of combination. I think people being able to see how more efficient they can save for their future (even if forced) compared to government we may start a trend away from people wanting government to pay for virtually everything. Since their really is no social security trust fund and the money meant to be set aside is being spent, the folks in Washington would be forced to immediately cut current spending. This particular game of smoke and mirrors would end.
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Old 07-31-2007, 10:38 AM   #48 (permalink)
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I won't give my money to a private corporation interested in turning a profit. I'll stop paying social security before I'll pay into a privatized system. Social Security is in trouble because the $509b surplus Bush inherited from Clinton was spent so that he could cut taxes and still spend billions on the Iraqi war.
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Old 07-31-2007, 10:44 AM   #49 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aceventura3
I thought a good first step would have been to privatize social security. It simply makes so much sense for young wage earners. Certainly we have to keep our promise to those currently on social security and those near obtaining it. And for people like me (40ish) having some kind of combination. I think people being able to see how more efficient they can save for their future (even if forced) compared to government we may start a trend away from people wanting government to pay for virtually everything. Since their really is no social security trust fund and the money meant to be set aside is being spent, the folks in Washington would be forced to immediately cut current spending. This particular game of smoke and mirrors would end.
ace....isn't your opinion that, "[there] really is no social security trust fund", even though that fund holds US Treasury bonds as assets in lieu of cash, just as every other US treasury debt holder, holds....an admission that the US treasury is bankrupt? It either is, or it isn't? If it is bankrupt now.....wa was s it in 2001, when it's total debt was $5.6 trillion, vs. $8.7 trillion, today? Did any SSI privitzation "reform", address where the money would come from to finance the government's portion of funding for private accounts/ Did any proposal offer a solution to cover the disability insurance and survivors' benefits components of the existing SSI program?

Doesn't the market for Treauries, at such low interest rates, considering your opinion that there are no SSI trust fund assets, contradict your opinion? ....or are buyers of T-Bills less informed than you are?
Quote:
http://mediamatters.org/items/200502040009
.....A January 10 (2005) New York Times editorial explained:

In suggesting that 2018 is doomsyear, the president is reinforcing a false impression that the trust fund is a worthless pile of I.O.U.'s -- as detractors of Social Security so often claim. The facts are different: since 1983, payroll taxes have exceeded benefits, with the excess tax revenue invested in interest-bearing Treasury securities. (An alternative would be to, say, put the money in a mattress.) That accumulating interest and the securities themselves make up the Social Security trust fund. If the trust fund's Treasury securities are worthless, someone better tell investors throughout the world, who currently hold $4.3 trillion in Treasury debt that carries the exact same government obligation to pay as the trust fund securities. The president is irresponsible to even imply that the United States might not honor its debt obligations.

Similarly, Princeton economist and New York Times columnist Paul Krugman explained on December 7, 2004, that claiming that the General Fund does not truly owe its apparent debt to the Social Security trust fund amounts to arguing for a large income transfer from working-class Americans to the wealthy:

Right now the revenues from the payroll tax exceed the amount paid out in benefits. This is deliberate, the result of a payroll tax increase -- recommended by none other than [Federal Reserve chairman] Alan Greenspan -- two decades ago. His justification at the time for raising a tax that falls mainly on lower- and middle-income families, even though Ronald Reagan had just cut the taxes that fall mainly on the very well-off, was that the extra revenue was needed to build up a trust fund. This could be drawn on to pay benefits once the baby boomers began to retire.

[...]

If the trust fund is meaningless, by the way, that Greenspan-sponsored tax increase in the 1980's was nothing but an exercise in class warfare: taxes on working-class Americans went up, taxes on the affluent went down, and the workers have nothing to show for their sacrifice.
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Old 07-31-2007, 10:47 AM   #50 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by host
ace and joshb....aside from a progressive income tax heavily weighted against the those making the highest incomes (the top ten percent already own 70 percent of all US wealth), and by inheritance taxes on million dollar plus estates,
how would you fairly tax the folks detailed in this post...
http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/showpos...2&postcount=21 ?
A progressive tax is one thing. But we have a system of taxation that is worse in the fact that it is a system that creates major obstacles for poor and middle class people from becoming wealthy. Our currents system tends to entrench the rich and creates a permanent class system. If you work, taxes are paid on your work before you see any of the money. If you save, taxes are paid on any income from those savings as current income. If you invest and have long-term capital gains you are taxed at a favorable rate. In order to become an investor you have to get past the first two. If you are already rich you start as an investor.

Rich people avoid inheritance taxes through complicated trusts and other means to shelter their wealth. For example, Bill Walton of Walmart made sure his children owned shares of Walmart in their names - no tax on his death. The Kennedy's still benefit from the wealth accumulated by Joe Kennedy, several generations after his death thanks to complicated trusts.

Quote:
Neil Bush, GHW Bush, his brother, William Bush, their lawyer, James Baker, the VP Dick Cheney, GW Bush's buddy, Joe Allbaugh, and the CNP millionaire and Blackwater founder and sole owner, Erik Prince, as the post at the link above informs us, all made appreciable sums as a direct result of their connections, and the opportunities from the war in Iraq.
So did all of the investors in Haliburton. Why shouldn't the average person be able to invest in a company like Haliburton and start to creat real wealth that could be passed on to thier children. Imagine a 20 year old who could put a small portion of his social security taxes (most to be put into safe stable less risky investments) into a company like that, with a 45 year time horizon?

Quote:
Progressive income taxes and inheritance taxes will return to the government some of what their unique connection/influence driven opportunities have brought to them....will return some of "their money" fo the original source where it came from....our tax dollars, appropriated for war and foreign policy objectives.
I think you underestimate the sophistication of wealthy people. They basically pay what they want to pay, if it ever becomes too painful they avoid the pain.

Quote:
Can you point to any comparable "fairness" and offset to the rest of us, compared to the profits that my linked post shows went to these guys, that would be included in your tax "reform"?
In principle, don't tax work, tax consumption. Don't tax savings, tax consumption. Don't tax investments, tax consumption. Tax based on usage.

We can have a safety net, but we don't need a system that in affect steals from one person so another can benefit.

Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
I won't give my money to a private corporation interested in turning a profit. I'll stop paying social security before I'll pay into a privatized system. Social Security is in trouble because the $509b surplus Bush inherited from Clinton was spent so that he could cut taxes and still spend billions on the Iraqi war.
Am I understanding correctly - You think the problem with social security is Bush's fault?
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Last edited by aceventura3; 07-31-2007 at 10:52 AM.. Reason: Automerged Doublepost
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Old 07-31-2007, 11:01 AM   #51 (permalink)
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the power to tax involves the power to destroy
everyone should know this. I'm pretty sure that everyone who approves of this method of government power to eliminate activities they do not approve of would have little issue with it having turned against them when it involves an activity they enjoy.

in other words, you either believe that taxation should be used to promote conformity in behavior, according to popular majority, or you believe in freedom.
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Old 07-31-2007, 11:10 AM   #52 (permalink)
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ace.... are you saying that anyone who bought Halliburton stock had connections, inside info, and influence that could be compared to "the juice" that the 3 Bushes, Cheney, and Erik Prince had with the folks who let the contracts, designated and appropriated the funds, and the knowledge that they all had, as to the timing of when and where to invest or to enter into business relationships?

If, as you say, the rich have ways to avoid taxes, rendering them meaningless, why did the fifteen welthiest US families spend more than $100 million, in a secret campaign to attempt to eliminate inheritance taxes, and why do their politics seem obsessed with lowering taxes and elimination of progressive income tax? Are their efforts to help the rest of us? Where do the billions collected from inheritance taxes, come from?

Why, after the Bush income tax cuts, did it take six years for tax revenue to rise just six percent, vs. the amount collected in 2000?

Why do you almost never support your claims with linked references that the rest of us can consider, learn from, or attempt to rebut?

dksuddeth, why can you not accept that progressive income taxes attempt to offset the outsized power and influence of the wealthiest and the oopportunities that those assets give them to accumulate even more?

I asked for anyone who objects to progressive income tax and inheritance tax to show how their proposed tax reform preference allows for any offset to the advantages of the wealthy that a progressive and an inheritance tax affords on them, and you have offered.....what ?

Last edited by host; 07-31-2007 at 11:15 AM..
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Old 07-31-2007, 11:10 AM   #53 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aceventura3
Am I understanding correctly - You think the problem with social security is Bush's fault?
How many people do you think would have retired on $509b? Of course it's not the only problem, but the fact that he raided the pantry, and then said the pantry isn't working is beyond disingenuous.

Yes, older people are living longer. Yes, the retirement age doesn't fit with Social Security. Yes, SS prolonged the Great Depression. Yes, I could invest my own money better. That hardly excuses the fact that the money intended for my generation to retire on was used to pay for a war of aggression.

I'd rather see the system abolished than privatized.
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Old 07-31-2007, 11:16 AM   #54 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by willravel
How many people do you think would have retired on $509b? Of course it's not the only problem, but the fact that he raided the pantry, and then said the pantry isn't working is beyond disingenuous.

Yes, older people are living longer. Yes, the retirement age doesn't fit with Social Security. Yes, SS prolonged the Great Depression. Yes, I could invest my own money better. That hardly excuses the fact that the money intended for my generation to retire on was used to pay for a war of aggression.

I'd rather see the system abolished than privatized.
The first SS check was not paid until 1940....how did SS prolong a depression that reached it's bottom in late 1932?
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Old 07-31-2007, 11:25 AM   #55 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by host
The first SS check was not paid until 1940....how did SS prolong a depression that reached it's bottom in late 1932?
The Social Security Act was passed in 1935. There was a recession in 1937 towards the end of the Great Depression.
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Old 07-31-2007, 11:34 AM   #56 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by host
ace.... are you saying that anyone who bought Halliburton stock had connections, inside info, and influence that could be compared to "the juice" that the 3 Bushes, Cheney, and Erik Prince had with the folks who let the contracts, designated and appropriated the funds, and the knowledge that they all had, as to the timing of when and where to invest or to enter into business relationships?
Publicly traded companies have to report transactions of "insiders" and "insider" have trading windows. A common indicator used by many investors is to monitor "insider" investment activity. The best indicator is CFO transactions.

In direct response to your question - no. However, it did not take an insider to know Haliburton's relationship with the government and the fact that the company had an inside track on very lucrative government contracts related to the war in Iraq. But so did Ceradyne (CRDN). It traded for about $3 per share at the start of the war and peaked in the $80 range and now is about $75. They specialize in ceramic armor or bullet proof vests.

Quote:
If, as you say, the rich have ways to avoid taxes, rendering them meaningless, why did the fifteen welthiest US families spend more than $100 million, in a secret campaign to attempt to eliminate inheritance taxes,
Some people are simply greedy and would rather keep the money spent to set up expensive trusts and other tax avoidance shelters.


Quote:
and why do their politics seem obsessed with lowering taxes and elimination of progressive income tax? Are their efforts to help the rest of us? Where do the billions collected from inheritance taxes, come from?
Warren Buffet is one of those guys(correction) who wants to raise taxes and increase the death tax. He could give away all of his wealth today and still maintain control of his company, but he doesn't. I wonder why? Rich people are often among the biggest hypocrites in my opinion. You have rich people on both sides of the issue. What do you believe? Many of the wealthiest people in the country are Democrats and many are Republicans.

Quote:
Why, after the Bush income tax cuts, did it take six for tax revenue to rise just six percent, vs. the amount collected in 2000?
We had to turn around a recession and the tax cuts were not all implemented at once. There is a built in delay in the impact of tax policy. Depending on who you ask or how you calculate it, a tax policy change could take from 2 to 10 years before the impact is felt.

Quote:
Why do you almost never support your claims with linked references that the rest of us can consider, learn from, or attempt to rebut?
When I do, they often get ignored or dismissed as right-wing propaganda.

In a case like this, I like to layout general underlying principles. If there is no basis in agreeing on the underlying principle, more data is pointless. For example - I say rich people easily avoid the "death tax" and I give two general examples. You don't believe it in principle, I could give pages of data on how they do it, etc., but it won't matter. So like I have stated in the past, often these discussions leads me to do research and to think of things I would not have ordinarily thought of, and when I do research, i do it for my education. If I felt others were interested I would share more of it.
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Old 07-31-2007, 12:05 PM   #57 (permalink)
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dksuddeth, why can you not accept that progressive income taxes attempt to offset the outsized power and influence of the wealthiest and the oopportunities that those assets give them to accumulate even more?
what part of my quote didn't you understand?
there is NOTHING progressive about taxes. The reasoning behind this is so very simple if one bothers to look at who makes the tax laws.

special interest groups will always get the power of legislative ears because of money. this 'attention' will almost always garner a favorable outcome for these special interests.

attempting to 'offset the outsized power and influence' is useless because it will only change the balance of power between two general sets of interest groups, especially considering the divide of political power between two radically different parties.

what you're really trying to promote is the redistribution of wealth by 'progressive' taxation, an oxymoron if ever there was one, instead of acknowledging that the reason this taxation looks necessary is because we've let special interest groups provide over-regulation of commerce, thereby providing those groups with even greater power over us.

Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
How many people do you think would have retired on $509b? Of course it's not the only problem, but the fact that he raided the pantry, and then said the pantry isn't working is beyond disingenuous.

Yes, older people are living longer. Yes, the retirement age doesn't fit with Social Security. Yes, SS prolonged the Great Depression. Yes, I could invest my own money better. That hardly excuses the fact that the money intended for my generation to retire on was used to pay for a war of aggression.

I'd rather see the system abolished than privatized.
The SS issue was totally destroyed when it was transferred to the general budget, decades before Bush was president. Trying to blame bush for a deficit or credit clinton with a surplus is nothing more than partisan hack BS.
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Last edited by dksuddeth; 07-31-2007 at 12:07 PM.. Reason: Automerged Doublepost
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Old 07-31-2007, 12:21 PM   #58 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dksuddeth
The SS issue was totally destroyed when it was transferred to the general budget, decades before Bush was president. Trying to blame bush for a deficit or credit clinton with a surplus is nothing more than partisan hack BS.
Obviously partisanship hackship is blinding you. Maybe I should make this more clear:
True or false?
1) The Bush Administration used the $509,000,000,000 surplus from social security to help pay for tax cuts and the war in Iraq.
2) In 2004, Social Security's total annual amount paid was $500,000,000,000.
3) The amount of money collected could have paid for a little over a year of usage.
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Old 07-31-2007, 12:26 PM   #59 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
Obviously partisanship hackship is blinding you. Maybe I should make this more clear:
True or false?
1) The Bush Administration used the $509,000,000,000 surplus from social security to help pay for tax cuts and the war in Iraq.
2) In 2004, Social Security's total annual amount paid was $500,000,000,000.
3) The amount of money collected could have paid for a little over a year of usage.
EVERY administration has used the SS funds to pay for one thing or another. If you think my blaming EVERY administration, to include Clintons, for squelching SS funds is partisan hacking, then what would you consider non-partisan?
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Old 07-31-2007, 12:36 PM   #60 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dksuddeth
EVERY administration has used the SS funds to pay for one thing or another. If you think my blaming EVERY administration, to include Clintons, for squelching SS funds is partisan hacking, then what would you consider non-partisan?
Clinton didn't pay for an illegal war.


Holy crap. I just read the OP and realized this the thread about taxing cigars. I didn't even realize.

/threadjack
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Old 07-31-2007, 01:13 PM   #61 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
Obviously partisanship hackship is blinding you. Maybe I should make this more clear:
True or false?
1) The Bush Administration used the $509,000,000,000 surplus from social security to help pay for tax cuts and the war in Iraq.
2) In 2004, Social Security's total annual amount paid was $500,000,000,000.
3) The amount of money collected could have paid for a little over a year of usage.
Congress authorized spending for the war.
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Old 07-31-2007, 10:54 PM   #62 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dksuddeth
what part of my quote didn't you understand?
there is NOTHING progressive about taxes. The reasoning behind this is so very simple if one bothers to look at who makes the tax laws.

special interest groups will always get the power of legislative ears because of money. this 'attention' will almost always garner a favorable outcome for these special interests.

attempting to 'offset the outsized power and influence' is useless because it will only change the balance of power between two general sets of interest groups, especially considering the divide of political power between two radically different parties.

what you're really trying to promote is the redistribution of wealth by 'progressive' taxation, an oxymoron if ever there was one, instead of acknowledging that the reason this taxation looks necessary is because we've let special interest groups provide over-regulation of commerce, thereby providing those groups with even greater power over us.


The SS issue was totally destroyed when it was transferred to the general budget, decades before Bush was president. Trying to blame bush for a deficit or credit clinton with a surplus is nothing more than partisan hack BS.
For the life of me, I cannot understand the resistance to progressive taxes and inheritance taxes aimed at collecting more from folks like war profiteers, William, Neil, and GHW Bush, Erik Prince, Joe Allbaugh, and Dick Cheney. The demcorats did it in 1993, and my research shows, income tax revenue rose from $1154 billion in 1993, to more than $2025 billion in 2000, and then reversed dramatically for years, under the tax policies of a republican controlled congress and white house.

The 2006 NY Times article shows that, although the wealthiest ten percent owned 70 percent of total US wealth in 2004, they only paid 67 percent of all income taxes in 2005. Tax law changes in 1993 had the effect of making them pay more, until the reversal of policy, after 2001.

If they can be made to pay 2/3 of all income taxes collected, why not use our superior voting numbers to attempt to collect 75 percent of all income taxes collected, from them? in 2006, the wealthiest one percent nearly managed to bring a senate bill to the floor for a simple majority vote that, is it had passed, would have been signed by Bush and resulted in elimination of inheritance tax, slated now to return at 2002 level, in 2011. Why are there so many "have nots", who support the agenda of the rich? Aren't the rich the folks who put the crop of federal politicians in office who turned annual total treasury debt, reduced to just $18 billion, in 2000...back to an annual average of $412 billion, each year since 2001? They deliberately shifted their former tax burden to you and your grandchildren....from pay as you go in 2000, to borrowing $3 trillion since....yet there is an advocacy here for taxing everyone equally, a "fair tax"...why...where does that thinking come from?

<h3>Because the debt has increased by $3 trillion in just the last six years, interest payments on the debt rose to $406 billion, last year. The government needs revenue, and 70 percent of the wealth is in ten percent of the hands. The other 90 percent of us have the votes, but, as you can see in posts here, there is much sentiment against taxing the rich, like we did from 1993 to 2001...why?</h3>


This article suports the revenue numbers that I posted on 10-09-06, and my contention that the top ten percent have much less ability to a avoid progressive tax increases that are fairer to the rest of us, aong with inheritance taxes reverting in 2011, back to their pre-Bush admin levels that were as high as 55 percent, and affected <a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/08/AR2006060800138.html">only 1.17 percent of all estates</a>:
Quote:
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/16/we...rssnyt&emc=rss
Those Wild Budget Swings
By EDMUND L. ANDREWS
Published: July 16, 2006

....At first blush, the recent jump in tax revenue would seem to validate Mr. Bush and those who believe that tax cuts ultimately generate higher tax revenues because they prompt people to work harder, invest more and take more entrepreneurial risk.

The White House, in a news release last week, boasted that tax revenues have climbed 34 percent since Congress passed Mr. Bush’s second big tax cut — which included a major reduction in taxes on stock dividends and capital gains.

But revenues are only up in comparison with how low they had plunged in recent years. Individual income taxes, the biggest component of federal revenue, are barely back to the level that was reached in 2000, $1 trillion. Adjusting for inflation, income tax revenue is still lower than six years ago.

“The idea that tax cuts have led to higher revenues is pernicious,” said Robert L. Bixby, executive director of the Concord Coalition, a bipartisan research group that lobbies for fiscal discipline. “Tax revenues may be higher, but they are not higher than they would have been if the tax cuts hadn’t occurred.”

But beyond the perennial debate about whether “fiscal discipline” means raising taxes or cutting spending, there is also an issue about the increasingly erratic pattern of the tax revenue itself.

The top 1 percent of taxpayers — those who earn more than $300,000 a year — provide about 30 percent of the federal government’s individual income tax revenues. <h3>The top 10 percent of taxpayers — those with incomes above $100,000 — provide about two-thirds of income tax revenue.</h3>

The lopsided burden is partly a result of progressive taxation, and partly a result of widening income disparities between people at the top and bottom of the economic ladder.

It’s hard to imagine what the federal government could do to reduce instability. Because about 40 million people do not owe any federal income taxes, almost any attempt to broaden the tax base would shift more of the tax burden from the wealthy to middle-income households. Yet the more the rich bear the burden, the more they will seek to escape it.

The unpredictable tax revenues first surfaced almost 10 years ago, as booming economic growth and the dot-com frenzy propelled the stock market to spectacular highs. The result was a tidal wave of tax revenue that far eclipsed projections by both the White House and the Congressional Budget Office. As if by magic, budget deficits disappeared and turned into surpluses.

For the most part, the Congressional forecasts missed the mark by less than 4 percent from 1982 until 1995. But starting in 1996, when the dot-com frenzy erupted in earnest, the agency began undershooting by as much as 9.5 percent. In 1996, tax revenues came in $93 billion higher than expected; in 1997, they were $163 billion higher; in 1999, they were $152 billion higher.

When the dot-com bubble popped in 2001, and the economy slid into a brief recession, tax revenues plunged $308 billion below what the Congressional Budget Office had predicted and remained depressed for the next three years.

NOW the pendulum is swinging once again. Corporate tax payments, which plunged more than $70 billion from 2000 to 2003, could hit a new record of $332 billion this year. Capital gains taxes could climb back from a low of $50 billion in 2003 to $75 billion this year.

Few budget analysts would say the jump in revenues is bad news. But if the last decade is any indication, it would be foolish to count on more of the same.

The Bush administration has quietly acknowledged the point. Its latest estimate anticipates that tax revenues will be almost flat in 2007 and that the deficit will widen to $339 billion.

But only if things turn out as expected.
From my post on 10-09-2006.....

Quote:
Originally Posted by host
http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/showpos...08&postcount=1
Year GDP Revenue Spending Surplus/Deficit
1993 ______1,154.5 1,409.5 -300.4

2000 9,817 2,025.5 1,789.2 86.4
2001 10,128 1,991.4 1,863.2 -32.4
2002 10,470 1,853.4 2,011.2 -317.4
2003 10,971 1,782.5 2,160.1 -538.4
2004 11,734 1,880.3 2,293.0 -568.0
2005 12,487 2,153.9 2,472.2 -493.6

Deficits in right column, above, do not include "off budget" appropriatins.....
GDP growth 2000-2005, 27% total, 4.9%/year.
Revenue growth 2000-2005, 6.3% total, 1.2%/year.
Spending growth 2000-2005, 38% total, 6.7%/year....

<h3>1993 :</h3>

Quote:

By Lucinda Harper
Publication title:
Wall Street Journal
More options ↓


Higher Taxes Unlikely to Hurt Recovery --- Economists See Minor Impact on Consumer Spending
New York, N.Y.: Dec 22, 1993
Abstract (Summary)

Although the tax rise will take some zest out of consumer spending, mainstream economists say it poses no serious threat to the recovery. They say that unlike former President Bush's tax increases, which hit a slowing economy, President Clinton's tax rise comes during an expansion. The added taxes on the wealthy, they say, will damp things, but at a time when the economy can absorb the setback.

The tax rise didn't pass Congress until August, but the income-tax increases are retroactive to Jan. 1, 1993; the increases apply to couples with taxable income over $140,000, after deductions, and individuals with income over $115,000. Taking account of all the income and other tax increases, the Congressional Budget Office estimates that families making more than $200,000 annually will be socked with an average of 17.4% more in taxes, or $24,000. The fear is that when wealthy people sit down to do their taxes next year, they will be shocked to find out how much they owe and suddenly stop spending -- hurting a recovery that's finally gaining momentum.

Besides, the wealthy tend to dip into savings to help pay for a higher tax bill, unlike the less affluent who immediately cut spending and slow the economy. Donald Ratajczak, head of economic forecasting at Georgia State University, estimates that well-off people will tap their savings to pay for half of the added taxes, paying for the rest by cutting purchases.

Just how much will the Clinton tax increase on the most well-off Americans hurt the economic recovery?

Although the tax rise will take some zest out of consumer spending, mainstream economists say it poses no serious threat to the recovery. They say that unlike former President Bush's tax increases, which hit a slowing economy, President Clinton's tax rise comes during an expansion. The added taxes on the wealthy, they say, will damp things, but at a time when the economy can absorb the setback.

A dissenting view comes from supply-side economists, who argue the tax on the rich will lead to lower investment and productivity, trends that, over time, would make the U.S. less competitive.

The tax rise didn't pass Congress until August, but the income-tax increases are retroactive to Jan. 1, 1993; the increases apply to couples with taxable income over $140,000, after deductions, and individuals with income over $115,000. Taking account of all the income and other tax increases, the Congressional Budget Office estimates that families making more than $200,000 annually will be socked with an average of 17.4% more in taxes, or $24,000. The fear is that when wealthy people sit down to do their taxes next year, they will be shocked to find out how much they owe and suddenly stop spending -- hurting a recovery that's finally gaining momentum.

"The April tax payment date may have a shock effect," warns Kurt Karl, chief economist for WEFA Group in suburban Philadelphia. Manhattan and Beverly Hills are two areas where a large group of taxpayers will be hit.

But economists don't think the economy will be set back far. For one thing, the number of people hit by the tax increase is quite small. Only 1.4 million taxpayers -- that's about 1.2% -- are affected by the increase on the wealthy. So, while those writing the checks may feel a burden, the nation as a whole will be relatively unscathed.

Furthermore, the tax rise, expected to raise about $20 billion annually to help lower the budget deficit, is equal to only 0.4% of all personal income. Meanwhile, the expected drop in the deficit has helped lower interest rates, a change that leaves many people -- including the wealthy -- with more money to spend or invest.

Besides, the wealthy tend to dip into savings to help pay for a higher tax bill, unlike the less affluent who immediately cut spending and slow the economy. Donald Ratajczak, head of economic forecasting at Georgia State University, estimates that well-off people will tap their savings to pay for half of the added taxes, paying for the rest by cutting purchases.

"You couldn't pick a better group to put this tax on," Mr. Ratajczak says. "They probably didn't vote for Clinton and there are not enough of them to severely crimp the expansion." And President Clinton, in an effort to limit the negative effects of the tax, has given Americans three years to pay for the increase, interest-free.

Mr. Ratajczak's forecast for growth in the first-quarter is a 3.2% annual rate and for the second-quarter, a 2.1% rate. He estimates that if there were no new tax on the wealthy, growth would be at a 3.5% rate in the first-quarter and 3.0% in the second. For the year, he predicts that the added taxes will bring growth to 2.8%, down from 3.2%, assuming all other factors -- including the lower interest rates -- were unchanged.

Most economists estimate that the tax will do the most damage in the first half of next year as wealthy consumers cut spending to help cushion the blow of a higher tax bill. "The economy will only be affected in a noticeable way in the first half of the year," says Mr. Karl, who estimates that the economy will grow at an annual rate of 2.7% for the first-quarter, rather than 3.0%, if there were no tax increase.

But supply-siders see things differently. "This is going to have a corrosive, corrosive effect" on the economy, says Lawrence Kudlow, chief economist at Bear Stearns & Co. in New York.

Rich people have a high propensity for savings and investment, and Mr. Kudlow says that will be crimped by the new tax.

The result, he argues, will be lower productivity. Mr. Kudlow estimates that the potential long-term growth rate of the economy will be lowered to 2.25% annually, from 2.7%.

"The tax increase is also coming as Asia and Latin America are lowering their tax rates and so will be becoming more competitive with America," Mr. Kudlow says.

There have been some obvious benefits from the tax boost. Lower interest rates have prompted thousands of people to refinance their homes, cut mortgage payments and use the extra money to buy cars, furniture and appliances. In that sense, the tax increase is "a wash for the nation as a whole," says Roger Brinner, director of U.S. forecasting for Data Resources Inc. in Lexington, Mass.
Quote:
http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstra...AB0994DB494D81
SALES IN NOVEMBER OF EXISTING HOMES HIT A RECORD PACE
Jr.,, ROBERT D. HERSHEY.

Dec 30, 1993

Special to The New York Times

Spurred by growing confidence in the economy and a fear that low interest rates may not last, Americans snapped up single-family homes in November at the fastest pace ever recorded, the National Association of Realtors announced today.

Sales of existing homes in November ran at an annual rate of 4.21 million homes. That rate, which is statistically adjusted for seasonal variations, was 2.9 percent higher than in October and 9.1 percent ahead of the November 1992 pace.

The previous record, set in November 1978, was an annualized rate of 4.15 million home sales.

This higher-than-expected activity reinforced optimism that the economy would continue to expand at a brisk pace in the new year, a prospect also reflected in a separate set of figures issued today showing a five-tenths of 1 percent rise in the Government's main forecasting index. 'Interesting Numbers'

The composite index of leading indicators has now climbed four straight months after managing only one gain in the first seven months of the year. Composed of items that tend to move ahead of the economy at large, like orders for manufactured goods, the Commerce Department index is designed to peer six months or more into the future.

"These are interesting numbers, especially the home sales," Stuart G. Hoffman, chief economist for the PNC Bank in Pittsburgh, said. Forget about a possible early 1994 slump from tax increases, weak exports and military cutbacks, he advised, adding, "All's clear on the recession watch."

The strength of the broad, current economy was confirmed by the Commerce Department's index of coincident indicators, which also posted a gain of five-tenths of 1 percent last month -- its fourth consecutive advance.

But since most of the index's components had been previously published, the bulk of the attention today went to the housing report. While sales of existing homes do not have the economic impact of building new ones, they do mean strong sales of items like drapes, paint and appliances, as well as business for lenders, lawyers, real estate agents, appraisers, moving companies and various kinds of insurers. The Government will issue its report Thursday on November sales of new homes.

November marked the seventh sales advance in the latest eight months and the highest since the real estate group began keeping records in 1968.

All regions of the country except the West contributed to the new sales record, which was a result not only of 20-year lows in interest rates but of an improved job market, rising consumer confidence, gains in income and relative stability in the price of houses.

"Month by month, I think the public has gotten more confident," said P. Wesley Foster Jr., president and owner of Long & Foster Realtors, which is based in Fairfax, Va., and is the nation's third-largest real estate concern. "When interest rates bottomed out and started kicking up, people really got busy," Mr. Foster said.

The national average commitment rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages was 7.16 percent in November, down from 8.31 percent a year earlier but somewhat above late-summer lows.

Mr. Foster said that after the first quarter, when his company's sales were 10 to 12 percent below those a year earlier, the company had posted quarterly gains of 18 to 25 percent for the rest of the year. He said he expected strong sales to continue. Median Price of Homes

The median price of homes sold last month was $106,800, up $200 from the October level but below the $109,300 in June that was the highest so far this year.

Month to month fluctuations, however, are heavily affected by what kinds of buyers are active and do not necessarily indicate the overall direction of prices. Still, the recent price data tend to confirm a belief that the sales surge is concentrated among first-time buyers moving from apartments.

For his company, Mr. Foster said, first-time home buyers accounted for about 48 percent of recent sales compared with the traditional proportion of about one-third.

By region, the Midwest posted a November sales gain of 7.3 percent, to an annual rate of 1.17 million. It was followed by the Northeast, up 4.9 percent to 640,000, and the South, up 4.1 percent to 1.53 million. The decline in the West was 4.3 percent, to a rate of 880,000, the report showed.

These numbers include a factor for typical seasonal variations, such as higher sales volume during the summer that reflect favorable weather and a desire by many families to minimize their children's school disruption. But analysts caution that these adjustments can sometimes distort results, particularly those that are then annualized by assuming that a monthly pace continues for a full year.

Nevertheless, the association's criterion that it takes several months to establish a trend has now clearly been met.

Actual sales last month, with no adjustment, were 140,000 in the South, 75,000 in the Midwest, 65,000 in the West and 43,000 in the Northeast.

The Commerce Department's forecasting index was impressive not only in its string of four straight increases but in its sustained breadth. Eight of the 11 components contributed to the November advance, paced by lower first-time claims for unemployment benefits, higher orders for new plants and equipment and a rise in the price of materials especially sensitive to the business cycle. Other Gains

Other elements helping to push up the index were a rise in building permits, higher backlogs for manufactured durable goods, an expanded work week, a higher money supply and manufacturers' new orders for consumer goods and materials.

Negative forces were lower consumer expectations, which were reversed in December; faster deliveries to companies by their suppliers, and stock prices as gauged by the Standard & Poor's 500 index.

The department's companion index of lagging indicators that move only after a turn in the economy eased two-tenths of 1 percent last month, the fourth consecutive month without a rise.
http://www.franceaccountants.com/tax...ates_in_France

...income tax and social security percentages paid in France....and isn't the result a universal and earlier and more financially secure retirement, as well as life during the pre-retirement years, and a 20 percent lower national poverty rate ?

Last edited by host; 07-31-2007 at 11:32 PM..
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Old 08-01-2007, 01:28 AM   #63 (permalink)
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Location: bedford, tx
Quote:
Originally Posted by host
For the life of me, I cannot understand the resistance to progressive taxes and inheritance taxes aimed at collecting more from folks like war profiteers, William, Neil, and GHW Bush, Erik Prince, Joe Allbaugh, and Dick Cheney.
Did you ever stop to think WHY you can't understand that? Could it possibly be your subconcious approval of that system of government to begin with?

instead of thinking of ways to change the taxation, why not change the method of politics? would that not have a greater effect of freedom?
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Old 08-01-2007, 05:34 AM   #64 (permalink)
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Location: Ventura County
Quote:
Originally Posted by host
For the life of me, I cannot understand the resistance to progressive taxes and inheritance taxes aimed at collecting more from folks like war profiteers, William, Neil, and GHW Bush, Erik Prince, Joe Allbaugh, and Dick Cheney. The demcorats did it in 1993, and my research shows, income tax revenue rose from $1154 billion in 1993, to more than $2025 billion in 2000, and then reversed dramatically for years, under the tax policies of a republican controlled congress and white house.
Does the implication of this data, as you suggest, factor in the lag in tax policy changes, as well as the many other factors that affect tax revenue? I don't think it does.

Quote:
The 2006 NY Times article shows that, although the wealthiest ten percent owned 70 percent of total US wealth in 2004, they only paid 67 percent of all income taxes in 2005. Tax law changes in 1993 had the effect of making them pay more, until the reversal of policy, after 2001.
There is a subtle but material difference between wealth and high income. Our system has a focus on taxing income, not wealth. If you want citations, spend some time reading the tax code. But understand that foe example a family farmer may control millions of dollars of land and equipment and net very little income and pay almost no federal taxes. On the other hand a doctor a few years out of medical school may have high debt (student loans, mortgage, car note, business loan to start his practice, etc), possibly negative net worth and makes $250,000 per year in income and pay a lot in federal income taxes.

I give you many examples showing some of the flaws in your theories regarding taxation, yet you show no interest in what happens in the real world. I think this illustrates a problem we have in Washington - there is no connection btween the theory and the real world.

Quote:
If they can be made to pay 2/3 of all income taxes collected, why not use our superior voting numbers to attempt to collect 75 percent of all income taxes collected, from them?
Because some of "us" want to become "them".
Because some of "us" believe in fairness.

Quote:
in 2006, the wealthiest one percent nearly managed to bring a senate bill to the floor for a simple majority vote that, is it had passed, would have been signed by Bush and resulted in elimination of inheritance tax, slated now to return at 2002 level, in 2011. Why are there so many "have nots", who support the agenda of the rich? Aren't the rich the folks who put the crop of federal politicians in office who turned annual total treasury debt, reduced to just $18 billion, in 2000...back to an annual average of $412 billion, each year since 2001? They deliberately shifted their former tax burden to you and your grandchildren....from pay as you go in 2000, to borrowing $3 trillion since....yet there is an advocacy here for taxing everyone equally, a "fair tax"...why...where does that thinking come from?
Do you understand the "fair tax"? Do you understand the difference between taxing consumption rather than income from work? Don't you see that taxing consumption in principle means that those who spend the most (the rich) will pay the most by far?

Read the book "Rich Dad Poor Dad".
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Old 08-01-2007, 05:47 AM   #65 (permalink)
 
dc_dux's Avatar
 
Location: Washington DC
Back to the OP.

The Senate is debating the S-CHIP bill this week and according to the top Republican sponsor, it could get a veto-proof majority.
Quote:
Grassley, one of the leading Republican sponsors of the bill, said he thinks supporters have the 60 votes needed to stop procedural moves and even hinted at the possibility of a veto-proof margin. “We think we’ve counted around 64, or 65 . . . and maybe with some help on a little problem with the cigarette tax, we can pick up a couple more.” Grassley didn’t elaborate on what the problem was. The legislation provides for a 61-cents-a-pack increase in the federal tax on cigarettes, and also provides for tax increases on other tobacco products, including cigars.

“We’re talking about 64 on cloture,” he said. “I think we’re going to get more on final passage.”

Grassley added that if GOP leaders don’t try to hold the level of support below the 67 votes needed to override a veto, the measure could get as many as 70 votes. The White House has taken a strong stance against congressional passage of the legislation, however, and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., is pushing for adoption of a much more scaled down SCHIP reauthorization bill than the measure approved by the Senate Finance Committee.
http://public.cq.com/docs/hb/hbnews1...002563294.html
A truly bi-partisan bill. The debate should be interesting in that the Democrats have allowed other unrelated tax amendments to be considered.
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Old 08-01-2007, 10:32 AM   #66 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aceventura3

......Because some of "us" want to become "them".
Because some of "us" believe in fairness.



Do you understand the "fair tax"? Do you understand the difference between taxing consumption rather than income from work? Don't you see that taxing consumption in principle means that those who spend the most (the rich) will pay the most by far?

Read the book "Rich Dad Poor Dad".
ace....you've, IMO, swallowed a line of "sheee-uttt" bought and paid for by the Richard Mellon Scaifes/Olin Foundation/CNP Billionaires who have created the cato/heritage/aei "think tanks" who inject heaping helpings of bullshit into the American psyche that persuade so many to vote against their best economic interests....

If "they" invest in convincing you to vote in ways that result in them paying less, either you will pay more, or, as we've seen in this decade, US Treasury debt simply increases hugely, and the tax bill gets transferrred to our grandchildren to pay "someday"......

Is it even possible to overtax war profiteers like Neil and William Bush, and Erik Prince? I don't see how that is possible.....

Here's some "stuff" that shapes my opinions:


Quote:
http://www.factcheck.org/taxes/unspi...e_fairtax.html

Unspinning the FairTax
May 31, 2007
We look at the numbers behind the numbers.

<center><img src="http://www.factcheck.org/demos/factcheck/imagefiles/Image/Fair%20Tax%20Revised%20Slide.JPG"></center>


Americans for Fair Taxation rejects the Treasury Department analysis, objecting that Treasury considers only the income tax. By leaving out payroll taxes (which are actually regressive) Treasury’s chart makes the FairTax look worse by comparison. We found that including all the taxes that the FairTax would replace (income, payroll, corporate and estate taxes), those earning less than $24,156 per year would benefit. AFT’s Burton agreed that those earning more than $200,000 would see their share of the overall tax burden decrease, admitting that “probably those earning between $40[thousand] and $100,000” would see their percentage of the tax burden rise.....
Quote:
http://209.85.165.104/search?q=cache...lnk&cd=3&gl=us
The Political Uses of Public Opinion: Lessons from the Estate Tax Repeal

Page 6

......Many analysts, and even strong advocates of repeal, reported being surprised by how wide-
ranging were the contours of opinion that became apparent. <h3>After all, considering that only the
wealthiest two percent of Americans pay the estate tax and that the estate tax is the most progressive
part of the tax code, the vast majority of the public could only lose from estate tax repeal.</h3> Yet,
many polls show that most people support repeal when it is presented as a standalone issue—even
those least likely to pay the tax and most likely to be beneficiaries of the roughly $30 to $40 billion it
raises each year. This amount of revenue boosts the federal budget by one to two percent, nearly
enough to fund, say, the Department of Homeland Security or the Department of Education. <h3>Is the
explanation that people do not understand their self-interest? There is indeed clear evidence that, in
light of misunderstanding and misinformation, many do not.......</h3>

Page 7

Perceived and Misperceived Self-Interest
If we were to impute preferences based on accurately-perceived expectations of economic
self-interest, those who never expect to pay the estate tax should favor keeping it, given the
likelihood that repeal would entail either a relative shift of the tax burden to them, or a reduction in
services that might benefit them. It would be reasonable to anticipate no more than a modest
showing in support of repeal: those several percentage of persons who might realistically risk paying
the tax upon death, plus their likely heirs. Yet, many polls since the late 1990s have shown
widespread public support for estate tax repeal, in the realm of 60 or 70 or 80 percent. Moreover,
supporters appear to be spread more or less equally across income groups, contrary to what self-
interest would predict.
3
More sophisticated economic models may impute preferences based on potentially
inaccurate perceptions of economic self-interest; and misperceptions certainly do help to explain a
good portion of the public support for estate tax repeal. People know very little about estate tax
levels and rates and rules, as evidenced by a January 2000 Gallup poll, in which most people (53
percent) admitted they simply didn’t “know enough to say” whether the “federal inheritance tax”
was too high, too low, or about right. Obtaining accurate information can be difficult, especially
when others have an incentive to mislead you. With little background knowledge, many people
seem to guess that nearly everyone is taxed at death—a misperception sometimes encouraged by
question wording. For example, in a 2003 National Public Radio / Kaiser Foundation / Harvard
Kennedy School (henceforth NKK) survey, two-thirds of respondents either thought “most people
have to pay” the estate tax (49 percent) or said they didn’t know (18 percent); and 62 percent of
those opposing the estate tax said one reason was because “it affects too many people.” Controlling
for socio-economic and demographic factors, and general attitudes towards the tax code, Joel


Page 8

Slemrod (2003) uses results from this survey to estimate that the misconception that most families
pay the estate tax “increases the likelihood of favoring abolition by 10.6 percent.”
4
In keeping with this, surveys consistently show that the number of people in favor of repeal
drops when respondents are given information on exemption levels or how many people pay. For
instance, in the NKK poll, 60 percent of respondents say they want to eliminate the estate tax when
the exemption level is not specified. Yet the percentage who favor repeal drops to 48 percent when
respondents are asked to consider an estate tax with an exemption of at least $1 million—which is
what the actual exemption was slated to be even before the repeal law passed. When asked to
consider an estate tax with an exemption of at least $5 million—which was one of the proposed
reforms rejected in the Senate—even fewer, 35 percent, still favor repeal.
Precisely how misperceptions about the estate tax change people’s views is difficult to say,
but it may be through affecting a person’s perception of self-interest in repeal or through affecting
her unselfish evaluation of the social fairness of the tax. In practice, these reasons are entangled
because, even provided with correct information, people may misunderstand their own self-interest
and their perceptions of social justice may correspond to their misperceived self-interest. For
instance, once given more information about who pays the estate tax, and hearing arguments both
for and against repealing it, the percentage of people believing that they or someone in their
household would have to pay the tax fell from 37 to 30 percent in a 2002 Greenberg Research Poll,
while support for repeal correspondingly dropped from 60 percent to 47 percent. Some of the
change in views might thus be attributed to a change in respondents’ perceptions of self-interest.
Yet, more remarkable than the difference made by the presence of correct information is the
difference that is not made. After all, a full 30 percent of informed people still believed someone in
their household would have to pay the estate tax. This result is even more extreme than another
often-cited July 2000 Gallup poll showing that 17 percent of informed respondents believe they will


Page 9

personally benefit from estate tax repeal, even after being told that only estates valued at over $1
million would be subject to estate tax. In the 2003 NKK poll, 69 percent of those supporting repeal
said a reason was because “it might affect [me] someday.” <h3>Like stereotypical lottery ticket holders,
Americans’ judgments about their likely future wealth seem wildly optimistic.</h3>
5
Principles of Fairness
Despite the important role of evaluations based on self-interest—and confused self-
interest—they do not seem to account for the majority of public support for estate tax repeal. A
surprisingly high percentage of people—26 percent in the NKK poll—still want repeal even with an
exemption of $25 million or more.
6
People’s particular judgments about tax fairness are a central to
accounting for the high support for repeal, and repeal proponents learned to “message” their goal in
terms of principles of fairness.....
I am not impressed with "Rich Dad, Poor Dad".....everyone cannot "Double down" and "roll the dice", as a reliable path to "riches"......but the book's author and I agree on two points:
Quote:
http://finance.yahoo.com/expert/article/richricher/9775
Only the Rich Survive

by Robert Kiyosaki

Posted on Monday, September 18, 2006

....The Chickens Come Home to Roost

In Thomas Frank's book What's the Matter with Kansas? : How Conservatives Won the Heart of America, which I highly recommend, a poor man reports that he voted Republican because he wanted to get back at Wall Street.

Can you imagine that? I always suspected that a lot of people aren't very bright. To paraphrase a popular statement, a poor person voting for a Republican is like a chicken voting for Col. Sanders......

.....In the next five years, the United States and the world will go through some of the most financially disturbing times in the history of the world. Once again, the rich will become very, very, rich, and the unsuspecting will be left like the passengers on the S.S. Titanic, heading straight for an economic iceberg.......

Last edited by host; 08-01-2007 at 10:56 AM..
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Old 08-01-2007, 01:52 PM   #67 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by host
ace and joshb....aside from a progressive income tax heavily weighted against the those making the highest incomes (the top ten percent already own 70 percent of all US wealth), and by inheritance taxes on million dollar plus estates,
how would you fairly tax the folks

...

Progressive income taxes and inheritance taxes will return to the government some of what their unique connection/influence driven opportunities have brought to them....will return some of "their money" fo the original source where it came from....our tax dollars, appropriated for war and foreign policy objectives.

Can you point to any comparable "fairness" and offset to the rest of us, compared to the profits that my linked post shows went to these guys, that would be included in your tax "reform"?
Well here it is Host, I want to see a single-schedule comprehensive income tax on individuals and corporations. This is where I am at. I continue to listen and learn all I can to further hone this into the best possible plan for fair and honest taxation.

The goals of my system:

A - Simple: A system where everyone knows exactly how much they are spending in taxes, and can directly correlate government spending with the impact on their taxes.

B - No loopholes: All pay their fair share. Loopholes, shelters, credits, etc. cost honest payers money.

C - Fair burden: All should share the cost evenly (does not equal flatly) of the things which we all benefit.

D - No social engineering: Tempting as it may be, using the tax code to do social engineering invites more corruption than positive social change.

So here's what I want to see in a working system:

1) All income is equal. It shouldn't matter whether you got it through a hard day's labor, cagey investments, or just an allowance from your inheritance trust fund.

2) All gains from operations in the US should be taxed, meaning you can't gain anything by setting up an 'official' headquarters in the Bahamas. Additionally, foreign citizens and companies also will have to pay on the same schedule for gains they make here as well.

3) 'Windfall' income should be able to be amortized over more than one year (up to ten years maybe?), eliminating being 'penalized' for gaining something like an inheritance or lottery, but taxes are still collected.

4) All 'special' taxes should be abolished. This includes taxes on specific events (inheritance taxes), taxes on specific goods, and taxes for specific programs (Social Security payroll taxes for example).

5) All 'user fee' taxes should be abolished. Things like fees to enter National Parks for example. All government services should be available to all regardless of ability to pay, and the poor shouldn't be penalized for utilizing them.

6) All 'penalty/fine' taxes should be abolished. This doesn't mean no fines for law breaking. It just means fines may not be collected to fund the law enforcement process (that leads to corruption). Also, fines should be levied on a basis of burden (i.e. according to one's ability to pay), not on a flat rate that means while a rich and poor man may commit the same crime, the payment may be budget breaking to the poor man but a sneeze to the rich man.

7) There should be no 'sales' tax of any sort (VAT or other such things included). Sales taxes are extremely regressive as they are at best a flat tax (regressive) but in reality when viewed against spending habits, they are unfailingly regressive. The only alternative is to start exempting stuff people have to buy (food, medicine, etc.) but then you are back in the loop-hole game. Unless you are going to have a truly comprehensive sales tax on all purchases (including real estate, stock certificates, labor, b-to-b items, and all other items) then it is unfair and dishonest, because it is really a consumer tax.

8) Individual taxes should be calculated by 'household' permitting all types of family units to be taxed fairly without prejudice to one type or the other. For example, a home with two wage earners earning $25K each should pay the same amount as one with two adults where one earns $50K and the other nothing.

Host, hopefully this clearly answers your question as to what I'm seeking...let me know if you need any more details.

Quote:
Originally Posted by host
Isn't it incumbant on the 90 percent of us who have little but our voting numbers to offset the other ten percent's wealth, power, and influence, to use that vote to counter all of their advantages, or use it to increase their advantages at our further expense....
Democracy isn't about 90% of the people using their majority to exploit the other 10% unfairly. It supposed to be about the 90% being able to not be exploited by the 10% just because the 10% has the guns and the money. It's a delicate line perhaps.

The taxation system has to assess a fair burden on all segments. That doesn't mean it shouldn't be progressive. It just means you can't be exploiting a specific group just because they don't have the votes to defend themselves.
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Old 08-01-2007, 01:56 PM   #68 (permalink)
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Location: Ventura County
Quote:
Originally Posted by host
ace....you've, IMO, swallowed a line of "sheee-uttt" bought and paid for by the Richard Mellon Scaifes/Olin Foundation/CNP Billionaires who have created the cato/heritage/aei "think tanks" who inject heaping helpings of bullshit into the American psyche that persuade so many to vote against their best economic interests....

If "they" invest in convincing you to vote in ways that result in them paying less, either you will pay more, or, as we've seen in this decade, US Treasury debt simply increases hugely, and the tax bill gets transferrred to our grandchildren to pay "someday"......

Is it even possible to overtax war profiteers like Neil and William Bush, and Erik Prince? I don't see how that is possible.....

Here's some "stuff" that shapes my opinions:
I read the link from Fact Check. Seems you cherry picked data to support your position (something I am often accused of) and ignored this:

Quote:
It is easy to look at charts like the one above and dismiss the FairTax as simply another way to help the rich get richer. But there is an economic argument for a less progressive tax system, though that argument is extremely technical. Kotlikoff has asserted that the FairTax will lower the marginal tax rate for all earners. (The marginal rate is the tax rate paid on the last dollar earned.) Because marginal rates are lower, each extra dollar of income will result in greater purchasing power. The decrease in marginal rates is progressive – that is, marginal rate reductions are greater for the working- and middle-classes than for the wealthy.

Moreover, even FairTax critics like Gale agree that consumption taxes increase the size of the economy. Many studies show that long-term incomes would rise under a consumption-based tax system. Optimistic accounts show a 10 percent rise in income over time, but even the more cautious studies show gains of 5 percent to 7 percent. Because the FairTax will grow the economy, workers will eventually see increases in their income. FairTax proponents claim that the growing economy, coupled with the reduction in marginal tax rates, will offset the increased tax burden. Burton argues that "the FairTax is a positive-sum game," one in which purchasing power will grow faster than the tax burden. The size of any such gains is disputed, however; Americans for Fair Taxation consistently chooses from among the most optimistic growth projections.
Seems like their biggest concern is whether the Fair Tax is 30% or 23%. Based on that analysis they seem to miss the looking at the bigger picture relative to developing a fairer tax system. A system that isn't so easily "gamed" by rich people.

Here is a portion of the Fair Tax rebuttal from their website:

Quote:
As the FairTax gains more national attention, questions have again arisen about whether the FairTax rate is 23 percent or 30 percent. In the toxic environment that often accompanies public policy debates, FairTax.org has even been accused by some of misleading the public, even though full descriptions of "tax-inclusive" and "tax-exclusive" calculations abound on our Web site. We hope the following explanation puts all such questions to rest -- at last.

Let’s use an example to illustrate the difference between tax-inclusive and tax-exclusive tax rates.

Assume there is a worker named Joe who earns $125 and spends all of his earnings. Let’s further assume that the government requires him to pay $25 in taxes.

If the government put a tax on Joe’s income, he would earn $125 before tax and would have $100 after tax to spend at the General Store. Thus, Joe has to earn $125 to have $100 to spend. Joe would also have to file an income tax return.

If the government put a tax on what Joe spends, he would earn $125 and would have $125 to spend at the store. Of the $125 paid by Joe to the storekeeper, $100 would be for the goods he bought at the store and $25 would be taxes that the storekeeper would send to the government. Joe would not have to file a tax return, as the storekeeper sends the tax in to the government.

Either way, Joe pays $25 in taxes and the government gets $25 in taxes. With a tax on income, Joe pays the $25 directly to the government, and with the tax on spending (sales tax), he pays the $25 in taxes indirectly when he buys something from the General Store. The General Store sends the tax that Joe paid to the government.
http://www.fairtax.org/site/PageServ..._053107_tomato

Here is more stuff:

Quote:
The FairTax preserves the overall progressivity of the federal tax burden. The FairTax not only lowers remaining average lifetime net tax rates, it also maintains and, indeed, enhances overall progressivity in the tax system. Consider middle-aged married households. The FairTax average lifetime tax rate is very low – only 1.5 percent – for the couple with $20,000 in annual earnings, and much higher – 20.5 percent – for the couple with $500,000 in annual earnings. The reduction in the tax rate is proportionately much greater at the lower end of the earnings distribution than at the high end. In switching to the FairTax, the $20,000- earning couple experiences an 86 percent cut in their average tax rate, whereas the $500,000- earning couple experiences a 42 percent cut. The FairTax: A very progressive long-run outcome
To get another meaningful picture of how persons in various income groups fare under the FairTax in the aggregate, Dr. Kotlikoff models the dynamic macroeconomic and microeconomic effects of replacing the income tax system with the FairTax. His model considers three income classes within each generation. It compares what the economy is like under the FairTax versus what it would be like if the current system were to remain in place. This approach gives a realistic view of the impact of America’s aging population, coupled with high and growing health and pension benefits that necessitate much higher payroll taxes, with potentially damaging effects on the U.S. economy. The FairTax offers a solution to this dismal economic future.
http://www.fairtax.org/PDF/FairTax-F...cts-070122.pdf

O.k. maybe the Fair Tax is not the solution, perhaps it will never pass. But here are words from a member of the Mises economic think tank, who does not support the Fair Tax.

Quote:
FairTax proponents are correct in their assessment of the Internal Revenue Code:

The current U.S. income tax code is widely regarded by just about everyone as unfair, complex, wasteful, confusing, and costly. Businesses and other organizations spend more than six billion hours each year complying with the federal tax code. Estimated compliance costs conservatively top $225 billion annually—costs that are ultimately embedded in retail prices paid by consumers.

The Internal Revenue Code cannot simply be "fixed," which is amply demonstrated by more than 35 years of attempted tax code reform, each round resulting in yet more complexity and unrelenting, page-after-page, mind-numbing verbiage (now exceeding 54,000 pages containing more than 2.8 million words).
http://www.mises.org/story/1814

No matter what side you are on regarding the Fair Tax, reasonable people recognize the problems with our current tax code.

Quote:
I am not impressed with "Rich Dad, Poor Dad".....everyone cannot "Double down" and "roll the dice", as a reliable path to "riches"......but the book's author and I agree on two points:
Neither am I, however he does make a good point about how the average person doesn't get "it". The "it" being income focused rather than asset focused.

Try the "Millionaire Next Door" too. It will help you understand who "us" and "them" really are.
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"It is useless for the sheep to pass resolutions on vegetarianism while the wolf is of a different opinion."
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"A lady screams at the mouse but smiles at the wolf. A gentleman is a wolf who sends flowers."


Last edited by aceventura3; 08-01-2007 at 02:12 PM..
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