11-29-2007, 04:56 PM | #41 (permalink) |
All important elusive independent swing voter...
Location: People's Republic of KKKalifornia
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Host,
Thank you for sharing your background with us in such detail. It's nice to "get to know the man behind the posts" a bit. I will try and answer your question (op) when I have a bit more time. I would like to give it more attention and detail. By the way, I really like the way you framed this thread as a spin-off of the context of the 6-questions thread. I actually think football players are underpaid. The Bears running back woes start with the offensive line. Cedric Benson and Adrian Peterson would probably do better if the O-line offered better protection and opened up lanes better. Rex Grossman's struggles are also related to poor O-line protection. Football players have to possess some measure of intelligence as it is a very cerebral game requiring mental and physical discipline. The play books alone are hundreds of pages of memorizations. When I used to play, I often struggled and missed a few assignments myself. |
11-30-2007, 10:40 AM | #42 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: NYC
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Host, here is my issue with your OP: question #4 of the 'six issues' post asked whether the function of taxes is to redistribute income. I answered no, the function of taxes is to raise money to enable the government to operate. Here is my reasoning:
1) Taxes have been around a very, very long time, since the very first governments, and it's only relatively recently that redistribution had anything to do with taxation. That's because (among other things) we are now rich enough as a society to worry about things like that. Redistribution is a luxury of rich societies. If everyone is poor there isn't much to redistribute. (Rich societies are dynamic societies, which means that the rich guy isn't just the son of the local lord of hte manor, who inherited his estate in a line from the original duke who was granted the land by William the Conqueror and didn't work a day in his life. The rich guy more likely than not is highly productive and creative, which is how he got rich.) When there wasn't much to redistribute there still were taxes. Why? Because the government had to run. And also because potentates had power and were greedy, and used taxes to enrich themselves. But even the benevolent ones taxed their populace. After all, someone has to pay for defense of the realm. So when you ask whether the purpose of taxation is redistribution, the answer has to be no. 2) The premise of your OP is that wealth inequality and income inequality in and of themselves are bad things. My answer to that is, "it depends." In France in 1788 there was an indolent, lazy, landed aristocracy that spent its days idly and hadn't done a thing to earn its position. That sort of inequality is a bad thing. And that sort of inequality arises from closed economic systems of the sort that had existed for a few previous millenia. In a closed economic system there is little growth, which means that for all intents and purposes an extra penny in a rich man's pocket comes out of the poor man's pocket. That is the sort of economy that the bible had in mind when it adjured charity. The redistributionist impulse traces to Christian teachings, and is based on an economic formula that simply no longer exists in Western countries. This isn't a knock on charity but it is a knock on redistribution. Inequality in and of itself is not a problem, if the inequality came about honestly. Unless a person is a horrendously envious type (which is very very ugly), it does not hurt him one bit if someone else has more than he does. I'll go out on a limb here: by historical standards we have no poverty in America. None, zero, zip, nada. If you go back to 1600 and consider what poverty meant then, we have NOTHING like that. The biggest health problem for poor people in this country is obesity. The premise for your OP, that inequality by itself is bad, reminds me of the story about the two Russian peasants, Pavel and Ivan. They were equally poor and miserable for years, friends and neighbors. Then one day Pavel was walking past Ivan's hut and noticed that, instead of the one chicken Pavel always had, Pavel had TWO chickens in his yard. Ivan was struck by the injustice of it all. Why should Pavel have two chickens and he, Ivan, only have one? So every night he would pray that this horrendous injustice should be rectified. One evening when he was praying, he heard an angel speaking to him: "Ivan, your prayers have been heard. We will fix the injustice." Ivan looked up, overjoyed, and said "you mean you're really going to kill Pavel's chicken?" That is what complaining about inequality is. |
12-01-2007, 06:13 PM | #43 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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uh...i dont think the digressions about the aristocracy work too well, loquitor:
donning my workhat, then, and compressing stuff shamelessly at the same time (historians like to blab, you see): the aristocratic "revolt" that triggered the french revolution (1787) happened because the crown defaulted on the bonds it had floated to pay for intervening in the american revolution. that is how the estates general came to be convened--and it was around this that things started to fall apart. the problems that faced the aristocracy by that point had nothing to do with the fact that they were an aristocracy and everything with the particulars of the situation the aristocracy was in by 1787--much of it had to do with the actions of louis 14 in centralizing the court, forcing the aristocracy to attend court, which put a huge strain on their resources, most of which were generated by land holdings, the revenue from which was static for a long long time. this strain was part of the point of the court--to subordinate the aristocracy, make them dependent on the crown for patronage, support, military commissions, etc. you're wrong about the chaos of the french taxation systems before the revolution as well--they WERE about redistributing wealth. the problem was not that, but rather that there were lots of such systems and no co-ordination between them...it's a confusing mess to read about even. if you're interested, read tocqueville's "ancien regime" on this, the best analysis of the financial problems this created, the link between this chaotic non-system and large-scale undertakings like war--the crown paid for wars by floating bonds--which were also a way to redistribute wealth..... the main changes the revolution brought about really was the centralization of taxation, the rationalization of the processes and of the wealth redistribution functions they served. these functions are the central occupations of the modern bureaucratic state. that is what it does, at its core. tocqueville sees the main consequence of the french revolution as the rise of the modern state--and that this had nothing to do with what the revolutionaries thought they were doing. the points: 1. the modern state is fundamentally different from what preceded it, and it makes no sense to jump around it as if this wasn't the case and make comparative arguments as if nothing changed after bonaparte. 2. wealth redistribution works in a lot of directions. if you think of it that way, it is absurd to argue that taxation is not about this. 3. (more to the side of the above) the effects/meanings of social inequality are ALWAYS contextual--you treat inequality as some metaphysical construct in your post, and the end of it simply runs to its conclusion the problems with thinking in this way about social inequality. by contextual in the modern context, i mean political. you cant wish the political away by thinking in terms of essence. i decided along the way that i'm not going to do anything with the first point in your post----in the period of william the conqueror, the entire social system was so differently organized that it makes no sense to draw on it for a point about the functions of taxation in the modern period. it's comparing wombats to toaster ovens or some such.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite Last edited by roachboy; 12-01-2007 at 06:20 PM.. |
12-01-2007, 07:18 PM | #44 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: NYC
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roachboy, you're missing the point. of course society was different if you go back more than 200 or 300 years - but there were still taxes. That's my point. Whether taxes can be used for other purposes, too, is a different issue. Of course they can. You can use a book for purposes other than reading, too, such as to hold up a table leg, but that doesn't mean the purpose of a book is to hold up a table leg.
Robin Hood redistributed wealth, too. He did it honestly - he used a gun, openly. Well, not a gun, but its medieval equivalent. |
12-01-2007, 07:33 PM | #45 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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i'm sorry, comrade, but i dont understand what you are saying.
seems to me that you're now doing the same thing to taxes that you did to inequality in the earlier post. taxation is not a table--it is a process. it is simply the case taxation after the french revolution has nothing to do with pre-french revolution taxation. totally different organization, totally different functions, totally different states. there's no way around this. the possible confusion lay in that we use the word "taxes" to talk about wealth transfer mechanisms that in an abstract sense are similar across contexts. it seems that is all you are talking about... that the same word gets applied. why is that interesting?
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite Last edited by roachboy; 12-01-2007 at 07:35 PM.. |
12-01-2007, 08:35 PM | #46 (permalink) |
warrior bodhisattva
Super Moderator
Location: East-central Canada
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Being that I live in a socialist country, I'll throw out my tax-free two cents:
Wealth inequality and redistribution cannot (and should not) be remedied by adjusting taxation alone. If America wants to continue with prosperity and avoid going to hell in a handbasked, she should consider further mixing her economy à la style Canadien.
This is just a few ideas. I would also like to point out that although the wealthiest of people pay the majority of tax, I believe that this is essential because of how that wealth is created: generated by the hard work of low-income workers. But paying less tax should not mean receiving fewer services. Government services should be equalized to ensure a basic health and well-being of all citizens. America needs to rethink her budget to stop an increasing wealth disparity. Her military budget is simply ridiculous. Her education budget, ludicrous. Now don't get me wrong; I'm not saying Canada is perfect, nor would I say she is the best nation in the world, but there is a reason why it has been said that Canada is one of the best places in the world to live. The socialists have had a hand in that. A mixed economy and a mixed political system encourages stability and prosperity. America could use a healthy dose of that to help improve the quality of life overall.
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Knowing that death is certain and that the time of death is uncertain, what's the most important thing? —Bhikkhuni Pema Chödrön Humankind cannot bear very much reality. —From "Burnt Norton," Four Quartets (1936), T. S. Eliot Last edited by Baraka_Guru; 12-01-2007 at 08:38 PM.. |
12-01-2007, 10:38 PM | #47 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: NYC
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roachboy, taxation is the process of taking from the populace to pay for the government. it's been around for thousands of years. its purpose isn't to redistribute wealth to the needy, it's to pay for the govt. its use for redistribution is a recent phenomenon.
Not that complicated, really, and I have to wonder why you are complexifying something so simple. |
12-01-2007, 10:59 PM | #48 (permalink) |
warrior bodhisattva
Super Moderator
Location: East-central Canada
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Then what would you call social security? This is just one example of redistribution of wealth.
Wealth distribution has been an issue of taxation for a long time. Do you mean recent as in last decade, or last century?
__________________
Knowing that death is certain and that the time of death is uncertain, what's the most important thing? —Bhikkhuni Pema Chödrön Humankind cannot bear very much reality. —From "Burnt Norton," Four Quartets (1936), T. S. Eliot Last edited by Baraka_Guru; 12-01-2007 at 11:02 PM.. |
12-02-2007, 01:57 PM | #50 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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loquitor:
i took the steps as an inferential chain. so if the steps are wrong, the inference collapses. it seems to me that you are simply fooled by nouns/names, that you think if you drag a name from one context to another that you designate the same thing in the same way in each context. the redistribution of wealth in the direction of the poor in the modern context is a political function, one of the ways in which the state legitimates itself. you can see infrastructure development and maintenance in the same way. the pre-revolutionary french state did not act in anything like these ways to legitimate itself--it operated with a fundamentally different ideology of the state. the modern state is primarily a bureacuracy that allocates resources. all functions--including military functions--involve wealth redistribution and can be understood as linked to creating conditions of equality within a capitalist context that tends the other way. (the military, for example, is as much a mechanism for social mobility as it is anything else--it then can be seen as a mechanism that IN ADDITION TO ITS OTHER FUNCTIONS enables folk who are socially or educationally from difficult situations to access different, maybe better situations by providing training and other forms of cultural capital--this is obvious is you remember that militaries persist beyond wartime periods--it is a side-effect of having a standing army etc.) so to say that taxation allows "the government to work" is a very limited viewpoint--simply because it treats government as separate from the social context it administers, as if it floats in space, referring to itself, generating itself, legitimating itself. it ain't like that, except insofar as it is framed as a neoliberal phantasm. btw: the underlying issue is that i find the entire trajectory in this thread that tries to define taxation as something other than the redistribution of wealth (which goes in a variety of directions) to be ridiculous, and decided to go after your post because at least you had the courtesy to say something interesting to back it up.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
12-02-2007, 04:20 PM | #51 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: NYC
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the purpose of an army is to fight wars. It has other effects as a result, but that's its purpose.
Taxes pay for government. Some people decided to extend the functions of government, so taxes followed that too. But that doesn't change the basic function of taxes. We can argue about whether govt should be in the redistribution business, and that would be a worthwhile discussion, but you're getting hung up on unnecessary overconceptualization. The purpose of taxes is to pay for the government to operate. |
12-02-2007, 06:15 PM | #53 (permalink) | |||||||
Banned
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you post like someone in deep denial, or under the spell of Ayn Rand. US income and inheritance taxes are a direct response to the excesses of a few, intended as reform to benefit the many. I've asked repeatedly, if 70 percent of total US wealth in the hands of just ten percent of us is not a problem, what greater percentage would be a problem? What mechanism, aside from government, is in a position, and authorized by the majority to lessen the extreme concentration of wealth? We never even get to the second question, do we? Extreme concentration of wealth is "never a problem". Unchecked, it inevitably provokes violence, after it breaks the self esteem, and then the hope of the vast majority. But that's a problem for another day, another generation, like....the $9.3 trillion federal treasury debt....correct? Quote:
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"The people" are not seperate of a government "by and for them", and an economic "system" should be as the people deem it to be, not Ayn Rand's "with a separation of state and economics". When an accused is charged with a crime, the court conducts a hearing to determine if there is justification to hold in custody or to grant bail to the defendant. The judge asks for the opinion of a representative of "the people", from the DA's office present in the courtroom. The economic system and the distribution of money and wealth are as unfettered or regulated as "the people", through their vote and input given to their representatives in the legislature, determine that they should be. It is an orderly, slow, and deliberative process, and it's a hell of a lot better than violent disruption to achieve similar ends, isn't it? If you don't admit that there is a problem, or if you do, but don't have a plan that is fairer and more democratic than what I've described to deal with it, it's either government attempt redistribution of wealth via progressive taxation and inheritance tax on the top tier....or ??????????? Quote:
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Last edited by host; 12-02-2007 at 06:39 PM.. |
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12-02-2007, 10:23 PM | #54 (permalink) |
Crazy
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Inequal distribution of wealth has been a fact of life since men got together to form groups (networks). It has nothing to do with individual competence or lackthereof. It is a law of economics which naturally emerges as an organizational feature of a group (network).
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12-02-2007, 10:35 PM | #55 (permalink) |
Getting it.
Super Moderator
Location: Lion City
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Perhaps I am confused but the suggestion that a small percentage control nearly all of the wealth and this is a problem, seems to suggest that there is a limited amount of wealth (i.e. no further wealth can be generated).
Can I get some clarity on this please?
__________________
"My hands are on fire. Hands are on fire. Ain't got no more time for all you charlatans and liars." - Old Man Luedecke |
12-03-2007, 12:20 AM | #56 (permalink) | ||
Banned
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Quote:
Why does it matter if total wealth is increasing? It is, and it mostly goes to where it is already concentrated, and none of the increase reaches the bottom 20 percent, at all. Quote:
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12-03-2007, 06:52 AM | #57 (permalink) | |
Pissing in the cornflakes
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I suggest people go to the original link in hosts post and read it for themselves.
He cherry picked the hell out of it since the article was about how people are making more money but not properly saving and expecting the federal government to do it for them, even though, due to the CURRENT social programs each of them will need to pay 16k a year into said programs by the year 2025. Yes the article if anything is anti-socialist. I was going to break it down and started to but frankly its a waste of time. The gist is that people need to manage their money better, not get hand outs. One of the more interesting points is that today you spend over 8k just to pay for social programs a year, and by 2025 you will be paying 16+k a year due to less workers in the work force and more retired people. Its estimated that a worker today will pay 220k for social programs in their working time. Just think if they invested that properly instead. Another one that made me chuckle was like I said in a thread in general it does NOT take 2 incomes these days, and the 'need' for it is a farce. Quote:
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Agents of the enemies who hold office in our own government, who attempt to eliminate our "freedoms" and our "right to know" are posting among us, I fear.....on this very forum. - host Obama - Know a Man by the friends he keeps. |
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12-03-2007, 04:28 PM | #58 (permalink) |
Getting it.
Super Moderator
Location: Lion City
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So here is what I am getting from this, and please correct me if I am off on this:
Of the total wealth that has been generated, the majority of it is being held by a small percentage but over all the amount of wealth is up so that those who are holding less of the total are individually holding more overall. Add to this the fact that people, throughout the spectrum of wealth, are not managing their money wisely and therefore have less savings than they should. To me, while the percentages might be a bit off from what *I* might like to see but ultimately I am not going to advocate for a system that strives to impose equality in economic matters. That just seems counter-productive. The struggle here is always between equality and freedom in these discussions and to my mind, the answer is somewhere along the spectrum between the two rather than either extreme.
__________________
"My hands are on fire. Hands are on fire. Ain't got no more time for all you charlatans and liars." - Old Man Luedecke |
12-03-2007, 04:47 PM | #59 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: In the land of ice and snow.
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I don't think that the american system necessarily strives for equality. It seems to me like a matter of good policy to keep the worse off in your country just happy enough so that they don't start causing a lot of problems as a result of their dissatisfaction. This often involves "wealth redistribution", but not really in any kind of significant way (at least not in america).
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12-03-2007, 05:17 PM | #60 (permalink) |
Getting it.
Super Moderator
Location: Lion City
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Filth... my read is that the US favours freedom over equality.
Wealth redistribution occurs in the US more along the lines of charity than through taxation, at least in the minds of most. Countries like Canada have a more pronounced social "safety net", universal health care, etc. which strive to bring about an equality of social services. One can discuss the merits of this pro or con, but ultimately my point here is that it is closer (economically speaking) to the "equality" end of the spectrum than the US is currently.
__________________
"My hands are on fire. Hands are on fire. Ain't got no more time for all you charlatans and liars." - Old Man Luedecke |
12-30-2007, 11:16 PM | #61 (permalink) | |
Banned
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"God", "Guns", and "race baiting", ain't Huckabee's style, and the "old guard" are concerned that their "evangelical faithful" are receptive to Huckabee's message.
"Horrors" if wealth inequity and the decline of the middle class earnings growth is actually discussed. An amazingly revealing article touching on the scam that is the republican party manipulation of the mostly southern evangelical vote. Selfless christians, persuaded to vote against their own economic interests, election after election: Quote:
Last edited by host; 12-30-2007 at 11:20 PM.. |
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