Xietsu
Banned
+50|6565
LOL. You have no idea about actual communism and these societies with their claims to communism. Regardless, my proposition, were you to read the response of mine preceding this one, you will find that it is quite a ways away from relation to communism. Does it have a similar motive? Yes. Is it actually communism? No.

Last edited by Xietsu (2006-05-16 13:08:19)

cpt.fass1
The Cap'n Can Make it Hap'n
+329|6705|NJ
Lib slayer why are you so Anti-American?
Xietsu
Banned
+50|6565
No no, he's got that...blind adherence. He's pro(+) status quo but he doesn't understand the complexities of the alternative.
topal63
. . .
+533|6727
. . . and you do?
Ilocano
buuuurrrrrrppppp.......
+341|6676

True communism is impossible in a modern society.  If everyone is given the same income/housing/food, who in their right mind would choose to be the garbage collector instead of the food critic.

Corporate Sales folks easily make well over $2Million in commission.  Should they stop taking new leads when they reach their cap?  Should Real Estate agents stop buying/selling after the cap?  Should surgeons go on vacation after they reach their cap?  $2million or $100million, it's all relative.  To some, $2 million is good enough.  To others, $100 million is not enough (I want that private 747/Island).
spacebandit72
Dead Meat
+121|6740|Michigan
Xietsu, I'd gladly pay an airline ticket to meet you!!!
Rather than giving money for tires how about to help out a family who needs it!!!

Seriously though, even though I don't make allot of money I think a cap is wrong. If someone works their way up in life, why limit them? It helps the economy. They buy all the stuff we can't afford and it keeps people employed.
As for the government... they would have plenty of money to support the war and take care of us here at home if our senetors would stop the pork barrel spending. I don't want to pay for a trout farm in Texas. I'll never see it and never want to see it.

just my 2cents
Xietsu
Banned
+50|6565

Ilocano wrote:

True communism is impossible in a modern society.  If everyone is given the same income/housing/food, who in their right mind would choose to be the garbage collector instead of the food critic.

Corporate Sales folks easily make well over $2Million in commission.  Should they stop taking new leads when they reach their cap?  Should Real Estate agents stop buying/selling after the cap?  Should surgeons go on vacation after they reach their cap?  $2million or $100million, it's all relative.  To some, $2 million is good enough.  To others, $100 million is not enough (I want that private 747/Island).
lol, did I somehow create the idea that I was searching for true communism?

topal, yes - I do. The alternative that I speak of is most definitely broken down for all to assimilate. Just read the three "paragraphs" in the response that I directed slayer to. Awful ironic of you to question such a thing when the alternative is my creation. Foolish.

spacebandit72 wrote:

Xietsu, I'd gladly pay an airline ticket to meet you!!!
Rather than giving money for tires how about to help out a family who needs it!!!

Seriously though, even though I don't make allot of money I think a cap is wrong. If someone works their way up in life, why limit them? It helps the economy. They buy all the stuff we can't afford and it keeps people employed.
As for the government... they would have plenty of money to support the war and take care of us here at home if our senetors would stop the pork barrel spending. I don't want to pay for a trout farm in Texas. I'll never see it and never want to see it.

just my 2cents
The type of product you mention has no holding when it comes to "keeping people employed". The majority of products these people invest in usually just supports people who are just as rich. Even still, you could honestly say that you wouldn't be satisfied with 2 million if it meant that our society has the chance to benefit so greatly from measures like the one you'd be undergoing?

Last edited by Xietsu (2006-05-16 13:31:57)

Ilocano
buuuurrrrrrppppp.......
+341|6676

spacebandit72 wrote:

Xietsu, I'd gladly pay an airline ticket to meet you!!!
Rather than giving money for tires how about to help out a family who needs it!!!

Seriously though, even though I don't make allot of money I think a cap is wrong. If someone works their way up in life, why limit them? It helps the economy. They buy all the stuff we can't afford and it keeps people employed.
As for the government... they would have plenty of money to support the war and take care of us here at home if our senetors would stop the pork barrel spending. I don't want to pay for a trout farm in Texas. I'll never see it and never want to see it.

just my 2cents
How about a trout farm in Michigan?
topal63
. . .
+533|6727
. . . and you do?

Xietsu wrote:

topal, yes - I do. The alternative that I speak of is most definitely broken down for all to assimilate. Just read the three "paragraphs" in the response that I directed slayer to. Awful ironic of you to question such a thing when the alternative is my creation. Foolish.
It was a rhetorical question - sarcasm, my opine of course would be NO I DON"T think you possess the sophistication, nor is your idea sophisticated.

Ilocano wrote:

True communism is impossible in a modern society.  If everyone is given the same income/housing/food, who in their right mind would choose to be the garbage collector instead of the food critic.

Corporate Sales folks easily make well over $2Million in commission.  Should they stop taking new leads when they reach their cap?  Should Real Estate agents stop buying/selling after the cap?  Should surgeons go on vacation after they reach their cap?  $2million or $100million, it's all relative.  To some, $2 million is good enough.  To others, $100 million is not enough (I want that private 747/Island).
Exactly . . . and I don't have a problem with that in anyway.

As soon as Bill Gates decided to spend HIS millions on his new home - that money went back into the system. Personally once you remove any-and-all "rank" to society you end-up with NOTHING to strive for, and an utterly bland grey uniform socio-economic scenery & a sense of inescapable dread (gee like it would be [was] to live in communist Russia).

Last edited by topal63 (2006-05-16 13:36:53)

FoShizzle
Howdah Lysozyme
+21|6636|Pittsburgh, PA

Xietsu wrote:

Sure dude, I just hope you don't mind paying the ticket at the airlines to come meet me. I don't give out money to people I don't know who just need it to get some new tires. Personal rule I've developed over time.
Yeah, that and you don't have $300 to hand out!  LOL

Just kidding...don't flame me.
cpt.fass1
The Cap'n Can Make it Hap'n
+329|6705|NJ

spacebandit72 wrote:

Xietsu, I'd gladly pay an airline ticket to meet you!!!
Rather than giving money for tires how about to help out a family who needs it!!!

Seriously though, even though I don't make allot of money I think a cap is wrong. If someone works their way up in life, why limit them? It helps the economy. They buy all the stuff we can't afford and it keeps people employed.
As for the government... they would have plenty of money to support the war and take care of us here at home if our senetors would stop the pork barrel spending. I don't want to pay for a trout farm in Texas. I'll never see it and never want to see it.

just my 2cents
Well the only reason for a cap is because the rich keep getting richer and the poor keep getting poorer, meaning that if you have 100 million dollars And I have 100 dollars and working for you with 20 other people, and theirs 40 other people looking to do the job for 50 dollars. You'd fire us and hire the cheaper people to raise your profit increasing the gap. Pork barrel spending helps the lower class citizen and keeps legit farmers in business.

edit cause I wrote porn not poor haha lol.

Last edited by cpt.fass1 (2006-05-16 13:37:40)

topal63
. . .
+533|6727

cpt.fass1 wrote:

spacebandit72 wrote:

Xietsu, I'd gladly pay an airline ticket to meet you!!!
Rather than giving money for tires how about to help out a family who needs it!!!

Seriously though, even though I don't make allot of money I think a cap is wrong. If someone works their way up in life, why limit them? It helps the economy. They buy all the stuff we can't afford and it keeps people employed.
As for the government... they would have plenty of money to support the war and take care of us here at home if our senetors would stop the pork barrel spending. I don't want to pay for a trout farm in Texas. I'll never see it and never want to see it.

just my 2cents
Well the only reason for a cap is because the rich keep getting richer and the porn keep getting poorer, meaning that if you have 100 million dollars And I have 100 dollars and working for you with 20 other people, and theirs 40 other people looking to do the job for 50 dollars. You'd fire us and hire the cheaper people to raise your profit increasing the gap. Pork barrel spending helps the lower class citizen and keeps legit farmers in business.
You and Xietsu. . . are missing the point. The cap idea is unsophisticated social commentary - and as a modification to the current system - one of this nature; or type - WILL NEVER HAPPEN.

There is a balance between the public need (& its social value judgments contained therein) & the private sector, upon which the governement has acquired its means to make value judgements (based upon some consensus). You can't go eliminating private wealth in the private sector - it is necessary - it is by right; based upon the constitution - it is an arbitrary social idea to simply cap a level - it goes against all historical precedence of law - it is incompatible with the current system.

As I have already said a progressive income-tax schedule is already in existence - with rates that have been historically as high as 91%.

Last edited by topal63 (2006-05-16 13:53:56)

whittsend
PV1 Joe Snuffy
+78|6767|MA, USA

Xietsu wrote:

lmao. You honestly believe there to be “Natural Rights”? Hahaha…how hilarious. These are inexistent, and all you have shown me is your fantastical, blissful patronage towards a founding forefather. There are no “Natural Rights” – this is merely a label you have attributed to the comprehension of civically-translated ethics, as seen through the light of an English revolutionary. Ethics change with society, and so too can civics (and, as down the stairs we go, so too can law). So many people support this form of civics because it identifies so closely with the success of the individual on a scale that preserves selfish ends (this logically being the extreme end of the spectrum). Of course, this is seen only as selfish through my “revolutionary” perception of ethics/civics.

In order to understand the deversifiability that such concepts hold, you must keep in mind 2 key ideas. Ethics and civics always hold comely morals as underpinnings, and that modern renditions of these concepts stem largely from poets writing of religion (back in the day, yo’) and the fairly new “modern revolutionaries” to civilization as it were – those of which include many thinkers throughout the 18th century. The only differential in this approach upon these concepts, is that over-indulgence and support for the greater, governmental good is given. Thus, this is why I have repeated over and over the fact that this discussion is more likely the ethical “What over-indulgence must people need?”

If you can settle on the fact that indulgence doesn’t need such extravagance, you may also be able to settle upon the fact that modern ethics, civics, and law ought to establish a more avid footing behind the type of breadth that (effectively) governing such societies requires in today’s world. So, should you make it this far, we can then start discussing to what level such people should be exacted upon (i.e. 2 million? 100 million?). To all onlookers, I’d just like to let you contemplate this one word – adherence.
This is not intended to be an insult, it is simply an observation.  That is the most egregious example of double talk I have read in a long time.  I have an MA in History, so I have read some convoluted thought in my time but that is quite bad.  My Girlfriend has an MA in Literature, and has been an English teacher for 8 years, so I asked her to read it.  She said, "Which one of his professors is he quoting?"  She also said, "The way this is written is ridiculous."  Please take this as constructive criticism:  Intelligence is not demonstrated by taking simple concepts and making them difficult to understand, it is demonstrated in taking complex concepts and making them easy to understand.

As far as Natural Rights go, I did not imagine them.  Do you dismiss them because you don't believe such a concept exists, or because you don't agree with the concept?  If the former, your education is simply lacking.  If the latter, I disagree, and I submit that your opinion (while quite possibly educated) is no better than mine.

It seems to me (and I can't be sure because your use of language is clearly designed to cloud, rather than clarify), that you believe that basic human rights are mutable, depending on circumstances.  I disagree.  It also seems to me that you suggest here:

Xietsu wrote:

If you can settle on the fact that indulgence doesn’t need such extravagance, you may also be able to settle upon the fact that modern ethics, civics, and law ought to establish a more avid footing behind the type of breadth that (effectively) governing such societies requires in today’s world.
that, in essence, that once a person reaches a certain standard of living, they no longer need any more than what they have, and that government is justified in taking the remainder away.  That is a spurious argument; To begin with, I disagree with the premise, and the conclusion is justified only by your opinion.  You will forgive me if I don't take that as an adequate guarantee of my rights.

Edit:  Upon reflection, I have realised why your writing is so incomprehensible:  It is because you have failed to define your terms.  Would you care to do so in the future?

Last edited by whittsend (2006-05-16 13:59:31)

Y0URDAD
I'ma Eat Yo Children!
+17|6654|Annapolis, MD
So, if you were to one day put in the work to earn over 2 million a year, are you saying that you would be willing to part with the extra money you earned?
cpt.fass1
The Cap'n Can Make it Hap'n
+329|6705|NJ
I don't even belive in the cap, I'm all for you reap what you sew. As in you make your own wealth, obviously people who come from money should get the benefits from their parents fortunes while growing up. But when they pass away if they don't have a hand in it like the Hiltons(sorry but I just think it's the best example) the empire that has been grown should be dispersed to the people controling it. If it is the Hiltons sisters running the business after their father passes away they will have the possiblity of mantaining the business.  I'm a self made person I have made my own money in my life and don't expect much from my parents, I'm just very against people who haven't done anything to obtain money to get a handout.

I'm not missing the point of the cap at all, I just feel that this people need to be preped to be a usefull piece of sociaty.
atlvolunteer
PKMMMMMMMMMM
+27|6780|Atlanta, GA USA

cpt.fass1 wrote:

I don't even belive in the cap, I'm all for you reap what you sew. As in you make your own wealth, obviously people who come from money should get the benefits from their parents fortunes while growing up. But when they pass away if they don't have a hand in it like the Hiltons(sorry but I just think it's the best example) the empire that has been grown should be dispersed to the people controling it. If it is the Hiltons sisters running the business after their father passes away they will have the possiblity of mantaining the business.  I'm a self made person I have made my own money in my life and don't expect much from my parents, I'm just very against people who haven't done anything to obtain money to get a handout.

I'm not missing the point of the cap at all, I just feel that this people need to be preped to be a usefull piece of sociaty.
This is still infringing on someone's right to decide what to do with their own property.  If someone makes a shit ton of money, they have every right to pass it down to their children, even if they are worthless.  On the other hand, they also have the right to donate it all to charity when they die.  It is their money, and they can do with it what they will.  That is the basis for our society.
cpt.fass1
The Cap'n Can Make it Hap'n
+329|6705|NJ
I do understand that, but then it's becomes damaging to the econimy with that system, because you use to have someone that would use that money for good, like investing and such. Now it just sits there for stupid reasons.
Xietsu
Banned
+50|6565

topal63 wrote:

. . . and you do?

Xietsu wrote:

topal, yes - I do. The alternative that I speak of is most definitely broken down for all to assimilate. Just read the three "paragraphs" in the response that I directed slayer to. Awful ironic of you to question such a thing when the alternative is my creation. Foolish.
It was a rhetorical question - sarcasm, my opine of course would be NO I DON"T think you possess the sophistication, nor is your idea sophisticated.

Ilocano wrote:

True communism is impossible in a modern society.  If everyone is given the same income/housing/food, who in their right mind would choose to be the garbage collector instead of the food critic.

Corporate Sales folks easily make well over $2Million in commission.  Should they stop taking new leads when they reach their cap?  Should Real Estate agents stop buying/selling after the cap?  Should surgeons go on vacation after they reach their cap?  $2million or $100million, it's all relative.  To some, $2 million is good enough.  To others, $100 million is not enough (I want that private 747/Island).
Exactly . . . and I don't have a problem with that in anyway.

As soon as Bill Gates decided to spend HIS millions on his new home - that money went back into the system. Personally once you remove any-and-all "rank" to society you end-up with NOTHING to strive for, and an utterly bland grey uniform socio-economic scenery & a sense of inescapable dread (gee like it would be [was] to live in communist Russia).
Wow, you are such a pompous fool. The fact is that the reasoning for acceptance of my idea hold sophistication, not the idea itself. Had you even read my reponse to whittsend (the one he quotes below me, which I posted just a wee bit back), you'd understand. Clearly, you're still the foolish fool you were 20 minutes ago.

whittsend wrote:

Xietsu wrote:

lmao. You honestly believe there to be “Natural Rights”? Hahaha…how hilarious. These are inexistent, and all you have shown me is your fantastical, blissful patronage towards a founding forefather. There are no “Natural Rights” – this is merely a label you have attributed to the comprehension of civically-translated ethics, as seen through the light of an English revolutionary. Ethics change with society, and so too can civics (and, as down the stairs we go, so too can law). So many people support this form of civics because it identifies so closely with the success of the individual on a scale that preserves selfish ends (this logically being the extreme end of the spectrum). Of course, this is seen only as selfish through my “revolutionary” perception of ethics/civics.

In order to understand the deversifiability that such concepts hold, you must keep in mind 2 key ideas. Ethics and civics always hold comely morals as underpinnings, and that modern renditions of these concepts stem largely from poets writing of religion (back in the day, yo’) and the fairly new “modern revolutionaries” to civilization as it were – those of which include many thinkers throughout the 18th century. The only differential in this approach upon these concepts, is that over-indulgence and support for the greater, governmental good is given. Thus, this is why I have repeated over and over the fact that this discussion is more likely the ethical “What over-indulgence must people need?”

If you can settle on the fact that indulgence doesn’t need such extravagance, you may also be able to settle upon the fact that modern ethics, civics, and law ought to establish a more avid footing behind the type of breadth that (effectively) governing such societies requires in today’s world. So, should you make it this far, we can then start discussing to what level such people should be exacted upon (i.e. 2 million? 100 million?). To all onlookers, I’d just like to let you contemplate this one word – adherence.
This is not intended to be an insult, it is simply an observation.  That is the most egregious example of double talk I have read in a long time.  I have an MA in History, so I have read some convoluted thought in my time but that is quite bad.  My Girlfriend has an MA in Literature, and has been an English teacher for 8 years, so I asked her to read it.  She said, "Which one of his professors is he quoting?"  She also said, "The way this is written is ridiculous."  Please take this as constructive criticism:  Intelligence is not demonstrated by taking simple concepts and making them difficult to understand, it is demonstrated in taking complex concepts and making them easy to understand.

As far as Natural Rights go, I did not imagine them.  Do you dismiss them because you don't believe such a concept exists, or because you don't agree with the concept?  If the former, your education is simply lacking.  If the latter, I disagree, and I submit that your opinion (while quite possibly educated) is no better than mine.

It seems to me (and I can't be sure because your use of language is clearly designed to cloud, rather than clarify), that you believe that basic human rights are mutable, depending on circumstances.  I disagree.  It also seems to me that you suggest here:

Xietsu wrote:

If you can settle on the fact that indulgence doesn’t need such extravagance, you may also be able to settle upon the fact that modern ethics, civics, and law ought to establish a more avid footing behind the type of breadth that (effectively) governing such societies requires in today’s world.
that, in essence, that once a person reaches a certain standard of living, they no longer need any more than what they have, and that government is justified in taking the remainder away.  That is a spurious argument; To begin with, I disagree with the premise, and the conclusion is justified only by your opinion.  You will forgive me if I don't take that as an adequate guarantee of my rights.

Edit:  Upon reflection, I have realised why your writing is so incomprehensible:  It is because you have failed to define your terms.  Would you care to do so in the future?
Why would I need to define my terms? If you don't understand a word, use http://www.dictionary.com/ . I don't write in a method aimed at inciting confusion - I write in the method that thought flows.

atlvolunteer wrote:

cpt.fass1 wrote:

I don't even belive in the cap, I'm all for you reap what you sew. As in you make your own wealth, obviously people who come from money should get the benefits from their parents fortunes while growing up. But when they pass away if they don't have a hand in it like the Hiltons(sorry but I just think it's the best example) the empire that has been grown should be dispersed to the people controling it. If it is the Hiltons sisters running the business after their father passes away they will have the possiblity of mantaining the business.  I'm a self made person I have made my own money in my life and don't expect much from my parents, I'm just very against people who haven't done anything to obtain money to get a handout.

I'm not missing the point of the cap at all, I just feel that this people need to be preped to be a usefull piece of sociaty.
This is still infringing on someone's right to decide what to do with their own property.  If someone makes a shit ton of money, they have every right to pass it down to their children, even if they are worthless.  On the other hand, they also have the right to donate it all to charity when they die.  It is their money, and they can do with it what they will.  That is the basis for our society.
Adherence to a system which possesses a flaw (one hindering the greater performance of our society) is just meaningless allegiance to the status quo; times change, and on occasion, such change calls for correspondence. Rather, it should be with adherence to conformity that you adopt your stance of...adhering. lolz

Last edited by Xietsu (2006-05-16 14:33:14)

topal63
. . .
+533|6727

cpt.fass1 wrote:

I don't even belive in the cap, I'm all for you reap what you sew. As in you make your own wealth, obviously people who come from money should get the benefits from their parents fortunes while growing up. But when they pass away if they don't have a hand in it like the Hiltons(sorry but I just think it's the best example) the empire that has been grown should be dispersed to the people controling it. If it is the Hiltons sisters running the business after their father passes away they will have the possiblity of mantaining the business.  I'm a self made person I have made my own money in my life and don't expect much from my parents, I'm just very against people who haven't done anything to obtain money to get a handout.

I'm not missing the point of the cap at all, I just feel that this people need to be preped to be a usefull piece of sociaty.
There's nothing wrong with having a personal worth & work-ethic, but that remains a personal thing. It is good that you have one - but you are confusing concepts - no offense intended.

There is no reason why a family's wealth should be redistributed to some other entity based upon some suspect notion of the common-good.

Suppose Paris Hilton is the sole heir and she in her 40's ended up running the Hilton Hotel Chain - and ran it into the ground - dead & gone - Hilton no MORE! It is neither ethical nor legal for the government to step in and sever her from the reins of something she rightfully owns - even if she is utterly incompetent at the job (not mentally incompetent; that is something else). Nor is it ethical or legal to disperse this wealth from her just because someone on the board, has a minor individual vested interest, nor redistribute the stock (wealth) to the employees upon her parents demise.

I own my own business; and ownership is different than running it. I could retire and continue to own it; if I could not continue to own it; based upon some arbitrary system or law; I would dissolve it and sell of the assets. Explain how forcing the wealthy (or merely anyone in a corporate ownership position) to dissolve the entity upon which employees depend is a good thing? And they would if such an arbitrary thing existed; even if seemingly; being a good idea to you; based upon your good personal worth & work-ethic - BUT it is a mistake to extend your personal ethic into a system, that ethic is to be carried out by YOU (the individual) and not the GOVERNMENT, with regard to personal property anyway.

And in a sense our constitution represents that need of the individual to be protected from such arbitrary, hostile and unethical acts/ideas - that would inhibit personal freedom or the right to personal prosperity.
Xietsu
Banned
+50|6565
cpt.fass1's interpretation of this proposal is clearly just that.
whittsend
PV1 Joe Snuffy
+78|6767|MA, USA

Xietsu wrote:

Why would I need to define my terms? If you don't understand a word, use http://www.dictionary.com/ . I don't write in a method aimed at inciting confusion - I write in the method that thought flows.
You are using terms (ethics, civics) that are not universal; certainly not in the way you are using them.  If you wish to be understood, you should define them.  The fact that you didn't respond to the points I made regarding my limited understanding of your argument leads me to believe that I, in fact, understood it all to well, and that it is as tenuous as I suspected.

Re: your writing as thought flows.  This is also known as "stream of conciousness," and it is incomprehensible to all but the originator.    You will note that most of the respondants to your idea are not addressing your arguments, they are addressing only your initial proposal: That is because it is difficult to understand your arguments because you refuse to define your terms...but, again, I suspect you prefer it that way, to ensure they are not dismissed out of hand.

Finally, a thought from my girlfriend (the English teacher), "If you are going to dismiss earlier thinkers as 'poets' then using their method of writing undermines your argument."

Good Night.

Last edited by whittsend (2006-05-16 14:42:22)

Xietsu
Banned
+50|6565

whittsend wrote:

Xietsu wrote:

Why would I need to define my terms? If you don't understand a word, use http://www.dictionary.com/ . I don't write in a method aimed at inciting confusion - I write in the method that thought flows.
You are using terms (ethics, civics) that are not universal; certainly not in the way you are using them.  If you wish to be understood, you should define them.  The fact that you didn't respond to the points I made regarding my limited understanding of your argument leads me to believe that I understood it all to well, and that it is as tenuous as I suspected.

Re: your writing as thought flows.  This is also known as "stream of conciousness," and it is incomprehensible to all but the originator.    You will note that most of the respondants to your idea are not addressing your arguments: That is because it is difficult to understand them...but, again, I suspect you prefer it that way, to ensure they are not dismissed out of hand.

Finally, a thought from my girlfriend (the English teacher), "If you are going to dismiss earlier thinkers as 'poets' then using their method of writing undermines your argument."

Good Night.
lol. I don't "dismiss" them as poets. Merely providing apt description. Ethics are the moral right. Civics are the right as applicable to the citizen. These change and are variable based on societies of differing times. My use of these terms within this post of mine is purely correct. Anyways, kind of ironic that you act as though my referring to the flow of thought as...how I just have...as being incorrect. What the hell does it matter if you denote it as the stream of conciousness and I the flow of thought? Completely synonymous (and pointless).

The point though, about my thinking in this manner, is that I think on such terms as it applies to a level understandable through modern English grammar. I thought you would catch that inference, but maybe I was just....caught on the stream of conciousness. lmao.

(P.S. No good nights! You aren't done yet.)

Hmm. Okay, so I read it over. I have decided that, for grammatic reasons, the second sentence in the second paragraph, the words "and that" should be replaced with "with", and the upcoming "stem" should be "stemming". I am sowwy I let that slip throughz. Ok ok, so I added some ammendments (well...one...a "(me)" after the emboldened "this") in parentheses that will help clear up perspective on a few of the comments. Go reread my original post O_o;.

Last edited by Xietsu (2006-05-16 14:58:44)

atlvolunteer
PKMMMMMMMMMM
+27|6780|Atlanta, GA USA

Xietsu wrote:

Adherence to a system which possesses a flaw (one hindering the greater performance of our society) is just meaningless allegiance to the status quo; times change, and on occasion, such change calls for correspondence. Rather, it should be with adherence to conformity that you adopt your stance of...adhering. lolz
IMO, it is not a flaw.  If someone legally earns their money, they should be entitled to do with it what they will, no matter the quantity.  If they want to pass it down to their children, slack-assed or otherwise, they are entitled to do that.
unnamednewbie13
Moderator
+2,053|6781|PNW

Xietsu wrote:

...and use all proceeds from the cap for redistribution towards all domestic needs of the government at all levels.

(Come on, does Bill Gates really need his house to be the size of a museum? Okay, so maybe we up the cap to 100 million so that Bill Gates can still support his property value of 113 million.)
Income caps would just force rich people to take themselves and their businesses out of the country, or failing that they'd just lose a bit of their competitive desire.

So thank you, but no.

If someone wants to make enough money to fund their families a dozen generations down the line, more power to them. It shouldn't be your, mine or anyone else's right to tell them they can't.

Xietsu wrote:

I'm all for debating guidelines defining about how this would be carried out in a more fine detail...
How about how it shouldn't be carried out? This topic shouldn't even be discussed, let alone considered by government.

The richest 3 out of 10 Americans pay about the same amount of income taxes as everyone else combined.

Last edited by unnamednewbie13 (2006-05-16 15:34:27)

Xietsu
Banned
+50|6565
volunteer...have you read the post of mine...covering, essentially, different public perceptions of ethics and civics? If you haven't you should. I think it's thoroughly flawed that someone waste funds that they don't even need.

I'm all for debating guidelines defining about how this would be carried out in a more fine detail, but most people are still so attached to the type of ethics and civics that I've been discussing.

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