Don't get me wrong, the time I spent in Germany I was genuinely impressed and surprised and envious. I compared life as I saw it there in the villages with life in the states. I saw a much more care free, easy going life style there that I was attracted to. It is just with our society, I do not see how that could happen in the states realistically.Jenspm wrote:
Yeah, sorry for not making it clear - I am fully aware that some economic systems are better suited to some countries than others. I can't really imagine implementing a socialist/progressivist system in the US - it seems too big, too diverse, and there is an underlying culture that just doesn't line up with it.lowing wrote:
No you don't have that problem in Norway. Norway also does not have the responsibilities taken on by the US either. Norway loves to sit back and reap the rewards for the security provided to it by everyone else, then has the nerve to talk down to other countries that we are spending too much money on military. Wonder what the European economy would look like if the US just pulled stakes and left you all to figure out how you will defend yourselves against, well, yourselves.Jenspm wrote:
We don't seem to have that problem in Norway, despite having one of the highest tax rates in the world. The maximum tax is around 54%, and a large portion of the population (around 20% I think) pay this. Norway is also the country with the highest average retirement age in Europe.
As Varegg said, people don't flee the country because they believe they are getting value for money with their taxes (in addition to a feeling of 'home' and whatnot, but yeah)
There are many, many things I'd change about the Norwegian system, mind, but it's more to show that high taxes doesn't have to mean people stop working or move.
I have not been to Norway, but I have been to Germany and though I was only there for a month I was left with a positive impression on the attitudes the German people have for their communities. I didn't see beggars on the corners. I saw clean communities with friendly people. We simply do not have that here in the states. We have workers and producers, then we have people who want to thrive on entitlement and handouts. These people are mostly liberals who will vote for anyone that will ensure those entitlements on the backs of the rest of us. Democrats cater to them for their votes.
We have a country where half want to work for themselves, and the other half want to leech off of our work. When you have half the people that have the rewards of hard work taken away for someone elses benefit and the other half that does not want to work for their own benefit, you are doomed as a society.
I love that you define people as arrogant based on the fact you can't follow the conversation due to your own ignorance.lowing wrote:
I said, I speak for all Americans? Sorry burnzz, I am not as arrogant as you jay or varegg.13urnzz wrote:
yes, you claimed it.lowing wrote:
never claimed to be the voice of America burnzz,what a cop out. i was following the thread, and you wrote in the thread.lowing wrote:
it is my opinion, if you don't want to read it, then don't.
this is why i don't want you speaking for Americans.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat
lol, I followed it just fine. I saw no reason to get into the middle of such a great discussion like that between you two "intellects", battling each other over who was dumber. . they way I read it, you both won.Jay wrote:
I love that you define people as arrogant based on the fact you can't follow the conversation due to your own ignorance.lowing wrote:
I said, I speak for all Americans? Sorry burnzz, I am not as arrogant as you jay or varegg.13urnzz wrote:
yes, you claimed it.
what a cop out. i was following the thread, and you wrote in the thread.
this is why i don't want you speaking for Americans.
Last edited by lowing (2011-08-02 13:53:07)
Play nice, now.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein
Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
― Albert Einstein
Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
When you factor in all taxes, the upper-income brackets pay well over 50% in taxes. That includes income, sales, state, local, property, etc. Everyone from outside the US keeps focusing solely on the federal income tax rate...we pay a lot more taxes than just income tax.Jenspm wrote:
There is, of course, a limit as to how much you can tax before the work force lose motivation. I personally believe that this hovers somewhere around 50%.lowing wrote:
Sounds good on paper, but explain why 1 citizen should have to pay 50% of 1 million dollars, ( $500,000) while another citizen only pays 10% of 40,000 dollars ( $4,000) all for the same EXACT services. Then explain why the person who works for that 1 million dollars would have the inclination to keep doing so if all that was gunna happen is, the govt. was gunna take it from him? Or is his motivation supposed to be the PRIVILEGE of working harder to pay more for govt. service than anyone else? If yo do not think you are punishing success in such a scenario we will just have to agree to disagreeJenspm wrote:
I actually partly agree with Jay on this one. I've never been a fan of "taxing the hell out of the rich" just for the sake of taxing them. As you touched upon, Jay, I believe in the government doing its best to create equal opportunity in the path to success, and by that I mean attempting to eliminate factors that you don't have control of - like, say, the wealth and success of your parents.
That is why I am against private schools, and want free state schools for everyone up to and including high school. That is why I want universities that are cheap, if not free, and a government handing out cheap loans, so that going to university, and where you are going, is never a question of how much your parents earn, or how much your parents are willing to pay, or where they're willing to send you.
In addition to this, I also believe that there are a handful of services you should have the right to access, no matter who you are. An example of this is the access to medical help. I do not believe that you should be able to pay your way to better doctors, better facilities or pay to cut in front of others in the waiting line. So I'm against private hospitals.
And finally, there are some goods that I believe the government should sponsor/subsidize for the sake of 'the common good'. This can be environmental issues by subsidizing public transport and taxing fuel, for example.
There are a lot of things I want to be government-supported, and this obviously has to be paid for. I think that the taxes paying for this have to be based on how much you're able to pay, and that means higher percentages for the more wealthy. 50% is a lot more for someone on $40k pr. year than it is for someone on $1mill.
So yes, I'd tax the rich more and the poor less, but that is for the sake of equal opportunity, rather than equal wealth. It is not an effort to drag down or punish the rich (which seems to be an idea that's far more prevalent in the UK), but rather building a common base to work from and supporting the society as a whole.
So yeah, there's my personal political philosophy in a nutshell, I guess. Off-topic? Nah.
Yes, the rich would pay more for the same services. But if we'd set the tax at, say, $4k pr. person regardless of income, we wouldn't be able to afford the equality that I want from society. I'd rather have the tax differences.
There is also an argument that in a system like this the rich can thank the system for being guaranteed the platform/opportunity to get to where they are now, whereas in a low-tax system they'd be highly handicapped if they were to be born in a poor, lower-class family.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein
Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
― Albert Einstein
Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
almost time for a new cunt!
Thread would make a good sticky.west-phoenix-az wrote:
almost time for a new cunt!
Pointless? ... if anyone should claim that it would be me ... when you make a post I at least have the courtesy to answer it, when I make a post all you can come up with personal insults.Jay wrote:
Arguing with you is pointless. You don't even know what consumerism is, nor do you seem capable of grasping the link between production and consumption. The argument against consumerism is the argument against democratic markets. People are too stupid to be responsible so some big brother has to step in. You may not understand the opinions you hold, but I do, and the argument is just another form of Proggressive nanny state elitism.
I'm done arguing with someone whose depth of knowledge is so shallow. Talk to hipsters, they'll nod along with you.
I understand very well what I'm talking about and unlike you I'm talking about it not spewing unrelated bullshit around when I can't answer a couple of easy question, your arrogance and disrespect is two perks you should get rid of and are the reason you get banned from time to time!
Wait behind the line ..............................................................
Yeah, so do we. As I said earlier, I think my father sends in around 80% of his income when the taxes are due. And that's (obviously) before sales tax and the like.FEOS wrote:
When you factor in all taxes, the upper-income brackets pay well over 50% in taxes. That includes income, sales, state, local, property, etc. Everyone from outside the US keeps focusing solely on the federal income tax rate...we pay a lot more taxes than just income tax.Jenspm wrote:
There is, of course, a limit as to how much you can tax before the work force lose motivation. I personally believe that this hovers somewhere around 50%.lowing wrote:
Sounds good on paper, but explain why 1 citizen should have to pay 50% of 1 million dollars, ( $500,000) while another citizen only pays 10% of 40,000 dollars ( $4,000) all for the same EXACT services. Then explain why the person who works for that 1 million dollars would have the inclination to keep doing so if all that was gunna happen is, the govt. was gunna take it from him? Or is his motivation supposed to be the PRIVILEGE of working harder to pay more for govt. service than anyone else? If yo do not think you are punishing success in such a scenario we will just have to agree to disagree
Yes, the rich would pay more for the same services. But if we'd set the tax at, say, $4k pr. person regardless of income, we wouldn't be able to afford the equality that I want from society. I'd rather have the tax differences.
There is also an argument that in a system like this the rich can thank the system for being guaranteed the platform/opportunity to get to where they are now, whereas in a low-tax system they'd be highly handicapped if they were to be born in a poor, lower-class family.
Say tnx to your father for me Jens
I just bought a new PS3 for the unemployment money I got this month
I just bought a new PS3 for the unemployment money I got this month
Wait behind the line ..............................................................
Hundreds of years of 'every man grab all he can' compared with an effective social democracy its easy to see it wouldn't be a simple switch.lowing wrote:
Don't get me wrong, the time I spent in Germany I was genuinely impressed and surprised and envious. I compared life as I saw it there in the villages with life in the states. I saw a much more care free, easy going life style there that I was attracted to. It is just with our society, I do not see how that could happen in the states realistically.
Fuck Israel
80%?!Jenspm wrote:
Yeah, so do we. As I said earlier, I think my father sends in around 80% of his income when the taxes are due. And that's (obviously) before sales tax and the like.FEOS wrote:
When you factor in all taxes, the upper-income brackets pay well over 50% in taxes. That includes income, sales, state, local, property, etc. Everyone from outside the US keeps focusing solely on the federal income tax rate...we pay a lot more taxes than just income tax.Jenspm wrote:
There is, of course, a limit as to how much you can tax before the work force lose motivation. I personally believe that this hovers somewhere around 50%.
Yes, the rich would pay more for the same services. But if we'd set the tax at, say, $4k pr. person regardless of income, we wouldn't be able to afford the equality that I want from society. I'd rather have the tax differences.
There is also an argument that in a system like this the rich can thank the system for being guaranteed the platform/opportunity to get to where they are now, whereas in a low-tax system they'd be highly handicapped if they were to be born in a poor, lower-class family.
And you people are just fine with giving 80% of what you earn to the state?!
YGBFSM.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein
Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
― Albert Einstein
Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
Well some people complain, but the complete dominance of the Labour party since the war (almost without pause) indicates that people are generally okay with it.FEOS wrote:
80%?!Jenspm wrote:
Yeah, so do we. As I said earlier, I think my father sends in around 80% of his income when the taxes are due. And that's (obviously) before sales tax and the like.FEOS wrote:
When you factor in all taxes, the upper-income brackets pay well over 50% in taxes. That includes income, sales, state, local, property, etc. Everyone from outside the US keeps focusing solely on the federal income tax rate...we pay a lot more taxes than just income tax.
And you people are just fine with giving 80% of what you earn to the state?!
YGBFSM.
Hail Marx...
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein
Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
― Albert Einstein
Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
I don't bring up 'unrelated crap'.Varegg wrote:
Pointless? ... if anyone should claim that it would be me ... when you make a post I at least have the courtesy to answer it, when I make a post all you can come up with personal insults.Jay wrote:
Arguing with you is pointless. You don't even know what consumerism is, nor do you seem capable of grasping the link between production and consumption. The argument against consumerism is the argument against democratic markets. People are too stupid to be responsible so some big brother has to step in. You may not understand the opinions you hold, but I do, and the argument is just another form of Proggressive nanny state elitism.
I'm done arguing with someone whose depth of knowledge is so shallow. Talk to hipsters, they'll nod along with you.
I understand very well what I'm talking about and unlike you I'm talking about it not spewing unrelated bullshit around when I can't answer a couple of easy question, your arrogance and disrespect is two perks you should get rid of and are the reason you get banned from time to time!
You were using the word consumerist incorrectly the entire time. What you were really referring to was 'conspicuous consumption'. You dislike people that overtly display their wealth, yes? The guy that drives a Hummer and knowingly gets 4 mpg bothers you greatly, yes? For a society to be too 'consumerist' as you were putting it, by definition means that a society is too free in your eyes. Consumerism is just a democratic representation of a market. People want things, other people create them. It's organic. There is no omnipresent being in the sky telling people what they should or shouldn't buy, nor should there be.
Any line drawn is completely arbitrary and is based on the present economic standing of the opinion holder. Why do you think class warfare in politics works? It feeds on emotion. "That other asshole has more toys than I think he should be allowed to have, let's tax him more." Of course, if this unnamed jealous person was the one with more toys, the line would be drawn elsewhere. It is pure jealousy, which in turn leads to hatred and anger.
Because you obviously wish to limit people and control their decisions for them, I brought up the 'unrelated' Marxist/Keynes as symbols of totalitarianism. Now, I threw out the word elitist too. Who but an elitist would deign to think he can make decisions for others? Marxist? Check. Conspicuous consumption was a term coined by the man himself and pushed along by Bertrand Russell.
Everyone else seems to have understood the connections I was making, perhaps you should go back and read the primary sources instead of spitting out the same garbled message the ignorant greenies like to foist on the rest of us.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat
Will just add something to that ... if you have a tax at 80% like Jenspms dad you make so much money that whatever you have left is enough to buy a small African country!FEOS wrote:
Hail Marx...
Wait behind the line ..............................................................
Lol. We just don't have the correct political indoctrination dontchaknow.Dilbert_X wrote:
Hundreds of years of 'every man grab all he can' compared with an effective social democracy its easy to see it wouldn't be a simple switch.lowing wrote:
Don't get me wrong, the time I spent in Germany I was genuinely impressed and surprised and envious. I compared life as I saw it there in the villages with life in the states. I saw a much more care free, easy going life style there that I was attracted to. It is just with our society, I do not see how that could happen in the states realistically.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat
Good thing your govt. decided for him that he doesn't need that much money. 80%! fuck that.Varegg wrote:
Will just add something to that ... if you have a tax at 80% like Jenspms dad you make so much money that whatever you have left is enough to buy a small African country!FEOS wrote:
Hail Marx...
you do realize that in a 365 day calendar, 292 of them he works to provide for someone else, leaving him only 73 days out of the year that goes toward himself and his family...lol.
But you're still giving 80 cents of every dollar you earn to the state. It doesn't matter how much you have left over...it's still only twenty percent of what you earned for your efforts.Varegg wrote:
Will just add something to that ... if you have a tax at 80% like Jenspms dad you make so much money that whatever you have left is enough to buy a small African country!FEOS wrote:
Hail Marx...
That's essentially the state saying, "Twenty percent of your pay is enough for you. You don't need any more than that...but I do."
I just don't see how people can NOT take issue with that.
We have similar upper marginal tax rates in this country (once you take into account all taxes paid). Yet the current administration has the audacity to say that those income brackets "aren't being asked to pay anything" (he actually said that in a speech during this "debt crisis"). It's fucking astonishing, tbh. The top 1% of wage earners pay 24% of the income taxes collected. The top 20% pay 70% of them.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein
Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
― Albert Einstein
Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
Lovely democracy eh? It allows every jealous idiot to demand higher taxes on those making more than he does. Why try to be rich when you can just tax the rich down to the middle class?FEOS wrote:
But you're still giving 80 cents of every dollar you earn to the state. It doesn't matter how much you have left over...it's still only twenty percent of what you earned for your efforts.Varegg wrote:
Will just add something to that ... if you have a tax at 80% like Jenspms dad you make so much money that whatever you have left is enough to buy a small African country!FEOS wrote:
Hail Marx...
That's essentially the state saying, "Twenty percent of your pay is enough for you. You don't need any more than that...but I do."
I just don't see how people can NOT take issue with that.
We have similar upper marginal tax rates in this country (once you take into account all taxes paid). Yet the current administration has the audacity to say that those income brackets "aren't being asked to pay anything" (he actually said that in a speech during this "debt crisis"). It's fucking astonishing, tbh. The top 1% of wage earners pay 24% of the income taxes collected. The top 20% pay 70% of them.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat
When you resort to insults you obviously have sidetracked the debate with unrelated crap ...Jay wrote:
I don't bring up 'unrelated crap'.
I know what consumerism is and have not used it incorrectly, I used it as intended but maybe you didn't understand what I mean ... call it conspicious or what ever you like ...Jay wrote:
You were using the word consumerist incorrectly the entire time. What you were really referring to was 'conspicuous consumption'. You dislike people that overtly display their wealth, yes? The guy that drives a Hummer and knowingly gets 4 mpg bothers you greatly, yes? For a society to be too 'consumerist' as you were putting it, by definition means that a society is too free in your eyes. Consumerism is just a democratic representation of a market. People want things, other people create them. It's organic. There is no omnipresent being in the sky telling people what they should or shouldn't buy, nor should there be.
When you have a economy that only can grow if the populace consume more than they need you have trouble when consumers stop consuming, when people loose their work they consume less, when people consume less someone else loose their work etc etc etc ...
If people can afford it they can buy what ever they wan't, I'm not in any way going to say otherwise and have never stressed that point at all, that's your faulty asumption ... however the consumption in the US is build around consumption on credit, rather than saving up for "shiny objects" to impress the guy next door you buy stuff on credit and that leaves even worse off when the economy is doing worse ...
The guy that drives a Hummer without needing the vehicles off road capabilities is just a moroon, if he choose to be a moroon that's fine by me ...
Kinda agree but not quite, progressive taxation works ... maybe a cap is in order at perhaps max 50%Jay wrote:
Any line drawn is completely arbitrary and is based on the present economic standing of the opinion holder. Why do you think class warfare in politics works? It feeds on emotion. "That other asshole has more toys than I think he should be allowed to have, let's tax him more." Of course, if this unnamed jealous person was the one with more toys, the line would be drawn elsewhere. It is pure jealousy, which in turn leads to hatred and anger.
I don't want limit people and control their decisions at all ... where did you get that idea?Jay wrote:
Because you obviously wish to limit people and control their decisions for them, I brought up the 'unrelated' Marxist/Keynes as symbols of totalitarianism. Now, I threw out the word elitist too. Who but an elitist would deign to think he can make decisions for others? Marxist? Check. Conspicuous consumption was a term coined by the man himself and pushed along by Bertrand Russell.
It's quite the difference between what you say in this paragraph and a more social responcible taxation of the people or proper regulation of the financial markets that I'm trying to advocate and you still have yet to answer or comment ... I can also throw names and economic theories around to try to impress lesser minds but mind you Jay ... that crap doesn't work on me and it also makes you look daft ...
You haven't made any connections Jay, that's the problem ... you spew out insults when you can't answer a question properly and refer to marxism and other unrelated topics noone else have brought up ... get real!Jay wrote:
Everyone else seems to have understood the connections I was making, perhaps you should go back and read the primary sources instead of spitting out the same garbled message the ignorant greenies like to foist on the rest of us.
So start making some comments and posts without the childish twist and maybe we can have a proper debate ...
Wait behind the line ..............................................................
Yes ... but like you pointed out earlier this isn't just income tax we are talking about ... it sounds steep and I actually doubt his dad pay that much tax ...FEOS wrote:
But you're still giving 80 cents of every dollar you earn to the state. It doesn't matter how much you have left over...it's still only twenty percent of what you earned for your efforts.Varegg wrote:
Will just add something to that ... if you have a tax at 80% like Jenspms dad you make so much money that whatever you have left is enough to buy a small African country!FEOS wrote:
Hail Marx...
That's essentially the state saying, "Twenty percent of your pay is enough for you. You don't need any more than that...but I do."
I just don't see how people can NOT take issue with that.
We have similar upper marginal tax rates in this country (once you take into account all taxes paid). Yet the current administration has the audacity to say that those income brackets "aren't being asked to pay anything" (he actually said that in a speech during this "debt crisis"). It's fucking astonishing, tbh. The top 1% of wage earners pay 24% of the income taxes collected. The top 20% pay 70% of them.
Besides if you tax the "poor" the same as the rich you wouldn't have a moderate rich middle class and the poor people would be an incredibly large group that wouldn't be able to consume the commodities the rich produce ... this is somehow linked together and what I've been trying to explain to Jay in 700 billion ways the last pages ...
Wait behind the line ..............................................................