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  4. Taxes, time to pay your fair share

Taxes, time to pay your fair share

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved The Parking Lot
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  • DaveHD Offline
    DaveHD Offline
    DaveH
    wrote on last edited by
    #74

    thrash;191735 wrote:
    To be fair, if person A spends 10x as person B, irrespective of taxes, you're already seeing wealth re-distribution.

    I guess I should have been clearer and said government wealth distribution ie: socialism.

    thrash;191735 wrote:
    Given all of this, one can make the argument that the wealthy man benefits from society tremendously more than the average man.

    This is where we differ, in general I would say the wealthy man contributes to, rather than benefits from society much more than the "average" man. How many moderate/poor people do you see starting businesses and creating jobs and products, how many moderate/poor people have come up with new inventions and improved ways of doing things? If a moderate/poor person did/does these things, then he shortly would no longer be in the moderate/poor category.

    thrash;191735 wrote:
    <snip> you can draw a dotted line to the conclusion "let's make wealthy people bear more of the burden of keeping a society running, since they benefit from a functioning society more than the average man does".

    I think that suggesting that taxes keep our society running is, well funny. 🙂 In general the ballooned government and taxes are what is holding our society down from being the best it could be.

    DaveH
    '94 Supra- 7.77 @ 176mph

    legacy image

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    • MisterCMKM Offline
      MisterCMKM Offline
      MisterCMK
      wrote on last edited by
      #75

      I make 3 peanuts a day working for NDSU. Fuckers took 1 of my peanuts. 😞

      FASTER THAN DUBBSY

      > thrash;315544 wrote:
      > I noticed that the new 5.0 valve covers say "Ford Motorsport" or something on them. Instead, the valvecovers should be a big bald eagle, holding a rifle in one talon, an american flag in the other, eating apple pie, and shitting on the outline of europe.
      >
      > Ford is back :)

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      • ? This user is from outside of this forum
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        Guest
        wrote on last edited by
        #76

        DaveH;191778 wrote:
        This is where we differ, in general I would say the wealthy man contributes to, rather than benefits from society much more than the "average" man.

        I think it works both ways honestly. It is probably fairly balanced on the contributes/benefits for the wealthiest of Americans and their businesses.

        How many moderate/poor people do you see starting businesses and creating jobs and products, how many moderate/poor people have come up with new inventions and improved ways of doing things?
        **
        How many have the capital needed to start a new business? If they do, how likely are they to be a large enough company to get tax incentives from cities/counties/states? How many can afford to put their guaranteed income from their present job on the line to start a new business venture that could end up costing them all of their possessions (house, car, etc....)? **

        If a moderate/poor person did/does these things, then he shortly would no longer be in the moderate/poor category.

        Agreed, but as stated above, the risk is great, more so than if you are upper-middle class to wealthy

        All things said, in theory I agree with a lot of what Dave and thrash have stated.

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          Guest
          wrote on last edited by
          #77

          MisterCMK;191781 wrote:
          I make 3 peanuts a day working for NDSU. Fuckers took 1 of my peanuts. 😞

          But, if you made 30000 peanuts a day, would it bother you as much if they took 10000 of them?

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          • StangerBanger96S Offline
            StangerBanger96S Offline
            StangerBanger96
            wrote on last edited by
            #78

            tjamz;191784 wrote:
            But, if you made 30000 peanuts a day, would it bother you as much if they took 10000 of them?

            Yes, I worked for those peanuts and they feel they have the right to just take them from me?

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              Guest
              wrote on last edited by
              #79

              At present, yes they do. Elected officials made those tax laws, therefore they have the right. You have the right to try to elect people who will attempt to change said laws, but until the laws have changed, they have the right.

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              • StangerBanger96S Offline
                StangerBanger96S Offline
                StangerBanger96
                wrote on last edited by
                #80

                tjamz;191786 wrote:
                At present, yes they do. Elected officials made those tax laws, therefore they have the right. You have the right to try to elect people who will attempt to change said laws, but until the laws have changed, they have the right.

                You get what I was saying though...Since you had to bring that up though your dream of "well vote them out of office then if you don't like their policies" doesn't work. Too many voters don't give a shit or know a damn thing and just blindly vote, ESPECIALLY when it comes to Congressional elections. Once you're voted into office (especially Senators) you have to screw up REALLY REALLY REALLY REALLY REALLY bad to get voted out.

                The Government's job isn't to redistribute wealth, make people prosperous, nor to make a profit. Taxes are insane because Congress is making taxpayers fund so much pork on every bill being passed and continues funding idiotic programs that we are paying out the nose for shit nobody cares about. We're FUBAR'd because all of Congress is part of the Old Boys club, democrats and rebpulicans are sucking each other off and wiping each others asses with $100 bills while the citizens of the country fund it.

                One of my favorite government funded studies was several hundred thousand dollars, or was it millions, were given to study whether or not dogs dream. WHAT THE FUCK? They waste our tax money to see whether or not dogs dream??!?! Give me a break...

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                • T Offline
                  T Offline
                  thrash
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #81

                  tjamz;191786 wrote:
                  At present, yes they do. Elected officials made those tax laws, therefore they have the right. You have the right to try to elect people who will attempt to change said laws, but until the laws have changed, they have the right.

                  What the people voted for is not the end-all be-all of government. We do not have direct democracy for a reason. 51% of the people can always agree to ride on the coattails of 49% of the people. Allegedly our constitution and several other mechansism exist to keep us from being a pure democracy (which is another name for mob rule).

                  Elected officials do not have the right to make any old law they plese. Marbury vs. Madison created the concept of judicial review, whereby the supreme court gets a say in wether the laws created by the electorate are constitutional or not, and the original separation of powers leaves it to the executive branch to actually do something about the laws created by the electorate.

                  In this case, all 3 branches are complicit with our odious taxation laws.

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                    Guest
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #82

                    StangerBanger96;191787 wrote:
                    You get what I was saying though...Since you had to bring that up though your dream of "well vote them out of office then if you don't like their policies" doesn't work. Too many voters don't give a shit or know a damn thing and just blindly vote, ESPECIALLY when it comes to Congressional elections. Once you're voted into office (especially Senators) you have to screw up REALLY REALLY REALLY REALLY REALLY bad to get voted out.

                    The Government's job isn't to redistribute wealth, make people prosperous, nor to make a profit. Taxes are insane because Congress is making taxpayers fund so much pork on every bill being passed and continues funding idiotic programs that we are paying out the nose for shit nobody cares about. We're FUBAR'd because all of Congress is part of the Old Boys club, democrats and rebpulicans are sucking each other off and wiping each others asses with $100 bills while the citizens of the country fund it.

                    One of my favorite government funded studies was several hundred thousand dollars, or was it millions, were given to study whether or not dogs dream. WHAT THE FUCK? They waste our tax money to see whether or not dogs dream??!?! Give me a break...

                    I agree with you Dustin as well. I know it is VERY difficult to remove someone from office via elections. Term limits, line item vetoes, etc... would be a good step in the right direction to cut the pork from politics and to break the good ol' boy club up a bit. BUT it needs to happen nationwide. While I'm on this subject, I may as well throw out the idea of splitting the electoral vote in states...say if one candidate gets 66% of the vote and another gets 33% and the state has 3 electoral votes....why can't 2 of them vote for the 66% candidate and 1 for the 33% candidate? Or better yet, do away with the electoral college entirely.

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                    • StangerBanger96S Offline
                      StangerBanger96S Offline
                      StangerBanger96
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #83

                      There seems to be increasingly serious talks about states splitting up their Electoral Votes. I know some states are already doing that IIRC. I say we get rid of the Electoral College completely as well...

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                      • T Offline
                        T Offline
                        thrash
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #84

                        Dave, I don't disagree that the contribution of a wealthy man to society is vastly greater than that of an average man. That doesn't change the fact that the wealthy man benefits more from society than the average man does.

                        Tremendous wealth is not possible without society. Society is possible without tremendous wealth. Society is a pre-requisite for tremendous wealth.

                        It's a bit paradoxical -- without all of those other people, no individual can become wealthy. But because of the differentiated structure of society (that affords some great wealth.. and releives many of the backbreaking toil of finding their days meal each and every day), the poorest man in American society has a higher standard of living than the worlds richest man of only 100 years ago (nobody 100 years ago had AC, television, cars. today, nearly everyone in the US has these things, and they live longer and healthier lives to boot)

                        So it is of course true that there is a symbiotic relationship between all levels of wealth in a society. But that does't change the fact that, without the society underpinning them, the wealthy cannot ever become wealthy in the first place.

                        The law, in its majestic equality, forbids the rich as well as the poor to sleep under bridges, to beg in the streets, and to steal bread.

                        • Anatole France, 1894
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                        • T Offline
                          T Offline
                          thrash
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #85

                          Getting rid of the electoral college means that the east and west coast will completely dominate national politics indefinitely and to the complete exclusion of any "red" state.

                          Some people think that's a good thing. The founders of the nation designed the EC precisely to avoid such stupidity.

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                            Guest
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #86

                            thrash;191793 wrote:
                            Getting rid of the electoral college means that the east and west coast will completely dominate national politics indefinitely and to the complete exclusion of any "red" state.

                            Some people think that's a good thing. The founders of the nation designed the EC precisely to avoid such stupidity.

                            The way the electoral college is now it is set up to grant larger numbers of votes for more populated states (read East/West coast) since it is based on the number of members of the Senate & House. In my opinion, more Democrats would vote in ND and more Republicans in MN if there were no electoral college (using those two states as an example) since their votes would actually count.

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                            • GarageAlchemistG Offline
                              GarageAlchemistG Offline
                              GarageAlchemist
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #87

                              with so much money being paid out in taxes, you'd think we'd get free healthcare out of the deal

                              97 GTi, 03 KJ

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                                Guest
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #88

                                GarageAlchemist;191800 wrote:
                                with so much money being paid out in taxes, you'd think we'd get free healthcare out of the deal

                                And this thread just spun wildly out of control.....

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                                • T Offline
                                  T Offline
                                  thrash
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #89

                                  tjamz;191799 wrote:
                                  The way the electoral college is now it is set up to grant larger numbers of votes for more populated states (read East/West coast) since it is based on the number of members of the Senate & House. In my opinion, more Democrats would vote in ND and more Republicans in MN if there were no electoral college (using those two states as an example) since their votes would actually count.

                                  The current algorithm blends total population and statehood. The ratio of EC votes to humans is higher in lower populated states like ND, since you get one selector per senator and per representative. This effectively gives residents of ND more "say" per warm body than residents of california, even though california aggregately has much more say in things.

                                  Under today's system, the ratio of electoral power between CA and ND is 55:3. Under a purely representational system, it would be 53:1

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                                    Guest
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #90

                                    Ok...can we at least agree to split the electoral college if (in ND) 2/3 vote Repub and 1/3 vote dem (needing >33% of the vote to even get one vote in ND)

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                                    • GarageAlchemistG Offline
                                      GarageAlchemistG Offline
                                      GarageAlchemist
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #91

                                      tjamz;191801 wrote:
                                      And this thread just spun wildly out of control.....

                                      why? government provided health care is a big part of many countries tax policy

                                      97 GTi, 03 KJ

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                                      • integra_gsr98I Offline
                                        integra_gsr98I Offline
                                        integra_gsr98
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #92

                                        The government should NOT provide health care to its citizens.

                                        /thread

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                                        • StangerBanger96S Offline
                                          StangerBanger96S Offline
                                          StangerBanger96
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #93

                                          GarageAlchemist;191837 wrote:
                                          why? government provided health care is a big part of many countries tax policy

                                          It's not the governments responsibility to provide universal healthcare. We wouldn't be able to afford it either unless you wanted astronomically high tax rates. It would hurt the nation more than it would help it.

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