My goodness. You're so out of touch with people below your income class. Spoken like a true white male living in the suburbs somewhere.
You're also out of touch with WHO the ones rushing to reopen were in many cases.
My goodness. You're so out of touch with people below your income class. Spoken like a true white male living in the suburbs somewhere.
I know there's a lot of folks who will draw a direct line (f they distinguish at all) between social programs and socialism, but the whole "pull yourself up by your bootstraps", personal-responsibility thing would be much more realistic were our entire economic and social scheme not oriented toward accumulation of wealth at the highest levels. I'm talking levels well-beyond even three vacation home, private-jet-chartering lifestyles.IllinoisJayhawk wrote: ↑Tue Jun 16, 2020 11:00 amMy goodness. You're so out of touch with people below your income class. Spoken like a true white male living in the suburbs somewhere.
You're also out of touch with WHO the ones rushing to reopen were in many cases.
I agree that my ability to maintain self discipline and to be financially responsible towards my larger goals even as the power company and phone company were shutting off service to my apartment was in the minority for others working at that pay scale at that point in my life.IllinoisJayhawk wrote: ↑Tue Jun 16, 2020 11:00 amMy goodness. You're so out of touch with people below your income class. Spoken like a true white male living in the suburbs somewhere.
You're also out of touch with WHO the ones rushing to reopen were in many cases.
Goo goo g'joobWalrus wrote: ↑Tue Jun 16, 2020 11:24 am A lot of people define socialism in different ways, or in some cases, incorrectly. Some define it as the "redistribution of any tax dollars", while others define as spending tax dollars on certain things they don't agree with. If one defines it the former, I am very much pro redistribution of tax money for certain things (police, fire fighters, health care, libraries, etc.). I am also for an unemployment safety net, however, our current system allows so many lazy people to take advantage of it.
The stats seem to not support the claim of "so many lazy people". That's largely a made up thing to juatify not supporting government funded programs.Walrus wrote: ↑Tue Jun 16, 2020 11:24 am A lot of people define socialism in different ways, or in some cases, incorrectly. Some define it as the "redistribution of any tax dollars", while others define as spending tax dollars on certain things they don't agree with. If one defines it the former, I am very much pro redistribution of tax money for certain things (police, fire fighters, health care, libraries, etc.). I am also for an unemployment safety net, however, our current system allows so many lazy people to take advantage of it.
I think this is an important point that is missed by almost everyone during these types of discussions.jfish26 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 16, 2020 11:16 amI know there's a lot of folks who will draw a direct line (f they distinguish at all) between social programs and socialism, but the whole "pull yourself up by your bootstraps", personal-responsibility thing would be much more realistic were our entire economic and social scheme not oriented toward accumulation of wealth at the highest levels. I'm talking levels well-beyond even three vacation home, private-jet-chartering lifestyles.IllinoisJayhawk wrote: ↑Tue Jun 16, 2020 11:00 amMy goodness. You're so out of touch with people below your income class. Spoken like a true white male living in the suburbs somewhere.
You're also out of touch with WHO the ones rushing to reopen were in many cases.
Agreed. There are some truly unfathomable levels of wealth out there in this nation. 1% of their net worth could fund a mind biggling array of wonderful social programs to bring those at the bottom of the ladder up a few rungs.PhDhawk wrote: ↑Tue Jun 16, 2020 11:31 amI think this is an important point that is missed by almost everyone during these types of discussions.jfish26 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 16, 2020 11:16 amI know there's a lot of folks who will draw a direct line (f they distinguish at all) between social programs and socialism, but the whole "pull yourself up by your bootstraps", personal-responsibility thing would be much more realistic were our entire economic and social scheme not oriented toward accumulation of wealth at the highest levels. I'm talking levels well-beyond even three vacation home, private-jet-chartering lifestyles.IllinoisJayhawk wrote: ↑Tue Jun 16, 2020 11:00 am
My goodness. You're so out of touch with people below your income class. Spoken like a true white male living in the suburbs somewhere.
You're also out of touch with WHO the ones rushing to reopen were in many cases.
It's all good. Just chatting.
lol
Yes. I think part of it is psychological - people with net worths of, like, $10-50mm sort of enjoy perceiving themselves as being among the super-wealthy.PhDhawk wrote: ↑Tue Jun 16, 2020 11:31 amI think this is an important point that is missed by almost everyone during these types of discussions.jfish26 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 16, 2020 11:16 amI know there's a lot of folks who will draw a direct line (f they distinguish at all) between social programs and socialism, but the whole "pull yourself up by your bootstraps", personal-responsibility thing would be much more realistic were our entire economic and social scheme not oriented toward accumulation of wealth at the highest levels. I'm talking levels well-beyond even three vacation home, private-jet-chartering lifestyles.IllinoisJayhawk wrote: ↑Tue Jun 16, 2020 11:00 am
My goodness. You're so out of touch with people below your income class. Spoken like a true white male living in the suburbs somewhere.
You're also out of touch with WHO the ones rushing to reopen were in many cases.
Agree 100%.jfish26 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 16, 2020 11:45 amYes. I think part of it is psychological - people with net worths of, like, $10-50mm sort of enjoy perceiving themselves as being among the super-wealthy.PhDhawk wrote: ↑Tue Jun 16, 2020 11:31 amI think this is an important point that is missed by almost everyone during these types of discussions.jfish26 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 16, 2020 11:16 am
I know there's a lot of folks who will draw a direct line (f they distinguish at all) between social programs and socialism, but the whole "pull yourself up by your bootstraps", personal-responsibility thing would be much more realistic were our entire economic and social scheme not oriented toward accumulation of wealth at the highest levels. I'm talking levels well-beyond even three vacation home, private-jet-chartering lifestyles.
They're not, but they'll argue against a wealth tax as if they are.
A wealth tax of 1% of net worth over $50mm would not change anyone's lifestyle one little bit. Nor would it disincentivize anyone from trying to make that kind of money to begin with.
Right. And in many ways we understood it better back in the day.jfish26 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 16, 2020 11:45 amYes. I think part of it is psychological - people with net worths of, like, $10-50mm sort of enjoy perceiving themselves as being among the super-wealthy.PhDhawk wrote: ↑Tue Jun 16, 2020 11:31 amI think this is an important point that is missed by almost everyone during these types of discussions.jfish26 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 16, 2020 11:16 am
I know there's a lot of folks who will draw a direct line (f they distinguish at all) between social programs and socialism, but the whole "pull yourself up by your bootstraps", personal-responsibility thing would be much more realistic were our entire economic and social scheme not oriented toward accumulation of wealth at the highest levels. I'm talking levels well-beyond even three vacation home, private-jet-chartering lifestyles.
They're not, but they'll argue against a wealth tax as if they are.
A wealth tax of 1% of net worth over $50mm would not change anyone's lifestyle one little bit. Nor would it disincentivize anyone from trying to make that kind of money to begin with.
Yep - it's not socialism (in my book, anyway) to think the wealth distribution is entirely fucked up, and that you could help a lot of the issues faced by the much of the left side of the curve, by asking more (but yet, an immaterial amount) from the farthest right side of it.PhDhawk wrote: ↑Tue Jun 16, 2020 12:11 pmRight. And in many ways we understood it better back in the day.jfish26 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 16, 2020 11:45 amYes. I think part of it is psychological - people with net worths of, like, $10-50mm sort of enjoy perceiving themselves as being among the super-wealthy.
They're not, but they'll argue against a wealth tax as if they are.
A wealth tax of 1% of net worth over $50mm would not change anyone's lifestyle one little bit. Nor would it disincentivize anyone from trying to make that kind of money to begin with.
In 1916, there were 14 tax brackets, and more importantly, the highest bracket started at $2 million dollars, which in today's money is $47 million.
Today, with 7 tax brackets, the highest bracket starts around $500,000 this means that someone making say $650,000 is taxed at the same percentage as someone making $60,000,000. I'm not advocating bringing back 70% income taxes or anything. But how does it make sense that the guy making $540,000 can pay 13% points higher taxes than a guy making $90,000, or 25% points higher than a guy making $45,000, but the guy making 10X or 20X or 30X more than $540,000 has no additional burden? If we're going to have a progressive tax, why cap it out at a salary that is upper-middle class and not something that's truly wealthy.
Oh, and we gotta find a way to tax someone like Warren Buffet more than just his $100,000 annual salary. I don't want crazy high taxes on someone who has their money in investments but give me a fucking break, if a guy is worth $75 billion dollars his income tax burden ought to be more than $24,000.
I'm not a socialist, and I'm not someone who likes redistribution of wealth, and as you said I don't want to de-incentivise anyone, but geezus, we have some fucked up things when it comes to who pays what share of our collective tax burden.
POTD.PhDhawk wrote: ↑Tue Jun 16, 2020 12:11 pm In 1916, there were 14 tax brackets, and more importantly, the highest bracket started at $2 million dollars, which in today's money is $47 million.
Today, with 7 tax brackets, the highest bracket starts around $500,000 this means that someone making say $650,000 is taxed at the same percentage as someone making $60,000,000. I'm not advocating bringing back 70% income taxes or anything. But how does it make sense that the guy making $540,000 can pay 13% points higher taxes than a guy making $90,000, or 25% points higher than a guy making $45,000, but the guy making 10X or 20X or 30X more than $540,000 has no additional burden? If we're going to have a progressive tax, why cap it out at a salary that is upper-middle class and not something that's truly wealthy.
Oh, and we gotta find a way to tax someone like Warren Buffet more than just his $100,000 annual salary. I don't want crazy high taxes on someone who has their money in investments but give me a fucking break, if a guy is worth $75 billion dollars his income tax burden ought to be more than $24,000.
I'm not a socialist, and I'm not someone who likes redistribution of wealth, and as you said I don't want to de-incentivise anyone, but geezus, we have some fucked up things when it comes to who pays what share of our collective tax burden.
But when someone like Elizabeth Warren or Bernie Sanders says it, it's "socialism".IllinoisJayhawk wrote: ↑Tue Jun 16, 2020 12:18 pmPOTD.PhDhawk wrote: ↑Tue Jun 16, 2020 12:11 pm In 1916, there were 14 tax brackets, and more importantly, the highest bracket started at $2 million dollars, which in today's money is $47 million.
Today, with 7 tax brackets, the highest bracket starts around $500,000 this means that someone making say $650,000 is taxed at the same percentage as someone making $60,000,000. I'm not advocating bringing back 70% income taxes or anything. But how does it make sense that the guy making $540,000 can pay 13% points higher taxes than a guy making $90,000, or 25% points higher than a guy making $45,000, but the guy making 10X or 20X or 30X more than $540,000 has no additional burden? If we're going to have a progressive tax, why cap it out at a salary that is upper-middle class and not something that's truly wealthy.
Oh, and we gotta find a way to tax someone like Warren Buffet more than just his $100,000 annual salary. I don't want crazy high taxes on someone who has their money in investments but give me a fucking break, if a guy is worth $75 billion dollars his income tax burden ought to be more than $24,000.
I'm not a socialist, and I'm not someone who likes redistribution of wealth, and as you said I don't want to de-incentivise anyone, but geezus, we have some fucked up things when it comes to who pays what share of our collective tax burden.
100% agree.
Actually you are looking at the wrong end of the regressive tax burden. The biggest culprit is the Social Security employee contribution. With a cap at around $133k someone making $266k is paying 3% of his/her income whereas someone making $26k pays 6%. For the latter that $1500+ is worth a lot more than the $8k for the former.PhDhawk wrote: ↑Tue Jun 16, 2020 12:11 pm Oh, and we gotta find a way to tax someone like Warren Buffet more than just his $100,000 annual salary. I don't want crazy high taxes on someone who has their money in investments but give me a fucking break, if a guy is worth $75 billion dollars his income tax burden ought to be more than $24,000.
I'm not a socialist, and I'm not someone who likes redistribution of wealth, and as you said I don't want to de-incentivise anyone, but geezus, we have some fucked up things when it comes to who pays what share of our collective tax burden.