twocoach wrote: ↑Fri Dec 23, 2022 10:18 am
randylahey wrote: ↑Fri Dec 23, 2022 10:00 am
jfish26 wrote: ↑Fri Dec 23, 2022 9:32 am
One of the more depressing macro things is seeing just how EFFECTIVE fear-mongering is...migrant caravans
this, crime-infested cities
that, drag-show-grooming
the other thing.
It's the same playbook, over and over and over.
And why not? It works.
This is insane to hear the "terrified of covid" crowd talk about fear mongering being effective. Talk about the pot calling the kettle black
Its a wasteful spending issue not a fear issue, the American people are severely overtaxed. Have you seen any government spending bills? They are wasteful and dishonest. And our government continues to increase taxing. With increases to the irs budget they are spending more American dollars on the department so they can claim/pursue even MORE American tax dollars and it is absolutely disgusting
You should do some research on all of these concerns you have. The IRS is increasing their budget so that they can work through the huge backlog of tax returns they have. This is will not only allow them to properly collect the tax money that is OWED BY American taxpayers but also allow them to get returns that are OWED TO American taxpayers. Increasing the IRS budget does nothing to increase the amount or percentage of taxes paid by Americans.
I think there are reasonable discussions to be had on government spending, generally, and how it is considered/approved, specifically.
I think there are ALSO reasonable discussions to be had on tax policy, generally, and what we incentivize (or not), specifically.
But the fact is that the system presently IS set up to put a much higher effective tax burden on income earners, as opposed to wealth accumulators. There absolutely ARE good reasons not to "punish" the accumulation of wealth. But the net-net of encouraging it, as we do, is that the gap in tax revenue arising out of pro-wealth-accumulation policy...falls on income earners.