traptunderice wrote:
cry of the banshee wrote:
traptunderice wrote:
cry of the banshee wrote:
FrigidSymphony wrote:
I'm a student, actively searching for a part-time job so I can stop relying on my parents to fund my boozing and love of overpriced balsamic vinegar. But my personal life has no bearing on the issue, nor on the obvious fact that the rich in America are undertaxed. The whole reactionary argument of BUT WAIT 'TILL THEY COME FOR YOUR MONEY is ignoring the actual facts, and in the US, everything is tainted by a misunderstanding of what socialism and communism actually are- i.e, nowhere near having any similarities or causal relationships at all.
Oh it has a bearing, very much so.
It's easy to spend other peoples money, is the whole point.
Which is why I suspect so many jobless "students" that spend all their time partying think so highly of welfare; without it, they'd have to actually WORK while going to school. Unless they have a rich mommy and daddy, of course.
Basic self interest.
Socaialism and obviously communism, are theft. Taking from one group to give it to another without consent is basically theft.
The rich in america are undertaxed?
How so?
They pay 70% of the tax while being a mere 10% of the populace.
Sounds like they are already paying their fair share.
You see, most of them (or their ancestors) actually worked very hard to get where they are, as opposed to waiting for someone to give them a handout or sitting around wasting their time with booze, broads and drugs.
Honestly, V, what is your excuse for righting me off? I now work two jobs, have had a job since I was able to and still really am into taxation. I must be brainwashed.
Equal taxation only makes sense when there is equal wealth. The top 10% control 75% of the wealth. Why does it not make sense that they would pay 70% of the tax, they have 70% of the money.The idea that my daddy earned all this money so I should get to keep it is the exact opposite of the American mantra of hard work is how you earn things. It's more comparable to hereditary nobility of the old world than anything I learned growing up. It only perpetuates inequality that some will have better opportunities than other and that will have a bearing on what that person is able to accomplish. I don't see how that is a desirable system.
As for communism being theft, if it develops out of the people insofar as it is a popular movement how can a self-governing body steal from itself to help itself?
Nonsense.
Income is private property.
The accumulation of private property can only be done to the extent that it doesn't harm others. Having so much resources when others have none, most importantly are going hungry or sick not just being broke, is letting your accumulation take resources that others need access to. That is unjust a la Locke, the Founding Fathers' home boy.
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It's more comparable to hereditary nobility of the old world
is nonsense as well.
People work hard for their fortune, this isn't the 19th century, and this isn't England.
Private property is what you put your labor into and you have earned. Not what others have earned and you simply inherited. Via Locke, the man who, so influentially, was read by and revered by the Founding Fathers.
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The idea that my daddy earned all this money so I should get to keep it is the exact opposite of the American mantra of hard work is how you earn things
is, sorry, completely wrong;
the American mantra, whatever that is, notwithstanding, redistrubition of wealth goes against EVERYTHING the founding fathers had in mind when they laid it all out. Private property rights are one of the pillars this country was founded on.
This is NOT a socialist country; never was, and it never will be.
America was founded on what you earned you keep, not that you get what others have earned because of your name or blood. Private property rights are fundamental but what is private, the individual or the individual and all the familial linkage he can come up with? As I stated earlier, to the Founding Fathers, property was what the resources that the individual "mixed with his labor" to prevent the unlawful seizure of one's property by the govt. However, I don't see how inheriting wealth is founded on the act of laboring and therefore I don't see it as unlawful seizure since that individual never had a right to it insofar as they never earned it.
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And you just stated that the rich, or top ten percent ARE paying their share,
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Equal taxation only makes sense when there is equal wealth. The top 10% control 75% of the wealth. Why does it not make sense that they would pay 70% of the tax, they have 70% of the money
Nobody is saying they should pay less than their share, are they?
So what's your point?
I don't understand tax terminology well enough but the way I understand the top is only paying 35%, throw in loopholes, all of those tax cuts which they receive on that chart I had on the page prior to this and those fuckers are not paying 75%.
Quoting Locke doesn't make your argument any more valid, or sound any smarter.
The rich generate wealth, they do not take away the access to resources, on the contrary, they supply jobs. Wealth is not a zero sum concept.
Explain to me how wealth redistribution is in any way shape or form in line with what the founders of this nation had in mind.
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Private property is what you put your labor into and you have earned. Not what others have earned and you simply inherited
If it was aquired legally it most certainly is private property, regardless of what you may think.
It doesn't matter whether it is inherited, made by playing the stock market, winning the lottery or by any other means.
Life is not fair, grow up.
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America was founded on what you earned you keep, not that you get what others have earned because of your name or blood.
Where in the constitution does it qualify one way of aquiring wealth over another? Where is this distinction listed?
Private property is what you have aquired through legal means, regardless of the amount of "labor" that was put into it.
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As I stated earlier, to the Founding Fathers, property was what the resources that the individual "mixed with his labor" to prevent the unlawful seizure of one's property by the govt.
No, private property is private property.
And you just made my argument for me (bold red), thanks.