Three States Propose Massive Tax Cuts For Millionaires, Tax Hikes for Middle Class

Re: Three States Propose Massive Tax Cuts For Millionaires, Tax Hikes for Middle Clas

That's not really my point. My point is the defense used by many that estate taxes are double taxation aren't valid. The money was tax when it was received by the person who earned it but this money is now a separate windfall for someone who did not and, in effect, has not been taxed at all.



That wasn't a good analogy at all. Peyton Manning didn't get into the NFL because his dad was in it. He got in because he earned his way in.


I see nothing wrong with taxes or immoral about the tax code in and of itself. It costs to live here and have this be a first world nation just like it costs everywhere else. The more you make the more you are clearly benefitting from being here and enjoying the advantages of this country. The only morality problem I have is how it's used to redistribute wealth from the poor and working classes to the wealthy, as proposed by Republicans all over the country and in DC.
I do agree that those in that 200k range work for their money but they aren't subject to the estate tax in the first place. It starts at $5m and much of that money isn't earned through working but through investments and in the case of more and more CEOs, through bonuses and stock options, all while cutting pay and jobs for working class people.




I also took that same time for introspection and realized I had been sucked in by Reagan and his charm while not seeing how his policies were tearing apart lower economic classes.
Everyone has political/social biases. I can talk and debate with anyone respectfully (even taming my naturally sarcastic, condescending nature) when I feel the other person is debating honestly. You and Lamarr do that but some of these other cats:smh:.

Peace. Thanks for responding. You said a lot and I appreciate it. I think you got some of my points confused or maybe ignored them mistakenly. The first part about the double taxation is that the money is the person who earned its money and they should be able to do with it as they choose. The government officials have no legitimate claim to it. If you transfer money into your children's account while you're alive, the government doesn't say it's going to take more of it because the kids didn't "earn it." While you're alive, you set the terms of your estate and who you wish to have your assets. That you've chosen for them to get it after you've passed doesn't legitimize dudes with a government job getting their hands on it.

The part about the Mannings wasn't about who earned it, it was a response to your claim that children shouldn't receive all of their parents estate even if the parent chooses simply because "they won the genetic lottery." If winning the "genetic lottery" is a problem to be addressed, then I think my example clearly shows just another example of the unfairness of the "genetic lottery" and what the federal government could do if people really viewed genetic inheritance as a legitimate issue to be undertaken by government. The fact you responded with your view that the Mannings "earned" their way into the NFL, seems to enforce the conclusion I had about your original statement, that the money shouldn't go to someone who hasn't earned it. So now I ask, do you feel like money should go to someone who's earned it or not? Once that person has earned it, where do government officials derive the right to deny the citizens their right to choose who they give the money to or how much? Is it more moral for government officials to lay claim to its citizens inheritance?

You say that "it costs to live here...". It's a gross understatement to say the federal government takes in far more than enough for this country to be "livable". They take in far more than enough to enforce laws that protect our life and property and prosecute against fraud. So we all, including the wealthy, pay enough for whatever material gain we earn. The rest goes to things you may or may not like. For example, the millions being spent each day to fight in Libya, our third current middle east war. Or money to subsidize oil companies. None of those activities are legitimate and I strongly oppose them. But neither is the manipulation of taxes and each group trying to fix it so the money is taken from this group of people to fund activities for another group of people. It's simply theft. Legal theft, but theft all the same. Corruption breeds corruption; there is no other way.

I view the tax code as immoral because it has been made to where everyone is picking everybody else's pockets through tax breaks, reductions, credits, so and so forth. We agree that most of these actually end up going to the wealthiest people. Why would anyone expect anything different? They're the ones that can afford to get the tax lawyers and lobbyists to put in the items that will benefit them; the average person will never be able to do that. But I have no problem with someone being wealthy. Not all people with estates over a million dollars to $5 mil or whatever can afford that. Those people in earning $200k save in order to have million dollar estates and pass it on to their children. Their not necessarily CEOS and they're certainly not all evil people with no concern for the "working class". Those simply characterizations really dampen the illectual rigor necessary for such an important debate. I have a major problem with people not all having to play by the same rules; whether they are wealthy or not. Obviously through government involvement, the wealthy are increasingly not having to play by the same rules as the rest of us (Wall Street bailout, GM bailout, healthcare waivers, endless subsidies, tax breaks for particular behavior, etc.).

Taxing in this way is not moral because it gives another person crippling control over another person's life and property. My belief is that each person is entitled to their life and property and they should be able to exercise their maximum freedom as long as they do not directly agress against another person's life or property. The US Constitution spells out legitimate government functions (and them some); all this other stuff the government in our country does is not legit if you respect the principles I just named and they certainly aren't necessary for this to be a first world country. Instead they establish the grounds for the trampling of our civil liberties, dependency on government instead of self-reliance and the means to be self-reliant, and widening of the classes. The wealthy who have the means to communicate directly and then influence the political class and those who do not have these means. The fact is the true upper-class and the political class are starting to become indistinguishable. The other "classes" will never be able to have that type of influence and as long as the scope and influence of the central government continues to expand they will even less so. All the while they'll continue, as we see today, to call for more government intervention (not realizing that the government is being handled by the wealthiest and most powerful among us).

I know I wrote a book and strayed off topic a bit but I believe it all comes back to the principles and that's what people need to realize. We may never agree on a lot of the stuff I've said. But I can guarantee, as long as the majority of this country's citizens don't respect the principles of property and individual liberty vs government control of our lives, it'll get better for "the rich" and worse for rest of us.

Oh, and we both think Reagan was wack. Good stuff. Peace cat.
 
Re: Three States Propose Massive Tax Cuts For Millionaires, Tax Hikes for Middle Clas

I also took that same time for introspection and realized I had been sucked in by Reagan and his charm while not seeing how his policies were tearing apart lower economic classes.
:smh:.

Not a Reagan fan like I said to you above, but maybe for different reasons. Just asking, what did Reagan do that tore apart lower economic classes?
 
Re: Three States Propose Massive Tax Cuts For Millionaires, Tax Hikes for Middle Clas

Not a Reagan fan like I said to you above, but maybe for different reasons. Just asking, what did Reagan do that tore apart lower economic classes?

He was the prime architect of supply side economics, a system who's sole purpose is redistribution of wealth from the lower economic classes to the top. That means cutting education at all levels (pre K through college) but keeping huge business subsidies even for multibillion dollar industries like energy.
Telling people that they can "make it" and then making the ladder up harder to navigate is as immoral as anything we've spoken about.
 
Re: Three States Propose Massive Tax Cuts For Millionaires, Tax Hikes for Middle Clas

You know this was a lot to digest, right?:D
I think we have philosophical differences that won't be bridged but there were a couple points I wanted to pick out.

Peace. Thanks for responding. You said a lot and I appreciate it. I think you got some of my points confused or maybe ignored them mistakenly. The first part about the double taxation is that the money is the person who earned its money and they should be able to do with it as they choose. The government officials have no legitimate claim to it. If you transfer money into your children's account while you're alive, the government doesn't say it's going to take more of it because the kids didn't "earn it." While you're alive, you set the terms of your estate and who you wish to have your assets. That you've chosen for them to get it after you've passed doesn't legitimize dudes with a government job getting their hands on it.

You can still leave whatever you want to your offspring but they have to be taxed on it.

The part about the Mannings wasn't about who earned it, it was a response to your claim that children shouldn't receive all of their parents estate even if the parent chooses simply because "they won the genetic lottery." If winning the "genetic lottery" is a problem to be addressed, then I think my example clearly shows just another example of the unfairness of the "genetic lottery" and what the federal government could do if people really viewed genetic inheritance as a legitimate issue to be undertaken by government. The fact you responded with your view that the Mannings "earned" their way into the NFL, seems to enforce the conclusion I had about your original statement, that the money shouldn't go to someone who hasn't earned it. So now I ask, do you feel like money should go to someone who's earned it or not? Once that person has earned it, where do government officials derive the right to deny the citizens their right to choose who they give the money to or how much? Is it more moral for government officials to lay claim to its citizens inheritance? [/QUOTE]

I still say your analogy was horrible even after you explained it further. The Mannings didn't inherit NFL careers but if they didn't do anything and Archie died and left them a lot of money, they have to be taxed on it.
The government derives that right from the Constitution through taxation.

You say that "it costs to live here...". It's a gross understatement to say the federal government takes in far more than enough for this country to be "livable". They take in far more than enough to enforce laws that protect our life and property and prosecute against fraud. So we all, including the wealthy, pay enough for whatever material gain we earn. The rest goes to things you may or may not like. For example, the millions being spent each day to fight in Libya, our third current middle east war. Or money to subsidize oil companies. None of those activities are legitimate and I strongly oppose them. But neither is the manipulation of taxes and each group trying to fix it so the money is taken from this group of people to fund activities for another group of people. It's simply theft. Legal theft, but theft all the same. Corruption breeds corruption; there is no other way.

I don't necessarily disagree with most of this but taxation is completely legitimate and has always been a form of wealth redistribution, even in dictatorships.

I view the tax code as immoral because it has been made to where everyone is picking everybody else's pockets through tax breaks, reductions, credits, so and so forth. We agree that most of these actually end up going to the wealthiest people. Why would anyone expect anything different? They're the ones that can afford to get the tax lawyers and lobbyists to put in the items that will benefit them; the average person will never be able to do that. But I have no problem with someone being wealthy. Not all people with estates over a million dollars to $5 mil or whatever can afford that. Those people in earning $200k save in order to have million dollar estates and pass it on to their children. Their not necessarily CEOS and they're certainly not all evil people with no concern for the "working class".

I would never attack a person's moral character based on his income. Never my point. So if you think I'm saying that, directly or indirectly, I'm not.
But who are these people that make 200k and can save millions? Don't they have bills? Do they eat? Of those people who do save that kind of money, much of it would be untaxed income (investments) and the first time it would be taxed would be in an estate tax.


Those simply characterizations really dampen the illectual rigor necessary for such an important debate. I have a major problem with people not all having to play by the same rules; whether they are wealthy or not. Obviously through government involvement, the wealthy are increasingly not having to play by the same rules as the rest of us (Wall Street bailout, GM bailout, healthcare waivers, endless subsidies, tax breaks for particular behavior, etc.).

We're agreed here but
GM got a loan, not a bailout and they have to pay it back and are doing so as they inch back to profitability. Wall Street got bailed out and wasn't required to pay back anything.
The healthcare waivers are for companies and institutions who already have good insurance plans or the reform would be too expensive for them to implement and they would end up dropping whatever coverage they currently have. I don't see how that's a problem. If I run Company A and I have great coverage for my employees and I can prove it, why shouldn't I be exempt from this new law?


Taxing in this way is not moral because it gives another person crippling control over another person's life and property. My belief is that each person is entitled to their life and property and they should be able to exercise their maximum freedom as long as they do not directly agress against another person's life or property. The US Constitution spells out legitimate government functions (and them some); all this other stuff the government in our country does is not legit if you respect the principles I just named and they certainly aren't necessary for this to be a first world country. Instead they establish the grounds for the trampling of our civil liberties, dependency on government instead of self-reliance and the means to be self-reliant, and widening of the classes. The wealthy who have the means to communicate directly and then influence the political class and those who do not have these means. The fact is the true upper-class and the political class are starting to become indistinguishable. The other "classes" will never be able to have that type of influence and as long as the scope and influence of the central government continues to expand they will even less so. All the while they'll continue, as we see today, to call for more government intervention (not realizing that the government is being handled by the wealthiest and most powerful among us).

I know I wrote a book and strayed off topic a bit but I believe it all comes back to the principles and that's what people need to realize. We may never agree on a lot of the stuff I've said. But I can guarantee, as long as the majority of this country's citizens don't respect the principles of property and individual liberty vs government control of our lives, it'll get better for "the rich" and worse for rest of us.

Oh, and we both think Reagan was wack. Good stuff. Peace cat.

:cool:
 
Re: Three States Propose Massive Tax Cuts For Millionaires, Tax Hikes for Middle Clas

He was the prime architect of supply side economics, a system who's sole purpose is redistribution of wealth from the lower economic classes to the top. That means cutting education at all levels (pre K through college) but keeping huge business subsidies even for multibillion dollar industries like energy.
Telling people that they can "make it" and then making the ladder up harder to navigate is as immoral as anything we've spoken about.

True that, that is wrong.

Not sure if you're going to respond to my longer and more substantive post above. Hopefully you will. We agree it is immoral to for the government to subsidize multibillion dollar industries like energy. Do you think wealth redistribution is wrong period or it is okay if you take the wealth from one group and give people it to people in another group? Yes or no? This is a question of principle. To me, both sides liberal and conservative are both fighting for the same principle, "theft is okay as long as I feel the right people are having their property stolen and the right people are given that stolen property." Both are wrong if you ask me but I'd like your answer.

Should the government subsidize any industries or set trade barriers that benefit any industries? Did the constitution have it all wrong but not spelling out a list of duties for the central government to play in private markets? Were they just clueless and now we've become much wiser and seen that we absolutely need a central government to manage the economy and distribution of wealth. Let's say they didn't do any of these things. Let's also say they didn't bailout any companies or have the Federal Reserve "print" any money or lower interest rates to benefit any businesses or banks... in this case, is everyone entitled to what they earn? Or is it fine for the government to go beyond it's constitutional duties and redistribute wealth still?

Peace.
 
Re: Three States Propose Massive Tax Cuts For Millionaires, Tax Hikes for Middle Clas

You know this was a lot to digest, right?:D
I think we have philosophical differences that won't be bridged but there were a couple points I wanted to pick out.



You can still leave whatever you want to your offspring but they have to be taxed on it.

The part about the Mannings wasn't about who earned it, it was a response to your claim that children shouldn't receive all of their parents estate even if the parent chooses simply because "they won the genetic lottery." If winning the "genetic lottery" is a problem to be addressed, then I think my example clearly shows just another example of the unfairness of the "genetic lottery" and what the federal government could do if people really viewed genetic inheritance as a legitimate issue to be undertaken by government. The fact you responded with your view that the Mannings "earned" their way into the NFL, seems to enforce the conclusion I had about your original statement, that the money shouldn't go to someone who hasn't earned it. So now I ask, do you feel like money should go to someone who's earned it or not? Once that person has earned it, where do government officials derive the right to deny the citizens their right to choose who they give the money to or how much? Is it more moral for government officials to lay claim to its citizens inheritance?

I still say your analogy was horrible even after you explained it further. The Mannings didn't inherit NFL careers but if they didn't do anything and Archie died and left them a lot of money, they have to be taxed on it.
The government derives that right from the Constitution through taxation.

So you feel they have a right to the money because they earned it. How did the federal government earn the inheritance money?

I don't necessarily disagree with most of this but taxation is completely legitimate and has always been a form of wealth redistribution, even in dictatorships.

So taxation is completely legitimate although you say it's "always been a form of wealth redistribution, even in dictatorships"?

I would never attack a person's moral character based on his income. Never my point. So if you think I'm saying that, directly or indirectly, I'm not.
But who are these people that make 200k and can save millions? Don't they have bills? Do they eat? Of those people who do save that kind of money, much of it would be untaxed income (investments) and the first time it would be taxed would be in an estate tax.

There's plenty of people like this. Since you're asking the question, I assume you're not close to being one of them. But you not being one of them, doesn't mean they don't exist or that they don't exist in large numbers. They do and there would be more of them if the current taxes weren't already so burdensome.

We're agreed here but
GM got a loan, not a bailout and they have to pay it back and are doing so as they inch back to profitability. Wall Street got bailed out and wasn't required to pay back anything.
The healthcare waivers are for companies and institutions who already have good insurance plans or the reform would be too expensive for them to implement and they would end up dropping whatever coverage they currently have. I don't see how that's a problem. If I run Company A and I have great coverage for my employees and I can prove it, why shouldn't I be exempt from this new law?

The banks that received TARP are required to pay it back and you'll find that a number of them already have. Not that I agree with TARP in the first place, it shouldn't have happened. In the case of GM or Wall Street, is it okay then for the government to start bailing out failing institution as long as they say, "pay us back." Certainly not. Failing institutions and companies should fail if that's the course they're on. People see GM and say, "bail them out" because they see the auto plant workers and want to "save them." They disregard the rich people who will get the majority of the money while clearly not serving the customers well (which is why they were losing so much money, bad business practices and products). They see Wall Street and see the bankers and say don't bail them out and they disregard all the middle and lower income people who will suffer in the short run the same way the auto workers would. The truth is that the market will correct itself in the long run without government intervention and the less it intervenes beyond its constitutional duties, the better everyone will be.



:cool:[/QUOTE]

I'm trying to figure out your philosophical stance. Flat out, is wealth redistribution okay? Is taking from one group of people what they earned and giving it to someone who had no claim to it okay?
 
Re: Three States Propose Massive Tax Cuts For Millionaires, Tax Hikes for Middle Clas

True that, that is wrong.

Not sure if you're going to respond to my longer and more substantive post above. Hopefully you will. We agree it is immoral to for the government to subsidize multibillion dollar industries like energy. Do you think wealth redistribution is wrong period or it is okay if you take the wealth from one group and give people it to people in another group? Yes or no? This is a question of principle. To me, both sides liberal and conservative are both fighting for the same principle, "theft is okay as long as I feel the right people are having their property stolen and the right people are given that stolen property." Both are wrong if you ask me but I'd like your answer.

I think it's safe to say you were responding to me while I was responding to your larger post. Happens to me all the time.
This is one of those philosophical divides I think we have. I don't see taxation as theft by it's nature. I see it as the cost of doing business. The only time I find it immoral is redistributing the money up. Not only do I find it immoral, it's not even good science. Do you grow trees by watering the fruit or the root?
That's how I look at it. As long as the taxation isn't exorbitant (and it has been at different times for different groups), I don't mind it.

Should the government subsidize any industries or set trade barriers that benefit any industries? Did the constitution have it all wrong but not spelling out a list of duties for the central government to play in private markets? Were they just clueless and now we've become much wiser and seen that we absolutely need a central government to manage the economy and distribution of wealth. Let's say they didn't do any of these things. Let's also say they didn't bailout any companies or have the Federal Reserve "print" any money or lower interest rates to benefit any businesses or banks... in this case, is everyone entitled to what they earn? Or is it fine for the government to go beyond it's constitutional duties and redistribute wealth still?

Peace.


I don't have a problem with some government subsidies if they produce a positive result for the general populace. Like investing in renewable energy. If the energy companies get subsidies for that, I wouldn't be as upset but that's a very small part of the subsidies they get from federal, state, AND local municipalities.
On trade, I don't think protectionism is all bad. In fact, it seems that the only place that doesn't practice it is us hence our huge trade deficits with Asia. The only time I've seen us do it is against small island nations over bananas and stuff like that but not over major goods like steel.

We've always needed a central government to manage the economy because just letting the markets work is how we end up with children working in mines and not going to school. Regulations is part of managing the economy. Tax policy is as well.
 
Re: Three States Propose Massive Tax Cuts For Millionaires, Tax Hikes for Middle Clas

So you feel they have a right to the money because they earned it. How did the federal government earn the inheritance money?
They have a right to their money (after taxes) because they earned it. They have a right to Archie's too, if he decides to leave it for them, after taxes.




So taxation is completely legitimate although you say it's "always been a form of wealth redistribution, even in dictatorships"?

Yep.


There's plenty of people like this. Since you're asking the question, I assume you're not close to being one of them. But you not being one of them, doesn't mean they don't exist or that they don't exist in large numbers. They do and there would be more of them if the current taxes weren't already so burdensome.

I don't assume they're like Santa Claus. I'm sure they exist but most don't work themselves into saving millions of dollars. People that make hundreds of thousands, live off that money. Most of those people still work for their money. Which is why I said, if they're able to leave a huge inheritance like that, it's mostly in money that has never been taxed in the first place.


The banks that received TARP are required to pay it back and you'll find that a number of them already have. Not that I agree with TARP in the first place, it shouldn't have happened.
I'm aware. My point was the conditions for repayment came later. GM had to jump through major hoops to get their money (which I'm not against, I just think some more heads should have been rolling and in prison on Wall Street).

In the case of GM or Wall Street, is it okay then for the government to start bailing out failing institution as long as they say, "pay us back." Certainly not. Failing institutions and companies should fail if that's the course they're on. People see GM and say, "bail them out" because they see the auto plant workers and want to "save them." They disregard the rich people who will get the majority of the money while clearly not serving the customers well (which is why they were losing so much money, bad business practices and products). They see Wall Street and see the bankers and say don't bail them out and they disregard all the middle and lower income people who will suffer in the short run the same way the auto workers would. The truth is that the market will correct itself in the long run without government intervention and the less it intervenes beyond its constitutional duties, the better everyone will be.

Hypothetically, that's actually correct but from the stance of the President and you see a major American company failing in the midst of an already dire economic crisis, inaction isn't an option. GM shutting down wouldn't have just hurt the workers but every vendor from all the other states that work with them. GM makes cars but they buy steel, glass, rubber, and plastic from other companies. I think if Ford (who didn't get any money) and/or other companies were in a position to absorb most of that business and the banks hadn't already tanked the world economy, GM should have been allowed to shut down.
Now with Wall Street, they've been allowed and even encouraged to become "too big to fail" and they don't produce anything. They just hold and move money, often times as we found out the hard way, imaginary money.


I'm trying to figure out your philosophical stance. Flat out, is wealth redistribution okay? Is taking from one group of people what they earned and giving it to someone who had no claim to it okay?


Yes. Taking my money and handing it to someone? No. But taking my money and funding Head Start programs, even though my kid is 14? That's okay. Taking my money and funding Medicaid for poor people, adults and children? Yes, I'm cool with that. Taking my money and cutting the taxes of Warren Buffett? Not cool with that.
 
Re: Three States Propose Massive Tax Cuts For Millionaires, Tax Hikes for Middle Clas

They have a right to their money (after taxes) because they earned it. They have a right to Archie's too, if he decides to leave it for them, after taxes.






Yep.




I don't assume they're like Santa Claus. I'm sure they exist but most don't work themselves into saving millions of dollars. People that make hundreds of thousands, live off that money. Most of those people still work for their money. Which is why I said, if they're able to leave a huge inheritance like that, it's mostly in money that has never been taxed in the first place.



I'm aware. My point was the conditions for repayment came later. GM had to jump through major hoops to get their money (which I'm not against, I just think some more heads should have been rolling and in prison on Wall Street).



Hypothetically, that's actually correct but from the stance of the President and you see a major American company failing in the midst of an already dire economic crisis, inaction isn't an option. GM shutting down wouldn't have just hurt the workers but every vendor from all the other states that work with them. GM makes cars but they buy steel, glass, rubber, and plastic from other companies. I think if Ford (who didn't get any money) and/or other companies were in a position to absorb most of that business and the banks hadn't already tanked the world economy, GM should have been allowed to shut down.
Now with Wall Street, they've been allowed and even encouraged to become "too big to fail" and they don't produce anything. They just hold and move money, often times as we found out the hard way, imaginary money.





Yes. Taking my money and handing it to someone? No. But taking my money and funding Head Start programs, even though my kid is 14? That's okay. Taking my money and funding Medicaid for poor people, adults and children? Yes, I'm cool with that. Taking my money and cutting the taxes of Warren Buffett? Not cool with that.

You're right, we have serious differences of principles. I don't agree with much of what you've said but it's good to get insight into what others are thinking. Thanks for the back and forth. Peace brutha.
 
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