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#1
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Larry L wrote:
Let me try again. Why do Republicans seem to think that, IN THE CURRENT SITUATION, where either tax cuts or spending will increase the already terrible and dangerous deficit, ... why do they think that Xdollars of tax cuts are better than Xdollars of spending, especially tax cuts for the 'not hurtin'. 'Cause they're idiots? |
#2
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Allowing someone to keep most of what he earns is not giving him
anything. After you understand that, you then may be able seriously to discuss fiscal policy. cheers oz, fisherman |
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On Tue, 27 Jan 2009 18:09:28 GMT, "Larry L" wrote:
wrote You are looking at things through the wrong lens. First, unless this ranch is VERY unusual, the 4 jobs created directly _upon_ the ranch are nowhere near the end of the overall economic impact created. I do understand that .... but it doesn't answer my poorly asked question. Let me try again. Why do Republicans seem to think that, IN THE CURRENT SITUATION, where either tax cuts or spending will increase the already terrible and dangerous deficit, ... why do they think that Xdollars of tax cuts are better than Xdollars of spending, especially tax cuts for the 'not hurtin'. ALL of the spending starts flowing, some of the tax cuts will, some will 'just' get saved or tucked away for investment in better times. My friend is one of this area's biggest developers, and he has created many many jobs, but right now is not a time I'd bet he's eager to spend more money 'developing' so why give him money 'back' instead of building improved levees to protect all of his past 'development,' RIGHT NOW as a recovery plan. {{ As for my 'lens,' my life's work and circumstances have brought me into contact with a lot of very wealthy people ( multi-million, billions in a couple cases ) and, on the whole, I'm not impressed with that group. I admit to, at this point in my life, having a 'guilty until proven innocent' attitude about the true 'moral' ( can't think of better word right now ) character and motives of extremely rich people, especially inherited rich. But I wasn't born that way, my experiences on the fringes of their world have made me that way, so it's not. exactly, prejudice. NOTHING is this world irritates me more than the very common idea, in their circles, that rich people are not only rich they are actually 'better people' than others. Few things irritate me more than flagrant consumption simply for the sake of comsumption and 'because I can,' and this is true when I see it in all economic levels. I've acquired my own luxuries, for sure, when compared to most of the world, but I find the trememdous excesses of many wealthy people, revolting. Thus, I admit to being a bit bias against 'big money' people but I'm not a 'commie' G I'd bet that this makes it harder for me to see and accept advantges of tax cuts to the rich, but I'm trying to do just that, and not just bicker }} Um ... a typical Larry L stream of semi-consciousness, aside ..... Last night, my wife and I were discussing something I haven't seen mentioned, as a possible consequence of bad times. The current situation with huge disparity in wealth and the accumlation of it in a relative few hands, coupled with lots of the 'masses' actually suffering, is a historical proven recipe for social turmoil. If I was rich, I'd be careful about suggesting that the people with no bread, eat cake instead. And, imho, that is exactly what we're seeing in some of the most ugly CEO cases being reported. You do realize that currently, a large portion of the potential pool of US taxpayers are, well, taxpayers, and if Obama gets his way completely, even less will be. You lost me there, so I guess I don't realize. I'd have lost me, too - it should read "are, well, NOT taxpayers..." , even just passive investments (which create work), so the more they have to use via less taxation, the more work it will create. Again, why is ( in practical terms, ) is that a better way to get Xdollars out actually working proding the economy into motion than direct spending on projects in the public good? Especially considering the fact that those projects will benefit the wealthy, too, and not just as 'levees' but one of my contacts owns a huge Catapiller dealership, he can sell some bulldozers and buy himself a third private plane. Well, it's better to allow folks who have acquired wealth to do with it what they see fit (as long as it isn't illegal, etc.). And when I say "wealth," I mean it in the economic sense, not the common speech sense. I've never understood the supposed logic behind the idea that those who earn or have more should pay _disproportionally_ more than those who haven't earned as much. Even Cuba, where "socialism" works about as well as it can, _depends_ on, first, "parental support" (USSR) and now, capitalist support (tourism). And this is in a State where the leaders are generally speaking, "walking the walk," unlike, say Venezuela, where Chavez wears Patek Philippe watches and his cronies spend like, well, the despotic nouveau riche trash that they are. Larry L ( who lives in California where Arnold got elected by repealing the' car tax' ( a very fair one, imho, and one the state needed for a dependable source of income ) and is now fighting his own Republican 'brothers' with their 'no new taxes,' as the 8th largest economy in the world goes straight to the ****ter ...... I, for one, would be happy to pay some more taxes instead of stealing money from furture education spending and such, and a $thousand to me is more than a few $million to the rich guys I know, in terms of real affect on my daily life ) And this kind of thinking does nothing but hasten a collapse. It may sound like a good idea to fund "future education spending," but it's not and here's why: what such spending does is shift the burden, and it shifts it from those who benefit from it. Look at it like this - if someone has enough income to support two children through college, while living "comfortably" but not "luxuriously," they could probably support another coupla-few children, although their style of living might go from "comfortable" to "getting by well enough." Now, suppose they are then forced to support their grandchildren. The person with two kids, who each have two kids, goes from "comfortable" to "getting by well-enough" and the person with 4 kids who have 4 kids each goes from "comfortable" to, well, "broke." Now what? You've bankrupted the source and the beneficiaries are SOL as they are unprepared on a variety of levels to support themselves. Granted, a very simplistic illustration using broad terms like "comfortable," but the principles remain - the "haves" cannot, even assuming they were willing to try, support a geometric growth in "have-nots." To put it in ranching terms, you cannot successfully run 15 pairs per acre on 10 pairs an acre land. Think about this - the whole _practice_ of socialism/social welfare/whatever term you prefer is really only about 80 years old (granted, the _concept_ is much older), and it has never really worked. WW2 brought the world out of the "Great Depression" - "Rooseveltesque" stuff wasn't working (go look at the actual data), Sovietism...well, I don't really see anyone suggesting it worked, and those that point to the alleged successes of various semi-socialist schemes in Europe can only do so when those "successes" are viewed in a vacuum (take all of the supposedly-wonderful healthcare schemes in Europe). TC, R |
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![]() wrote in message ... I've never understood the supposed logic behind the idea that those who earn or have more should pay _disproportionally_ more than those who haven't earned as much. the logic deals with social stability, and the observation made earlier that when a society gets to the point where economic disparity is too great, social upheaval occurs. Usually violently, I might add. Why you haven't ever understood this, I don't know. Lord knows I've tried to explain it to you enoughbseg. Later in the post, you refer to the fact that such 'schemes' have never 'worked'. I am not sure that is the case, but before dashing off in search of case studies, would like to hear your example of 'working'. In my view, the goal was to prevent massive social upheaval, but your definition of success may be quite different. Finally, you cast out an aside about healthcare. Trust me, while no one's healthcare system is perfect, there are(there HAVE to be) vastly better ways of going about it, in the name of the good for ALL the citizens of the nation, than the present US method. Another debate for another day........ Tom |
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On Wed, 28 Jan 2009 15:28:27 GMT, "Tom Littleton" wrote:
wrote in message .. . I've never understood the supposed logic behind the idea that those who earn or have more should pay _disproportionally_ more than those who haven't earned as much. the logic deals with social stability, and the observation made earlier that when a society gets to the point where economic disparity is too great, social upheaval occurs. But in most of the "western world," economic disparity is nowhere near what it would take to cause "social upheaval" in the sense of violent upheaval. While the difference between, say, Bernie Madoff and much of those in the US might be, in pure numbers, great, in real terms, they aren't all that different insofar as the necessities of life AND a few "luxuries." IOW, while some folks might be able to spend $400K on a wedding using pocket change and others have to settle for only one movie channel on their cable and are only able to afford to eat at Mickey D's and then, only a coupla-few times a month, their "standard of living" is, on a scale, closer to "rich" than much of population of the world outside of the western world. So that brings us around to the fact that, in comparison, the lesser-well-off in the western world, are, to truly _poor_ in the rest of the world, "rich." So, in some mythical, ahem, "fair world," those in the western world of even modest means would be taxed to (allegedly) help the truly _poor_, while the (contextually) "rich" would be taxed to help, well, the whole friggin' population. There are much larger numbers of people in the "less-well-off" category than in the "rich" category, and so, if you had to guess, whom would you guess is going to potentially react more "violently," the "rich" people whose lifestyles aren't terribly affected or the "less-well-off" who are reduced to basic cable and the value menu on their visits to Mickey D's? Usually violently, I might add. Why you haven't ever understood this, I don't know. Lord knows I've tried to explain it to you enoughbseg. Later in the post, you refer to the fact that such 'schemes' have never 'worked'. I am not sure that is the case, but before dashing off in search of case studies, would like to hear your example of 'working'. In my view, the goal was to prevent massive social upheaval, but your definition of success may be quite different. Finally, you cast out an aside about healthcare. Trust me, while no one's healthcare system is perfect, there are(there HAVE to be) vastly better ways of going about it, in the name of the good for ALL the citizens of the nation, than the present US method. Another debate for another day........ There are things that can be done to improve the healthcare system in the US and worldwide - taxing the bejeebers out of anyone isn't the way. One thing to consider is the cost of being a doctor. On a related-but-somewhat-converse line is the attitude that doctors are entitled to be "rich" - the whole concept of doctors being "rich" because they are, well, doctors, is new. TC, R Tom |
#6
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![]() wrote Well, it's better to allow folks who have acquired wealth to do with it what they see fit (as long as it isn't illegal, etc.). I, more or less, understand the ideology you support .... and support it myself, ... again, more or less. But, I still don't understand why NOW, in a state of crisis, with all the economists I have seen suggesting that getting money into the economy, in quantity and quickly, is desperately needed ... why in these unique circumstances, .... why chant the ideology when it certainly seems, to me, that thoughtful government spending ( odious as government spending may be ;-) is a more practical, pragmatic, approach ..... one that leaves us with the dangers of a huge deficit, for sure, but then so would reducing government income .... and, at least, we'd have the actual created infrastructure as well as the deficit to leave our kid's. Maybe I'm just very dense, but I don't see a pragmatic, non-ideological, answer in the "better to" or "communism didn't work" |
#7
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![]() wrote And this kind of thinking does nothing but hasten a collapse. It may sound like a good idea to fund "future education spending," but it's not Well in the Arnold case, he is moving money that the public voted to spend SPECIFICALLY on education ...... and using it for nearly anything else, because everyone on both sides say cuts can't get deeper and the Republican side simply chants "no new taxes" to any idea that income must be increased. To use your homey, family situation, analogies for government it's time for dad to admit that we can't cut more and even though it hurts get a second job to increase income and not just chant " I don't believe in that" Larry L ( whose ideology includes the idea that what the public voted to tax themselves for is what that money should be used for .... ) |
#8
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![]() "Larry L" wrote Well in the Arnold case, FWIW, Arnold has proven to be a better governor than I would have ever guessed and it' interesting that his "own' party is the main reason he can't govern better ... ah, in the opinion of many observers from the extreme middle, not just me Larry L ( who also will point out that he thinks that at the national level, the Dem congress are being foolish in many ways... at least enough so to equal the 'other side' ) |
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