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Originally posted by Sandro
Income tax took three times to be to be voted into law. Even, then it took lying to the American people to get it passed. The other two times it was deemed unconstitutional.
Source
The FairTax:
• Abolishes the IRS
• Closes all tax loopholes and brings fairness to taxation
• Maintains our current Social Security and Medicare benefits
• Brings transparency and accountability to tax policy
• Allows American products to compete fairly
• Reimburses the tax on purchases of basic necessities
• Enables retirees to keep their entire pension
• Enables workers to keep their entire paycheck
Originally posted by Nygdan
Can you even imagine what would happen if there was no income tax, if that source of government revenue was wiped out? Who'd pay for the infrastructure, schools, hospitals, military, social services, foreign aid, the bonds that prop up the economy, business loans, etc etc???
Originally posted by darkelf
I caught the tail end of Coast to Coast when they were talking about this. The proponent stated that a 23% federal sales tax on 2005 GDP would equal the amount of income taxes collected for that year. There would be no exemptions. We would be able to afford this sales tax if we get to keep our entire pay check. Also, illegal aliens would be paying into our tax system as well as foreigners who are visiting here.
Originally posted by dr_strangecraft
Any sales tax above 9 and a quarter, and it becomes a SERIOUS incentive for businesses to cheat
A FAIR tax would be one where everyone pays the same rate.
Originally posted by Two Steps Forward
A fair tax is one in which everyone bears the same burden. That is not the same thing as everyone paying the same rate.
The burden of taxation is what you have to sacrifice to pay it.
And that's why the simplistic formula "fair = same tax rate for everyone" doesn't work.
Originally posted by dr_strangecraft
If I charged rent based on the color of the tennants' skin, who here would not call me a moral monster?
What you are aiming at is "equal outcomes." And equal outcomes are the opposite of fairness. The only way you get equal outcomes is by giving some people an unearned boost (however you justify it), and holding some people back, despite their enhanced ability.
Holding people back is a form of preferential treatment, and is the very definition of tyranny.
Does taxation have anything to do with income?
I am not aming for "equal" outcomes, only for acceptable outcomes for everyone, or as nearly everyone as can be reasonably achieved.
Originally posted by dr_strangecraft
The idea that some people ought to be burdened differently, just because we don't like them as much, is the definition of unfairness; and it's a point you never address.
Whether you use the word 'equal' or 'acceptable,' you're still imposing someone who will judge what an acceptable outcome should look like.
No one is condemned to a life of drudgery because of their intelligence. Britney Spears and Jessica Simpson bring hope to millions who never finished high school. As a matter of fact, half of all US millionaires never finished college. So obviously, inherited "open doors" matter a lot less than other factors do.
And even if someone is "condemned to a life of drudgery" by their IQ, taxing other people at a higher rate will not increase anyone's IQ.
Look, the whole Idea of a progressive tax implies that there is something immoral about increasing your income
You need to read up on the demographics of wealth in the US. Most high income-earners are first-generation wealthy
The old inherited wealth of the likes of Kennedy and Kerry is all tied up in trust funds and T-bills and is thus completely tax-free.
But then, nearly 80% of the millionaires in the US are first-generation rich.
Think about it. We've had a progressive income tax for almost a hundred years--and the left continues to tell us that the rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer. So apparently, a graduated tax isn't slowing them down any.
Originally posted by Two Steps Forward
But then, nearly 80% of the millionaires in the US are first-generation rich.
A statement that would be better supported by both links and definitions. By definitions, I mean of course what you mean by "rich" ("millionaire" is already defined).
Think about it. We've had a progressive income tax for almost a hundred years--and the left continues to tell us that the rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer. So apparently, a graduated tax isn't slowing them down any.
Actually, it did slow them down, but not as much as some other measures (like labor rights recognized by the government) that have been effectively reversed in the last 20 years or so.
But you continue to miss the point, it seems. A graduated income tax isn't designed to redistribute wealth any more than it's designed to improve people's IQ. It's designed to have the burden of taxation fall heaviest on those who can most easily pay it.
Originally posted by dr_strangecraft
I am using the definition they used---a household with over a million dollars of net wealth.
I think everything a government does, has the effect of rewarding some people and punishing others.
It's my belief that a graduated tax punishes the entrepreneurial class the most.
In many ways, a progressive tax is a sort of "economic activity tax." The persons most responsible for America's economic innovation are the ones who bear the bulk of such a burden.
It seems like I've really pissed you off by disagreeing with you.
Originally posted by Two Steps Forward
No, you've irritated me (I wouldn't go so far as to say pissed me off) by putting words in my mouth. At no time did I ever say, directly or indirectly, that people should be taxed more because I don't like them
Originally posted by Two Steps Forward
or that a graduated income tax will raise people's IQ.
Why should anyone be condemned to a life of drudgery and never making it because his or her intelligence is less than mine? Did he or she choose to be less intelligent than I am?
I do not like fallacious arguments. I do not like straw men.
Originally posted by dr_strangecraft
Well, you've said that some people ought to pay a higher rate than others, which pretty much implies that their burdens are less relevant than the burderns other people bear. Whatever categories of differentiating, weather minority status or wealth, you still end up treating people differently based on what category they fit into.
Talk about straw man arguments. If people's IQ won't be affected by the tax system, why did you even bring this up?