My interpretation subsumes your more narrow application of the meaning of "fair" as applied to taxation.
As I said in the beginning, your 'nuanced' definition of "fair" is the opposite of the dictionary definition.
That is your opinion; not fact. There is no causal link between lower PIT rates and revenue either.
There is no causal link between PIT rates and revenue, in either direction. That is a fact, not an opinion.
I trust the NYT model of the future more than your's.
I did not offer a "model of the future". My statements are based on historical fact, not future speculation.
It seems that anything you believe in is "fact" and anything I believe is "speculative opinion".
Projected Revenue is speculative opinion while Actual Revenue is fact. Therefore, your conclusions about tax rates are based on opinion while mine are based on fact.
Wowee you are in an irritable mood. You seem to be challenging the 16th amendment still. Taxes are here to stay. You gotta learn to live with it.
What I said is true, I do not seek to impose my will on others though government's monopoly on the legal use of force. Additionally, I have not challenged the 16th amendment in any way. My only challenge is aimed at the immorality of imposing your will on others by force of law.
You are being silly. Of course they don't do it voluntarily.
It's silly that they argue in favor of being forced to do something they refuse to do voluntarily. If they are in favor of paying more money in taxes, then they should do so voluntarily.
Hey, don't make it personal. In place of the word "you" substitute "80% of Americans".
I'm not speaking to "80% of Americans", I'm speaking to you. If it bothers you to be personally confronted with the truth, that you are seeking to use government's monopoly on the legal use of force to coerce others into bending to your will, then perhaps you should stop trying to impose your will on others by force of law.
It pays down the debt while allowing poverty level people to keep their current tax rate.
Claiming that raising the top two rates would pay down the debt is an opinion based entirely on speculation regarding projected revenue, it is not real. Such a claim also ignores the fact that revenue would have to increase enough to eliminate our annual deficits before any amount of revenue could be put toward the actual debt.
The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several States, and without regard to any census or enumeration.
Where in the Constitution is our Federal government authorized to redistribute wealth?
Congress specifically declares that BigRob does not have this power.
I never claimed he did.
If you want an explanation why Buffet doesn't give the gov money, you are going to have to ask him yourself. You are still being silly asking me how Buffet thinks.
I did not ask you how Buffet thinks. If you had a pocket full of $5 bills and wanted to give a homeless man $5, would you do it voluntarily, or would you push for government to write a law forcing you to give him $5 before you would actually fork over the money? The latter of the two is, in essence, what Buffet is doing and it doesn't make sense.
Obama's plan was to raise the taxes on earnings over $250,000. That is well above middle class level.
I do not recall any plans to create a 7th bracket for income taxes... With the current 6 brackets, the second highest bracket begin at $174,400, well below the $250,000 number that is being regurgitated.
Again look at the NYT site to see just how much that would raise.
Projected revenue is not the same thing as actual revenue, the first is fiction while the second is fact. Does the concept of reality so escape you that you cannot tell the difference?
LOL; including the definition is supposed to make your point stronger? C'mon. Just calm down. I don't think you have an objective enough perspective of yourself to claim anything about the merits of your conclusions.
The NYT's site is based on speculation, not reality. By embracing their imaginary numbers, you are forming your belief on what you consider pleasing to imagine, rather than appealing to evidence, rationality or reality. Thus your position, and the NYT's site, is nothing more than Wishful Thinking.
As you have. Yeah right. You are so rabidly against PIT that I'm sure you cherry picked just what you wanted.
Perhaps that is how you conduct yourself and arrive at your opinions but I have more honor and integrity than that. Lying to myself, and/or others, is neither rational nor logical behavior.
People who claim that lowering tax rates increases revenue, must cherry pick data to support their claim. People who claim raising tax rates increases revenue must also cherry pick data to support their claim. Neither claim can be supported when you look at all the data available because there simply is no causal link between tax rates and revenue. That much is fact.
The following is opinion: My conclusion was that tax rates should be consistent, at whatever their level, not because I believe that will increase revenue but because I believe that kind of stability helps bring order to the chaos. People, and markets, respond erratically to uncertainty, eliminating the uncertainty in our tax laws creates a more stable environment for people, and markets, to flourish.
Yep, that's what they should do. Maybe we should get the tea party on it.
I believe the TEA Party is against raising taxes, so I doubt they would embrace such a plan. Perhaps president Obama should make it part of his re-election campaign, as a means of pandering to the "80% of Americans" who want higher taxes on the wealthy, he could call it the "Tax ourselves into prosperity" plan... It would go well with his "Spend our way out of debt" plan.