This definition of fair is more in line with what I was thinking.
If the woman in the example wants to receive her "fair share" of the proceeds, and the distribution of those proceeds are based on merit, i.e. her contribution to the creation of those proceeds, then people who contribute the most should get the most, that would be in keeping with your newest definition of fair...
You seem to be advocating for the exact opposite. You are saying the people who contribute the least should receive the most, and those who contribute the most should receive the least. Even according to your latest definition that would not be "fair".
I know you will interpret it to your bias, but here is my bias: A flat tax of 15% with no deductions on a family that is living on $10,000 a year amounts to $1,500 and would put them much more deeply into poverty. The same tax on earnings of $100,000 is $15,000 and is very tolerable. That 15% tax on poverty level families is too significant and is not merited relative to the family with 10 times the earnings.
Your fictional family earning $10k/yr would be receiving at least $7,500 in government assistance. After paying their fair share of taxes, $1,500, they would still be coming out ahead by at least $5k. Paying $1,500 in taxes to get $7,500 in government benefits is a pretty good deal, especially for a "family" that must be a bunch of unskilled and irresponsible couch-potatoes who,
combined, work less than 30 hours per week in min wage jobs. It's likely that the "bread winner" in such a family spends more than $1500/yr on a combination of cigarettes, booze, drugs, porn etc.
That is what I have been saying.
No, you've been saying that raising PIT rates will increase revenue, while citing the NYT's fictitious revenue projections as your "proof". You have said that lowering PIT rates has not proven to increase revenue but I have no idea why you would bring it up since I never suggested it did.
We must model the future. That is where our destiny lies. How can you be so short sighted to live in the past. It's over.
History proves that your assertion about higher PIT rates increasing revenue is false.
Of course it's speculative, it's a mathematical model of the future, not the past.
i.e. Wishful Thinking
If you want to live in the past, lets go to Reagan's or Clinton's tax structure, or earlier. The country was doing OK then.
Are you claiming the country was doing better BECAUSE of the higher PIT rates?
Imposing my will? You mean the government's will? Are you saying the 16'th amendment is immoral?
Is it your will to force the "wealthy" to pay more in taxes? Yes
Are you looking to use government's monopoly on the legal use of force to impose your will on the "wealthy"? Yes
Is imposing your will on others through force immoral? Yes
The Giving Pledge is a group founded by billionaires Warren Buffett and Bill Gates. Many have joined it. Look it up. They would rather donate most of their money to special causes they care about. Why should they give it to the government? Why give it to fund wars, subsidies, etc. when the government is doing that?
That only makes Buffet's calls for raising his taxes that much more perplexing... According to what you just said, the extra tax dollars Buffet thinks he should be forced to pay would only "fund wars, subsidies, etc."
It doesn't personally bother me that you are paying more taxes than I am.
An individual's income has no bearing on the validity of their statements, so these continued appeals to wealth and poverty are pointless logical fallacies.
If that's your fancy way of saying PIT, the 16'th amendment comes closest.
The 16th only outlines how taxes are to be collected, it says nothing about how it should be spent.
I would directly give it to the man. That's what Buffet is doing with his billions through the program I mentioned above.
Which is why it makes even less sense that he would ask to pay higher taxes, if he wants to help people he doesn't need to be forced by law to do so.
That's what I heard. Maybe when you do the tax calculation by stepping up through all the marginal brackets, that number pops up as being the pivot point for lower income tax decreases to upper income increases. I'm not going to do the arithmetic.
There is no arithmetic needed... The top bracket begins at $374k, the next one down starts at $174k and goes up to $374k, the figure of $250k is inside that second bracket.
So unless there has been some plan to add a 7th bracket, one that begins at $250k and goes to $374k, claiming that raising the top two PIT rates will only affect people making over $250k is an outright lie.
Aren't you going to print the definition of Wishful Thinking again?
If you need it I'd be glad to post it once again.
It's the future that I'm concerned about and that has to be projected.
Why? If we limit government spending
this year to actual revenue of
last year, there is a 97% probability that our government will run a surplus as a result, regardless of tax rates. Of course, that's based entirely on historical fact, which you seem to think has no place in guiding us to our future.
Basing our spending on projected revenue, as we've done for decades and as you wish to continue doing, has almost always resulted in the government overspending, i.e. running deficits which add to our debt, because the actual revenue is almost always lower than projected revenue. Again, that's historic fact... Forgive me for living in the past but I feel it's relevant to our future.
Well, personally I don't think you have much honor and integrity, nor rationality. Your logic is misguided. You are just trying to rationalize a way to keep all your money.
Feel free to use personal attacks all you like, you cannot illicit an emotional response from me and it only highlights the weakness of your arguments.
Yes, yes, I know, I know, you want to say the same thing about me.
I have too much honor and integrity to attack your character simply because we disagree on policy. Additionally, ad hominems are a logical fallacy, therefore it would not be logically sound to resort to such emotional outbursts when offering rational opinions.