Results 61 to 70 of 117
Thread: Taxes?
-
07-06-2008, 06:34 PM #61
Oh boy, this is going to be FUN!
1. All pork and pork related projects. Now.
2. All foreign aid (~241 billion). While I am not opposed to it in principle, I don't think forgein aid should have become a habit. Once we have fixed what is wrong at home, whatever leftovers remain can be considered for foreign aid.
3. The DEA (~1146 million). The War on Drugs has failed. Not only has it enriched drug dealers it has made otherwise honest citizens criminals. Perhaps most importantly, what I choose to do to my body is of no one else's concern and especially not Uncle Sam's. If I want to smoke crack, get high, shoot smack, go on a week long coke bende or do none of the above it is my choice, and my choice alone, to do so.
4. The Department of Education (~70 billion). Education in America has been an embarassment since the Feds got involved. The more we spend, the worse we do. Let the states and the private sector take over, it really cannot get any worse.
I could go on and on and on and on. Shall I?
-
07-06-2008, 07:09 PM #62
-
07-06-2008, 08:16 PM #63
- Join Date
- May 2008
- Location
- Washington, DC
- Posts
- 448
Thanked: 50
-
07-06-2008, 08:20 PM #64
- Join Date
- May 2008
- Location
- Washington, DC
- Posts
- 448
Thanked: 50Sure. By all means. So far, we've eliminated a major tool of foreign policy, placed the responsibility for education (and, not coincidentally, our competitiveness in the global marketplace) on states like Mississippi, saved a nickel or two in drug enforcement -- and we still have a huge deficit.
Keep going. You're doing fine.
j
-
07-06-2008, 08:23 PM #65
- Join Date
- May 2008
- Location
- Washington, DC
- Posts
- 448
Thanked: 50Ah, yeah. Those senior citizens! They really suck at life, don't they.
Do you know the average time a person stays on welfare?
I agree with you on corporate welfare (unless you're talking about market-based incentives, which I do believe in), but you have about as much chance of getting that one past the lobbyists as I have of growing a second whatever.
j
-
07-06-2008, 08:27 PM #66
- Join Date
- Aug 2006
- Location
- Maleny, Australia
- Posts
- 7,977
- Blog Entries
- 3
Thanked: 1587<This signature intentionally left blank>
-
07-06-2008, 09:26 PM #67
Income is irrelevant in the calculation. Everyone pays 10.00 in tax on your 100.00 item. Since all esstential items such as food and clothing have been excluded from the tax, ideally anyway, your item is wanted but not needed. Every day we all have to decide if we afford something we want, but don't need, or not. That a doctor can possibly bid more for a Puma Gold than I can is neither fair nor unfair. Its just a fact of life.
Despite some emotional counter-arguements to a limiited federal government, made in some cases by those with a vested interest in big government, the fact remains that the Federal government has grown far, far beyond what is necessary. In so doing it has usurped rights reserved for American citizens and the states they populate. I refer you to the Tenth Amendment to the Constitution which say powers that are not delegated to the U.S. government by the U.S. Constitution are "reserved to the states, or to the people." As it stands today, there is no functional difference between living in Massachusetts or Mississippi besides the weather and the accent. The roads stink, public education is shameful and drugs are everywhere. It is well past the time for the Federal government to get out of the way.
As for foreign aid, why on God's green Earth should we buy friends? Simply pathetic. If we have to pay someone to support or agree with us, then that friendship is not worth one cent. Frankly, I care very little whether or not the world likes us. America is far from perfect, but on the whole we are as good as any and better than most. If that is not enough to engender good will and friendship, neither begging nor bribery will make a scintilla of difference.
Now I am off to the other forums for the original reason I first came to SRP. Shave geekery.Last edited by ProfessorChaos!; 07-06-2008 at 09:28 PM.
-
07-06-2008, 09:49 PM #68
- Join Date
- Apr 2007
- Posts
- 1,034
Thanked: 150Interesting thread y'all.
As for taxes, I feel that progressive flat tax is the most efficient and fair method of taxation. the first $20,000 of your income is tax free. After that, every dollar is taxed at 15%, whether from wages, investments, or inheritance. Easy and simple. For someone making $20k or less, they have no tax burden, but again, their income is going to be gone just buying the necessities. some one making $30k per year is going to pay t$1,500 on that $30k, or 5% income tax. for someone making $50,000, he will pay $4,500 in taxes on the $30,000 which is taxable, or a total tax on his income of 9%. The more income you make, the more the percentage of tax approaches 15% of your total income. This holds true for estates (except when the estate passes to the surviving spouse). I would even go along with a 20% progressive flat tax.
Matt
-
07-06-2008, 10:03 PM #69
I would say on the foreign aid topic that I don't see it as 'buying friends'. It's buying services. I don't think there are inherent friends or enemies, even though people like to make fluffy speeches on the subject. There is money and what you get for it. I'd qualify this in the same 'facts of life' category
The Israelis or the Palestinians, or the Saudis, or Pakistanis, or various African countries, etc. won't love US any more or less because of the US foreign aid they get, but their government will certainly do some things in exchange for it. I can imagine that often it's much cheaper to get them to do these things by giving them free stuff, than any alternative ways.
-
07-06-2008, 10:08 PM #70
- Join Date
- Aug 2006
- Location
- Maleny, Australia
- Posts
- 7,977
- Blog Entries
- 3
Thanked: 1587I see your point. But that's where the fun begins. What's exempt? What's a need and what's a want? I agree that a Puma is (probably, but I might argue the point) a want, and that food, clothing, and shelter are needs. But only to a point - caviar, Armani suits, and MacMansions are not needs - who decides the basic minimum requirements for these things to change from need to want? What about brake pads? Petrol? Pens and stationary for children's schooling?
We've had these debates already in Aust.. We had our parliament discussing the world's important issues - what is the taxation status of a chicken? Turns out if it's bought frozen it's exempt, but if it's bought prepared it's not. If it's bought alive for the purpose of laying eggs, it gets hit by tax because you are getting a fringe benefit from it. (that last one is a joke, but only just).
Rebates, exemptions, compensations, special exemptions....the "simple" flat tax ends up doing just the same thing as a graduated tax system in the end, IMO, and ends up just as complicated.
James.<This signature intentionally left blank>