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The Rise of the Super-Rich
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TreeTwista10 minisoldr 148441 Posts user info edit post |
I think $315,000 a year is rich
but not "Super-Rich" 7/26/2006 5:35:06 PM |
Gamecat All American 17913 Posts user info edit post |
Novel concept, though, Duke.
What if there was a mandated standard of living (nothing glorious, just liveable; think prisons w/o cable) that the gov't could guarantee in some way that you couldn't dip below?
You could go on and earn as much as you want beyond that standard, limited only by demand for your services from the marketplace.
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Once more for page 2:
Quote : | "Randy -
Please state clearly what makes you think liberals get upset when an individual earns a lot of money and decides to keep it." |
[Edited on July 26, 2006 at 5:36 PM. Reason : ^ agreed]7/26/2006 5:35:37 PM |
theDuke866 All American 52839 Posts user info edit post |
I'm ok with (and believe that we should have) a very, very basic, minimum standard being guaranteed by Uncle, with the caveat that you have to at least be trying to do better for yourself (i.e., you can't just say "fuck it, this shithole is good enough for what I'm paying for it" and subsist forever on the taxpayers' dime)
i hate this goddamned attitude of "you're making more money than any one person deserves" or "you're making lots of money, so it's only fair that we hammer your titties on taxes."
Fuck that. I see no problem whatsoever with a few people being dirty, rotten, filthy, stinking rich, while others live with just the basics. If I were one of the "haves", I personally would give money to "have nots", but it's not Uncle's place to take it from me (for that matter, I already have 2 small allotments taken from my pay each month for charities, but where it goes and how much it is are strictly up to me. As a side note, I believe the Bill Gates Foundation is something like the 3rd or 4th largest foreign aid entity in the world, behind America, Japan, and maybe one other country).
Like I said, I believe in a minimum standard (unless you just flat out refuse to work when you are capable), and I believe in providing for kids even if their parent(s) are a bunch of jack-offs.
I can't stand this attitude of hating on the "rich", though. Why not just resolve to become one of the "rich" yourself if you're so damned jealous of them? You don't even have to make that much money to amass a colossal amount of wealth.
(hell, look at me. i'm active duty military--i make just over 40k/year. i don't mind disclosing that because any one of you assholes with 5 minutes and an internet browser can find out exactly what i make now, what i'll make next year, the year after that, etc. I drive a kickass sports car (Honda S2000, supercharged, with a nice aftermarket stereo and $5000 worth of wheels and tires), just bought a jet ski, could stroke a check for a motorcycle at any time, and have been putting away money for my daughter and her college, even though she won't even be here until October. I have no debt except for my car, which is at 3% interest, and it's up for sale. I should turn about a $3k profit on it after driving it for 2 years, and when I replace it with a BMW, I should have no--or at least nearly no--debt at all. I save and invest about $800+/month. I go out to eat all the time, have a couple thousand dollars worth of firearms, and all sorts of guy-gadgets like my aviation GPS, tools, digital cameras, 3 electric guitars and a decent amp (including a really nice Gibson Firebird), etc.
What I'm getting at is that I blow money left and right, on only an average salary, and STILL always have plenty to spare. What most people need is not more money...it's more ability to manage the money they have. People who don't (or won't) "get it" are gonna be all fucked up financially regardless. People who are rich got that way, in large part, by being smart.
Why take money from people who know what to do with it in order to give it to people who have no clue how to handle it?
[Edited on July 26, 2006 at 6:20 PM. Reason : asdfasdfasd]
[Edited on July 26, 2006 at 6:24 PM. Reason : asdf] 7/26/2006 6:06:23 PM |
pwrstrkdf250 Suspended 60006 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "I can't stand this attitude of hating on the "rich", though. Why not just resolve to become one of the "rich" yourself if you're so damned jealous of them? You don't even have to make that much money to amass a colossal amount of wealth" |
7/26/2006 6:09:42 PM |
Schuchula Veteran 138 Posts user info edit post |
Hell, why don't we just give rich folks more money, so it can trickle back to us again? 7/26/2006 6:28:40 PM |
pwrstrkdf250 Suspended 60006 Posts user info edit post |
seems liek alot of people that don't want alot of money don't want anyone else to have it either 7/26/2006 6:37:12 PM |
nastoute All American 31058 Posts user info edit post |
i want to be super rich 7/26/2006 6:41:52 PM |
EhSteve All American 7240 Posts user info edit post |
What do you get the ultra-wealthy person who already has it all?
More money! 7/26/2006 7:27:36 PM |
Schuchula Veteran 138 Posts user info edit post |
Our economy isn't totally free until one man has all of the money. It's his right, and he should see fit to not give it to anyone else as he pleases. 7/26/2006 9:16:18 PM |
EarthDogg All American 3989 Posts user info edit post |
Here is a response to Ms. Tritch's tirade from from Bruce Bartlett
Quote : | "Taxation Trash from the Times Courtesy of Teresa Tritch.
In its corporate wisdom, the New York Times recently decided to hide its most influential columnists behind a subscription wall. So those who have been accustomed to reading the likes of Paul Krugman and Maureen Dowd for free on the Internet will have to pay $50 per year for the privilege. But to make this proposition more attractive, the Times promised that it would provide a little something extra for subscribers. Apparently, this involves publishing articles by its editorial writers that are not good enough to appear in the print edition of the paper. The first of these articles appeared on October 4 and dealt with taxation. It was written by Times editorial board member Teresa Tritch, who writes most of the paper’s economic editorials. Tritch lists her qualifications as having degrees in German and journalism, as well as years of writing about personal finance for Money magazine where she explained why people should shop around for the lowest price before buying soap and things of that sort.
What really qualifies Tritch to lecture the rest of us about tax policy is her absolute conviction that our tax system is tilted too much in favor of the rich. To read her diatribe, one would think that the wealthy pay no taxes at all and that the tax burden falls almost entirely on the poor and middle class. One would also come away thinking that taxes do not affect economic growth in any way.
According to Tritch, our tax system should serve one purpose and one purpose only — to soak the rich. Any reduction in tax rates, especially on saving and investment, has nothing to do with raising growth, and is nothing but a give-away to the ultra-wealthy. Despite her paucity of knowledge or experience in the field of economics, one can see now why she was hired by the Times.
The reality, of course, is that the wealthy pay almost all of the U.S. federal income tax. There also is clear and compelling evidence that our tax system — especially its misguided redistributive elements — imposes a heavy cost in terms of growth that is ultimately paid by the non-wealthy in the form of lower productivity and, hence, lower wages and incomes.
Interestingly, the latest Internal Revenue Service data on distribution of the tax burden were released the same day Tritch’s tirade appeared. The data show that the top 1 percent of taxpayers paid 34.3 percent of all federal income taxes in 2003, although they earned just 16.8 percent of the adjusted gross income. The top 5 percent of taxpayers paid more than half of all federal income taxes, the top 10 percent paid two-thirds, and the top half of taxpayers paid 96.5 percent — meaning that the bottom half paid just 3.5 percent.
Another IRS report deconstructed the top 1 percent and found that the top 10 percent of the top 1 percent (the top 0.1 percent) increased their share of all federal income taxes from 7 percent in 1980 to 15.3 percent in 2003. These 129,000 tax filers earned 7.6 percent of the income and paid an average tax rate of 23.6 percent. This came to $114.6 billion — four times more than all the taxes paid by the 64 million taxpayers in the bottom 50 percent, who paid an average tax rate of 2.9 percent.
I would be curious to know just how much more Tritch thinks the wealthy ought to be paying. Back in the good old days (from her point of view) when Jimmy Carter was president and the top statutory tax rate was 70 percent (versus 35 percent today), the top 1 percent of taxpayers paid only 19.7 percent of all federal income taxes. In other words, although the marginal tax rate of the top 1 percent has fallen by 50 percent, their tax share has almost doubled.
I assume that Tritch would be happier with the British tax system, where the top income tax rate is 40 percent. But according to British tax data, the top 1 percent of taxpayers pay just 21 percent of income taxes, the top 5 percent pay 40 percent, and the top 10 percent pay 52 percent. The bottom 50 percent, meanwhile, pay 11 percent of all income taxes. In other words, wealthy British pay higher rates — as Tritch would have it here — but pay less of the overall tax burden.
According to a new report from the U.S. Government Accountability Office, we pay a very high price for the heavy taxation on saving, investment, corporate earnings, and estates that Tritch strongly favors. It found that the efficiency cost of the tax system — the output that is lost over and above the tax itself — is between 2 percent and 5 percent of the gross domestic product. In short, we lose between $240 billion and $600 billion every year just because of the way we raise taxes." |
7/26/2006 9:38:07 PM |
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