Page 6 of 7 FirstFirst ... 3 4 5 6 7 LastLast
Results 151 to 180 of 203

Thread: Finally, Some Good News for Mitt

  1. #151
    gribbler
    Deity gribbler's Avatar
    Join Date
    18 Feb 2010
    Location
    Nazi Moon Colony
    Posts
    12,712
    Country
    This is gribbler's Country Flag
    Thanks
    57
    Thanked 75 Times in 57 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    09:24
    You might was well claim "the Democrats got trashed nationwide in 2010, therefore they'll get trashed again in 2012!" which would instantly get you identified as a moron. Republicans perform well among old people with nothing better to do but vote in every election.

  2. #152
    regexcellent
    Emperor regexcellent's Avatar
    Join Date
    06 Jun 2011
    Location
    Rochester, New York
    Posts
    4,069
    Country
    This is regexcellent's Country Flag
    Thanks
    36
    Thanked 46 Times in 35 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    10:24
    Virginia has an election every year. Do you think it's random noise that the government there is currently completely dominated by Republicans?
    I come from the land of the ice and snow
    From the rust belt where industry won't go

  3. #153
    gribbler
    Deity gribbler's Avatar
    Join Date
    18 Feb 2010
    Location
    Nazi Moon Colony
    Posts
    12,712
    Country
    This is gribbler's Country Flag
    Thanks
    57
    Thanked 75 Times in 57 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    09:24
    Is it meaningless that voter turnout is much higher every presidential election?

  4. #154
    Guynemer
    Deity Guynemer's Avatar
    Join Date
    07 Mar 1999
    Location
    here
    Posts
    13,941
    Country
    This is Guynemer's Country Flag
    Thanks
    66
    Thanked 125 Times in 84 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    10:24
    Many state governments are dominated by Republicans; it doesn't have much effect on Presidential voting.
    "My nation is the world, and my religion is to do good." --Thomas Paine
    "The subject of onanism is inexhaustable." --Sigmund Freud

  5. #155
    gribbler
    Deity gribbler's Avatar
    Join Date
    18 Feb 2010
    Location
    Nazi Moon Colony
    Posts
    12,712
    Country
    This is gribbler's Country Flag
    Thanks
    57
    Thanked 75 Times in 57 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    09:24
    Look at the Democratic dominance in Arkansas and West Virginia. Does Obama have any chance of winning those states? No.

  6. #156
    The Mad Monk
    Emperor The Mad Monk's Avatar
    Join Date
    22 Mar 2000
    Location
    Flyover Country
    Posts
    9,113
    Country
    This is The Mad Monk's Country Flag
    Thanks
    11
    Thanked 38 Times in 29 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    09:24
    Quote Originally Posted by gribbler View Post
    You might was well claim "the Democrats got trashed nationwide in 2010, therefore they'll get trashed again in 2012!" which would instantly get you identified as a moron. Republicans perform well among old people with nothing better to do but vote in every election.
    How can you have anything better to do for one hour on one day a year than vote on the people who will manage your public affairs?

    I will concede that the lazy and vacuous do tend to avoid voting Republican.
    "We have tried spending money. We are spending more than we have ever spent before and it does not work...After eight years of this Administration, we have just as much unemployment as when we started... And an enormous debt to boot!" — Henry Morgenthau, Franklin Delano Roosevelt's Treasury secretary, 1941.

  7. #157
    MrFun
    Deity MrFun's Avatar
    Join Date
    19 Nov 2000
    Location
    Iowa
    Posts
    12,804
    Country
    This is MrFun's Country Flag
    Thanks
    84
    Thanked 17 Times in 16 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    09:24
    This is where an awesome Mark Twain quote would be, but Apolyton says it would be too many lines. :(

  8. #158
    The Mad Monk
    Emperor The Mad Monk's Avatar
    Join Date
    22 Mar 2000
    Location
    Flyover Country
    Posts
    9,113
    Country
    This is The Mad Monk's Country Flag
    Thanks
    11
    Thanked 38 Times in 29 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    09:24
    Just How Does Mitt Romney's Wealth Stack Up?
    Abby Rapoport
    January 24, 2012
    The former Massachusetts governor is wealthy—but is he wealthier than past presidents?
    Donate Share on emailEmail Print Send to Instapaper In case there was any question, after the release of his tax returns, it's clear that Mitt Romney is rich, even by 1 percent standards.

    But it's one thing to be rich compared with the general public. Some of our readers wondered just how Romney's wealth stacks up against his would-be peers: the presidents. Turns out, were he to be elected, Romney would be among the top four richest people to become president.

    In 2010, the website 24/7 Wall Street did an analysis of all 44 presidents' assets and adjusted their peak wealth to 2010 dollars. The article points out that the comparisons over time can be a little sticky. "The fortunes of American presidents are tied to the economy in the eras in which they lived. For the first 75 years after Washington’s election, presidents generally made money on land, crops, and commodity speculation," it says. "A president who owned hundreds or thousands of acres could lose most or all of his property after a few years of poor crop yields."

    Interestingly, many U.S. presidents were worth less than a million (the lowest designation on the scale). For a good chunk of the 19th century, Americans elected presidents from poor backgrounds with little to their name, like Abraham Lincoln, Ulysses S. Grant, and James A. Garfield.

    George Washington, the first president, also turns out to be the wealthiest, clocking in with more than half a billion in net worth. At his peak, Thomas Jefferson wasn't far behind with $212 million. Then there was John F. Kennedy, who shared a trust worth more than $1 billion with his siblings. Teddy Roosevelt and Andrew Jackson were the only other presidents to break the $100 million mark.

    Most sources estimate Romney's net worth at around $200 million or so. However, at his peak he was reportedly worth as much as $500 million. Either way, he'd be on the podium for wealthiest presidents.

    So if Romney were elected, he would rank among the richest presidents in American history. As a wealthy presidential candidate, however, he's got more company—most recently, Steve Forbes, Ross Perot, and John Kerry all had as much, if not more.

    Of course, that didn't mean any of them got to be president.
    http://prospect.org/article/just-how...s-wealth-stack
    Last edited by The Mad Monk; May 14, 2012 at 14:22.
    "We have tried spending money. We are spending more than we have ever spent before and it does not work...After eight years of this Administration, we have just as much unemployment as when we started... And an enormous debt to boot!" — Henry Morgenthau, Franklin Delano Roosevelt's Treasury secretary, 1941.

  9. #159
    MrFun
    Deity MrFun's Avatar
    Join Date
    19 Nov 2000
    Location
    Iowa
    Posts
    12,804
    Country
    This is MrFun's Country Flag
    Thanks
    84
    Thanked 17 Times in 16 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    09:24
    Romney never really earned the wealth that he has today.
    This is where an awesome Mark Twain quote would be, but Apolyton says it would be too many lines. :(

  10. #160
    notyoueither
    Deity notyoueither's Avatar
    Join Date
    12 Aug 2001
    Location
    la la la la la
    Posts
    24,248
    Country
    This is notyoueither's Country Flag
    Thanks
    5
    Thanked 8 Times in 8 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    08:24
    Care to go to the barricades?
    (\__/)
    (='.'=)
    (")_(") This is Bunny. Copy and paste bunny into your signature to help him gain world domination.

  11. #161
    Al B. Sure!
    Deity Al B. Sure!'s Avatar
    Join Date
    04 Mar 1999
    Location
    Quantico
    Posts
    22,674
    Country
    This is Al B. Sure!'s Country Flag
    Thanks
    5
    Thanked 32 Times in 20 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    10:24
    Quote Originally Posted by MrFun View Post
    Jesus. I don't even have to click the video to see this is stupid. The screen capture saying "Pay Only 15% Tax" begins the idiocy that Jaguar and I thoroughly explained in the other thread.
    "Flutie was better than Kelly, Elway, Esiason and Cunningham." - Ben Kenobi
    "I have nothing against Wilson, but he's nowhere near the same calibre of QB as Flutie. Flutie threw for 5k+ yards in the CFL." -Ben Kenobi

  12. #162
    MrFun
    Deity MrFun's Avatar
    Join Date
    19 Nov 2000
    Location
    Iowa
    Posts
    12,804
    Country
    This is MrFun's Country Flag
    Thanks
    84
    Thanked 17 Times in 16 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    09:24
    Then where do people get the claim that Romney only paid 15 percent in taxes, if it's clearly and obviously false?
    This is where an awesome Mark Twain quote would be, but Apolyton says it would be too many lines. :(

  13. #163
    Hauldren Collider
    Deity Hauldren Collider's Avatar
    Join Date
    20 Feb 2010
    Location
    Virginia
    Posts
    13,542
    Country
    This is Hauldren Collider's Country Flag
    Thanks
    75
    Thanked 44 Times in 38 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    10:24
    Quote Originally Posted by MrFun View Post
    Romney never really earned the wealth that he has today.
    Moron.

    Want to explain how it wasn't earned?
    If there is no sound in space, how come you can hear the lasers?
    :(){ :|:& };:

  14. #164
    MrFun
    Deity MrFun's Avatar
    Join Date
    19 Nov 2000
    Location
    Iowa
    Posts
    12,804
    Country
    This is MrFun's Country Flag
    Thanks
    84
    Thanked 17 Times in 16 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    09:24
    The video explains it. Moron.
    This is where an awesome Mark Twain quote would be, but Apolyton says it would be too many lines. :(

  15. #165
    Hauldren Collider
    Deity Hauldren Collider's Avatar
    Join Date
    20 Feb 2010
    Location
    Virginia
    Posts
    13,542
    Country
    This is Hauldren Collider's Country Flag
    Thanks
    75
    Thanked 44 Times in 38 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    10:24
    If there is no sound in space, how come you can hear the lasers?
    :(){ :|:& };:

  16. #166
    Al B. Sure!
    Deity Al B. Sure!'s Avatar
    Join Date
    04 Mar 1999
    Location
    Quantico
    Posts
    22,674
    Country
    This is Al B. Sure!'s Country Flag
    Thanks
    5
    Thanked 32 Times in 20 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    10:24
    Quote Originally Posted by MrFun View Post
    Then where do people get the claim that Romney only paid 15 percent in taxes, if it's clearly and obviously false?
    We covered this.

    W= wage income
    T= tax rate
    r= return
    C= investment tax rate

    Wage and return income with no taxes:
    W + W*(r)

    Add taxes on wages:
    (1-T)W + (1-T)(W)(r)

    Add taxes on investment income:
    (1-T)W + (1-T)(W)(r) - (1-T)(W)(r)(C)

    so...

    (1-T)W + (1-T)(W)(r)(1-C)

    As you can see, the investment income is not only taxed at the investment tax rate but also implicitly taxed at the wage tax rate.

    And yet, someone with more investment income will have a lower ETR but will actually have been more constrained by taxation!
    "Flutie was better than Kelly, Elway, Esiason and Cunningham." - Ben Kenobi
    "I have nothing against Wilson, but he's nowhere near the same calibre of QB as Flutie. Flutie threw for 5k+ yards in the CFL." -Ben Kenobi

  17. #167
    Jon Miller
    OTF Moderator Jon Miller's Avatar
    Join Date
    18 May 1999
    Posts
    17,204
    Thanks
    70
    Thanked 11 Times in 9 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    09:24
    Investment isn't just a black box where you put in money and get more money out later. It isn't just some 'fact of nature'.

    (A) Investment is often you getting a portion of someone else's labor, and to get a gain by it (this is investment in businesses/etc).

    (B) Investment is also often due to you having wealth when others don't, and so being able to buy an asset that someone else wants and then sell it to them for more than what you paid for it when they come to have the money to be able to purchase it.

    For (A), investment should be obviously taxed. Or at least the gains. And it should be taxed at the same rate as income.

    For (B), investment isn't as obviously taxed. It is closer to the 'black investment box' that you and others keep imagining (but that doesn't exist). However, due to the fact that your asset increases in value because of the public goods that exist, it makes sense that you pay taxes on it.

    My understanding, and I could be wrong, is that you don't pay capital gains on property but rather property taxes.

    I think the easiest thing to do would be to just have businesses pay taxes (no income or capital gains taxes). That way we are taxing what is important, the output (whether the income from the output goes to the labor or the capital). However, quite logically they would just pass this on to consumers/etc. So then we are back to consumption taxes? Except maybe it is fairer to make it be on businesses.

    JM
    Last edited by Jon Miller; May 15, 2012 at 05:09.
    Jon Miller-
    I AM.CANADIAN
    GENERATION 35: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation. Social experiment.

  18. #168
    Jon Miller
    OTF Moderator Jon Miller's Avatar
    Join Date
    18 May 1999
    Posts
    17,204
    Thanks
    70
    Thanked 11 Times in 9 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    09:24
    Thinking about it, I am remembering why pragmatically it works better to be taxed on point of consumption.

    Combining consumption taxes, wealth/property taxes, and some transfer, would be fairest and pragmatic.

    JM
    (wealth taxes could be in the form of a higher targeted inflation rate)
    Jon Miller-
    I AM.CANADIAN
    GENERATION 35: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation. Social experiment.

  19. #169
    Kuciwalker
    Deity Kuciwalker's Avatar
    Join Date
    17 Feb 2001
    Posts
    19,361
    Thanks
    5
    Thanked 16 Times in 12 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    10:24
    Quote Originally Posted by Jon Miller View Post
    Investment isn't just a black box where you put in money and get more money out later. It isn't just some 'fact of nature'.

    (A) Investment is often you getting a portion of someone else's labor, and to get a gain by it (this is investment in businesses/etc).

    (B) Investment is also often due to you having wealth when others don't, and so being able to buy an asset that someone else wants and then sell it to them for more than what you paid for it when they come to have the money to be able to purchase it.

    For (A), investment should be obviously taxed. Or at least the gains. And it should be taxed at the same rate as income.

    For (B), investment isn't as obviously taxed. It is closer to the 'black investment box' that you and others keep imagining (but that doesn't exist). However, due to the fact that your asset increases in value because of the public goods that exist, it makes sense that you pay taxes on it.
    Jon, (A) is Marxist nonsense. As in, it is literally both Marxist and nonsense and has been discredited since basically forever. It also doesn't logically follow.

    (B) also doesn't follow. I'm calling you out on explaining how "benefits from a public good" becomes "should be taxed".

    I think the easiest thing to do would be to just have businesses pay taxes (no income or capital gains taxes). That way we are taxing what is important, the output (whether the income from the output goes to the labor or the capital). However, quite logically they would just pass this on to consumers/etc. So then we are back to consumption taxes? Except maybe it is fairer to make it be on businesses.
    So your big fairness issue is that you'd prefer businesses do the paperwork?

  20. #170
    Jon Miller
    OTF Moderator Jon Miller's Avatar
    Join Date
    18 May 1999
    Posts
    17,204
    Thanks
    70
    Thanked 11 Times in 9 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    09:24
    It has nothing to do with marxism, do you even know what marxism states?

    A person works and produces wealth. The business that employs can spend some of that wealth on paying the person (income), some of the wealth on paying for the things that that person needs to work with, and the wealth that is left over is profit.

    It is entirely unfair to tax the wealth created by the person that goes to paying him (as income) and not tax the wealth that goes as profit (or to purchase the things needed to run the business). If you just tax the 'income', than you are creating a tax advantage for the wealth to go to profit instead of to pay for income. This might be fine economically, but is entirely unfair when you consider that those who own the business are getting gains that are untaxed while those who work in the business are getting gains that are taxed.

    Consider this example:

    I make a company. It is a law office (because that is easiest).

    I hire 5 lawyers, and 5 clerks.

    I could pay them 200k and 50k (for a total of 1m + 250k + 120k (for the office) = 1.37) and have a profit of (for example) 130k per year. Obviously the lawyers would pay quite a bit in taxes, and the clerks would pay a bit.

    Or I could pay them a little bit (~30k), give the lawyers some preferred shares that give a dividend (initial dividend of say 70k per year), and give them shares in the company each year. Then my total costs are 0.77 and I can take the remaining 1.23 and invest it in property/etc and grow the wealth of the employees (and myself, and more than lawyers than the clerks) enormously. All of this with none of us paying taxes.

    There is a reason why Steve Jobs worked for 1$. It doesn't mean that he wasn't making an income from his work.

    Your method unfairly taxes those who 'make an income by standard means' (who are generally poorer) compared to those who 'make an income by using their wealth advantage' (who are generally much wealthier).

    It is still income. Just because in one case I get payed by the boss, and in the other case I get payed by managers, doesn't mean I am not getting payed.

    JM
    Jon Miller-
    I AM.CANADIAN
    GENERATION 35: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation. Social experiment.

  21. #171
    Jon Miller
    OTF Moderator Jon Miller's Avatar
    Join Date
    18 May 1999
    Posts
    17,204
    Thanks
    70
    Thanked 11 Times in 9 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    09:24
    Quote Originally Posted by Kuciwalker View Post
    So your big fairness issue is that you'd prefer businesses do the paperwork?
    No, it is just that a lot of things businesses do, are done to benefit those in control of the businesses (managers, CEOs, etc).

    By taxing consumption, than many of these 'perks' are untaxed.

    JM
    Jon Miller-
    I AM.CANADIAN
    GENERATION 35: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation. Social experiment.

  22. #172
    Jon Miller
    OTF Moderator Jon Miller's Avatar
    Join Date
    18 May 1999
    Posts
    17,204
    Thanks
    70
    Thanked 11 Times in 9 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    09:24
    Why should one person's work (the worker at McDs or the engineer at Apple) get taxed, but another person's work (providing a building and supplies and so on for the McDs, providing the office and patents and so on for the engineer) not get taxed?

    They both make an income from the work, but the earlier group (poor) would get taxed for their income while the latter group (wealthy) does not get taxed.

    JM
    Jon Miller-
    I AM.CANADIAN
    GENERATION 35: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation. Social experiment.

  23. #173
    Jon Miller
    OTF Moderator Jon Miller's Avatar
    Join Date
    18 May 1999
    Posts
    17,204
    Thanks
    70
    Thanked 11 Times in 9 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    09:24
    Quote Originally Posted by Kuciwalker View Post
    (B) also doesn't follow. I'm calling you out on explaining how "benefits from a public good" becomes "should be taxed".
    The public good is payed for by everyone's taxes.

    The more in assets you have (B type investments), the more you gain from the taxes that the public pays.

    Therefore you should pay more in taxes relative to someone who does not have any B type investments.

    Think of property. Who benefits the most (asset wise) from having good roads/electricity grid/etc/etc/etc? You can charge a lot more for property in an advantageous area than property that no one wants...

    JM
    Jon Miller-
    I AM.CANADIAN
    GENERATION 35: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation. Social experiment.

  24. #174
    The Mad Monk
    Emperor The Mad Monk's Avatar
    Join Date
    22 Mar 2000
    Location
    Flyover Country
    Posts
    9,113
    Country
    This is The Mad Monk's Country Flag
    Thanks
    11
    Thanked 38 Times in 29 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    09:24
    Quote Originally Posted by MrFun View Post
    Romney never really earned the wealth that he has today.
    Did you notice how often "inherit" came up in that list? Including Washington and Jefferson?
    "We have tried spending money. We are spending more than we have ever spent before and it does not work...After eight years of this Administration, we have just as much unemployment as when we started... And an enormous debt to boot!" — Henry Morgenthau, Franklin Delano Roosevelt's Treasury secretary, 1941.

  25. #175
    gribbler
    Deity gribbler's Avatar
    Join Date
    18 Feb 2010
    Location
    Nazi Moon Colony
    Posts
    12,712
    Country
    This is gribbler's Country Flag
    Thanks
    57
    Thanked 75 Times in 57 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    09:24
    Quote Originally Posted by Al B. Sure! View Post
    We covered this.

    W= wage income
    T= tax rate
    r= return
    C= investment tax rate

    Wage and return income with no taxes:
    W + W*(r)

    Add taxes on wages:
    (1-T)W + (1-T)(W)(r)

    Add taxes on investment income:
    (1-T)W + (1-T)(W)(r) - (1-T)(W)(r)(C)

    so...

    (1-T)W + (1-T)(W)(r)(1-C)

    As you can see, the investment income is not only taxed at the investment tax rate but also implicitly taxed at the wage tax rate.

    And yet, someone with more investment income will have a lower ETR but will actually have been more constrained by taxation!
    So you're suggesting Mitt Romney was some hard working laborer who set aside his wages and reaped a return in doing so, therefore taxing his capital gains the way wages are taxed would be unfair?

  26. #176
    Kuciwalker
    Deity Kuciwalker's Avatar
    Join Date
    17 Feb 2001
    Posts
    19,361
    Thanks
    5
    Thanked 16 Times in 12 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    10:24
    Quote Originally Posted by Jon Miller View Post
    It has nothing to do with marxism, do you even know what marxism states?
    Better than you, apparently.

    A person works and produces wealth. The business that employs can spend some of that wealth on paying the person (income), some of the wealth on paying for the things that that person needs to work with, and the wealth that is left over is profit.
    A person works in conjunction with capital. Frequently the capital is actually far more important than the worker! In the extreme, imagine a Star Trek replicator that produced a car out of thin air, but for some reason it could ONLY be operated manually, i.e. by pushing a button once per car. So I build this replicator and then hire a worker to push the button, then sell the cars. It is very clear that the overwhelming majority of the value being produced derives from the capital, and the worker is providing essentially none of it. This becomes even more true if the worker is able to do all of the fun things he would normally do in his leisure time, just every few minutes he has to press a button (say we put the button in an app on his phone).

    It is entirely unfair to tax the wealth created by the person that goes to paying him (as income) and not tax the wealth that goes as profit (or to purchase the things needed to run the business). If you just tax the 'income', than you are creating a tax advantage for the wealth to go to profit instead of to pay for income. This might be fine economically, but is entirely unfair when you consider that those who own the business are getting gains that are untaxed while those who work in the business are getting gains that are taxed.
    Jon, let's continue on with the car replicator thought experiment. Let's say I, with my own labor, manufactured 100 of these. Let's say that the tax on wages is 10%. In that case pre-tax I have 100 car replicators and, over my lifetime, I will get 100*X cars (where X is the number of cars a replicator will produce in its lifetime before breaking down). I am assuming that the wages of the button-presser are small relative to the price of the cars, etc. and so can be ignored.

    If we impose a 10% wage tax but no tax on capital income, when I make the 100 replicators I have to give 10 of them to the government. Therefore, I will have 90*X cars - 90% of my pre-tax lifetime income.

    If we additionally impose a 10% tax on capital income, I will have to give 9 out of each batch of 90 cars to the government. This leaves me with 81*X cars of lifetime income, which is a 19% tax rate.

    If the replicators can be configured to produce more replicators instead of cars, then this tax rate goes even higher, because each round of replicator production multiplies in the tax rate again.

    Consider this example:

    I make a company. It is a law office (because that is easiest).

    I hire 5 lawyers, and 5 clerks.

    I could pay them 200k and 50k (for a total of 1m + 250k + 120k (for the office) = 1.37) and have a profit of (for example) 130k per year. Obviously the lawyers would pay quite a bit in taxes, and the clerks would pay a bit.

    Or I could pay them a little bit (~30k), give the lawyers some preferred shares that give a dividend (initial dividend of say 70k per year), and give them shares in the company each year. Then my total costs are 0.77 and I can take the remaining 1.23 and invest it in property/etc and grow the wealth of the employees (and myself, and more than lawyers than the clerks) enormously. All of this with none of us paying taxes.
    When you provide non-monetary compensation you still have to pay taxes. The lawyers would have to pay taxes on the value of the shares received each year. Under current law, they would also pay taxes upon realizing any appreciation in the share price, and upon receiving any dividends. Depending on the way the firm was set up, there would be additional firm-side taxes paid on the dividends (under current law).

    Your method unfairly taxes those who 'make an income by standard means' (who are generally poorer) compared to those who 'make an income by using their wealth advantage' (who are generally much wealthier).
    There are occasional cases where wage income can be improperly (from an economics standpoint) classified as investment income. The scale of this problem is tiny compared to the scale of the distortion introduced by taxing investment income.

  27. #177
    Kuciwalker
    Deity Kuciwalker's Avatar
    Join Date
    17 Feb 2001
    Posts
    19,361
    Thanks
    5
    Thanked 16 Times in 12 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    10:24
    Quote Originally Posted by Jon Miller View Post
    The public good is payed for by everyone's taxes.

    The more in assets you have (B type investments), the more you gain from the taxes that the public pays.

    Therefore you should pay more in taxes relative to someone who does not have any B type investments.

    Think of property. Who benefits the most (asset wise) from having good roads/electricity grid/etc/etc/etc? You can charge a lot more for property in an advantageous area than property that no one wants...

    JM
    This logic doesn't actually work, Jon. Lots of people benefit far more from taxes than they EVER pay in. There are entire segments of society that receive huge net transfers of wealth through government redistribution. They are called the poor. Your logic would suggest that they should have to give all of that wealth back.

  28. #178
    Kuciwalker
    Deity Kuciwalker's Avatar
    Join Date
    17 Feb 2001
    Posts
    19,361
    Thanks
    5
    Thanked 16 Times in 12 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    10:24
    Government isn't a "you should pay in what you get out" thing. When the government provides public goods, it should try to provide the most benefit at the lowest cost, and that's pretty much it. Deadweight loss from the means of revenue collection (taxation) is part of that cost.

  29. #179
    Jon Miller
    OTF Moderator Jon Miller's Avatar
    Join Date
    18 May 1999
    Posts
    17,204
    Thanks
    70
    Thanked 11 Times in 9 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    09:24
    If the capital contributes a lot more than the worker, than why shouldn't the capital be taxed far more than the worker?

    JM
    Jon Miller-
    I AM.CANADIAN
    GENERATION 35: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation. Social experiment.

  30. #180
    Jon Miller
    OTF Moderator Jon Miller's Avatar
    Join Date
    18 May 1999
    Posts
    17,204
    Thanks
    70
    Thanked 11 Times in 9 Posts
    Local Date
    May 23, 2013
    Local Time
    09:24
    Quote Originally Posted by Kuciwalker View Post
    Government isn't a "you should pay in what you get out" thing. When the government provides public goods, it should try to provide the most benefit at the lowest cost, and that's pretty much it. Deadweight loss from the means of revenue collection (taxation) is part of that cost.
    No, but people who make their wealth due to the largess of government (Which is all rich people) should pay more than the the poor people who do not make such wealth.

    This seems fair.

    Asking the poor to pay to subsidize the wealthy seems grossly unfair.

    JM
    Jon Miller-
    I AM.CANADIAN
    GENERATION 35: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation. Social experiment.

Page 6 of 7 FirstFirst ... 3 4 5 6 7 LastLast

Similar Threads

  1. Replies: 27
    Last Post: December 12, 2005, 15:35
  2. Finally - Bush did something good !
    By Chemical Ollie in forum Off-Topic-Archive
    Replies: 64
    Last Post: December 6, 2003, 18:41
  3. Last news .. and finally,
    By James Adams in forum Civ2-Democracy Game
    Replies: 27
    Last Post: July 9, 2002, 08:03
  4. Replies: 1
    Last Post: November 13, 2001, 20:17
  5. Note on Unit Editor... good news or bad news?
    By izmircali in forum Civ3-General-Archive
    Replies: 2
    Last Post: October 24, 2001, 11:09

Visitors found this page by searching for:

powered by vBulletin dishwasher recall

jason horowitz lied about haircut

powered by vBulletin top high school baseball detroit news

mitt and ann virgins at marriage

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions