Winstonm, on 2013-May-23, 07:38, said:
People I have known who advocate this position also seem to misunderstand that national budgets and deficits do not operate the same and cannot be compared to individual or family budgets, no matter how much more understandable that false comparison seems to make it. We, as a country, do not have to "live within our means" at all times, and there are time when it is clearly a mistake to do so.
As for the flat rate, do you really think that taking $2000 from a family of 4 who earn $20000 has the same impact as taking $20000 from a family of 4 who earn $200,000? Although the mathematics may seem fair, is the result just?
It is fair for you to make your "means" statement, but in fact completely inconsistent with how our budgets, deficits, and entitlements programs are being run. Ask the kids in college today if they think it is fair. Some of them are already learning that the "Ponzi scheme" (kick the can down the road, or whatever you like to call it) will fall on their backs, crushingly. Families can run a deficit for a while because a bankrupt estate has no claim on the survivors. The government can only resort to things like devaluation of currency and other really bad things. In Europe they seemed to believe what you believe - and some still do.
Per your flat rate question - Well, if I had been brain-washed/educated (and never questioned it) in school to believe that the Robin Hood approach to taxes was fair, then I would likely agree with you. But if you believe that, then why would you not argue that when you take a train, bus, etc, you should pay some portion of your income, not some portion of what it cost the provider? For you the beer is a buck, for him $100.
The real point here is that this government is ours as a nation. And if people voted as if the money being spent was theirs - as they should be thinking - the behavior of the government and its spending would change to meet what it could get and what its people thought was worthwhile.
Right now politicians have the electorate - as a whole - addicted to OPiuM (Other People's Money). Sure spend money on this, that and the other thing - and tax like you are Jesse James, just don't take my money. In a true sense, they can't escape behaving that way. The system is fixed for them, too. They have to go along to get elected whether they believe in it or not.
Why does this work? First, we have been "educated" to believe that it is fair to tax this way - even though it is a relatively recent idea. Second, we feel entitled to be taxed less if we earn less. We think nothing of taking by force money from others as long as they are doing better than we. There is just something morally repugnant to that idea. Hey, the insurance company is huge, a few thousand in false claims won't hurt them much. That is a transference - people like that prefer not to think of taking money from their neighbors or real people, just people that they don't know (and perhaps envy).
At the end of the day - we have taxation without representation. Kids that can't vote, or have not even been born, will be paying taxes to pay for what our government has promised us, (or emigrate?)! Of course, it is not possible to instantly "balance" the budget, and eliminate the deficit, or the future shortfalls, by an immediate extraction - pro-rata - or any other way. But the system is broken, and when we continue to fail to repair it, we guarantee that it will not only stay broken but get worse.