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The biggest straw man

But consider this:

Paul Allen is awesome at business, so we want him to work for as long as possible.
But if his dream is, say, 5 yachts, then he can quit as soon as he has the money to buy them.
So in order to make the most of his talent, we should tax him heavily, thereby delaying the moment when he has saved enough money to sail into the sunset in style.

Because leftists live in fantasy land and ol Paul is going to let you have your way with him?
 
What do you mean, "perfectly fine"? You think policy should be based on a series of unprovable claims?

I'm not talking politics, but life. If someone wishes to assert something really stupid, but unfalsifiable, I'm just going to go on reading my book. It is the falsifiable stuff I'm going to call them out on.

I'm not really politically active, so I can't really comment about policy.
 
I'm not talking politics, but life. If someone wishes to assert something really stupid, but unfalsifiable, I'm just going to go on reading my book. It is the falsifiable stuff I'm going to call them out on.

I suppose that's how we should have responded to your post?
 
It makes more sense than the Libertarian folly that lower income tax makes people work more.

Well there is a certain percentage that works best. No one is going to work being taxed 100%. It would be nice if government could settle on a number and leave it alone.
 
What do you mean, "perfectly fine"? You think policy should be based on a series of unprovable claims?

The idea that there is a level of income which is enough and the rest should be taken by tax and redistributed is an unprovable claim. It's an ideological position.
 
The idea that there is a level of income which is enough and the rest should be taken by tax and redistributed is an unprovable claim. It's an ideological position.
And quite depressing at that. I remember writing a huge check to the federal government for some property sold, what was so depressing was knowing it was going down a rat hole.
 
The idea that there is a level of income which is enough and the rest should be taken by tax and redistributed is an unprovable claim. It's an ideological position.

If that's ideology, then it all is. The idea that any tax should happen, the idea that there should be a government at all, the idea that you deserve to keep anything you make...

No, that's a silly frame. The question is how to best organize a society. Certainly, there will be some values that are advanced that people may disagree on, but there is ample empirical evidence to guide the discussion.

I get whey Glibertarians would want people to think it was all about ideology, after all, empiricism rejects every point they've ever put forward, but ideology is less important than factual reality. It's simply a matter of fact, for example, that single payer nations spend less per capita on healthcare than the US does. What you do with that fact may depend on ideology, but it's perfectly possible to move from a factual understanding of the world to principles of good government.

Or we can play the brain in a vat game.
 
The question is how to best organize a society.

That isn't always the question. Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar. Sometimes the question is if you think Bill Gates will feel sad if he had to pay more taxes and there isn't a broader point.
 
That isn't always the question. Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar. Sometimes the question is if you think Bill Gates will feel sad if he had to pay more taxes and there isn't a broader point.

Haha, and sometimes a cigar was a poster defending something, a higher top marginal income tax rate, by pointing out that the downside - rich people paying more - wasn't much of one as they would not be affected by such a change in a way that should concern us.

You took his phrase literally and seemed to imply that we should be worried about the number of yachts Paul Allen can buy when determining the tax rate.

What a strange defense you've developed: Oh, I was posting something that had nothing to do with anything.
 
Haha, and sometimes a cigar was a poster defending something, a higher top marginal income tax rate, by pointing out that the downside - rich people paying more - wasn't much of one as they would not be affected by such a change in a way that should concern us.

You took his phrase literally and seemed to imply that we should be worried about the number of yachts Paul Allen can buy when determining the tax rate.

What a strange defense you've developed: Oh, I was posting something that had nothing to do with anything.

Yes, I took the question literally. I definitely did not imply anyone should be worried about Paul Allen's yachts. Saying he is going to be down about it or I empathize with his feeling he needs them has nothing to do with policy.
 
Do you really think he'd miss it? Lol

Quite telling and he is a rabid leftist, why doesn't he just give it to you?
I don't want his yacht. I can't afford the moorage.
 
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Well there is a certain percentage that works best. No one is going to work being taxed 100%. It would be nice if government could settle on a number and leave it alone.

No one is suggesting a 100 percent rate. We were talking 50 percent. And people will be arguing about what is the right tax rate forever. It is reasonable that it changes over time as conditions change.
 
I was reminded of our Hollywood elite who in times past idolized Chavez and his socialist Venezuela. Losers like Sean Penn and Harry Belafonte. But it seems the upper classes had enough of having their land seized and being forced to work for nothing.

In my country poverty is a choice, the state gives for free all the tools a person needs to get out.

What did Ducky do wrong, apart from getting ill?

Not in reality again? We have quite the safety net!

There isn't any sinking in this country.

Oh it would be fantastic that we wouldn't have one single Ducky in the country.:rolleyes:

What the hell is one ******* example supposed to show? Should I send in my government donation now?

Just pure leftist emotion is all your side runs on.

A single counterexample can disprove a claim that something doesn't exist.

Medical bankruptcies are a problem - about 75% of bankruptcies in the US before the ACA were partly due to medical costs, and of those, the majority had insurance at the start of their medical treatment. What did they do wrong apart from getting ill?


ETA: We don't have this problem in the UK, and my government spends a smaller proportion of its GDP on healthcare than your government. In other words, more of your taxes are spent on healthcare than mine.
 
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ETA: We don't have this problem in the UK, and my government spends a smaller proportion of its GDP on healthcare than your government. In other words, more of your taxes are spent on healthcare than mine.

Another fun fact: in countries with UHC there is far less tort litigation. Provide UHC and the damages in most accident cases decrease rapidly.
 
No one is suggesting a 100 percent rate. We were talking 50 percent. And people will be arguing about what is the right tax rate forever. It is reasonable that it changes over time as conditions change.

Just to be clear, the US has had marginal tax rates of over 50% in the past. In fact, it may be the best way to MAGA!
 
Just to be clear, the US has had marginal tax rates of over 50% in the past. In fact, it may be the best way to MAGA!


. We had marginal tax rates above 50 percent from WWII to 1982. We had 90+ rates in the 1950s.
 

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