jj said:
You don't even know the answer to this question, but you're rebuking somebody else on the tax rate?
Yep, I don't know everything about the issue, though I try to pay attention to evidence. In any event, just cause I don't know everything does not mean I don't know anything.
Shouting at me is hardly an appropriate response, especially seeing as you've brought in virtually no evidence in terms of sources to support many of your claims.
Next, perhaps, the question will arise of what it means when the employer is obliged to match the employee's SS tax.
Think about that one, ok?
Well if you can show me if this is actually the case, I will gladly oblige. Otherwise its proof surrgogate. I know actually having to bring in your evidence, and do research in order to prove what you know to another who doesn't might be tedious, but it still almost always has to be done if we are to avoid an endless series of wild goose chases. It's not my job for example to gather your evidence or prove your case for you. That's your job.
Shouting "Do your Homework" in this issue, in bold and big font isn't evidence for your case.
Yep, thought we'd get there. You just said, in effect:
"What's mine is mine, what's yours is mine.".
Did I really?
No I said, what's in many way's society's wealth should be spent by society in a way that benefits most of us most of the time. That's a very different statement.
Perhaps you simply confuse two types of trading and the ownership that arises, equating trading and market pricing.
Equiaty ownership is what we use most of the time with our personal possesions. It's the way we evolved to think about things, because on the plains of Africa we either directly made most of our own stuff, or purchased it by things we made directly ourselves.
And even then certain things that took group effort, like big kills, would be shared by a group.
Now at days, in our complex, state level market economy things are a bit more complex, and production is a bit more indirect. The concept of ownership becomes a bit more blurry and open to disagreement here.
In your opinion, the wealth of the super rich is the equivalent to personal property. The stone axe, or hut of a caveman. IMO, it's more like a big game that the entire tribe took down, who's shares should be destributed in the most efficient and fair manner.
Of course certain people should get more, because certain people did more. And full equality is not practical as it is usually economically not feasible.
But more fairness, especially in a way that rewards talent is I think preferable to a method that basically rewards priveledge and promotes gross inequality. I really doubt those at the top .5% level really work 200 times harder then the rest of us, which is what one would think seeing as they own 30% of the wealth.
IMO the modern economy is somewhat a mix of personal ownership produced in part by individuals and group ownership, where things are made by group effort. Our job is to find the right balance, so as to serve our general values.
The aspects I'm talking about, overall wealth from which you use your dollars to purchase from, is imo, a group product and multi-personal aggregate of products.
It is stuff produced at many stages by many individuals (like Universities) or commidities/services produced or provided more by single individuals (like books), though groups are involved here as well i.e. publishers, book stores, paper companies, etc..
They all in many ways likewise rely on a superstructure necessary for this system to exist, things like electricity, schools, police/courts, armies, hospitals, roads, and sewers.
All things necessary for the creation of wealth, making its creation even more of a group effort.
So given this set-up, what would you say raw money amounts to?
Mere individual property, like the stone axe, which brings with it a certain psychology?
Or group wealth, like a dead mestadon, that is supposed to be split by the group fairly and efficiently?
Of course extremes on this issue are always wrong, which is why extreme capitalism and socialism fail imo to capture the psychology and system necessary for the best kind of economy.
But this is also why I don't see progressive taxation as outright robbery. Not so much as I see flat tax, which is the equivalent imo, to a single man trying to hoard the group's big kill.