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Nonpartisan Tax Report Removed After Republican Protest

eldavojohn writes "On September 14th a report titled 'Taxes and the Economy: An Economic Analysis of the Top Tax Rates Since 1945' (PDF) penned by the Library of Congress' nonpartisan Congressional Research Service was released to little fanfare. However, the following conclusion of the report has since roiled the GOP enough to have the report removed from the Library of Congress: 'The results of the analysis suggest that changes over the past 65 years in the top marginal tax rate and the top capital gains tax rate do not appear correlated with economic growth. The reduction in the top tax rates appears to be uncorrelated with saving, investment, and productivity growth. The top tax rates appear to have little or no relation to the size of the economic pie. However, the top tax rate reductions appear to be associated with the increasing concentration of income at the top of the income distribution. As measured by IRS data, the share of income accruing to the top 0.1% of U.S. families increased from 4.2% in 1945 to 12.3% by 2007 before falling to 9.2% due to the 2007-2009 recession. At the same time, the average tax rate paid by the top 0.1% fell from over 50% in 1945 to about 25% in 2009. Tax policy could have a relation to how the economic pie is sliced—lower top tax rates may be associated with greater income disparities.' From the New York Times article: 'The pressure applied to the research service comes amid a broader Republican effort to raise questions about research and statistics that were once trusted as nonpartisan and apolitical.' It appears to no longer be found on the Library of Congress' website."

382 of 555 comments (clear)

  1. Of course it was! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Of course it was removed!

    Non-partisan is just a politically correct way of saying, Lib'rul bias.

    Now excuse me, I have to go back to watching Fox News.

    1. Re:Of course it was! by Mitreya · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Non-partisan is just a politically correct way of saying, Lib'rul bias.

      All politicians have their issues, but Republicans are departing further and further into never-land

      It's one thing to argue in generalities, but to directly and blatantly contradict facts - that's something else.

      How do you reconcile a non-partisan analysis that directly contradicts one of your main philosophies? In tune with Romney/Ryan platform of cutting taxes on everyone, increasing spending on military and keeping the good parts of Health Care Act (that cost money), while getting rid of the "bad" parts (that bring in money). And of course all of this will balance the budget somehow.

    2. Re:Of course it was! by AvitarX · · Score: 5, Insightful

      To be fair, Romney had one of the better close loopholes proposals I've heard.

      rather than fight about this or that, he wants a cap on deductions. I can't think of a better way eliminate massive deductions without picking and choosing (which is political suicide).

      I think Romney's plan won't work, and I won't vote for him, but I appreciate that small step to a better tax system (his limit was high enough that it would absolutely only effect the upper class)

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    3. Re:Of course it was! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The really funny part... this reminds me exactly of that masturbatory, dystopian, boat anchor of a book, Atlas Shrugged. Government research agencies were operating under extreme pressure from ultra left wing political interests to generate only the results they wanted, or risk losing their jobs. Any results to the contrary were buried.

      Note that this one follows one of the worst financial calamities in US history, perpetrated in reality by those magnates at the top (so revered in the story), and total lack of regulation.

      My irony gauge just blew a fuse.

    4. Re:Of course it was! by AK+Marc · · Score: 2, Funny

      I thought it was well accepted that reality has a liberal bias.

    5. Re:Of course it was! by AK+Marc · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Many countries moved to PAYE (pay as you earn), rather than the US pay April 15, and not before or after, but with a complex set of pre-pay rules and penalties, withholdings and such. PAYE means that the tax withheld from your paycheck is what you owe, no more no less. No deductions, no refunds, no returns (with a few exceptions in the "liberal" PAYE countries to help the children and such). All the people talking about eliminating the IRS really don't care about the IRS, they care solely about changing taxes to help the rich (spending taxes to punish the poor and reward savings). You can eliminate the IRS (as we know it) without touching the idea of an income tax.

    6. Re:Of course it was! by Mitreya · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think Romney's plan won't work, and I won't vote for him, but I appreciate that small step to a better tax system

      I know that Romney's plan won't work, because he hasn't given the details (you know, the ones that have the devil in them). I am not saying his plan is bad, I am saying it is at best half-defined and thus hard to evaluate either way.

      Until he gives us some idea of the cap amounts he is thinking of, the non-partisan budget office can't even evaluate his plan. And I suspect that he is keeping it vague, because he knows it won't work

      Is it really too much to demand a specific economic plan (with some numbers) from the president _before_ he is elected? Especially as he makes some significant promises about what his plan would achieve?

    7. Re:Of course it was! by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      I heard 17k, and maybe going down for higher income.

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    8. Re:Of course it was! by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      I should add, I DO NOT support Romney, I like this one idea I had not previously heard from anyone. I think it sidesteps pretty much every issue with closing deduction related loopholes. I hope to see it incorporated into a future budget, that will obviously require some.level of bipartisanship for the foreseeable future (as a super majority is unlikely).

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    9. Re:Of course it was! by frosty_tsm · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I think you can take a look at just the mortgage interest deduction. It could be argued whether this is a good thing or not (the intent being that home ownership is a good thing). Regardless, removing it would add thousands of dollars to families tax burden which would cause many to have to sell their homes (causing another mortgage crisis). Offsetting the thousands of dollars in lost deductions with a tax reduction would mean the non-home owners would get a big tax cut from what they previously paid which quickly reduces revenue and makes balancing the budget harder.

      We've seen what happens when the housing market gets screwed with. Sadly I think this becomes one of the so-called sacred cows.

    10. Re:Of course it was! by NicBenjamin · · Score: 1, Informative

      We basically have PAYE right now. If you owe more then $1,000 on April 15 you have to file a Form 2210, and pay a penalty.

      http://www.irs.gov/taxtopics/tc306.html

    11. Re:Of course it was! by NicBenjamin · · Score: 1

      I heard 17k, and maybe going down for higher income.

      And that is the best info we have on his plan. He's mentioned numbers from $15k to $25k, but he doesn't specify what. He also refuses to tell how much this would raise, and what precise tax rate cuts he'd implement with the money.

      And (surprise surprise) when independent analysts look into the tax rate cuts he's promising, and the revenue the deductions cap would raise, they find that it doesn't really add up.

    12. Re:Of course it was! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Simply saying it is non-partisan is not the same as it being non-partisan. the chief author is a substantial contributor to the Obama campaign and democratic party.

    13. Re:Of course it was! by NicBenjamin · · Score: 1

      I should add, I DO NOT support Romney, I like this one idea I had not previously heard from anyone. I think it sidesteps pretty much every issue with closing deduction related loopholes. I hope to see it incorporated into a future budget, that will obviously require some.level of bipartisanship for the foreseeable future (as a super majority is unlikely).

      It's not a bad idea. As an H and R Block guy it is certainly the only idea to limit deductions that does not nuke my livelihood.

      The problem is that very few people use $25k in deductions. Many of the ones who do actually need the whole amount (for example, last year I had a guy who withdrew six figures from his IRA to pay for his wife's Chemo, that is technically taxable income to him, and a deductions cap would have screwed him).

      Even if you o down to $15k you aren't increasing revenue by a hundred billion.

    14. Re:Of course it was! by cas2000 · · Score: 3, Informative

      i don't know how it works in other PAYE countries, but in Australia income tax is deducted from your weekly/fortnightly/monthly pay by your employer and paid to the government.

      Withheld tax is calculated based on your pay for that period, with a progressive tax scale (the first $18,200 you earn is tax free).

      You are still expected to file a tax return every year, and there are all sorts of exemptions and deductions and expenses you can claim (e.g. if you have children, and you can claim the cost of tools or education required for your work). Deductions aren't subtracted directly from the tax you pay, they reduce your taxable income (e.g. if you earn $50K and have $2K worth of deductions, you pay tax as if you earned $48K). For most people, this results in a tax refund, especially if they spent any time not working or had irregular overtime.

      You're also supposed to declare in your tax return any other income you may have received (interest from investments, share dividends, capital gains, etc). For people who make significant incomes in this way, they end up with a tax bill to pay.

      e.g. someone making $50,000 in a year would end up paying abut $8600 tax over that year, including the 1.5% medicare levy but not including any deductions. That works out to an effective tax rate of 17% - which isn't too bad considering that it pays for roads, schools, universities, hospitals, police, tax collectors :), army, navy, pharmaceutical benefits scheme (subsidised and price-regulated drugs - pharma companies hate it, people love it. PBS-approved drugs cost a maximum of $35 for a month's supply, but usually less - or about $5 if you're a pensioner or unemployed), infrastructure projects like the NBN, and thousands of other government services. it's not perfect, and money is wasted, and nearly everyone can think of some things that they'd rather their tax money wasn't spent on but the benefits greatly outweigh the cost.

    15. Re:Of course it was! by digitig · · Score: 1

      PAYE means that the tax withheld from your paycheck is what you owe, no more no less.

      Not quite. There's typically an adjustment needed at the end of the financial year due to things that don't appear in your paycheck (share dividends, interest on savings accounts and so on), although if the adjustment is small here in the UK it can be carried over into the next year. I usually end up having to pay a couple of hundred pounds. My wife usually manages a small rebate.

      --
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    16. Re:Of course it was! by thaylin · · Score: 2

      The chief author, however the total contribution team was bipartisan.

      --
      When you cant win, ad hominem.
    17. Re:Of course it was! by __aaltlg1547 · · Score: 1

      To be fair, Romney had one of the better close loopholes proposals I've heard.

      rather than fight about this or that, he wants a cap on deductions. I can't think of a better way eliminate massive deductions without picking and choosing (which is political suicide).

      I think Romney's plan won't work, and I won't vote for him, but I appreciate that small step to a better tax system (his limit was high enough that it would absolutely only effect the upper class)

      What do you mean plan? He talks like he has a plan but he won't tell us what it is.

    18. Re:Of course it was! by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Here, there is no adjustment. You pay taxes on dividends and interest as they are paid (withheld by the bank, according to the tax status you tell them about). In the US, you take it all home, and pay it back later unless you do what most do and give the government an interest free loan by erring on the side of overpaying your withholding so that when April 15 comes around, you get a "refund" of the interest-free loan you gave the government. The number of people trying to game the system is reduced, Only 20,000 companies have 500 or more employees (a large portion of the taxpaying workers) and only a few banks and firms paying interest and dividends, as opposed to 300,000,000 individuals all responsible for taxes. So the IRS stops being an accounting organization, but an enforcement organization against possible cheats. Though, the cost of the IRS is only a tiny percentage of the government, so eliminating it won't save much, other than the headaches for the 300,000,000 of us that are responsible for taxes.

    19. Re:Of course it was! by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Across the pond in NZ, you aren't expected to file a tax return, and most people don't. If you have low income and children, it's in your best interests to file for your refunds. I make enough that none of the benefits apply to me, so I'd be better off becoming a one-man company and claiming back GST for personal expenses (illegal, but from what I can tell, quite common for those who make too much for any other tax deductions).

    20. Re:Of course it was! by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      One of the problems with Romney's plan is that he wants the details to be worked out in a bipartisan manor by the sitting congress. The details on the cap would likely not cover medical expenses in a situation like that but we wouldn't know until congress put something forward. Most likely it would be attached to the hardship rules allowing distributions. However, if his IRA was a ROTH, it wouldn't have counted as income either. I guess there is no replacement for a good accountant and financial planning on matters like this.

    21. Re:Of course it was! by Surt · · Score: 1

      A poorly defined plan is bad by definition. It doesn't meet the core requirements of 'plan'.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    22. Re:Of course it was! by sumdumass · · Score: 1, Informative

      If you payed attention during the debates, you would know his plan is mostly an outline with a few specific changes that he expects congress to achieve. He wants to largely follow the simpson bowles commission with limiting raising taxes and increasing the tax revenue by increasing the over all revenue that will be taxed.

      Its no more vegue then Obama's plan is had anyone paid attention to it. The striking part of it is that he wants congress to work together on making it happen instead of putting something in front of them and saying support it. I personally think that is a good thing, perhaps it would get back to the Tip Oneal and New Gingrich style of congresses where they actually did something beneficial for the country and not a party.

    23. Re:Of course it was! by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      You'd still be able to loan against a 401k I assume, or if that's too much, you could spread it over years, and simply allow more hardship withdraws.

      These are perhaps not preferable as a 5 year repayment on the loan would be near as hard to handle as 100k all at once, and a loan from a hospital to withdraw over a few years (lower taxes) for repayment would cause the withdrawer to also have to pay interest.

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    24. Re:Of course it was! by DriedClexler · · Score: 1

      In fairness, we all know how that would work out:

      Romney: "I would like to eliminate [specific deduction that everyone as of last year agreed was f*ckt*rded]."

      Interest group that benefits from it: "OMG!!!! Did you hear that? Romney hates [our group] and by extension must hate puppies!"

      People that hate Romney anyway: "How cruel he is to even think of torturing [interest group] by eliminating that VITAL deduction!"

      Moderate commentators: "Hey everyone, all the cool kids [now] agree that [deduction] is the greatest thing since sliced bread and Romney is a fool to even consider reducing it.

      [repeat for every insane deduction]

      [for each voter, begin pondering why there are so many deductions]

      --
      Information theory is life. The rest is just the KL divergence.
    25. Re:Of course it was! by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      Yes, but 17k still allows for a lot of flex. That's a fairly expensive (but not absurdly so) house before it begins to interfere, and there are other deductions.

      Every deduction is a sacred cow to someone, which is why I like the idea of allowing them all to remain, but capping them. It is by it's very nature progressive.

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    26. Re:Of course it was! by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      Has constitution loosened up? last I saw an interview with them (was the fantastic /. interview in 2000) they came across as libertarian + religious right.

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    27. Re:Of course it was! by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      A president could veto a respect of marriage act. A veto is more powerful than a filibuster.

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    28. Re:Of course it was! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      This is marked insightful?

      Romney hasn't published a plan. He has a series of talking points. And his excuse? "As a businessman, I don't want to go into a business deal dictating what the deal will be." BS. He's not walking into the first meeting of a business deal, he's asking the other party to sign the final contract before negotiating the deal. "Just sign here. Trust me," he says, "we'll work out the details later."

      Capping deductions? What does that mean when he doesn't get rid of the credits that matter? When he doesn't change the tax rate on investments?

      And that is every middle-income taxpayer no longer will pay any tax on interest, dividends or capital gains, no tax on your savings.
      That makes life a lot easier. If you’re getting interest from a bank, if you’re getting a statement from a mutual fund or any other kind of investments you have, you don’t have to worry about filing taxes on that, because there will be no taxes for anybody making $200,000 a year and less on your interest, dividends and capital gains.

      Guess what? I'm in the upper-middle income bracket and I don't have any appreciable interest, dividends, or capital gains, nor do I know very many people in my income bracket who do. Why? Because I come from a background of poverty and my daddy didn't give me more money than I could ever spend. I've worked (really worked, not just been given CEO positions by my daddy's friends) to get where I am (and also took advantage of many socialism opportunities like roads, schools, police, and health care, and other public works).

      So, Romney's "plan"? To fuck over the middle class some more with a bullshit honey pot that has nothing but bees in it.

    29. Re:Of course it was! by NicBenjamin · · Score: 1

      It's the perfect plan politically.

      Everyone says "Of course he wouldn't screw that guy," and "Of course the numbers add up," etc. But if the numbers don't add up (which is, IMO, very likely) he can always blame it on the Congresspeople he's insisting actually write the plan.

      As for my client, I got the impression they weren't doing much planning at all. They were in survival mode.

    30. Re:Of course it was! by NicBenjamin · · Score: 1

      I'm sure there were plenty of ways for them to get around this.

      He needed to have been touch with us (or a good CPA) before he withdrew the cash. But he didn't, probably because he was in oh-shit-she's-gonna-die mode. I can't really blame him for it, but he would have saved himself a lot of money and stress if he'd done so.

    31. Re:Of course it was! by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      There is already a defense of marriage act signed into law by a democrat president. A single president cannot change anything without the support of congress. That won't happen in today's political climate. At to the effect of that, its likely not to mean anything because states can simply override it by local law. This is because marriage is a state issue not a federal one. pinning a federal election on a marriage anything is a lost cause.

    32. Re:Of course it was! by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      As for your client, I agree. As for the perfect plan, I also agree but it has the benefit of exposing the representatives and senators which have way more ultimate control over this crap then any one man in government anyways. I don't see a good house cleaning as a bad thing. It would definitely/should cause them to drop their supposed corporate overlords to save their jobs. however, I'm not against politicians looking out for businesses either. We need business to have jobs to have employment and a thriving economy. It's a balancing act that must play out else we will have nothing.

    33. Re:Of course it was! by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      As Margaret Thatcher noted, "The facts of life are conservative."
      It is the reporting that is liberal, hence your misbelief.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    34. Re:Of course it was! by iphinome · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you should look up respect for marriage act. It is only like DOMA on opposite day.

    35. Re:Of course it was! by makomk · · Score: 1

      That is a load of steaming, ideologically-driven bullshit.

      rigorous enforcement of housing mandates such as theCommunity Reinvestment Act

      Ironically, part of the reason we ended up in this mess is that the Community Reinvestment Act didn't go far enough. Have you looked at what it actually required? It banned the practice of redlining, where banks oughtright refused to offer mortgages to people living in poor and/or racial minority areas even if they had a good credit rating, a good job, and would have been eligible if they lived anywhere else. That's all it changed - it didn't require banks to offer ninja loans or subprime mortgages or lend to people with bad credit ratings or any of the other stuff that conservatives blame on it. Banks did that all by themselves for entirely commercial reasons. Most of the banks that did it weren't even covered by the CRA.

      Why do I think the CRA didn't go far enough, then? Because the banks went and targetted the exact same groups they'd screwed over before - poor people and black people - and mis-sold them expensive subprime mortgages when they were actually eligible for much cheaper prime mortgages which would also have posed a lower risk of non-repayment. This was actually a contributing factor to the financial crisis. There is literally no way in which this helped drive home ownership up - in fact, more people would've bought homes if they'd been offered the proper mortgages - but like every single other decision it helped to drive bank profits through the roof. If it wasn't for the CRA they could've and would've gone further and outright denied prime loans to these people, not because the banks thought they were actually a financial risk, but because they'd make more money that way.

      by prodding mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to make loans to people with lower credit scores (and to buy loans that had been made by banks and, later, “innovators” like Countrywide).

      That had rather less to do with "driving homeownership rates up" and more to do with greed. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were relatively late to the game here compared with the commercial financial sector, and basically wound up doing it because they weren't competitive with commercial players and were missing out on a bunch of apparently-profitable opportunities.

    36. Re:Of course it was! by squiggleslash · · Score: 1, Informative

      This is completely false, and was debunked over and over again when the argument was first made as the crisis started. I suggest you pull yourself out of the echo chamber, as it's sitting in the chamber that leads people to say that 47% of the population are dependent on government, or that Obama didn't use the word "Terror" the day after an attack on a consulate.

      The vast majority of sub-prime loans were issued by banks and divisions of banks not regulated by the CRA. Further, the CRA's anti-discrimination language is just that, it prevents discrimination by race, not by credit rating. It is still perfectly legal to reject someone for a mortgage if they don't have good credit, or have bad assets, etc, whether they're white, black, or blue.

      As such you're also being used when you repeat the argument without thinking about it. The CRA argument (that the CRA forced banks to give money to black people) was an inherently racist argument, propped up only by the superficial disclaimer that people who voiced it pretended they weren't aware that banks still could reject anyone on the basis of creditworthiness. The people who came up with this argument in the first place knew full well, however, that the CRA didn't abolish creditworthiness checks, and they knew full well that the argument would spread by "clever" right-wingers thinking they were being anti-PC and who wouldn't notice the creditworthiness issue, and active racists.

      Stop making this claim. The claim is debunked. Even if it hadn't been, it was stupid, nonsensical, and ultimately racist to begin with. You're not doing anyone any favors by repeating it, especially yourself.

      --
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    37. Re:Of course it was! by Clubbah · · Score: 1

      I've been paying attention to most of it I could bear. To me, his debt reduction plan was:

      Lower Taxes
      ???
      No Deficit!

      To lower taxes that much, you have to make up for it if you are trying to reduce the deficit. He just refused to say how he was going to do that. If you are bold enough to lay out number for tax reductions, you better damn well be bold enough to say how you are gonna pay for it.

    38. Re:Of course it was! by LurkerXXX · · Score: 1

      Basically the same in the U.S. The grandparent is full of crap. You can't just make 100k a year and never pay a dime until April 15th. You'll get hit with fines for not paying at least quarterly. Having some taken out each payday (weekly, bi-monthly, monthly, whatever) is the standard that almost everyone does. April 15th is the time to settle up if you've over/under paid for the year.

    39. Re:Of course it was! by LurkerXXX · · Score: 1

      If you are giving a free 'loan' of more than a couple hundred bucks, you are doing a crappy job estimating your taxes and should change that.

    40. Re:Of course it was! by CronoCloud · · Score: 1

      Of course, the Republicans will then decide that means-testing Social Security is tantamount to Communism...

      Actually, Social Security was originally intended to be means tested, and to be paid out of general tax revenues. However...it was "altered" at the behest of conservatives so that:

      1. It's not means tested
      2. It is paid by a flat tax that only applies to specific level of income...income above that level does not receive SS taxes... So it' screws the working poor and now wealthy people because they pay some SS taxes..feel entitled to what was originally going to be for people with out other sources of income.

    41. Re:Of course it was! by microbox · · Score: 1

      rather than fight about this or that, he wants a cap on deductions.

      It's a good idea -- nigh on perfect -- except that it cannot raise enough money to offset tax cuts.

      --

      Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
    42. Re:Of course it was! by locketine · · Score: 2

      Banks have existed long before they were regulated and just because they are regulated they are not government enterprises. Much of their business goes on without any governmental oversight. Their primary means of exchange (not a product) is government issued currency but if people decided to start paying for things in bottle caps then they would accept bottle caps.

      Your point about the villains and heroes in the book is still valid though. Unfortunately, I know of very few 1%'ers who don't participate in political bribery or manipulation.

      --
      Think globally but act within local variable scope.
    43. Re:Of course it was! by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      Doma is the only thing making it cut and dry if states get to pick which legal marriages are acceptable.

      Currently states are required to recognize (non gay) marriages if they conform to state law or not. Cousin marriage is not legal in my state, but if married cousins move here (or return from marrying somewhere it is legal), the marriage sticks. Doma relieves states of that responsibility in a specific case.

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    44. Re:Of course it was! by thomasw_lrd · · Score: 1

      Correlation doesn't imply causation.

      The thing I take from this data it that as the country prospers so do the rich, and the poor. This is shown by the large drop in the wealth percentage during a two year recession. But again, this does not imply a cause. It could be tax rates. It appears to imply that, but as the famous saying goes, There are three types of lies, lies, damnable lies, and statistics.

    45. Re:Of course it was! by xelah · · Score: 1

      Correlation doesn't imply causation.

      TFA is claiming that there isn't a correlation, not that there is one. That's sort of the point - that, having looked, there's no real sign that reducing top marginal tax rates will increase GDP growth (or reduce it). (There's actually a small correlation between higher top tax rates and growth, but not a significant one). This does rather question whether taking the cost of increased inequality in the hope of it increasing growth is a sensible strategy.

    46. Re:Of course it was! by thomasw_lrd · · Score: 1

      Correct. This report proves nothing. Except that rich people have gotten richer over the last 60 years. The only reason this is news s because the repubs had it taken down.

    47. Re:Of course it was! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Same thing is going on up here in Canada. Our Conservative party seems to have an extreme dislike of evidence based policy making. Instead they have firmly ideas first then defend them vigorously in the face of contrary evidence. I think it is not a coincidence that they also seem to be injecting more religeon into public policy.

      I am worried that the fundementalism that is harming the usa is leaking north more and more.

    48. Re:Of course it was! by catprog · · Score: 1

      technically you only need to file if you earn more then $18,200 and also it does not pay for the NBN(that is funded by bonds)

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    49. Re:Of course it was! by JBaustian · · Score: 1

      According to the New York Times, "Mr. Hungerford [the author of the report], a specialist in public finance who earned his economics doctorate from the University of Michigan, has contributed at least $5,000 this election cycle to a combination of Mr. Obama’s campaign, the Democratic National Committee, the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee and the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee."

    50. Re:Of course it was! by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      They are with held at the time of paycheck, but not calculated at that time. That makes the US system incompatible with the idea of PAYE.

    51. Re:Of course it was! by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      lol.. some democrat doesn't like the truth even though it wasn't damaging to them. Yea!! Go "Troll Modding"-- it is psudoLatin for "I refuse to accept facts and disagree with reality."

    52. Re:Of course it was! by locketine · · Score: 1

      I'm not understanding how a bank's existence depends on government decree. Banks will accept whatever common currency is available. Like any other service based business, they have no physical product. And like pretty much every business on the planet, they depend on a common currency to function. The world economy would fall apart without common currencies issued by the public and a vast majority of products could never be made without one.

      While I recognize that some aspects of the villains in the novel also exist, it's to the same degree as the heroes... just like any novel.

      --
      Think globally but act within local variable scope.
    53. Re:Of course it was! by bar-agent · · Score: 1

      Do you really want the gubmint to know enough about your personal finances, assets, and living situation to calculate the exact withholding?

      --
      i'd hit it so hard, if you pulled me out you'd be the king of britain [bash.org]
    54. Re:Of course it was! by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      Put simply, if the laws listed here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_federal_banking_legislation were repealed banking as we know it would no longer exist. They would have no product or service to offer.

      Banks do not merely accept fiat currency, they release it. Take away fiat currency and the banking system as it exists today is non-existent. Their hypothetical willingness to accept commodity currencies is meaningless in the absence of wide usage such currencies. Loans are a product, not a service. When lending decreases it is called a contraction in the money supply. Think about that for a minute, our money supply diminishes if we slow down the acquisition of debt. Issuing currency is a function of the federal government yet is currently carried out by banks through fractional reserve lending.

      I'm not saying that the government is secretly controlling banks, I'm saying that the banks are in effect, if not in law, a part of the government structure. The lack of oversight indicates their position in the government (ie: higher than elected representatives) rather than their exclusion from it.

      Now large scale free markets are also enabled by legislation. Without laws against force and fraud you have feudalism, not a free market. Regulation and government services provide an environment in which a free market can thrive. A functioning court system is a necessary prerequisite to a free market. My argument is that any fiat currency is by definition provided by the government and is more akin to a court system that allows free enterprise than a product or service provided by free enterprise. As such, running it on a system of profit motive is no less corruption than court judgements being sold to the highest bidder.

      Therefore I'm saying that our entire currency system is an instrument of feudal political/economic power rather than a free market. If I'm correct, you could expect to see money being funneled from the general population to the rich, a widening gap between the rich and the poor and an ongoing erosion of the middle class. I'm not advocating less regulation, or more regulation, just to see the problem for what it is.

    55. Re:Of course it was! by toddestan · · Score: 1

      i don't know how it works in other PAYE countries, but in Australia income tax is deducted from your weekly/fortnightly/monthly pay by your employer and paid to the government.

      Withheld tax is calculated based on your pay for that period, with a progressive tax scale [ato.gov.au] (the first $18,200 you earn is tax free).

      Does this mean that your paychecks shrink over the course of the year as the tax taken from each check gets progressively higher? It seems to me that would be a problem for people who have problems budgeting, including many Americans.

    56. Re:Of course it was! by toddestan · · Score: 1

      Problem is that the IRS does a crappy job of estimating your taxes. Filing taxes as probably about the simplest case possible - a single guy, one salaried job for the entire year, not moving, no dependents, no significant investment income, taking the standard deduction you would think that the IRS would pretty much nail the amount I owed, but depending on how I adjusted the withholdings I would either get a rebate of several hundred or owe several hundred. While it's true I could try to micromanage it by having my employer adjust my withholdings mid-year it just wasn't worth the bother.

    57. Re:Of course it was! by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Have you seen a 1040? Under PAYE, they don't get any more info than a W2 contains.

    58. Re:Of course it was! by locketine · · Score: 1

      I agree with everything that you've written here except that it would be better to say that the banks are an integral part of the regulation of commerce rather than that they are wholly dependent on government for their existence. The former is a quick summary of your point while the latter makes an unsubstantiated claim which cannot be proven and ignores the history of the banking system. We both know that banks work without a nationally issued currency as they did for hundreds of years so claiming that they wouldn't exist without it makes no sense. But saying the US banking system is tightly integrated with monetary policy is right on point.

      One of the articles linked to by the wiki article you provided a link to describes exactly how the banks existed pre-federal regulation; They issued their own currencies. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Bank_Act

      --
      Think globally but act within local variable scope.
    59. Re:Of course it was! by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      Undoing all my mods to say,

      Whoa!? Did you really say you want a Gingrich style congress!?? His era was the tipping point that got us where we are today.

    60. Re:Of course it was! by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      Thank god there are at least two people on Slashdot that understand this issue.

    61. Re:Of course it was! by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      The Gingrich congress got us a balanced budget, low energy costs, and a thriving economy. You know, the stuff that Clinton claims made him a good president. Of course the low energy costs was probably the most effective on the economy part which allows the budget to be balanced. But the real key was limiting the extremes of both ends and allowing most of what was only productive to be passed into law.

    62. Re:Of course it was! by TomJetland · · Score: 1

      It's calculated by assuming you will get the same weekly wage for a year. The tax office produces some tables employers can use as a guide, so if weekly wage is $x, deduct $y as the tax component. I guess any extra pay (overtime, bonuses etc) is paid at your marginal tax rate.

      If you have a second job, that job is meant to tax you at the top tax rate, so the tax office gets an excess of your money and returns it to you when everything is reconciled at the end of the year (by submitting your tax return).

    63. Re:Of course it was! by Tore+S+B · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry to be an annoying outsider here as a non-American, but my pet peeve about political discussions in the United States is this absurd belief that all correlation implies total causation - "Say what you want about the Yugo, but when I drove a Yugo the economy went really well". It's a great way to remove all meaning from a discussion.

      Discuss the facts of the matter - the concrete decisions made, the changes in culture - and the direct and indirect outcomes of those. That's how you get closer to a good answer. And the clear and obvious reality is that the Republican party has - to a far greater extent than the Democratic party - made the strategic choice to put the popularity of the party above the general welfare of the nation, by eagerly jumping at a chance to obstruct the political system to hinder its work in a manner which - to the casual observer - seem to make the Democrats look bad by impeding their agenda.

      This is possible because the press will not criticise the Republicans for fear of being branded partisan. Commercial censorship at its best. This is not a partisan statement even if it is primarily a criticism of a single political party. Objectivity is not the belief that both parties are always equally poor.

      --
      toresbe
    64. Re:Of course it was! by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      And yet, the world was so much better then. Try focusing on what was working.

    65. Re:Of course it was! by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Well, you don't seem to know what you are talking about and obviously have not paid much attention to American politics in the last 30 years. The problem is that both parties given the change will do the same to the extreme. The press has no problem criticizing republicans or even democrats. They have given President Obama a big pass on a lot of issues they had grilled Bush over though.

      The congress simply needs to be controlled by one party with the administration being controlled by another. What we end up with is the extreme policies being negated and the meaningful ones that work getting center stage. And yes, I'm a firm believer that the government does not need to be constantly passing laws or doing something. I think it is much more effective and efficient if they do less things right then doing something to justify whatever need they have. There should be a 1 year knee jerk wait on everything suggested unless 3/4 of both the house and senate agree something needs done right now. We have too many bad laws because somebody should do something and think of the children. We have too many bad laws because the democrats controlled everything and because the republicans controlled everything. I say can the bullshit, make them meet in the middle and only pass meaningful and effective laws within the limits of the constitution. In order for the checks and balances to be effective, there needs to be bickering between the president and congress. This is how we know they aren't letting each other run wild.

    66. Re:Of course it was! by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      We both know that banks work without a nationally issued currency as they did for hundreds of years so claiming that they wouldn't exist without it makes no sense.

      Banks as they exist today did not exist for hundreds of years without government help. They issued their own notes but the currency was gold or silver. Issuing notes allowed them to engage in fractional reserve lending, which would be prosecuted as fraud in any other industry that attempted similar practices. Banking and fractional reserve lending would not have lasted to this day without government intervention, in particular the creation of central banks. The likelihood of bank runs meant it was not a long term viable business which is why the Federal Reserve was created.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fractional_reserve_banking#History

      Savers looking to keep their valuables in safekeeping depositories deposited gold coins and silver coins at goldsmiths, receiving in turn a note for their deposit (see Bank of Amsterdam). Once these notes became a trusted medium of exchange an early form of paper money was born, in the form of the goldsmiths' notes.

      As the notes were used directly in trade, the goldsmiths observed that people would not usually redeem all their notes at the same time, and they saw the opportunity to invest their coin reserves in interest-bearing loans and bills. This generated income for the goldsmiths but left them with more notes on issue than reserves with which to pay them. A process was started that altered the role of the goldsmiths from passive guardians of bullion, charging fees for safe storage, to interest-paying and interest-earning banks. Thus fractional-reserve banking was born.

      However, if creditors (note holders of gold originally deposited) lost faith in the ability of a bank to redeem (pay) their notes, many would try to redeem their notes at the same time. If in response a bank could not raise enough funds by calling in loans or selling bills, it either went into insolvency or defaulted on its notes. Such a situation is called a bank run and caused the demise of many early banks.

      While some economists see this re-lending of customer money as fraud, governments saw an opportunity to license this re-lending while reducing the bank failures and financial crises it causes by the creation of central banks - public institutions that have the authority to regulate commercial banks, impose reserve requirements, and act as lender-of-last-resort if a bank runs low on liquidity. The emergence of central banks mitigated the dangers associated with fractional-reserve banking.

    67. Re:Of course it was! by Tore+S+B · · Score: 1

      The problem is that both parties given the change will do the same to the extreme.

      Nope. Sorry. There's no comparison. And trying to say that both parties are equally bad isn't merely incorrect, it represents a cowardly cop-out which is far too common, built on the illusion that saying that both parties to a conflict are "just as bad" serves to "raise you from the fray". It does not. It serves to remove you from any useful discourse, and to remove the disincentive to the Republicans for any disingenuous behaviour (thus stimulating it, since the incentives are many).

      --
      toresbe
    68. Re:Of course it was! by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      lol.. You should stick to the politics in your country unless you are willing to pay attention to what happens in this country. In fact, you probably should learn how to pay attention to what was written in front of you.

      Both parties do the same things. The extremes pushed by either is not good. Obamacare got passed by using legislative tricks to snake it past the opposition and it is riddled with faults a mile long.

      Your rant about the parties being the same as a cop out is completely incorrect too. My entire point was that one party contrasting the other was the best scenario because it avoids the extremes of either. For you to say that's a cop out is a clear sign that you had no intention for a discussion but rather wanted to cheer lead for what you think is best or rail at what you do not like. There is a problem though, you don't know what you are talking about. Now go troll somewhere else. And it might help if you actually read what is posted and at least try to comprehend it before injecting such nonsense and rubbish again. I mean for you remind me of the idiot who always raises his hand at the end of a training seminar and asks a question that was answered 6 times during the training and is an obvious conclusion to what was just covered before closing for questions. If you going to be in the room, pay attention to what is happening.

    69. Re:Of course it was! by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      Ahhh, the better days argument...

      We will just have to agree to disagree, until I get to that age too. ;)

    70. Re:Of course it was! by kaatochacha · · Score: 1

      flat tax it and get rid of ALL the deductions...

    71. Re:Of course it was! by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Well, I find it funny that Bill Clinton is known for a thriving economy, what was different between then and now, the same things that were different when Reagan and Bush 1 was president. The president had a congress that wouldn't bend at every whim and support what they wanted to do. Instead, congress had to convince the president it was a good idea and the president had to convince the congress. The most profitable times our economy has seen in the last 45 years has been when the government was actually checking and balancing each other. This is when one party controls congress and another controls the executive. When this happens, we end the extremes and get things that work.

    72. Re:Of course it was! by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      I wish we could have two parties in power, maybe some Goldwater Republicans will take back control of the party.

      The current GOP is waging a scorched earth campaign. They push a bunch issues, lure some bipartisan support over, then torch those issues and retreat further to the right.

    73. Re:Of course it was! by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      The problem is that very few people use $25k in deductions.

      Have you seen the housing deduction? Interest alone on a ~250k house @ 4% a year is around 10k. While not 25k, deductions are quite high, even for the average American.

    74. Re:Of course it was! by locketine · · Score: 1

      Issuing notes allowed them to engage in fractional reserve lending, which would be prosecuted as fraud in any other industry that attempted similar practices

      I think there's an analogous practice for ISPs, Gym's, Clubs and Telecoms. They all charge a subscription fee for their services but if everyone actually tried to use their service at the same time, they couldn't, because in all of these markets the suppliers over-subscribe their services. This allows them to be more efficient and charge less for their services. In the case of banks, they don't charge anything for most of their services and even pay us for keeping our money safe. Just as described in what you quoted from wikipedia.

      I'm sure there are other industries with similar practices but they aren't coming to my mind immediately.

      Regarding the emergence of central banks. They are largely private enterprises and could have been created by private industry had it had the foresight to do so. The greatest problem with our modern banking system is accountability. The banks know that the Fed will bail them out and bank customers know that the FDIC will give them their money back if the bank doesn't. This leads to banks with very low liquidity taking even greater risks with their customers' money. To solve this problem congress could bring back Glass-Steagal, raise liquidity requirements and break up bank monopolies so that no bank is large enough to hold our economy hostage.

      --
      Think globally but act within local variable scope.
  2. Re:Did anyone get a copy first? by DanTheStone · · Score: 4, Informative

    It's the PDF link in the summary...

  3. Re:Did anyone get a copy first? by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 2, Informative

    It was removed, but did anyone manage to get a copy before that was done. It would be interesting to get an independent (in relative terms) review of the document.

    Reading fail - it is right there linked in the summary. Now excuse me while I walk away and hide in shame ;)

    --
    Jumpstart the tartan drive.
  4. Re:Romney Kills Baby Seals by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    When you're a hammer, everything looks like a nail.

    When you're a conservative nut-job, everything looks liberal.

  5. What's that, Mrs. Streisand? by gman003 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seriously, when are people going to learn about the Streisand Effect?

    I would never have heard about this had they left it up. But now, it's gone from "boring tax report" to "the economic analysis that THEY don't want you to know about!".

    1. Re:What's that, Mrs. Streisand? by Mitreya · · Score: 2

      I would never have heard about this had they left it up.

      Sure you would have.
      Obama would probably site it in his address (or debates, even) and release ads that mention it

      I assume that it just doesn't have the same ring to it:
      "Romney wants to cut taxes for the rich, but a never-released economic report proves him wrong".

      The goal here is to keep the report from the undecided voters and the remaining sane Republicans. That may have been a success.

    2. Re:What's that, Mrs. Streisand? by peragrin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No it is one of the major weaknesses of democrats. they won't stand up and start shouting liar.

      The democrats have enough economic strengths that if they started laying out the truth and forcing the republicans to admit their own hypocrisy it could truly be scary. However the democrats won't stoop that low as then the republican's can fight their dirty laundry.

      Sort of like MADD with weapons of political destruction.

      the trick is only one republican has ever lead this country out of a recession.
      However only a couple of democrats have lead this country into recessions.

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    3. Re:What's that, Mrs. Streisand? by TubeSteak · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But now, it's gone from "boring tax report" to "the economic analysis that THEY don't want you to know about!".

      And the other half of America is going to hear how it's "the lying economic analysis that LIBERALS want to cram down your throat!"

      The Republican Party has created a bubble of alternate facts and alternate narratives.
      It damages their ability to govern and has destroyed their ability to compromise.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    4. Re:What's that, Mrs. Streisand? by Velex · · Score: 1

      So wait, does that make this One Weird Old Report that Republicans Hate?

      --
      Join the Slashcott! Stay away entirely Feb 10 thru Feb 17! Close all tabs to prevent autorefresh!
    5. Re:What's that, Mrs. Streisand? by Maxmin · · Score: 1

      So wait, does that make this One Weird Old Report that Republicans Hate?

      Only when advertised on nytimes.com. It's "Stupid Lies Lib'ruls Tell" when advertised on newsmax.com.

      --
      O lord, bless this thy holy hand grenade, that with it thou mayest blow thine enemies to tiny bits, in thy mercy.
    6. Re:What's that, Mrs. Streisand? by 1u3hr · · Score: 1

      I assume that it just doesn't have the same ring to it: "Romney wants to cut taxes for the rich, but a never-released economic report proves him wrong".

      But "Romney wants to cut taxes for the rich, but an economic report the Republicans tried to suppress proves him wrong" has a double impact.

    7. Re:What's that, Mrs. Streisand? by cold+fjord · · Score: 1, Interesting

      The Republican Party has created a bubble of alternate facts and alternate narratives.
      It damages their ability to govern and has destroyed their ability to compromise.

      Do tell.

      Reid says he can't work with Romney

      As of August 11, 2012: '1,200 Days and $5 Trillion in New Debt Since Senate Dems Passed a Budget'

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    8. Re:What's that, Mrs. Streisand? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      I'm not missing anything at all. It doesn't say what you think it says and you are ignoring reality. Companies are moving jobs over seas to save money on wages and taxes. That is undisputed and a claim made by just about all parties. The tax savings portion is even a battle cry by democrats where they want to someone penalize companies who move jobs over seas through taxes. That is certainly something that impacts economic growth.

      Now the study says if anything, lower taxes correlates with income concentration in the upper end of income earners. It does not however say that the poor get poorer. You are completely making that portion up. Now, lowering tax rates is a mechanism for rich people to retain more of their money. That part is explained. But if it doesn't correlate to economic growth, then it has absolutely no impact on the poor who are dependent on economic growth.

      Now, what am I missing? I'll recap for you. The study says the tax rate impacts nothing but the amount of money the rich keeps. What is taxing the rich going to do as the great plan? You see, both are full of Bullshit.

    9. Re:What's that, Mrs. Streisand? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It will not matter much. NPR did a story yesterday on the first Reagan election. The topic was on how the media was calling him out on his blatant lies and how he sucessfully made them be narratives in a story he was telling. And those that voted for him bought it up even knowing they were lies.

      That was during a time when media was trusted. The republican engine then turned to that same media that told the truth and over many years started to claim bias so that they could lie and make it a huge conspiracy against them, to make them look like an underdog harried from the big bad liberals.

    10. Re:What's that, Mrs. Streisand? by unitron · · Score: 1

      ...
      The goal here is to keep the report from...the remaining sane Republicans....>

      All both of them?

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

  6. the facts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    have a well-known liberal bias.

  7. Re:Romney Kills Baby Seals by kenaaker · · Score: 1, Funny

    Have you considered the possibility that you're somewhat to the right of Attila the Hun?

  8. Business as usual with republicain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    We don't like global wrming number so it did not happen.
    We don't like your data on tax and economic so remove it.
    We don't like your evolution thingy so it did not happen (yes technically I know there are some creationist on dem side but technically the crushing majority is on rep side).

    1. Re:Business as usual with republicain by dunng808 · · Score: 1

      Easy solution:

      mv "Library of Congress" "Library of Republican Congress"

      --

      Gary Dunn
      Open Slate Project

    2. Re:Business as usual with republicain by El+Rey · · Score: 1

      mv "Library of Congress" "Lie-brary of Congress"

  9. Politically stupid timing by davidwr · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    If you are going to pull a stunt like this, you are supposed to wait until AFTER the elections!

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
    1. Re:Politically stupid timing by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 5, Interesting

      If you are going to pull a stunt like this, you are supposed to wait until AFTER the elections!

      This "stunt" was pulled back in September as a run-of-the-mill decision. Three guesses as to why it was publicized THIS week?

    2. Re:Politically stupid timing by farble1670 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This "stunt" was pulled back in September as a run-of-the-mill decision. Three guesses as to why it was publicized THIS week?

      and the pedophile says: "i molested that little girl back in 2007. i can't believe they decided to bring it up when i applied for my new teaching position."

      why did they bring it up now? to try and keep those liars that are hiding the truth from getting elected? duh.

    3. Re:Politically stupid timing by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 1

      This "stunt" was pulled back in September as a run-of-the-mill decision. Three guesses as to why it was publicized THIS week?

      and the pedophile says: "i molested that little girl back in 2007. i can't believe they decided to bring it up when i applied for my new teaching position."

      why did they bring it up now? to try and keep those liars that are hiding the truth from getting elected? duh.

      No, this is more like one peophile bringing it up when he's competing with another pedophile for the teaching position.

      It's not to keep liars that are hiding the truth from getting elected... it's to help the OTHER liars that are hiding the truth get elected.

      I'm glad it got brought up... I just wish it didn't take an election to get someone motivated to bring it up, as part of a mudfest.

    4. Re:Politically stupid timing by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Because the government generates so much paperwork that nobody noticed until now. Never attribute to malice that which can be explained by laziness.

    5. Re:Politically stupid timing by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Because /. is slow? Becasue it was done less then 2 weeks ago?

      "Senator Charles E. Schumer, Democrat of New York, cited the study a week and a half after it was withdrawn in a speech on tax policy at the National Press Club."

      I'm no sure why you think it was pulled in September.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    6. Re:Politically stupid timing by quantaman · · Score: 3, Informative

      If you are going to pull a stunt like this, you are supposed to wait until AFTER the elections!

      This "stunt" was pulled back in September as a run-of-the-mill decision. Three guesses as to why it was publicized THIS week?

      Well it was September 28th, so only about a month ago, and we don't know how well the retraction was published, so it could be all the political junkies got their copy in the 2 weeks it was available and it took a while for people to notice it was missing.

      Or it's also possible that whatever political operatives did notice immediately, but decided to sit on it while waiting for a more opportune time, rather than cause an early October bump that would dissipate before the election.

      I think two critical questions are a) does the agency have an explanation for the retraction, and b) how common are retractions.

      --
      I stole this Sig
    7. Re:Politically stupid timing by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      The article said it was out and open to everyone. It wasn't even open to the public in it's original hosting, just politicians and it was a democrat politician who is whining about this as he provides a copy to the press.

      No, it's clear that malice is at work. Why else would you be upset that something is removed from a location that you couldn't access anyways.

    8. Re:Politically stupid timing by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      The article said it was out and open to everyone.

      http://graphics8.nytimes.com/news/business/0915taxesandeconomy.pdf

      That's out and open to everyone, as far as I can tell. Did you need me to give you a lesson on the Internet?

    9. Re:Politically stupid timing by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      So what, you are going to prove my point? The article said it was released to only politicians and their aids and it was up to them to release it to other entities. After several weeks, it was removed and a democrat got his panties in a bunch. The entire it was buried revolved around it's closed access being removed, not copies in the wild.

    10. Re:Politically stupid timing by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      What? Nazis and neonazis are very strongly anti-pedophile, to the point where they lynch innocent people because they got the address wrong.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
  10. FACTS by Ossifer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Facts don't match my ideology so FACTS MUST BE WRONG!!!

  11. Post-truth politics by benjfowler · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The Right seem to live in this strange world, where you can change reality by wishing hard enough, or lying hard enough, or by denying evidence and truth hard enough.

    A bit like how Communists and their whacked-out theories about how reality could be changed by willing it so, e.g. the New Soviet Man.

    And a bit like left-wing crazies in academic literary circles with postmodernism; where they deny objective reality, and consider science and reason to be something not to be trusted, because it's invented by powerful people to keep the little man down.

    So what we're really seeing, is right-wing postmodernism; where the FOX crowd deny objective reality, because they see rationality, science and evidence-based-anything as a liberal left-wing plot to repress and hold down Galtian supermen such as themselves.

    In a nutshell, the modern American Right is losing credibility, because enough of them are so split from reality, that they think that simply making shit up, denying the truth, and being stupid will bend the world to their will. Serious right-wing thinkers like William Buckley would have been appalled by the intellectual and moral rot.

    It's tragic and bizarre, but nobody's laughing, because they're dangerous and get into power often enough to cause serious damage, like expensive and pointless wars, massive environmental damage, and yawning inequality.

    1. Re:Post-truth politics by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 5, Funny

      where you can change reality by wishing hard enough

      well, lets be real, here. the right *is* the party of prayer.

      everyone knows it.

      not the party of facts, but the party of 'sky daddies'.

      facts only get in their way.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    2. Re:Post-truth politics by benjfowler · · Score: 3, Insightful

      People prone to "magical thinking" (e.g. the religiously pious), are likely to apply their flawed thinking to other areas, like politics and economics.

    3. Re:Post-truth politics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The conclusion in the report has nothing to do with core conservatism. To a conservative it doesn't matter. The question is if it is the government's responsibility to equalize incomes and wealth. The question is if it right to take so much wealth not for the purpose of running a government and safety, but to subsidize pet projects and re-allocate the money to people or people groups to "help" them. Conservatism points out that spreading wealth around is an issue of the person's own wealth, not the government. It would be interesting to note if the report covers not only the rates, but the types of deductions and how top tax payers take advantage of the deductions. The government can set a high rate, but then try to manipulate behavior by offering incentives (deductions) to behavior that they deem as "good". That is just as immoral as a religious zealot trying to legislate things they hate or like.

    4. Re:Post-truth politics by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 2

      In a nutshell, the modern American Right is losing credibility

      yeah, since the reagan era, pretty much.

      not one of their ideas has ever worked. not one.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    5. Re:Post-truth politics by Hatta · · Score: 5, Insightful

      In a nutshell, the modern American Right is losing credibility

      The modern American Right is losing credibility because they so completely and thoroughly won that positions more conservative than Nixon's or Reagan's are considered left wing these days. Conservatives have managed to move the political center so far to the right that there are no longer any tenable positions rightward of center.

      Even if the Republican party completely implodes and never elects another official again, conservatives still have the Democratic party, which is well to the right of anything considered centrist anywhere else in the world. Right wingers in the US can choose between two parties. Left wingers in the US really only have one candidate, and she has to get arrested to get any attention.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    6. Re:Post-truth politics by El+Rey · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't believe these guys believe in anything except:

      If you aren't rich you need to do whatever we say and STFU.

      Freedom means the freedom for us to screw you over because we are rich and for you to be free to do nothing about it.

      The "we're Christian" thing is just a ruse to convince poor people to vote against their self interest.

    7. Re:Post-truth politics by Maow · · Score: 1

      The Right seem to live in this strange world, where you can change reality by wishing hard enough, or lying hard enough, or by denying evidence and truth hard enough.

      A bit like how Communists and their whacked-out theories about how reality could be changed by willing it so, e.g. the New Soviet Man.

      And a bit like left-wing crazies in academic literary circles with postmodernism; where they deny objective reality, and consider science and reason to be something not to be trusted, because it's invented by powerful people to keep the little man down.

      So what we're really seeing, is right-wing postmodernism; where the FOX crowd deny objective reality, because they see rationality, science and evidence-based-anything as a liberal left-wing plot to repress and hold down Galtian supermen such as themselves.

      In a nutshell, the modern American Right is losing credibility, because enough of them are so split from reality, that they think that simply making shit up, denying the truth, and being stupid will bend the world to their will. Serious right-wing thinkers like William Buckley would have been appalled by the intellectual and moral rot.

      It's tragic and bizarre, but nobody's laughing, because they're dangerous and get into power often enough to cause serious damage, like expensive and pointless wars, massive environmental damage, and yawning inequality.

      While I agree with everything you've said, I must point out that in stories that might touch on climate change, the craziness appears to be hemorrhaging from everywhere. Seeing people posting to a tech oriented site to dismiss scientists is truly depressing. (Note, I'm not vouching for the quality of that particular post that begat the thread, just commenting on the ridiculous nature of *some* of the comments - a surprisingly large number of comments).

    8. Re:Post-truth politics by farble1670 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The question is if it right to take so much wealth not for the purpose of running a government and safety, but to subsidize pet projects and re-allocate the money to people or people groups to "help" them.

      ... whooooooosh ... both candidates are advocating reallocation. romney wants to re-allocate to the wealthy through top-tier and corporate tax cuts. the report shows, with data to back it up, that this doesn't benefit the economy ...

      "The reduction in the top tax rates appears to be uncorrelated with saving, investment, and productivity growth. The top tax rates appear to have little or no relation to the size of the economic pie. However, the top tax rate reductions appear to be associated with the increasing concentration of income at the top of the income distribution."

    9. Re:Post-truth politics by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Sorry about this, but recently more wars have started or been extensively expanded under the Democratic party than under the Republican party. This wasn't the case in olden times, but it's been true for the last while. (OTOH, the difference isn't significant, and you can easily alter it by dicking with what period of time you consider recent. Or by what you consider a war.)

      This mainly matters if you're trying to paint the Democrats as the "party of peace". They aren't. And, obviously, neither are the Republicans, even though Nixon did stake a claim on that by normalizing relations with China.

      FWIW, the Republicans seem to be a bit better about keeping campaign promises. I may wish they weren't, but they are. I just don't particularly like the things they promised to do that they carried through on. Both parties, however, are extremely selective about which campaign promises they keep, which they compromise on, and which they just conveniently forget. And they're both after essentially the same goal: More power to the central government with *us* in control.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    10. Re:Post-truth politics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      ... whooooooosh ... both candidates are advocating reallocation. romney wants to re-allocate to the wealthy through top-tier and corporate tax cuts. /quote>

      *Not* taking someone's money from them, is not reallocating it to them. It's letting them keep what is theirs.

    11. Re:Post-truth politics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It's cool that you dig mocking right-wing religious types, but don't you find equally mockable all those many deluded leftists who seem to possess nothing but a blind faith in government to solve all their problems?

      It's enough to make a person wonder what might be more harmful to a person: religion or political ideology. Heck, maybe both have the knack of twirlin' up a person's brain in the same kinda pitiful way.

    12. Re:Post-truth politics by jfengel · · Score: 2

      I think that you're correct, but I'd say that America probably never was all that progressive as a nation. Socialism never got a real foothold in the US, in part because victories by unions eliminated the worst of the abuses without setting real groundwork for progressivism.

      The nation has drifted much further to the right than I believe is its natural state. And I think that the implosion of the Republican party, or a drawn-out drift back from the brink of lunacy, will gradually let the nation drift back closer to its center. But it's unlikely to ever become a truly leftist country. I just don't think that's where the country has ever really lived.

    13. Re:Post-truth politics by nomadic · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "don't you find equally mockable all those many deluded leftists who seem to possess nothing but a blind faith in government to solve all their problems?"

      You mean that giant mass of invisible strawmen that don't really exist in real life?

    14. Re:Post-truth politics by TClevenger · · Score: 1

      The modern American Right is losing credibility because they so completely and thoroughly won that positions more conservative than Nixon's or Reagan's are considered left wing these days.

      Nixon pulled the US out of Vietnam, enforced desegregation of southern schools and created the EPA. He would be blasted as a RINO if he were running for any office today.

    15. Re:Post-truth politics by kenh · · Score: 1

      romney wants to re-allocate to the wealthy through top-tier and corporate tax cuts

      Uhm, lowering tax rates for the wealthy (and everyone else that actually pays federal income taxes) isn't a "re-allocation" - it's allowing them to retain more of what they earned. In order to "re-allocate" you have to take from one and give it to another...

      --
      Ken
    16. Re:Post-truth politics by DriedClexler · · Score: 1

      Pretty bold claim there. What about "take down the Soviet Empire though an arms buildup they can't compete with"?

      --
      Information theory is life. The rest is just the KL divergence.
    17. Re:Post-truth politics by KDR_11k · · Score: 2

      That's just vague terms, the specific numbers matter. Calculations that attempt to model Romney's plan reach the conclusion that it doesn't work and screws over the poor. The key issue is that reducing deductions cannot make up for much of a tax cut. With Romney's other planned income cuts and expenses that adds up to either driving the country into a massive deficit for little gain or requiring a tax rate increase.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    18. Re:Post-truth politics by Nishi-no-wan · · Score: 1

      I'm just surprised that it's taken everyone this long to see these tactics in politics. Microsoft has been teaching them these techniques for over a decade.

    19. Re:Post-truth politics by Clubbah · · Score: 1

      >Nixon pulled the US out of Vietnam

      He also sabotaged the peace talks in 1968 which would have gotten us out earlier.

      His slogan was "Withdrawl with Honor" which happened 4 years after he was elected with not much honor.

      >enforced desegregation of southern schools

      That was Kennedy and Johnson.

      >created the EPA

      I believe he did do that. He also created the drug schedule we now all know and love.

    20. Re:Post-truth politics by Clubbah · · Score: 1

      I don't think the Ds are the party of peace. I think that moniker came out when Bush II pushed for war in Iraq when everyone else wanted to wait for the weapons inspections / sanctions.

      Here's the 20th century wars the US fought in and the president in charge (if I remember correctly)

      WWI - Wilson (D)
      WWII - FDR (D)
      Korea - Truman (D)
      Vietnam - Kennedy (D) , ramped up by LBJ (D) (some feel this started with Ike (R) in the 50s with aid to the French)
      Gulf War I - Bush (R)
      Afghan War - Bush II (R)
      Gulf War II - Bush II (R)

    21. Re:Post-truth politics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Yeah, being an American who believes that war is an incredibly horrible thing and that the natural rights of man actually extend to those beyond our own country's border too, it's tough going trying to convince myself that a vote for either Democrat or Republican wouldn't be a huge, insufferable compromise of my own morals. Having voted for Obama last go around, I can't help but feel a tremendous pang of guilt with every drone strike since. And how on earth the champion of peace and civil liberites I thought I was voted for in '08 could have actually signed into law The NDAA... I'm just at a loss to try to understand how that could have happened.

      I look at these two candidates now, and I just wonder how so many people can be suckedered into spewing so much virtiol back and forth across stupid party lines when the real, substantive differences between both parties' policies seems so very small and so very inconsequential.

    22. Re:Post-truth politics by LurkerXXX · · Score: 1

      That's what he said. Wishing.

    23. Re:Post-truth politics by microbox · · Score: 1

      OMFG. Thank-you for articulating something that is really a big deal for me. Right-wing postmodernism is almost identical (pathologically speaking) to the alternate reality in reasonably large tracts of the humanities and social sciences. Right down to the humour mix of conspiratorial thinking, and the belief in having some superior insight. And the use of Popper as the cure-all for anything that hurts the ears.

      Having run my own experiments, and having some understanding of how endlessly we can fool ourselves in apparently subtle ways, having a small understanding of knowing something, I prefer to distrust the voice inside when faced with evidence. *Especially* if the evidence makes me feel uncomfortable. That's the signal that one is fooling themselves.

      --

      Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
    24. Re:Post-truth politics by LurkerXXX · · Score: 1

      And he was pro women's rights.

    25. Re:Post-truth politics by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Actually the US involvement started before Kennedy, but I think we had something like 52 troops on the ground when he took office.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    26. Re:Post-truth politics by terjeber · · Score: 1

      This isn't particularly surprising given who is now in control of "The Right". The NeoConservative movement was never conservative, neo-cons are extreme left, not extreme right. Paul Wolfowitz, the architect behind the Iraq 2 blunder is a strong devout Leninist for cripes sakes.

      If you measure by economic activity by public vs private sector, and you assign a +1 socialist for a shift from private-sector economic activity to public-sector economic activity, and add a +1 capitalist (or -1 socialist) for driving economic activity away from the public sector and over to the private sector, the past few Republican presidents we have had have been among the most socialist presidents ever. If you compare Bush Jr. to Clinton, for example, Bush was a veritable Karl Marx to Clinton's Milton Friedman. The fact that Bush Jr was all about growing the federal government and empowering his closest friends was taken straight out of the play-book that Stalin governed by. Labels do not matter when actions are the opposite of what those labels say. The current Republican party is simply a left-wing party of lunatic Christians.

      It is bizarre, but true, that almost universally, since the war, public-sector spending goes up significantly with Republican leadership and either up far less, or down with Democrats in the White House. It is not strange that the red states are red, they are utterly and fatally dependent on federal hand-outs (with the exception of Texas) and could not survive capitalists in power, while the "liberal" blue states are (on average) net contributors to the federal government and would fare a lot better with a strict capitalist economic policy (they wouldn't have to pay for the dead-beats in the red states).

    27. Re:Post-truth politics by terjeber · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Wooooosh. You can't re-allocate through tax cuts. Taxation is the government confiscating money from citizens, not confiscating that money is not an act of re-distribution, it is an act of stopping any possibility of re-distribution. Romney, for all his faults, have never advocated re-distribution. What you are essentially saying is that if I am a thief, and I stop stealing money from people, I am in fact giving them money, that's absurd.

      Don't forget, the top earners in the US pay the vast majority of the taxes (at a federal level). The bottom half (the 47 percent'ers) do not pay any federal tax at all, while the top 1% pay more than 10% (top of my head but not far off) of the total federal tax. Please see the word "federal" in there.

    28. Re:Post-truth politics by terjeber · · Score: 1

      At a federal level, Romney can't cut taxes across the board, he can only cut taxes for the top half of earners in the US since the bottom half doesn't pay any federal tax and therefore will "receive" no benefit from a tax cut. This is what the left would call "unfair" since the bottom half won't get a tax cut. It is almost impossible to make them understand their idiocy.

      Please note, I am a right-wing person and therefore can not vote for anyone from the Republican party since that party is currently governed by left-wing and Christian lunatics. Romney may be as business friendly and as capitalist as all Hell. Once in the grasp of the current Republican leadership he will have to revert to the Stalinist policies followed by the Republican party back to (at least) then 1980s.

    29. Re:Post-truth politics by El+Rey · · Score: 1

      Mod me troll if you must, but I find this article most interesting.

    30. Re:Post-truth politics by farble1670 · · Score: 1

      Romney, for all his faults, have never advocated re-distribution.

      his companies have *taken* govt bailout money. he was profited from it. oops. just because conservative rhetoric doesn't use the commie term "redistribution", doesn't mean they aren't advocating it. taking my tax dollars and building things that allow corporations, the wealthy to profit and not giving back? that's redistribution alright. my tax dollars were sure as hell redistributed to romney's pocket.

      Don't forget, the top earners in the US pay the vast majority of the taxes (at a federal level)

      the govt provides an environment to conduct business. we the people pay to build that environment. you know, silly little things like roads, fire depts, police. to let the wealthy, a company reap profits from the environment we the people built with our money without giving back ... that's theft.

      Taxation is the government confiscating money from citizens

      whoooooooooooooooosh.

    31. Re:Post-truth politics by farble1670 · · Score: 1

      that's am extremely simplistic view of how an economy works.

      we the people paid with our taxes to build and environment that allow the wealthy to reap profits. you know, silly little things like the military, police, roads, bridges, and so on. so yeah, allowing those folks to make profits from those things *we* built for them, and not contribute back to society is a re-allocation. we've subsidized their profits.

    32. Re:Post-truth politics by Arterion · · Score: 1

      I thought that until recently. I had a conversation with my conservative christian mother about why she opposed "Obamacare", even while my dad depends on medicare, her sister has serious health problems and no health insurance, as does my brother. Her answer was that it would be "good" to offer health care to everyone "if it could work", but that she was afraid it would "break the whole system." I pointed out that was a very selfish way to look at it. You can't have it cause it might take away from what I have!

      This is a woman who is constantly praying for this thing or the other thing, and "trusts god" to make doing the right thing work out. So I asked her, "Why don't we just give everyone healthcare, cause it's the right thing to do, and trust god to make it work out financially?" She had no answer.

      These people don't really trust in prayer or god. They are just brainwashed to think if they don't do whatever the religious leaders tell them to do, they are going to burn in hell. It doesn't make sense, it's not consistent, and as much as they claim it to be the most important thing, it's not really based on the bible. In many cases, what they're told is blatantly opposed to what was taught in the gospels, and often, the policies they want to see in government are contrary to their own self-interests. But that's okay, because they have a mansion waiting for them up in heaven.

      --
      "That which does not kill us makes us stranger." -Trevor Goodchild
    33. Re:Post-truth politics by terjeber · · Score: 1

      he was profited from it. oops

      Yes, he has. As you should. If someone is giving away money and they are willing to give it to you, take it. That doesn't mean he approves of the government taking money and redistributing it though.

      company reap profits from the environment we the people built with our money without giving back ... that's theft.

      But Mr. Marx, I though you were dead, and your ideas too.

    34. Re:Post-truth politics by farble1670 · · Score: 1

      Yes, he has. As you should. If someone is giving away money and they are willing to give it to you, take it. That doesn't mean he approves of the government taking money and redistributing it though.

      yes, he has. and i'm sure he'll continue to milk the system to give himself and his wealthy friends perks when he's elected. because after all, that's the type of person we want for president- someone with the "if i can get away with it, i'll do it" attitude.

      But Mr. Marx, I though you were dead, and your ideas too.

      oh knows! the "M" word! yeah sorry, but i have enough common sense to not see the world in black and white terms.

  12. zero sum game by godrik · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I never understood that idea that giving a tax break to high salary people will stimulate the economy.

    Usually the reasonning is that since they will have more money, they will consume more and that will help the economy. If you give a tax break to low income people for the same amount of tax dollars, they will use that money as well. They are not going to set it on fire, they will use it in a grocery store.

    Am I understanding something wrong?

    1. Re:zero sum game by aicrules · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's why you give tax breaks to everybody and cut the size of government. Win-Win-Win

    2. Re:zero sum game by benjfowler · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Giving tax cuts to rich people as economic stimulus has been shown to not be as effective as giving tax cuts to lower-income earner, and the reason's really simple.

      Rich people invest. Poor people spend; many people live paycheck-to-paycheck, so any extra dollar goes straight into consumption, and good, services and jobs. However, for the wealthy, there is too much money chasing too few investment opportunities.

    3. Re:zero sum game by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      some rich folks use their money for overall good.

      but most don't! they hoard it for personal power.

      putting more money in the hands of the rich is futile. I'm hoping that we, as a culture, grow up soon and stop giving rich folks more and more gifts!

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    4. Re:zero sum game by khallow · · Score: 1

      Usually the reasonning is that since they will have more money, they will consume more and that will help the economy. If you give a tax break to low income people for the same amount of tax dollars, they will use that money as well. They are not going to set it on fire, they will use it in a grocery store.

      I understand the usual reasoning along those lines is that the rich will invest the money and the poor will consume it. The implicit assumption for those who support high income tax cuts is that investment is better than consumption.

    5. Re:zero sum game by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 1

      I never understood that idea that giving a tax break to high salary people will stimulate the economy.

      Usually the reasonning is that since they will have more money, they will consume more and that will help the economy. If you give a tax break to low income people for the same amount of tax dollars, they will use that money as well. They are not going to set it on fire, they will use it in a grocery store.

      Am I understanding something wrong?

      Added to this: low-income people are generally low-income because they don't save their money, but live hand-to-mouth -- so anything you give them will go right back into the economy (although not necessarily to the institutions that could benefit society the best).

      Why are high income people rich? It's not because they give away all their money (in most cases)... wealth attracts wealth.

    6. Re:zero sum game by wurp · · Score: 2

      The proposal is that rich people invest in business, creating more new jobs and more value. Poor people spend their money on stuff.

      I haven't seen any real support for the notion that investing in businesses based on what rich people think will succeed creates more jobs or a "bigger economic pie" than poor people giving more money to businesses that provide services & goods that the poor actually need.

      Obviously, I don't buy it, but that's the supposed reason.

    7. Re:zero sum game by mvdwege · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Rich people don't invest, they spend on luxuries, which has a lower return in terms of jobs and contribution to the GDP.

      Mart

      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    8. Re:zero sum game by enlefo · · Score: 1

      Well, you're not missing something in the fact that it's BS. The concept of trickle down economics is that the rich will take that extra tax money and create jobs with said money. The reality is they just use that money to bribe their way into more money via lobbying for tax breaks, etc. I'm reminded of the Dave Chapelle sketch where the US gov't gives all the black people in the country reparations money. They then go out and spend it all on cars, cloths, electronics, etc which stimulates the economy. A hilarious, over simplified, and racist sketch but still some major truth is in there none the less. If the republicrates wanted to stimulate the economy they would help the poorest people financially.

    9. Re:zero sum game by Americano · · Score: 2

      Yes, the typical argument is that the high-net-worth individuals are the ones who will *invest* their money into other businesses, thus helping to create jobs, which grows the economy, which also helps bring about higher tax revenues in general, because more people will be making money to put them into the tax-paying income brackets.

      The argument continues that since a fair share of of "low-income" people already pay little-to-no-taxes, and much of any stimulus given to them would go into consumption, the stimulus would be a short-term jolt to the economy that would have little long-term effect in terms of creating new jobs or helping existing businesses to grow.

      And if you help businesses grow and hire more people, the low-income people you didn't directly provide stimulus to will still get better paying jobs, and be able to afford more and better stuff for themselves.

      I'm not enough of an economic expert to say whether or not this *actually* works, but the theory runs something like that. I suspect most of the other people who will respond to you are not economic experts either, so beware accepting anything asserted as fact without seeing some actual data to back up the assertions.

    10. Re:zero sum game by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 4, Interesting

      the elite class is the richest they've ever been.

      you see a lot of spare jobs around this economy?

      hmmm, we gave the rich all they asked for. they wanted this and that and we gave it to them.

      have they 'created more jobs?'

      yes.

      in india!

      fuck the rich. they don't deserve our respect. (yes, I had my job outsourced by some rich ceo asswipe. yes, I'm bitter. having to train your foreign replacement to help the ceo get a bigger boat tends to make one bitter. my company was doing very well but they wanted even better numbers, so we had mass layoffs. the rich do NOT carry their weight. they are a liability to us, more than an asset.)

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    11. Re:zero sum game by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      47% of tax FILERS pay no net INCOME TAX (yes, they pay taxes on their cellphones, auto tires, gasoline, etc)

      That's just sales tax

      If they are working, they also pay payroll tax, social security, FICA, etc.

      If they are not working, they either have no income or are on social security/disability.

    12. Re:zero sum game by AvitarX · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The thing about consumption is it tends to have a larger local economy element (less so than it used to though).

      this means tax cuts to the poor help poorer areas get better.

      investment is very global now, and has for a long time been less local, this means it will.have a broader area it improves, and less of it will go to poorer areas.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    13. Re:zero sum game by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There are very few places money can truly be "wasted" other than government programs.

      How about Swiss Bank Accounts and Caymen Island stashes of cash? It does nothing for the economy. Stop pretending these guys are the 'job creators.' Unless your talking about their limo drivers and cooks. Trickle down economics doesn't work outside theory because, in reality, tax rates are not related to job creation and rich people just end up accumulating bigger and bigger piles of cash. This was the gist of the report and why it had to be suppressed.

      If they were true 'job creators' they wouldn't be fighting any attempt to link their excessive tax breaks to actual, you know, job creation.

    14. Re:zero sum game by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 5, Insightful

      tax breaks.

      to the extremely wealthy.

      of course, our infrastructure is in fine shape, our roads don't need upgrading. neither do our comms infra or any of the other social programs that help raise the overall qualtiy of life for everyone.

      oh, but the infra can go fark itself. it will just self manage. right? that rotting bridge or overpass - we don't need to invest in fixing that.

      the me-generation should have run out of steam, but it only gets stronger as time goes on. no one wants to invest in our own infrastructure or help those who are below what should be a minimum american standard of living.

      but lets give the rich more reasons to not help out. they'll just naturally be good people on their own, right?

      right??

      left to their own devices, they'll steal you blind. this class of people need to be watched more than the worst criminal among us.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    15. Re:zero sum game by umghhh · · Score: 1
      for this reasoning to reflect reality not only the 'rich' would have to invest so that benefit the country they get a tax cut in which does not seem the case - they invest globally and they invest in a way that is tax optimized. This is of course assuming that comparison of consumption v. investment is done on base of how it merits local economy and local population which is also not true - the actual reason why some say so is probably abduction by aliens because I cannot understand how they come to the conclusions that are either neutral or harmful to them while being also a fantasy.

      I also think that GOP still has something to learn - the great teacher knew how to solve the problem of faulty statistics

    16. Re:zero sum game by Dadoo · · Score: 1

      are you prepared to defend the idea that increasing taxes on higher income individuals will somehow stimulate the economy?

      Indirectly, yes. Lowering taxes on the middle class will stimulate the economy. The problem is that, unless we reduce the size of the government, we have to make up the difference, somewhere. We can't take any money from lower-income people, since they don't have any, so we have to get it from the wealthy.

      Sure, it would be great if we could simply reduce the size of the government, but no administration in recent history (at least as far back as Eisenhower) has done that. Do that first. Then we can talk about lowering taxes on the wealthy, too.

      --
      Sit, Ubuntu, sit. Good dog.
    17. Re:zero sum game by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Except starve the beast is a failure; look it up.

    18. Re:zero sum game by stephanruby · · Score: 1

      If you give a tax break to low income people for the same amount of tax dollars, they will use that money as well. They are not going to set it on fire, they will use it in a grocery store.

      I thought we didn't want the money to end up in grocery stores.

      We wanted the money to be spent on the latest gadgets and entertainment. That's where the more interesting jobs are.

    19. Re:zero sum game by jader3rd · · Score: 1

      I never understood that idea that giving a tax break to high salary people will stimulate the economy.

      Usually the reasonning is that since they will have more money, they will consume more and that will help the economy. If you give a tax break to low income people for the same amount of tax dollars, they will use that money as well. They are not going to set it on fire, they will use it in a grocery store.

      Am I understanding something wrong?

      I don't know about understanding it wrong, but your confusing might come from the fact that what we call 'tax breaks for the rich' aren't per se for the rich, it's taxing different categories of income at different levels, and it just so happens that rich people tend to make up the vast majority of some of the categories. The tax breaks for the rich are in reality lower tax rates for income made from investments. If a poor person were to make the same investments, the income made from these investments would be taxed at the same lower rate. So it's not tax breaks for the rich, the argument is to create tax breaks for investors; but it just so happens that investors tend to be rich people. This is why you see articles about how President Obama (a rich person) has a noticeably higher tax rate than Mitt Romney (also a rich person). The difference is due to their sources of income.

      The argument is to tax income made from investments at a lower rate, because that should encourage more investing. It doesn't matter how rich the investor is. The idea is that investment money spreads/generates more wealth than money spent other wise. I can kind of see the argument possibly being true if investment was limited to actually being spent on expanding existing facilities or hiring more personal, but since it also covers gambling on the stock market, the argument is BS.

    20. Re:zero sum game by farble1670 · · Score: 1

      the idea is that if you give money to wealthy people and corporations, they will use it to expand or build new companies which will result in more jobs for low-income folks. more jobs means less unemployment, which means more demand for workers and higher wages.

    21. Re:zero sum game by Shagg · · Score: 1

      That's because it's nonsense. "Stimulating the economy" is just the excuse they use. I bet even they don't take it seriously.

      --
      Unix is user friendly, it's just selective about who its friends are.
    22. Re:zero sum game by Cajun+Hell · · Score: 1

      I never understood that idea that giving a tax break to high salary people will stimulate the economy.

      Of course you don't, because you called those people "high salary" instead of "job creator." And you called it "giving a tax break" instead of "increasing the deficit." So let's look at your words, after a first round of repairs:

      I never understood that idea that increasing the deficit to job creators will stimulate the economy.

      Bold "to" mine; as you can see, when we repair parts of the sentence, we get a nonsense preposition. Let's fix that too.

      I never understood that idea that increasing the deficit for job creators will stimulate the economy.

      Now we're getting somewhere. "Stimulate the economy" is kind of vague though ... I can still see how neither you (nor anyone else) would understand that consequence. Let's keep going...

      I never understood that idea that increasing the deficit for job creators, will increase the interest revenue for the Chinese bond investors who use their increasing leverage to become the equity holders, so that they can ultimately be the people who hire us to work in their third world sweatshops.

      Aha. Once we get specific about what "stimulate the economy" really means, by explaining who benefits from lobbying the Republicans to act like they act, then you get something which makes sense, and then you will understand the cause-effect relationship between the policy and what it hopes to accomplish. So then:

      I understand that increasing the deficit at the behest of foreign bond investors even if it's contrary to American interests, will increase their interest revenue so that they can become the primary equity holders of America, resulting in us becoming third world slaves, therefore I oppose Republic politics because it doesn't actually resemble conservative politics in any way (indeed, Barry Goldwater would laugh in those peoples' faces), and in fact it has no right/left component at all, being mere corruption rather than partisan idealism.

      Repair complete.

      --
      "Believe me!" -- Donald Trump
    23. Re:zero sum game by kipling · · Score: 2

      Added to this: low-income people are generally low-income because they don't save their money, but live hand-to-mouth.

      May I suggest that causation could be the other way around: Low income people generally live hand-to-mouth and don't save their money because they're low-income people.

      --
      -- open source? sounds like the real book --
    24. Re:zero sum game by Shagg · · Score: 4, Informative

      But tax cuts for the rich does have a higher return in terms of contributions to the GOP.

      --
      Unix is user friendly, it's just selective about who its friends are.
    25. Re:zero sum game by farble1670 · · Score: 1

      Whats a high-salary person to do with their money other than set it on fire or spend it?

      if you can't figure out anything to do with your money other than spend or burn it, you should not be participating in this conversation.

    26. Re:zero sum game by Hatta · · Score: 1

      The implicit assumption for those who support high income tax cuts is that investment is better than consumption.

      Which is a damned stupid assumption. You can invest all you want in starting new businesses. If people don't have money to purchase your goods and services that investment is worthless.

      Economic activity is demand driven, and despite the enormous income inequality the lower 99 percent still have the most purchasing power. Most people earn a living making goods or providing services for the middle and lower classes. The economy is not driven by the purchase of luxury goods.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    27. Re:zero sum game by farble1670 · · Score: 2

      low-income people are generally low-income because they don't save their money

      i think you are confused. low income people don't have money to save. if you think that the only reason people are poor is because they spend all their money, you need to get out of your basement more often.

    28. Re:zero sum game by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      but most don't! they hoard it for personal power.

      Power comes not from hoarding money but from spending it. A few billion in a bank account means nothing in terms of status. A rich person cannot put his name in any visible location on a bank account (i.e., it appears only on the statements).

      On the other hand, a few hundred million given to a University will get his name on a building or three. A civic center built through his donations will get his name on it.

      And a billion in the bank doesn't buy politicians. It's the flow of money that gets power, and that fact is represented in the Move To Amend furor. They know that money spent is speech with some power to it.

      The money he invests in the stock market goes to build and grow companies, which hire people, and pay off other investors in the stock market, many of whom are middle class working people who have money market and retirement accounts in mutual funds.

      putting more money in the hands of the rich is futile.

      Cutting tax rates doesn't put money in anyone's hands. It lets the people who earned the money KEEP it in their hands. And it isn't a gift, despite the repeated attempts at class warfare that would try to brand it as such. Returns on investments come at the risk of loss of that money, and there needs to be a reason to invest. Taking half of everything a "rich person" owns doesn't give him much reason to invest. Poker players call it "pot odds". If a bet will require half the pot, but only have a 20% chance of winning, the bet is a bad one, no matter what the cards a player is holding are. If a rich person sees that his investment in growing a company has a 20% chance of success, but he'll lose 50% of the success in taxes, he's better off keeping his money in the bank.

    29. Re:zero sum game by farble1670 · · Score: 1

      I'm not enough of an economic expert to say whether or not this *actually* works, but the theory runs something like that.

      well thank goodness TFA links to a document that shows factually that it doesn't work.

    30. Re:zero sum game by rsborg · · Score: 1

      The proposal is that rich people invest in business, creating more new jobs and more value. Poor people spend their money on stuff.

      The fact may still be that rich people invest ... they just doing in third world countries so all that investment is basically doing nothing for the local/federal tax base... worse, it moves jobs overseas.

      A complete snow-job

      --
      Make sure everyone's vote counts: Verified Voting
    31. Re:zero sum game by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Yes increasing taxes on higher income individuals will stimulate the economy. If they take home less money, to maintain their standard of living they will have to earn more by growing their business.

      Also, when the taxes are redistributed to the lower classes they will just turn around and spend it and it will end up right back in the pockets of the wealthy. Wealth accumulates upward, and we need redistribution to keep the pump primed.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    32. Re:zero sum game by farble1670 · · Score: 1

      hey i'm with you.

      in reality, any "trickle-down" is completely accidental. in most cases maximizing (short-term) profit means offshoring, cutting jobs, closing factories, increasing H1-B visas (putting downward pressure on wages), and so on.

    33. Re:zero sum game by El+Rey · · Score: 1

      A number of people have said that.

      For example,

      Ben Stein

      Paul Krugman many times

      Please show me your Nobel Prize in Economics if you disagree.

      The top 1% of incomes earn 20% of all income and pay 40% of all COLLECTED income taxes.

      Yes, everyone learned in elementary school that 15% of 20 million is greater than 25% of 100000. So what? Oh you mean that you think it's fair if someone makes $20 million and pays a lower tax rate than most people, because they paid more actual dollars. The percent is the only measure of fairness. Don't insult our intelligence.

    34. Re:zero sum game by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 2

      low-income people are generally low-income because they don't save their money

      i think you are confused. low income people don't have money to save. if you think that the only reason people are poor is because they spend all their money, you need to get out of your basement more often.

      Bad choice of words on my part: low-income people are generally low-income because they have no way to save their money, but must spend it to survive. This should have been understandable by the context, but I see now how it could be misunderstood to be the rantings of a clueless libertarian basementist.

    35. Re:zero sum game by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      "Capitalism" is where the rich are the only "useful" members of society, as capital is used to make things. You must own a press to make a book. The poor don't have presses or the money to buy one. So cutting taxes on the producers will get you more presses, thus more books for less money.

      But give the money to the poor, and they'll never make anything with it.

      I'm not saying I agree with that stance, but I at least try to

    36. Re:zero sum game by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      But the Republicans cut for the rich and grow the government. The democrats increase taxes and spending. Neither is good, but which is more fiscally responsible?

    37. Re:zero sum game by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 1

      Added to this: low-income people are generally low-income because they don't save their money, but live hand-to-mouth.

      May I suggest that causation could be the other way around: Low income people generally live hand-to-mouth and don't save their money because they're low-income people.

      Precisely... there's really no causation either way; it's a catch-22 situation. I've lived below "poverty" level, and I've lived at the top end of middle class, and a range in between. There are definite "magic numbers" that when your income passes that point, your entire lifestyle and way of saving/spending changes, due to what you can actually accomplish with the resources you have/the resources you can borrow. I presume that by the time you hit the top 0.1%, you have passed through a few more of these "magic numbers" that grant you even more powers of holding on to the majority of your money.

      This is all getting away from the point though -- while there are "middle class" people with high incomes who have debt that equals their income, "upper class" people with high incomes tend to be the lenders, not the debtors. As such, people always owe them more (with interest) than they owe to others, thus perpetuating the high income. Spending more money would undo this situation, and really... there's only so much money a person can spend. Eventually you have to hire others to spend it for you.

    38. Re:zero sum game by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Your reasoning is faulty. Total wealth in society results from increasing production which means delaying consumption today so you can invest in better means of production to increase the goods available tomorrow. Consuming more today does not magically create more tomorrow. Your reasoning taken to the logical extreme could increase consumption to 100% and end up with no resources left to produce the goods we need tomorrow.

      Production and savings drives the economy. Rich people who save and invest increase production. Poor people who receive government handouts instead of finding ways of increasing their productivity only consume the resources of the economy. Transferring money from the relatively productive to the relatively unproductive will only serve to reduce the products available for the masses and ultimately make the poor poorer.

      Super rich elite with access to the printing presses are vastly different than the multi-millionaires as via inflation they transfer wealth from the productive to themselves. Unfortunately, these people control the government and fund the deficit and actively work to prevent the multi-millionaires from accumulating enough capital to threaten their power and help others become independent. Therefore, they favor a progressive income tax and promote fallacies such as consumption / debt leads to prosperity. This is because they are in the business of creating debt/money from thin air and seek to enslave the masses via their own faulty understanding of economics and to create 'class warfare' while hiding behind the curtain.

    39. Re:zero sum game by khallow · · Score: 1

      If people don't have money to purchase your goods and services that investment is worthless.

      While sometimes people invest in things that don't have customers, that usually isn't the case.

      Economic activity is demand driven

      The fundamental unit of economic activity is the trade between the one who wants something and the one providing it. Demand is only half of that transaction. Thus, economic activity is driven by both supply and demand. Things don't just happen because someone has money. Someone needs to supply the want. Investment builds the infrastructure that provides the supply and does so for far longer than demand-driven approaches can provide hte demand.

      And why speak just of short term economic activity? Another aspect of the investment versus consumption issue, is that investment tends to be longer term.

      The economy is not driven by the purchase of luxury goods.

      That would just be more demand and hence, more driving of the economy. At least for the luxury goods that are still produced in the US.

    40. Re:zero sum game by kenh · · Score: 1

      So if your boss lowers your wages, your natural reaction is to work more to make up the shortfall?

      I've not seen that particular response when gov't/employers try and worker's cut wages... They seem to get indignant and talk about striking...

      --
      Ken
    41. Re:zero sum game by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 2

      If they are working, they also pay payroll tax, social security, FICA, etc.

      Correct, the precentage of people who do not pay payroll taxes is 18% - and most of them are retirees.

      Furthermore, Obama cut payroll taxes and the GOP had a big WTF? moment given their support for the orignally temporary "Bush" tax cuts.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    42. Re:zero sum game by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      cut military by 3/4. yes, I'm serious. or maybe cut it even more.

      put that into 'ourselves'.

      problem solved.

      its the sacred cow, though. war on the world, oops, I mean ideas, oops, I mean terror. yeah, war on something. always.

      don't dare take care of ourselves. we can wait. but the hawks want to keep their pockets lined.

      folks, its simple. cut military and stop trying to police the world. attack only when attacked on our own land and even then, be quick and decisive about it. then get BACK to the core business of this country, which is OURSELVES. not other countries. we have enough to worry about here and keep our activities here.

      its simple. but both parties (R's more then D, though) are too beholden to the military and its entire industry. mostly based on fear and to some degree, ego.

      just think of what could be done if we spent even 1/10 of what we spent overseas, here!

      no need to raise taxes OR cut services. just need to apply our great wealth *here*.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    43. Re:zero sum game by kenh · · Score: 1

      There are only one set of tax rates in America, and they apply equally to all Americans.

      The next time an A-List celebrity/performer suggests the rich need to pay more, dig into it a little bit and see how they are paid. Most high earners have a personal services company that takes their ONE employee's pay not as income but as a fee for services rendered, then their personal services company buys their house, cars, invests their money, etc. as a corporation and are taxes as a corporation. Do you think when Brad Pitt takes a $20M fee to be in a film he turns around and writes Uncle Sam a $7M check for income taxes? ($7M is 35% of $20M)

      Also, don't confuse the tax rate on the last dollar earned to someone's overall tax rate.

      Obama, Romney, Buffett, and Buffett's secretary all pay the same income tax rates on their income, and pat the same capital gains tax on their long-term investments - the difference is that each of them has a different mix of earnings and investment income.

      --
      Ken
    44. Re:zero sum game by sjames · · Score: 1

      What you don't understand is that the people doing the tax cuts don't hang out with the peasants and prefer not to actually touch them if they can avoid it. They believe they are actually superior to the low and middle class.

    45. Re:zero sum game by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      I thought we didn't want the money to end up in grocery stores.

      "what's this 'we' shit, white-man?"

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    46. Re:zero sum game by kenh · · Score: 1

      As you cut taxes for the middle class you are also cutting them for the rich.

      Please define 'middle class' - politicians seem to place it between 2x and 8x the Federal Poverty Level... (That's around $40-150K/yr)

      --
      Ken
    47. Re:zero sum game by sjames · · Score: 1

      They spirit it out of the country before they spend it so they can avoid paying their fair share of taxes. They like having law enforcement protect their stuff, but they prefer that the middle class pay for it.

    48. Re:zero sum game by khallow · · Score: 1

      This is a good point. Investment wouldn't necessarily be in the country with the tax break. Consumption is a bit easier to control.

    49. Re:zero sum game by alexander_686 · · Score: 1

      Actually, there is a disproportional amount of evidence (IMF, World Back, academia, etc.) that show that lower tax rates increases private investment.
      Investments grow the pie, so the economy is larger, so that is good – everybody has gotten richer. The problem, at least in American over the past 40 years, is that most of the benefits have flowed to the top .1%.
      Short term tax breaks to the lower and middle class does cause a short term stimulus effect. Downside, you have to pay it back, which slows future growth. There is a fierce debate on what the overall effect is. Here are 2 good ones.

      http://www.nber.org/papers/w18423.pdf
      http://www.nber.org/papers/w16311.pdf

      And the type of taxes are important. The mortgage interest deduction stimulates consumption by encouraging people to build bigger houses – however most of the benefits of the mortgage interest deduction flow to people who have big loans on their houses – the rich. Cutting capital gains tends to stimulate long term investment. An example - I wish I could something better - but you get the point.

      http://www.economist.com/node/21564609

      The rich invest abroad. O.k. So what? Trying to draw artificial lines in the sand has had a host of negative unintended consequences. Better to reform the tax code from a residential to a territorial format. Besides, we are greying. You can only throw so much capital at a ever shrinking base. Ask the Japanese.

    50. Re:zero sum game by kenh · · Score: 1

      Where do the 'rich' hide their money and avoid having it finance other activities?

      It's not in tax-free bonds. (They directly fund work)

      It's not in a bank account. (They fund banks that loan money for business loans and home mortgages)

      It's not in the stock market. (By investing in the stock market the 'market cap' of public companies increase, allowing companies to fund expansion, individual incestors see their portfolios increase allowing investors to buy an expensive car, house, fund a child's education, act as seed money for starting their own business, etc)

      Please, where do the rich 'hide' their money from building the economy? (BTW, foreign banks fund the same activities as domestic banks, sometimes in America, sometimes overseas)

      --
      Ken
    51. Re:zero sum game by sjames · · Score: 2

      It's because by hook and by crook and a big helping of good fortune they accumulated enough in the first place that their existing wealth attracts more. Sometimes that luck was being born to someone who already had the big pile of wealth. The rest try to accumulate wealth as well, but rich people's wealth keeps attracting it away faster than they can pile it up.

    52. Re:zero sum game by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Could you make any money with no government to set the rules and defend your ability to make money?

    53. Re:zero sum game by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Even the supply-side economists agree that trickle-up has worked in practice (Ford and such), and that there's no documented case of trickle-down working (as this report supported). When the poor want something, it drives investment to provide that service or good. So money in the hands of the poor is better for the economy (better for everyone other than the old money, who hate new money).

    54. Re:zero sum game by AK+Marc · · Score: 2

      The only thing the government can do to positively impact the economy over any scale of time is to back the hell off.

      That's what this paper proved wrong, yet it's being pushed even in comments about a paper proving the opposite. Cutting taxes on the rich doesn't ever help the poor (or the economy). Putting money in the hands of the poor does help the economy. Raising taxes on the rich doesn't hurt the economy, but putting money in the hands of the poor helps the economy. Nope, you are wrong. The government can positively impact the economy through manipulation. The problem is that multiple types of conflicting manipulation won't help.

    55. Re:zero sum game by sjames · · Score: 1

      Of course, if poor people are spending their stimulus at businesses, those get busier and more prosperous so they need more employees and they can afford to hire them. That in turn keeps the money circulating around in the community.

    56. Re:zero sum game by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 1

      For a small business owner in the US (sole proprietorship, partnership, LLC, or S-Corp), company profits are taxed as income. If the profits are re-invested in the company, only what is left after taxes is available. Re-investment could be either for growth or stability; both are generally important to running a successful business.

      If your business has a 20% margin and a 10% growth rate then you need to re-invest 8% each year, which is not a problem if you pay less than about 50% taxes on profit-- you still get to take home 2% of revenue or 10% of profits.

      BUT, if you have 20% margin and 25% growth, you will not have enough capital to reinvest in the business if you are paying 50% taxes-- you will need to limit growth. This translates to hiring fewer people, buying less equipment, etc.

      Of course this analysis isn't looking at actual cash flow-- if you work in terms of cash flow, too high of a tax rate will limit your ability to build a cushion for slow months, seasons, or years. This creates a less healthy business.

      One alternative, used in some countries, is to only tax money when it is taken out of the company.
      ----
      All that said, and despite the huge pain in the butt dealing with taxes is today, tax rates (especially on capital gains) are too low, and it clearly has the effect the report concludes.

    57. Re:zero sum game by sjames · · Score: 1

      Actually, the income tax as originally implemented wasn't supposed to touch the middle class AT ALL. Middle class income was below the threshold for even being required to file the forms.

      Meanwhile, I have no idea where you got that 47% figure from, it's pure fiction.

      Lowering taxes on the lower and middle class (and yes, they pay plenty even when not in the form of income tax) will give them money to spend on productive businesses and make the investments made pay off. Raising taxes on the wealthy is not a stimulus in itself, but IS necessary to keep the books balanced.

      Taxes on the top have been lowered and lowered, and the economic miracles somehow continue not raining down from the heavens as promised. Seems like time to try another approach.

    58. Re:zero sum game by cerberusss · · Score: 1

      Why the fuck was this modded as troll?

      --
      8 of 13 people found this answer helpful. Did you?
    59. Re:zero sum game by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      First sentence is factually incorrect. When the GOP is in power they borrow & spend like drunken sailors on shore leave after two years on a boat.

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    60. Re:zero sum game by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      You have the reasoning completely wrong, so it isn't surprising it doesn't make sense.

      The idea is that say you are a business owner on a huge income. You could employ an additional worker, doing so would generate some extra revenue and profit via the extra production they generate. However, it's possible you won't be able to use the extra production for a number of reasons (demand tanks for some reason, for example) but you still have to pay the wages of that new person for a time. There's also just the extra work in managing a larger enterprise.

      So you have a standard risk/reward situation. The higher your marginal tax rate the less of the reward you get and hence the lower the risk level you will not employ that extra person.

      That doesn't mean it actually happens in reality, but logically it makes sense.

    61. Re:zero sum game by Chalnoth · · Score: 1

      The economic logic is that by reducing the taxes on the rich, you increase their incentives to do better: after all, if they get to keep more of their money, they have more to work towards, right? Of course, this has no basis whatsoever in reality. You have to get to rather extreme tax rates (around 70%-90%) before the incentives start to become counterproductive.

    62. Re:zero sum game by kenh · · Score: 1

      What do the Swiss and Cayman Island banks do with thier deposits? If they are paying interest, they must be investing that money somewhere...

      There are a whole lot of people caught up in-between $200/250K/yr and the folks that can justify Swiss/Cayman Island bank accounts.

      When has anyone actually proposed tying job creation to tax breaks?

      --
      Ken
    63. Re:zero sum game by Fallingcow · · Score: 1

      Yes increasing taxes on higher income individuals will stimulate the economy. If they take home less money, to maintain their standard of living they will have to earn more by growing their business.

      That's actually kind of true, though I don't think that's the best way to illustrate it.

      Say you've got a metrick fuckton of money to invest, but you've got enough employees and business infrastructure to handle current demand for whatever it is that you sell; demand is stagnant, and nothing you've done has helped, nor has anyone else in your industry been able to significantly affect spending on the products you all make. Say they're all sitting on a metric fuckton of money, too. Maybe they've got it in currency speculation, maybe in some low-yield foreign investment that's not as good a return as it would be in their core business if there were more demand, whatever. Not important.

      Say the government taxes you at a higher rate. Now instead of a metric fuckton of cash you only have an 2.5 imperial fuckloads. But demand has ticked up a bit. Now, despite having less money, you actually invest more in your core business. Maybe you hire some more people, build another factory, etc. Your competition does the same. Other industries follow the same pattern. Bam, feedback loop, demand goes up even more from all the new jobs. It levels off eventually, but it certainly helps heat up the economy a bit.

      It is absolutely possible for higher taxes on "job creators" to drive productive investment, if the money's spent the right way or given to the right people. Would it work that way in every conceivable situation? Not necessarily. Would it in our current situation? Done correctly, yeah, probably.

    64. Re:zero sum game by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      Because Slashdot has a rather large audience of Randroids and Ron Paul zombies, and any suggestion that they are not completely rational actors must be suppressed.

      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    65. Re:zero sum game by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      That's not counter to what he said, he just said that the GOP also cuts taxes along with that increased spending.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    66. Re:zero sum game by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      Let's worry about full employment when we reach it, the US is still recovering from a recession.

      The report that's being suppressed in this story is pretty much the reason the growth the GOP wants never manifests: There's no connection between tax cuts and economic growth. Taxes are so low that they don't inhibit the economy so cutting them doesn't boost the economy either.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    67. Re:zero sum game by KDR_11k · · Score: 2

      Luxuries are fine but unlike the poor they don't spend 100% of their post-tax income, they invest a lot of it and investments are not complete spending, they're supposed to be earned back at some point so the recipient of them goes into debt. While the rich have a positive total balance the rest of the system develops a negative balance. When most people are in debt you run the risk of default chain reactions (e.g. with the mortgages the defaults led to a lower house value led to a lower total balance for other mortgage takers led to more defaults led to a worldwide financial crisis). When it happens across nations you get the EU where the rich states are building up a positive balance while the poorer ones are indebted to them. Then you get country defaults.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    68. Re:zero sum game by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      Funny thing about taking economies as a whole is that spending and earning are connected. Consuming more today lets the person you bought those goods from produce more goods tomorrow. However that guy you bought from needs to put that additional money into the same economy it came from in order to grow it, if he puts it outside the country or something then sooner or later too much money gets siphoned out of the economy and those consumers become unable to consume and thus generate income for the producer. That means the producer needs to get rid of his surplus capacity which means firing workers, those workers are then unable to consume. Get enough people unable to consume and the economy grinds to a halt. Neither the govt nor the rich must be allowed to accumulate too much wealth without spending it into the local economy again or the system grinds to a halt and the economy which is measured by the flow of money, not the total of it that is available, crashes.

      Giving poor people govt handouts is indirectly subsidizing the businesses of the area (where else do you think they're going to put that money?).

      Two possible threats are when the govt decides it must save money instead of reinvesting the money it takes via taxes and such, then it acts as a brake on the economy like in Greece.
      The other threat is that one point in the chain of spenders and earners is unable to spend, e.g. when rich people cannot find investment opportunities and thus decide to sit on their money. That also acts as a brake on the economy because the flow of money gets stuck.

      Failures amplify themselves as Greece has demonstrated, they increased taxes while cutting spending, thus increasing the friction on the economy. This included salary cuts and firings. That means fewer consumers. That means less income for the businesses. The economy slowed and the GDP collapsed. And then Greece stood there with even lower tax incomes, even higher debt to GDP ratios and even more problems.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    69. Re:zero sum game by jrumney · · Score: 1

      Poor people are more likely to spend any extra money you give them immediately and locally, the rich will just ship it offshore to avoid paying tax on it and store it up for future generations of Paris Hiltons.

    70. Re:zero sum game by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      Don't forget that both trade partners provide and demand. One provides money, the other provides goods or services. Only if both parties can offer their part and demand the other you get trade.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    71. Re:zero sum game by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      of course, our infrastructure is in fine shape, our roads don't need upgrading. neither do our comms infra or any of the other social programs that help raise the overall qualtiy of life for everyone.

      oh, but the infra can go fark itself. it will just self manage. right? that rotting bridge or overpass - we don't need to invest in fixing that.

      You'll never make any real progress until you start identifying the actual source of the problems.

      Obama and the Women’s Lobby

      . . . The 2009 stimulus program set the pattern. The president had originally called for a two-year “shovel-ready” plan to modernize roads, bridges, electrical grids, and dams. Women’s activists were appalled. Op-eds appeared with titles like “Where Are the New Jobs for Women?” and “The Macho Stimulus Plan.” More than 1,000 feminist historians signed an open letter urging Mr. Obama not to favor a “heavily male-dominated field” like construction: “We need to rebuild not only concrete and steel bridges but also human bridges.” Kim Gandy, president of the National Organization for Women (NOW), attacked the “testosterone-laden ‘shovel-ready’ terminology.” Christina Romer, who chaired the President’s Council of Economic Advisers, would later say, “The very first e-mail I got . . . was from a women’s group saying, ‘We don’t want this stimulus package to just create jobs for burly men.’”

      The president’s original plan was designed to stop the hemorrhaging in construction and manufacturing while investing in physical infrastructure. It was not a grab bag of gender-correct transfer programs. The whole idea was to get Americans back to work, and it was “burly men” who had lost most of the jobs following the financial collapse of 2008. But as protests mounted, the president’s team reconfigured the bill according to NOW’s specifications. In a column entitled “Economic Recovery: What’s NOW Got to Do with It?” Gandy could hardly contain her elation: “As we looked through the act, over and over we saw reflections of the very specific proposals that we had made, and with big numbers next to them. Numbers that started with a ‘B’ (as in billion).” To read Gandy’s column is to understand why shovels are still standing idle and the stimulus was such a disappointment . . . .more . . .

      No Country for Burly Men - How feminist groups skewed the Obama stimulus plan towards women's jobs.

      A "man-cession." That's what some economists are starting to call it. Of the 5.7 million jobs Americans lost between December 2007 and May 2009, nearly 80 percent had been held by men. Mark Perry, an economist at the University of Michigan, characterizes the recession as a "downturn" for women but a "catastrophe" for men.

      It’s the public sector that’s ‘doing fine’

      - - - - -

      but lets give the rich more reasons to not help out. they'll just naturally be good people on their own, right?

      right??

      left to their own devices, they'll steal you blind. this class of people need to be watched more than the worst criminal among us.

      You could watch the rich all day long and completely miss what happened to the stimulus as noted above. You would be better off watching the government and governing class with vigilance rat

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    72. Re:zero sum game by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      So where do you think that waste goes? When the govt buys a 10000$ hammer that's not 1$ to the hammer maker and 9999$ on the landfill.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    73. Re:zero sum game by cold+fjord · · Score: 1
      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    74. Re:zero sum game by Legion303 · · Score: 1

      I don't understand the people who bitch about training their replacements when a company ships jobs away. I get that you were desperate for the money and were forced into this economic rape. I don't get why you didn't train your replacement very, very poorly. That's what I would do.

      "Company policy is to end each call with a cheerful 'go fuck yourself, sir!' No, it's cool, it's just slang like 'bad' or 'sick, bro.' "

    75. Re:zero sum game by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      I agree.

      People who are wealthy will spend more, but, you know, if I'm a billionaire, exactly how many plasma TVs can I reasonably buy before I have too many plasma TVs? Ultimately, the impact on the economy would seem to be slight.

      Worse still, if every dollar I pull out of my company to pay myself is now worth, for the sake of argument 80c instead of 70c, wouldn't it stand to reason that there's more incentive for me to pull money out of my business? Perhaps even an incentive to run it into the ground - it's doing well now and can pay me a fortune, why wait - it might not always be like that?

      Tax cuts to people on more ordinary salaries tends to be more effective because the number of - well, I used plasma TVs above - things bought will be massively increased, and that'll raise the economy.

      The funny thing is I suspect some ultra-capitalists would agree with me, reluctantly of course. Henry Ford is famous for raising the salaries of his own employees. He knew that his own business would benefit from that, both temporarily as quality improved from motivated workers, but also in the medium to longer term as other companies would be forced to compete and raise there's, thus increasing the pool of people who could afford... Ford's vehicles.

      The counter arguments tend to be these which may or may not be true, depending on how you think about it:

      1. Giving more money to the rich will enable them to invest in job creation programs. My view is that the opposite is true - the money for job creation is done through businesses, always, never through their leaders. That is, if I leave my money in a business and ensure the business runs at maximum efficiency, the money is untaxed anyway.

      2. If you tax people too highly, they'll continue to pay themselves well but will move the money off-shore, out of reach of any tax authorities. With respect, i think the overwhelming evidence is that this happens anyway, and in any case, the long-term rich ultimately pay a rate of less than 20% these days, thanks to the bizarre way in which dividends are taxed and the ability to restate compensation as whatever you want it to be (just as $1 a year Steve Jobs.)

      We need more of a rising tide type economics, to raise all boats, rather than a policy based on salvaging one fishing boat and hoping the guy in it can haul in enough fish for the rest of us.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    76. Re:zero sum game by khallow · · Score: 1

      The one providing the money is traditionally labeled the "demand" or "consumer".

    77. Re:zero sum game by khallow · · Score: 1
      What do you mean by "worked" and for whom? You imply that trickle down works for "old money", for example. As another replier noted, one has greater control over where consumption is spent than over where investment is made. So trickle down may have worked, just not for the class of people you wanted to help in the region you wanted to help them in.

      and that there's no documented case of trickle-down working (as this report supported)

      I'll just note that there's plenty of cases that both support and deny this. It depends in part who your sponsors and their interests are.

    78. Re:zero sum game by microbox · · Score: 1

      I'm not enough of an economic expert to say whether or not this *actually* works, but the theory runs something like that.

      Cutting taxes on the rich might help if there was a dearth of investment money; however, just consider for a moment that there is a huge glut of investment money in the world, looking for a place to be parked.

      --

      Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
    79. Re:zero sum game by xelah · · Score: 1

      Usually the reasonning is that since they will have more money, they will consume more and that will help the economy.

      This reasoning doesn't work. On the one hand, if you don't tax, the money remains with them (rich or poor) and they spend all of it (at best). On the other the government takes it and spends all of it. It's still spent. Directly, taking money away and spending could be argued to stimulate the economy, not the opposite, because it's guaranteed to all be spent.

      The potential positive effect of cutting taxes is through changing incentives to work and getting rid of dead-weight losses. eg, you'd pay $15 to have your house cleaned, a cleaner would accept $10, but there'd be taxes of $6 so it doesn't happen.

      Now.....compare raising taxes by taxing the rich (so a few people are subject to these discintives) to raising taxes by taxing the poor (so a lot of people are subject to them). If you assume that someone's contribution is genuinely proportionate to their income then maybe it wouldn't make much difference (assuming rich and poor respond to a certain percentage change in the same way....which is a bit doubtful). The rich might work less and we'd lose their highly valuable output. But if not, if you assume that rich people get a lot of their income from rent-seeking and don't really create what their salaries suggest they do....welll....then taxing the poor instead is going to have a much bigger negative impact on the economy because far more economic activity is distorted by the taxes.

    80. Re:zero sum game by Schmorgluck · · Score: 1

      While the rich have a positive total balance the rest of the system develops a negative balance.

      Not necessarily, since the investments are supposed to drive the economy forward and generate growth. It's supposed to be a positive sum game, after all.

      I'd rather say that past a certain level of inequality, the generated growth is superseded by the effect you describe. Even in a positive sum game, the majority can be in the negatives if a minority is sufficiently high in the positives.

      --
      There's nothing like $HOME
    81. Re:zero sum game by ukemike · · Score: 1

      I never understood that idea that giving a tax break to high salary people will stimulate the economy.

      Usually the reasonning is that since they will have more money, they will consume more and that will help the economy. If you give a tax break to low income people for the same amount of tax dollars, they will use that money as well. They are not going to set it on fire, they will use it in a grocery store.

      Am I understanding something wrong?

      You don't understand it because it doesn't make sense. But you are getting the explanation for the twisted internal logic a bit wrong. The idea of trickle down economics is that the wealthy already have what they need so they won't spend the extra money, they will invest it. That is supposed to be good for the economy. It could be if the investments were new investment in new economic activity. But we all know that when they invest money they buy already issued stock in already existing companies. That does almost nothing for the economy. The money stops moving in the real economy, it circulates in the stock market/casino for years and contributes virtually nothing. If anyone remembers their macroeconomics 101 class from freshman year you'll recall that speed of money is a key factor in the health of an economy. You want each dollar out there to change hands lots of times. And you want it changing hands in a way that makes things or activity. Each time it changes hands a dollar worth of activity takes place. So like all conservative ideology these days they are almost exactly wrong. Giving tax breaks to the poor will trickle up because the poor will have no choice but to spend most every dollar they get their hands on and they spend it on stuff or services. Unfortunately we can't give more tax breaks to many of the poor since they currently pay little or no income taxes. There are lots of hungry people in the US so we could spend more on food stamps. We could also start big infrastructure projects and hire the unemployed to do them. This also gets money into the economy in an effective way. The stimulus package worked. The bailout of detroit worked. The bailout of the banks was a tremendous failure in terms of helping the economy. We missed a big opportunity to massively reconfigure the banking business into a form that would benefit the people of the US.

      So it seems to me that the more money that is in the hands of the already rich, the worse it is for the economy since money just stops when it gets there. I believe that this was a factor in the steady economic growth during the post-war period, our tax structure prevented money from becoming stagnant in the pockets of the rich.

      So lets tax the hell out of the rich, and lets tax the derivatives markets and get some of those dollars back into the real economy via big infrastructure projects where they will be spent on real things likes cars, computers, apps, movies, toys, appliances, houses, and food. Lets build fiber to the curb for every house. Let's build mass transit for every major city. Let's build massive solar power plants. That's the way to make the win-win scenario.

      --
      -- QED
    82. Re:zero sum game by Schmorgluck · · Score: 1

      I suspect something like "work ethics".

      --
      There's nothing like $HOME
    83. Re:zero sum game by ukemike · · Score: 1

      investment is very global now, and has for a long time been less local, this means it will.have a broader area it improves, and less of it will go to poorer areas.

      That's not the real problem with "investment." The real problem is that "investment" usually takes the form of buying already issued stock in already existing companies and buying derivatives. The change of hands of a share of stock does nothing-zip-zilch for the economy of people, and then the money just stays in the stock market and it doesn't buy anything or cause anything to be made or done. Derivatives do even less since they are essentially gambling and have no intrinsic value. If you include derivatives the amount of money that is tied up in the global casino, doing nothing real except extracting ever more money from the real economy into the the casino economy, is actually far greater than the amount of money left in the real economy of making things and providing services. http://xkcd.com/980/ (look down in the trillions corner and compare the global GDP to the size of the annual derivatives market)

      That's the reason that tax breaks for the rich do nothing. The last 30 years of US history are clear cut proof that trickle down economics do exactly the opposite of what they claim.

      --
      -- QED
    84. Re:zero sum game by cerberusss · · Score: 1

      Yes, and by your use of the phrase "Randroids and Ron Paul Zombies," I can tell that your rationality is completely beyond reproach.

      Well, his original statement was beyond reproach. In fact, it was just simple fact and still it got modded troll.

      --
      8 of 13 people found this answer helpful. Did you?
    85. Re:zero sum game by terjeber · · Score: 1

      Well, the bottom half of income earners pay zero federal tax, so giving them a federal tax break has no impact on anything whatsoever. In fact, what Romney should do is to tell the US population that he will give the bottom half a ten million dollar cash tax break. Across the board. They would vote for him and it would cost nothing at all.

      Please note, I am a right-wing libertarian and wouldn't vote for the Republican party if you paid me (open to negotiations of course).

    86. Re:zero sum game by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      And the neat thing is, the libertards are so predictable to jump on anything who does not agree that Rand is God and Paul is her prophet.

      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    87. Re:zero sum game by celle · · Score: 1

      " I understand that increasing the deficit at the behest of foreign bond investors even if it's contrary to American interests, will increase their interest revenue so that they can become the primary equity holders of America, resulting in us becoming third world slaves, therefore I oppose Republic politics because it doesn't actually resemble conservative politics in any way (indeed, Barry Goldwater would laugh in those peoples' faces), and in fact it has no right/left component at all, being mere corruption rather than partisan idealism.

      Repair complete."

          You know that reads like economic treason right? What's the penalty for treason in time of war?
      answers: Yes and Death. Kill those republican bastards.

    88. Re:zero sum game by khallow · · Score: 1

      of course, our infrastructure is in fine shape, our roads don't need upgrading. neither do our comms infra or any of the other social programs that help raise the overall qualtiy of life for everyone.

      And if you were right, you'd have a point. Let's start with those social programs. Complete waste of money, top to bottom. I don't even understand how someone can claim that they raise quality of life when the primary effect is take tax money from people who need it and toss it down many, many ratholes. Oh, and raise the cost of many components of that standard of living (such as real estate, health care, and education).

      And we spend plenty on infrastructure building and just not enough on infrastructure maintenance. Guess the latter just isn't that sexy. But if we moved some funding from new construction to maintenance, that would fix this issue.

      the me-generation should have run out of steam, but it only gets stronger as time goes on. no one wants to invest in our own infrastructure or help those who are below what should be a minimum american standard of living.

      That's a standard outcome for greed-based public spending. It turns a growing economy into a zero-sum public funded economy. And that's why the me-generation keeps gathering steam. It's a growing battle with more to fight over each year.

    89. Re:zero sum game by unitron · · Score: 1

      Supply usually doesn't create demand.

      But if there's demand, that is, someone who wants something and has the money with which to pay for it, somebody else who wants that money is going to hustle to come up with that for which the demand exists.

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

    90. Re:zero sum game by unitron · · Score: 1

      When Stein agrees with Krugman, you know things have gotten weird.

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

    91. Re:zero sum game by unitron · · Score: 1

      the idea is that if you give money to wealthy people and corporations, they will use it to expand or build new companies...

      Why would they do that, unless there was demand? And if there's demand, someone is going to try to come up with ways to make money meeting that demand, they don't have to be bribed to do so.

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

    92. Re:zero sum game by unitron · · Score: 1

      "Capitalism" is where the rich are the only "useful" members of society, as capital is used to make things. You must own a press to make a book. The poor don't have presses or the money to buy one. So cutting taxes on the producers will get you more presses, thus more books for less money.

      But give the money to the poor, and they'll never make anything with it.

      I'm not saying I agree with that stance, but I at least try to

      Give the money to the poor, and maybe they'll have enough to buy books, which will make owning a press worth the investment.

      If no one has the money to buy books, what's the point in investing in a press?

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

    93. Re:zero sum game by unitron · · Score: 1

      If profits are re-invested in the business, they're expenses, and they reduce the taxable income.

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

    94. Re:zero sum game by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      The poor get just enough cleaning the rich people's house to buy a book (as long as they don't want to eat that week), if only the rich hadn't closed all the schools to save 0.001% on their taxes.

    95. Re:zero sum game by farble1670 · · Score: 1

      because even if there's demand, they may not have the money to spend to meet the demand if you tax them heavily. and business is not only about meeting existing demand, it's about creating products and services that create demand for new things, AKA r&d.

      p.s., i'm not claiming that this works, i'm just noting the philosophy.

    96. Re:zero sum game by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      The economy and its growth is measured by the money flow rate, that's fairly independent of the balance. You can have money flows even when everybody is in debt. Only when they want to pay that debt back do you get trouble because then they spend less than they earn which decreases the earnings of those that they deal with. Two people can spend the same dollar (by one earning that dollar from the other) but they can't own the same dollar.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    97. Re:zero sum game by aicrules · · Score: 1

      Anyone can have a positive impact on the economy, over some finite time. What is a government program in existence today that actually contributes positively to the economy?

    98. Re:zero sum game by aicrules · · Score: 1

      Mostly to the high number of people involved in "managing" government services. The size of government to the services they provide makes the overhead of the big charities like United Way and Red Cross look like a pittance.

    99. Re:zero sum game by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      A program today? None. Some of the WPA contributed positively to the economy. But today, everything was put in place by modern Democrats or modern Republicans. Neither or which is qualified to sit on a school board, let alone a federal office.

    100. Re:zero sum game by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      Which is a damned stupid assumption. You can invest all you want in starting new businesses. If people don't have money to purchase your goods and services that investment is worthless.

      By the same logic, if people don't have jobs, they don't have money. How do you produce new jobs if not by starting new businesses? Right now we have a TON of people itching to have jobs. What we don't have are the actual slots to fill.

    101. Re:zero sum game by philip.paradis · · Score: 1

      Please reference this comment thread, which contains a comment I posted in response to what some might perceive as an "attack" on Ayn Rand (a person who undoubtedly doesn't care a bit about it, as she's dead). In broad strokes, if pushed to classify myself in terms of political affiliation, I might reasonably be described as strongly identifying with many of the principles espoused by the Libertarian party.

      Based on that single comment thread and my open admission of apparent LP affiliation, I'm curious whether you would presume to make a summary judgement of my character per your post. In different terms, I wonder if you would not only believe that you have a deep understanding of me as a whole person based on this limited criteria, but would also act upon that belief if you believed it would serve to reinforce your particular worldview. I look forward to your reply.

      --
      Write failed: Broken pipe
    102. Re:zero sum game by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      Unless you're the AC I'm replying to, I think the lady doth protest too much.

      And aside from that, my point stands: question libertard dogma in even the most general terms, and you get plenty of libertards whining as if you insulted them personally. Thank you for proving the point.

      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    103. Re:zero sum game by philip.paradis · · Score: 1

      There's a difference between defending dogma and noting that someone appears to be making gross generalizations. I did the latter, and if anything you seem to be persisting in defending your own dogma at this point.

      I'll ask another question. Do you believe there might be value in sitting down over a cup of coffee with someone like me, with my admitted political leanings (again, not to be confused with the particular beliefs of anyone else), and just having a nice afternoon talk about whatever comes up? That's how I prefer to have these sorts of discussions, as it seems the participants gain the opportunity learn more about who the other person actually is as a whole being.

      So again, my objective in the previous post was quite removed from any attempt to defend or assail any particular approach to politics. Instead, it was to see if you might be interested in slowing down for a moment to think of someone as a person, instead of a cog in some political collective. I look forward to your reply.

      --
      Write failed: Broken pipe
    104. Re:zero sum game by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      Nice hypothetical you have there. Unfortunately, I don't deal in hypotheticals, I deal with the real world, and the real world says that Internet libertarians are the kind of people that with a 95% confidence interval deserve the moniker 'libertard'.

      Mart

      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
  13. Re:Romney Kills Baby Seals by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 1, Informative

    There's some truth to that. The fact that I despise conservative crazies doesn't mean I don't despise liberal, libertarian or whig crazies just as much. Basically, I despise any party or organization to the extent that their views deviate from provable reality. Admittedly, right-wing republicans have taken over as the top of the reality denial list of late, but that doesn't mean that any other group is getting saner.

    --
    Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
  14. Re:News for nerds? by patch5 · · Score: 1

    ...stuff that matters.

  15. Wealth disparity -- more important than income ine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Wealth disparity is actually more important than income indequality, as the extremely wealthy often earn a tiny fraction of income compared to their immense wealth, while the extremely poor have only their income to rely on.

    Unfortunately, wealth inequality is rarely talked about in the mainstream media. Usually it's income that's talked about, and as horrible as income inequality is, focusing on it paints an unduly rosy picture of the real economic injustice suffered in the US.

  16. it may actually be counterproductive by Chirs · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If I give $1000 to a guy who is worth a billion dollars, he may just stick it in the vault and let it sit there.

    If I give $1000 to someone who's living hand-to-mouth, it's going to get spent on food/drink/rent/clothes pretty much immediately.

    1. Re:it may actually be counterproductive by aicrules · · Score: 1, Insightful

      But you're not GIVING anybody anything. We're talking about not TAKING as much. Remember, they're taking money from people that is NOT theirs. And decided to give more back to people based on their need turns it from taxing to stealing.

    2. Re:it may actually be counterproductive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You try earning money in complete isolation and then claim that it's entirely yours.

      A government has a stake in all business, because all business operates in a society stable and functional enough for it to be viable.

    3. Re:it may actually be counterproductive by Cajun+Hell · · Score: 1

      But you're not GIVING anybody anything. We're talking about not TAKING as much.

      The money was TAKEN when it was spent (or when the federal budget was allocated). Abstaining from taking is not an option on the table. Nobody currently serving in government, or one of the top two candidates for any particular offices, is seriously discussing not taking money away from innocent victims. Harm will occur.

      Tax policies are the question of from whom it will be taken, not whether it will be taken. You can either increase inflation and harm everyone who uses money, or you can tax(harm) those who are able to pay, or you can go deeper into debt (the Republican plan) so that you can have even higher inflation and taxes a year later (harm everyone, in every way imaginable).

      A little common sense will rule out the third option, so we're left with inflation or higher taxes. At that point, it is very natural for proponents of either approach to talk about losing this debate, as GIVING something to whose who benefit. That's not intellectual dishonestly; it's just spin.

      --
      "Believe me!" -- Donald Trump
    4. Re:it may actually be counterproductive by thaylin · · Score: 1

      So therefore it is stealing no matter which side gets a lower tax rate....

      --
      When you cant win, ad hominem.
    5. Re:it may actually be counterproductive by manu0601 · · Score: 1

      If I give $1000 to a guy who is worth a billion dollars, he may just stick it in the vault and let it sit there.

      Incorrect. That person will invest. But since the poor are too poor to consume goods, there is not worthly investment in real life economy. The $1000 will therefore be invested in speculative financial products. This feeds financial bubbles.

    6. Re:it may actually be counterproductive by adrn01 · · Score: 1

      According to all the economic models I ever saw, it's exactly as good for the economy to spend $1000 on goods as to invest $1000 in a business (ie, stick the money in a bank account, bond, or stock market). This seems like total crap to me, but professional economists are a lot smarter than me.

      Paul Krugman, a Nobel-winning econominist, also thinks that notion is crap, esp when the problem is lack of DEMAND.
      If there's a sufficient demand for goods / services, money to provide those WILL materialize; conversely, if there is insufficient demand, money will hide in bank accounts / Wall Street casino games / overseas shelters rather than hire employees who aren't needed.

    7. Re:it may actually be counterproductive by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      We ARE giving that money to people. Where do you think those taxes go? The govt does not have an income surplus, i.e. it spends every dollar it gets and then some. That spending goes somewhere. Be it help for the poor, hiring people to repair the streets, employing the police and firefighters, building up the military or whatever. All those recipients get money to spend that then goes back into the economy. Unfair? Who cares, the point is that the money must flow and by flowing it improves the standards of living for everybody. Taxes and inflation must make sure people can't act as money clots and block the flow, those who accumulate too much are pressured to keep it flowing. To keep society stable a certain amount of flow must go through every individual in it. Call it theft if you want, that doesn't change that it's a benefit to society and thus mankind.

      Money exists to facilitate trade. The sum of all trade (this obviously includes trade for labor and such), not the sum of all money is the economy.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    8. Re:it may actually be counterproductive by aicrules · · Score: 1

      What about the option of cutting spending? Including potentially some defense spending? You can't tell me that everything the government does right now is critical to the survival of the nation.

    9. Re:it may actually be counterproductive by aicrules · · Score: 1

      I guarantee you if there was a way to only pay taxes for things you actually used (use taxes are a very real alternative to income taxes) we would all be way better off. It's not something you could start doing overnight as those who currently pay no taxes would be harmed over the short term, but if someone was promoting the slow transition to a completely use-based tax system I would be behind them 100%.

    10. Re:it may actually be counterproductive by aicrules · · Score: 1

      One big reason I'd be behind that is that the use tax would have a direct representation. My biggest problem with income tax is that it doesn't have a specific representation tied to it. It could go anywhere....in fact, if all taxes had to have specific direct representation (you know actually going to what the tax was meant for) then I may even be okay with Social Security. Maybe....

    11. Re:it may actually be counterproductive by Cajun+Hell · · Score: 1

      What about the option of cutting spending?

      It's a theoretical option, but tomorrow over 95% of the country will vote against it. IMHO it seems like a good idea, but most people disagree, so at least for the next two years, that's not on the policy agenda. (So that leaves inflation-vs-taxes.)

      It could become part of the next campaign agenda, though. If libertarians are willing to sacrifice their private lives to run in 2014, then reduction of spending could possibly happen some day.

      --
      "Believe me!" -- Donald Trump
  17. BFD by Sloppy · · Score: 1, Insightful

    What's the big deal? Everyone knows economics and history are lies straight from the pit of hell.

    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  18. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by benjfowler · · Score: 1

    Very interesting. Mod parent up.

  19. Re:Romney Kills Baby Seals by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Oddly, Attila the Hun was very liberal for his day, and could be considered liberal even today. Among the very progressive (for the times) things he enforced:

    - It was fairly typical for him to take a city and then kill all of the political leadership, but not punish the populous. He then would let it be known that he knew who had commanded the opposition, and that the fight was now over with their disposal. Of course if anyone then tried to resume the fight he was incredibly brutal in retaliation. The idea of punishing the people responsible for war rather than the common man is something we still struggle with nowadays.

    - Having been a near-slave himself early in life he abolished the idea of being born into slavery. The only people who were slaves were the people who were conquered.

    - With the exception of the inherited emperorship (which was always going to go to whichever of his many children proved the most able), governmental positions were almost all by merit rather than political connection. This was virtually unheard of anywhere in the world at the time.

    - Religious freedom was enforced all across the empire (because the largest in history it should be noted). In fact he seems to have enjoyed religious debate, and the most scholarly work comparing and contrasting religion of the time all came out of his capital where he brought diverse religious leaders together and invited them to debate before the court.

    Most of this is from "Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World" (a great read): http://www.amazon.com/Genghis-Khan-Making-Modern-World/dp/0609809644

    Other pieces from the traveling museum exhibit that it seems will next be in Chicago in Feb (I saw it in San Jose): http://fieldmuseum.org/about/genghis-khan-invades-chicago

  20. Communism by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 2

    The Soviet gangsters also practiced rewriting history and making inconvenient facts disappear.

    They also valued Party connections over competence. Compare that to the people flown out to do Iraq reconstruction straight from college because they were in the Young Republicans.

  21. Re:Romney Kills Baby Seals by gangien · · Score: 1

    Just my opinoin, but the 2000, 2008, 2012 elections have nothing on how crazy slashdot got in 2004.

  22. Dead with the Summary by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The plan advocated by House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan that is embodied in the House Budget Resolution (H.Con.Res. 112), the Path to Prosperity, also proposes to reduce income tax rates by broadening the tax base.

    There is not conclusive evidence, however, to substantiate a clear relationship between the 65-year steady reduction in the top tax rates and economic growth. Analysis of such data suggests the reduction in the top tax rates have had little association with saving, investment, or productivity growth. However, the top tax rate reductions appear to be associated with the increasing concentration of income at the top of the income distribution. The share of income accruing to the top 0.1% of U.S. families increased from 4.2% in 1945 to 12.3% by 2007

    Roughly interpreted: Ryan doesn't know what he's talking about, by extension neither does Romney. In fact, the only thing accomplished by reducing taxes on the rich is a money grab that increases the disparity between the 1% and the other 99%.

    You know I really cannot understand why the Republicans would take issue with this report. I mean really, you'd think they'd like to know that their domestic policy is specious so that they can find real solutions. Unless, perhaps they already understood the reality of their talking point...

    --
    Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
    1. Re:Dead with the Summary by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 2

      You know I really cannot understand why the Republicans would take issue with this report. I mean really, you'd think they'd like to know that their domestic policy is specious so that they can find real solutions. Unless, perhaps they already understood the reality of their talking point...

      When has it ever been a goal of the Republic Party to attempt to minimize income disparity or concentration of income? Equalizing outcomes, regardless of merit, is the goal of the Democrats. The typical republican position is that there is nothing wrong with receiving an income well above the national average, provided it is freely given and not acquired by theft or fraud. If this report turns anyone away from the Republican Party, it can only be because they were never ideologically aligned with the Republican position in the first place.

      Personally, I consider the report's main conclusion to be rather obvious. Naturally, lowering the top tax rates means that the group that earned more income gets to keep more of it. There is a direct, mathematical link between the top tax rates and the share of income retained by the top earners. This does not imply that anyone else's income has decreased in absolute terms.

      That the additional retained income did not go into saving or investment does seem rather odd, though there has been a major push toward glamorizing consumption over the same time period. If the extra did go toward consumption rather than investment, or was offset by increased consumption elsewhere in the economy, then it's not surprising that it did little to contribute to productivity growth. Consumption is indeed essential, the whole point of the exercise really, but it's capital investment which boosts productivity.

      --
      "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
  23. Re:Romney Kills Baby Seals by kenaaker · · Score: 2
    Well, thank you for the information.

    I withdraw the comparison. It was a snarky comment I heard many years ago. And it makes an even greater contrast to the current day.

    Who would Attila have punished for the Iraq war? How many of the current political dynasties would have been cut off from any connection with the government? Can you imagine a set of broadcast national debates on religion today?

    Interesting.

  24. As conservatives continue to reject evidence... by DavidHumus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...-based reasoning, reality will continue to take on an increasingly liberal tinge.

  25. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by Lehk228 · · Score: 1, Interesting

    wealth is theft,

    name a single billionaire who earned their billions through their own labor, rather than by exploiting the labor of others

    --
    Snowden and Manning are heroes.
  26. Net asset tax instead of income tax? by ortholattice · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Let me propose a radical idea to discuss: abolish the income tax and replace it by a tax on net assets. I'm not proposing any particular rate structure, but let me describe the general ideas.

    Income tax has too many loopholes for the wealthy. For example, the Facebook and Google CEOs pay themselves $1 per year, avoiding any income tax and paying only the low capital gains rate when they occasionally sell some stock to finance their lifestyles. The rest grows tax-free, indefinitely, as their companies grow.

    It seems to me that a fair tax would be based on a person's ability to pay it. The ability to afford a tax is much more dependent on how much wealth you have than how much income you make. Taxing the income of someone who can barely make ends meet, preventing them from accumulating any savings, doesn't seem beneficial for society overall.

    It is much harder for a wealthy person to hide their assets than to exploit income tax loopholes. Of course there will always be loopholes, but most of the information regarding the ultra rich, for example, is even public, otherwise it would not be possible to compile the Fortune 400 list.

    The middle class is already subject to an asset (real estate) tax on what, for most, is their primary asset, their home. So it's nothing new, and although those who pay it don't enjoy doing so of course, it's accepted and viewed as a necessary evil to finance their local community. The real estate tax is actually very regressive â" the less equity you have in your home, the higher percentage of that equity you pay, since it is based on the home's value, not your equity in it. You pay it even if your equity is negative (i.e. if the mortgage is underwater)! If both real estate tax and income tax were replaced by a net asset tax, it would seem to me to be much fairer.

    One argument I've seen against an asset tax is that it would encourage people not to accumulate wealth i.e. would encourage stagnation. I disagree. A positive benefit of the real estate tax, for example, is that it discourages the accumulation of property sitting idle, but encourages the development and use of that property. Similarly, I would imagine a net worth tax would encourage productive use of the money, possibly even finally leading to that trickle-down job creation we hear so much about.

    1. Re:Net asset tax instead of income tax? by geekoid · · Score: 1

      The peopel would tie up there money in ways that made it seem that couldn't afford it. You ahve basical greatre a self defining tax loophole.

      Remove all deduction except RnD
      Tax companies that make under 250K 10%
      over 250K 30%.
      Tax monies over a 5 billion at 100%
      Raise the top 3% taxes to 36%, raise the top .1% taxes to 50%
      Remove deductions to non profits.
      Churches pay taxes just like companies.
      Remove the child credit.
      Institute a Tobbin's tax, .05% on every trade.

      Put the increase in revenue into Education, NASA , Infrastructure and Darpa.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:Net asset tax instead of income tax? by RabidReindeer · · Score: 1

      I think we've pretty well proven that there is no revenue-generating system that cannot be gamed.

      Income and sales taxes are popular (pardon the expression) because:

      1. They're one-time events. You pay the tax when you are best able to afford it and never again. If you cannot afford an item just because of the sales tax, you really couldn't afford the item to begin with. If you cannot spare the income, you're not making enough to contribute (and fortunately, we designed our tax codes to afford relief to those in that category).

      2. "ownership" taxes, such as sales taxes are a continual hemorrage. If your financial life stalls and you have no income, you can stop discretionary spending (necessities are often tax-exempt) and you'll pay no income tax. But your taxable property is the gift that keeps on giving. In reverse. Do nothing, and eventually, it all gets taken from you. You can't just coast.

      One of the major reasons why so many communities are in dire financial straits right now is precisely because of the aforementioned. When people don't have income and they cannot spend, tax revenues dry up. Plus the implosion of property values added icing to the cake by shrinking that income supply as well.

      The other reason was that we allowed ourselves to be persuaded that All Taxes Are Stealing and that we should cut and cut and cut on the taxes. But we expected that some sort of Free Market Trickle-Down Fairies would wave their "????" wands and it'd be all Profit and we could continue to have the same results as when we had the tax money coming in to spend. So we went from tax-and-spend, which is annoying and (sometimes) wasteful, to cut-and-spend, which is downright suicidal.

    3. Re:Net asset tax instead of income tax? by elvis+the+frog · · Score: 1

      At this point, arguing about what form the imposition of taxation should take is salt in the wounds of the common taxpayer. Unfortunately the merits of taxation are completely diminished by the out of control spending at all levels of a government which is lurching it's way ever more quickly towards bureaucratic despotism. Everyone must alter their behavior to survive in thrall to the monster, and those who thrive typically leverage their influence or position to achieve a favored position.

      Unbalanced government steals an ever larger piece of an ever shrinking pie, taking from the actual economy the means of sustenance and growth. Government doesn't really produce anything and as an investment vehicle it's plagued by conflict of interest and poor performance. It's a monopoly that can not be addressed by anti-trust laws, a monopoly that takes pleasure in eradicating competition with extreme prejudice.

      The morality of enslaving people for their own good will never again face serious examination by the slaveowners. Popular Sovereignty has been corrupted into Popular Servitude. Which is why this system will eventually fly apart in bloody catastrophe and reform at a lower standard of living. There is no lower limit to your standard of living, by the way, only an upper limit.

    4. Re:Net asset tax instead of income tax? by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 1

      Considering how much Republicans (and I imagine most rich Democrats) hate the Estate Tax...

      Seriously, though, the humor to me of it all is how the argument for why Estate taxes are so evil--that they take away a life time of effort and simply hand it over to a government that didn't earn it like the person did. Well, people, you can't take your money to your grave. That gold ring on you finger won't look too pretty on your rotting body or eventually your brittle skeleton. When you're dead, you're dead.

      Besides, the idea of being able to hand out big chunks of estate to people of your choosing really goes against the whole idea of equal opportunity when those gifts are given to children, grandchildren, etc. Meanwhile, one can give tax exempt gifts of scholarship, medical payments, *cough* political organizations, and tax deductible gifts--which go against the idea of equal opportunity but at least don't seem focused on simply allowing for self-supporting dynasties.

      Really, I think it all comes down to the fact that I've never heard of a solid explanation on how property can come into ownership into the first place--simply saying "me first" is an absurd justification given just minimally that there's no way to really know if you're first. Nor is there a solid explanation on how property can be properly abandoned--be it through natural death or murder--not unlike the issue of whether a copyrighted work can sensically be put into the public domain. In the end, it's all a level of arbitrary government sanctioned rules. And once you're at that point, then the Estate Tax or a Gift Tax make as much sense as anything else.

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    5. Re:Net asset tax instead of income tax? by kenh · · Score: 1

      You really haven't thought this through, have you?

      Remove all deduction except RnD Why spare R&D? Why is that so special?

      Tax companies that make under 250K 10% On every dollar of profit?

      over 250K 30% That's a huge chunk of a company's profits.
      .
      Tax monies over a 5 billion at 100% So no company will ever earn more than $5BN? Congratulations, you've killed the stock market, and all those 401Ks

      Raise the top 3% taxes to 36%, raise the top .1% taxes to 50% So you are taxing individuals at a higher rate than corporations?

      Remove deductions to non profits. You've just taken a 10-30% "cut" off the top of every successful charity (based on your previous corp. tax rates)

      Churches pay taxes just like companies. So now the gov't is entitled to 10-30% of every church donation?

      Remove the child credit. This will hurt low-income families way more than the wealthy - is that your goal?

      Institute a Tobbin's tax, .05% on every trade. Why?

      Put the increase in revenue into Education, NASA , Infrastructure and Darpa.

      Let me guess, you are college student studying either science or engineering, have no children, no relation to a religious organization, and you've never met anyone that started their own business...

      --
      Ken
    6. Re:Net asset tax instead of income tax? by T+Murphy · · Score: 1

      We already have the estate tax, which takes a heavy cut of inheritance, so accumulated wealth can be addressed when the person dies. Taxing wealth directly feels like a retroactive tax, so as much as I support a more progressive tax system, I couldn't support a tax on wealth.

      If you want to deal with low capital gains taxes, etc., I think the simple solution is if investment income is greater than your salary, that investment income is taxed as though it is part of your salary. Sure, CEOs would try to balance it so they get $1 more in salary than investment income, but that's an improvement.

      To avoid collateral damage on this tax idea, income from a 401k or other retirement plan would be protected from this, but if any additional investment income exceeds 401k income, that is then taxed at the appropriate rate for a salary.

    7. Re:Net asset tax instead of income tax? by terjeber · · Score: 1

      The basic tenet of your plan has been tested. In fact it is currently implemented here and there. The most famous implementation of your plan was in the USSR, the plan is currently at work in North Korea. It worked great in the USSR right? Perfect in North Korea? Stop living in your mothers basement and get an education!

    8. Re:Net asset tax instead of income tax? by Schmorgluck · · Score: 1

      There's a Wealth Tax in France, and for a long time I've had qualms about it, because I perceived it as more complicated than it's worth collecting. I don't think I'll ever hit the amount in assets needed to trigger it, so no, it's not my being deluded in the idea that I'll be someday rich enough that it hits me.

      Recenly, I read an economist's point of view on the matter that turned my opinion. Taxing assets can be an incentive to make use of them instead of just sitting of them, which benefits society as a whole, with carefully designed incentives.

      I have one example in mind that translates poorly in the USA, but still. Imagine the owner of a medieval castle. Owning it makes him somehow happy (I fail to understand why). It also makes him a target of the Wealth Tax. Unless he makes it open to visits, even partilally, Even for a fee. Even if it's limited to some times of the year. Even if it's limited to institutional visits (which can equally cover school trips and historians). If he makes some of the things listed above, his castle can be excluded from his tax base. The money he spends to keep it in shape can even be deductible to his income tax.

      In the end, it's an incentive to DO something with your assets instead of just owning them.

      --
      There's nothing like $HOME
  27. All taxes do that to some degree by bigtrike · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's not stealing, you have a choice not to take part in this system. All taxes are going to benefit some more than others.

    You're welcome to move to Somalia where there is no government to take your money or trample on your freedoms. Just don't expect to have the benefits of a stable currency to trade with, a government to enforce contracts, large scale water purification to give you cheap arsenic free drinking water, or even a public police force to keep people from trying to take your property.

  28. Propaganda check list by manaway · · Score: 1

    News of document removal comes on Friday, so fewer readers? Check.

    People gossiping about removal of document instead of contents? Check.

    People blaming republicans, conservatives, FOX News, and general unfairness instead of the rich? Check.

    Advertising to elect a president and support staff who will lower taxes the most on the richest real-life gamers the world has ever known? Work in progress, though even a Democrat is a success; so check.

    People calling and writing their elected representatives? Not enough to overcome the lobbyists, though that shows occasional signs of change.

    1. Re:Propaganda check list by microbox · · Score: 1

      People blaming republicans, conservatives, FOX News, and general unfairness instead of the rich? Check.

      HaHa. I love how this is evidence of propaganda to you.

      You can read the report here.

      One objection made by GOP staffers was that the report used the term "Bush era tax cuts", which didn't set the correct tone.

      This is pretty pathetic.

      --

      Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
    2. Re:Propaganda check list by manaway · · Score: 1

      Your comment represents well the very point you are criticizing. Talking about the GOP and Bush and politicizing the report, instead of the report's content, i.e. the wealthy getting increasingly richer off the poor. It's weird how you can't see this.

  29. Taxes are never theft in a democracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Taxes are an expression of faith and comity and the dues paid as part of citizenship. It's perfectly valid to want lower taxes, and to vote for elected officials or take other steps to change tax rates.

    But taxes themselves, and the services they provide, are never stolen from you. They are exactly the price you have to pay, and the benefit you receive, for living in a democratic country, even if some benefits aren't directly tangible to you right now.

    To call taxes "stealing," when the government is elected by the people, is disgusting and unpatriotic.

    1. Re:Taxes are never theft in a democracy by toganet · · Score: 1

      I can't believe this was modded down as a troll. This is one of the clearest explanations of why taxes must exist I've seen posted here.

    2. Re:Taxes are never theft in a democracy by guspasho · · Score: 2

      I wish I had mod points to promote this post. This is an important point that almost never gets said. Taxes are theft only if you believe the government is illegitimate. Otherwise, you are just a greedy, self-centered son of a bitch.

    3. Re:Taxes are never theft in a democracy by Pfhorrest · · Score: 1

      To call taxes "stealing," when the government is elected by the people, is disgusting and unpatriotic.

      Only if by "the people" you mean ALL the people, unanimously. Otherwise, it's some of the people stealing from some other people.

      I, for instance, have no interest in buying expensive weapons from Haliburton to blow up people on the other side of the world, and consider being forced to make that purchase against my will (my money is being taken to pay for that), under threat of force, disgusting and unpatriotic.

      --
      -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
      "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
    4. Re:Taxes are never theft in a democracy by circletimessquare · · Score: 4, Insightful

      'I like to pay taxes. With them I buy civilization.'

      - Oliver Wendell Holmes

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    5. Re:Taxes are never theft in a democracy by Pfhorrest · · Score: 1

      If my housemates have a party and they decide that we're going to order pizza and we all have to chip in $5, and they say I have to chip in (even if I don't want pizza and would rather they not have a party at all because I have a headache and want to be left alone to peace and quiet in my room), and I can either hand it over or they will take it from me by force and if necessary lock me in the garage to keep me from stopping them or taking it back or ruining their party, is that not theft? If they said that I can either deal with that or move the fuck out of the house, which is just as much mine as theirs, does that make it OK?

      What difference does it make if it's a lot more "housemates" in a much bigger "house"? I was born here like all the rest of them, I have every right to be here, it's my "house" too, I don't have to gtfo, I don't even have to stay in my "room" because I have just as much right to "halls" and "living room" as they do and they have no more right to exclude me from them than I do them, and they have no right to demand I chip in for a "party" I'd rather they not throw in the first place.

      Now mind you, in the same breath as I argue that taxation is morally unjustifiable theft, I will also argue that it is pragmatically justifiable as a temporary means of preventing even greater theft and other crime. I'll even argue that specifically because taxes are a necessarily evil, that progressive taxation is morally obligatory as a way of mitigating the harm thereby done. But none of that makes it morally acceptable. It's a problem we've got to put up with at the moment because we don't know of a better way, but we had damn well acknowledge that it is a problem and start looking for a better way. (A way to prevent injustices, and maybe even do other goods, without committing further injustices ourselves).

      --
      -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
      "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
    6. Re:Taxes are never theft in a democracy by guspasho · · Score: 1

      Because individual decisions on that basis are inherently shortsighted. Like why bother paying for defense when my neighbors are all paying for it? I think I'll opt out and let them carry the burden. It's because of idiotic thinking like that that we have to have governments in the first place.

  30. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by Mitreya · · Score: 2

    So now you want to tax wealth? Get the hell out of here.

    Taxing wealth may be a bad (or at least hard to implement) idea

    But taxing investment (i.e. wealth-derived) income at a higher rate than the standard income seems fair. Instead, once your wealth is earning you money, you pay less than 15% on such income.

    As your salary increases, you progressively move into higher income brackets and pay more taxes. But jump to a point where you only earn money from capital tax gains, then suddenly you are back to 15%?

  31. That's not really true by bigtrike · · Score: 1

    Citizens of soviet russia still had to work and they weren't allowed to keep much of any wealth. They effectively had 100% taxes, and yet they still worked. I'm not suggesting that we should tax wealth or make it illegal not to work, but your assumptions are based on "common sense" rather than fact.

    1. Re:That's not really true by aicrules · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying people won't work, I'm saying they won't do anything other than bare minimum. You don't get a palm sized computer than can stream netflix movies from a country full of mediocrity. How blind can you be to what that would mean? Is across the board mediocrity actually better in your book than everyone having their own opportunity to move beyond what they are now?

    2. Re:That's not really true by airdweller · · Score: 1
  32. Stupid @#%@# Laffer! by jgarry · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I've been saying it since Howard Jarvis and Ronald Reagan implemented their "tax revolt" at the end of the '70s: any benefit from tax cuts and less regulation is temporary, short-term, and soon overridden by the increased size of the crash after the greedy rich people abuse various economic sectors. That's why there was an S&L crises in the '80s, a housing crash in the '90s, bank and housing crises in the oughts, California schools run out of money. Shoot, does anyone think to check the top tax rates under Eisenhower? Even Greenspan was shocked... shocked! that rich people were greedy, that Objectivism is... oh well, why bother, people just filter it through their biases. Brown and Clinton have the best budget surpluses of their eras, then conservatives have to go and mess it up with voodoo economics.

    Will some psycho please reenact an episode of Criminal Minds with George Will and Arthur Laffer as victims?

    --
    Oracle and unix guy.
  33. another point of view by khallow · · Score: 4, Informative

    OTOH, we do need to consider that the paper did have real problems. For example, there are almost no dynamics considered. Very few of the variables are lagged. That was one of the Republican complaints.

    And it misses some important economic issues such as the declining value of labor versus capital (one would expect owners of capital to do relatively well in a global market with extremely cheap labor available and for that capital to move to foreign locations) and the burden of regulation (which has considerable effect on hiring people and creating new businesses, both which would favor those who own established, working capital). In other words, there are two big, contrary effects which might mask any economic benefit from cutting taxes for the highest income bracket.

    As to the article being pulled, it was allegedly done at the behest of Senate Republicans who are a minority in the Senate. Why didn't Democrats block that? In fact, who actually asked for and sequestered the report? Doesn't seem to be a Republican thing to ask for stuff that might run counter to their agenda, but maybe the people who requested it thought they could bury anything inconvenient.

    1. Re:another point of view by wubti · · Score: 1

      It is not clear from reading the NYT article that it was pulled simply because the GOP said to pull it. The article points out that

      “There were a lot of problems with the report from a real, legitimate economic analysis perspective,” said Antonia Ferrier, a spokeswoman for the Senate Finance Committee’s Republicans. “We relayed them to C.R.S. It was a good discussion. We have a good, constructive relationship with them. Then it was pulled.”

      The GOP also argued that the report might not be entirely non-partisan:

      "Senate Republican aides said they had protested both the tone of the report and its findings. Aides to Mr. McConnell presented a bill of particulars to the research service that included objections to the use of the term “Bush tax cuts” and the report’s reference to “tax cuts for the rich,” which Republicans contended was politically freighted."

      --
      You are unique, just like everyone else.
  34. High salary people invest. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    That's what I do with it. I sock it away, in stocks, bonds or other instruments. Sometimes I buy stuff--a car, a nice meal, new clothes, but mostly (~80% of my purchases) I buy paper. I'm under no illusion that this goes back somehow into the pockets of working-class folks.

    Take it from a rich guy, I don't want the responsibility for taking care of every shlub in America--I've got other things to worry about. What am I going to do, get ten freaking maids to clean my house every day? I don't want to live in Mexico, or Russia. I want a strong economy built on a mix of services, manufacturing and education. That's what makes stock prices go up, and that's what makes me wealthy.

    Taking care of poor people--with heath care, education and unemployment insurance, is actually a really good job for the government. They do it well, and I'm happy to contribute my bit.

  35. Re:Romney Kills Baby Seals by DMiax · · Score: 1

    Wow I never realised Attila and Genghis-Khan were the same person... thank you for this interesting information, I'd like to subscribe to your newsletter on factually inaccurate history /me rolls eyes

  36. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by umghhh · · Score: 1

    so you neither you read the article nor you can draw conclusions - must belong to tea party or what? The state (or emperor) taxes people not because it is morally good or bad or it is such a big fun. Taxes are collected for two reasons: keep the state running i.e. have those corner stones of civilization like justice system, police, army, administration needed to govern that etc as well as to spend it on things that whoever has the power thinks is good. This may include the circus or some other policy - i.e. effectively redistributing the wealth. Now the way the wealth is redistributed, who gets it and who pays for it is a matter of applicable laws and decisions that folks in a given country have to come to agreement for - for this a certain amount of social cohesion is needed or appropriate oppression apparatus as well as indoctrination in schools ('free market fixes all' is not much different from 'Kim was the greatest leader' in that it is not really true) - this is in fact redistribution already as in an ideal state police and justice system do not need oppress people into anything so one may argue having institutions like say DEA is just as much about redistribution (of money and power) as in case of public schools etc. Once we understand that we can start thinking about two other things: what we want to support with our taxes including prioritizing of targets etc and how we are going to fund those targets with tax. If one find out that money kept in bank is to be taxed because it benefits the society in which banks operate then so be it and we should only hope that decisions like this are based on merit not on basis of wishful thinking and political indoctrination and they get modified if found not working or being inefficient in that what they do. OC reality is different I know but that is ideal to fight for.

  37. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

    Ownership is defined as what you can hold in both hands while running at full tilt. From that perspective, you might want to be careful. There have been plenty of instances where the lowly masses had enough of the current definition of ownership, and decided to change it. Plenty of kings, princes and other wealthy people were suddenly wishing that they could ride their jewels to safety.

    --
    Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
  38. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You want to know what would happen if you attacked that wealth? Eventually no one would be motivated to do the things that being to earn them such wealth. Progress would stop dead. You wouldn't have any of the cool stuff technologically that you have today. Sure there may be an occasional person who comes up with a brilliant idea that advances some sector of industry or whatever, but what you really end up with is a bunch of people who will only do what is need to just get by because that's as much recognition for their work as they get.

    Yes, yes. People would simply lose ALL hope and waste their entire lives just watching TV reality shows. Without the motivation of the remote possibility of getting filthy rich, no one would ever want to think, create, imagine or actually do anything ever again. Yes, sir, Einstein only thought stuff up for the money. No one would ever give to charity, because that would make themselves, you know, less rich. I could go on, but won't because ...

    Jesus, you're fucking stupid.

    P.S.
    And your NFL football example... Seriously? It has *nothing* to do with the progress, ideas and technology in your rant.

    --
    It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
  39. And the truth shall... what again? by erroneus · · Score: 2

    Normally, I am not about Replublicans versus Democrats. I see them both as rather "bought and sold out" groups who behave at the request of big money.

    That said, I find it fitting and typical of my observations and expectations of those who subscribe to Republican philosophies. If the truth gets in the way, hide it, change it, deny or it erase it. This type of behavior is known among commoners as deceitful. Others just simply call them liars and cheats.

    I understand all too well how people try to cling to their beliefs even when facts and evidence is staring them right in the face. But I see it as a mental weakness or flaw and such people are ill equiped to make important decisions which affect millions of lives across the planet.

    1. Re:And the truth shall... what again? by kenh · · Score: 1

      You might want to take a look into this administration's handling of a terrorist attack in Libya...

      --
      Ken
  40. Truth uncovered, quickly buried by kawabago · · Score: 1

    Republicans on the warpath against truth, again. Does this means everything Mitt Romney has been saying is completely untrue?

  41. Re:Case Study in Lying with Statistics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    1945 is a common reference year for 20th Century trends because it corresponds to the start of the postwar period, at which point the world's economies started rebuilding themselves after 40 years of global-scale wars and the Great Depression. You can pick an earlier or later starting year if you'd like. The results of the past 50 years speak for themselves, though.

  42. Re:Romney Kills Baby Seals by AK+Marc · · Score: 4, Insightful

    One side is obvious, the other is not. The Republicans have indicated that they object to the tone, and the conclusions, but have not indicated if there were any facts or assumptions that they object to. Objecting to the findings and conclusion when the foundation is solid seems more like censorship than debate.

    The cowards haven't even admitted they requested it taken down.

  43. Typical republican shenanigans by geekoid · · Score: 2

    "“There were a lot of problems with the report from a real, legitimate economic analysis perspective,” said Antonia Ferrier,"
    No, there wasn't. You set up a different set of goals and then complained the report didn't take into account for your made up goals.

    These are the same people who complain when the study might be delayed by Sandy.

    Then they don't actual raise any factual concerns. Some talk about verbiage that in no way impacts the results.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  44. in the 50s by geekoid · · Score: 1

    the top .1% paid 50%.
    We got a great space program, good education program, parks...etc.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  45. What most miss. by garyoa1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    See, the thing most miss is that when higher incomes had higher taxes they'd have to look for tax breaks by hiring, diversifying, expanding, whatever.

    With taxes low they can just invest in the stock market. Less aggravation, likely higher (and lower taxaable) income.

    So, the markets bloom, they get richer with no aggravation with hiring, firing, building costs, overhead, etc. While the average guy starves.

    --
    Wuddooeyeno? IITYWYBMAD? Like nuts? eclecticallyincorrect.com
  46. Re:Romney Kills Baby Seals by HiThere · · Score: 1

    Sorry, but no party can operate on provable reality. Plausible reality, however, is a different matter. It would be nice if that were required, but because if the difficulty in defining plausible that cannot happen.

    IOW, I think that provable lies should disqualify a candidate. (I'm not saying that if he refuses to look at existing evidence he's lying. But he should be able to be called on that by his opponent, and if his opponent can be proven to be lying, the opponent should be disqualified. [Sort of like challenging in the official rules of Scrabble, except that you're allowed to look in the dictionary first.])

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  47. Re:Romney Kills Baby Seals by Sique · · Score: 2

    Attila the Hun predates Genghis Khan by about 750 years. Attila was defeated in the Battle at the Catalaunian Plains in 451 AD and died in 453 AD, while Genghis Khan was born (named Temujin) somewhen around 1162 AD and died in 1227.

    --
    .sig: Sique *sigh*
  48. Income Taxes were higher? Not really... by argStyopa · · Score: 2

    I used to think that the fact that mid-20th-Century US highest tax bracket rates were in the 80%+ region was a VERY persuasive argument that Republicans had significantly overshot in their efforts to relieve taxation on job-creators, and reached a point where it was more about enriching the rich than any sober policy of trickle-down economics.

    However I had the opportunity in September to be seated next to an older gentleman who was a personal accountant in the 1950s. As he explained to me, the tax rates were high but NOBODY paid those rates, nobody. There were so many massive loopholes, and much-easier "wink'n'nudge" accounting going on (than today, in his opinion, although he's been retired for 20 years), he said it was uncommon if a top-bracket individual was paying over 20%, ever.

    It was his suspicion that in fact the top tax brackets probably paid the same today in fact, as they ever had, plus/minus 5%.

    I didn't perceive him as a demogogue of either side, and he was pretty comprehensive in his discussion. I was convinced that the "taxes were higher in the old days and we were great" is also, in reality, as much bullshit as what usually comes from politicians' mouths otherwise.

    --
    -Styopa
  49. Re:Did anyone get a copy first? by jc42 · · Score: 2

    It'll be interesting to see if there's any Streisand Effect (google it) from this feeble attempt to suppress the document.

    We've all read and heard a lot of opinion on this topic, and there's precious little that passes as Scientific Method in the field of economics. It could be interesting to read criticisms (negative or positive) from actual scientists and statisticians about this document.

    --
    Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
  50. Tax Reform by ErnoWindt · · Score: 1

    The tax "reform" acts of the 1980s - supported by both Republicans and Democrats - shifted the tax burden off the wealthy and corporations and onto the middle class. 30 years of gradual destruction of the middle class ensued. Today, instead of a progressive system of taxation, the US has a system where the wealthiest and the largest corporations pay little or no tax, while those least capable pay the most. Having a bunch of millionaires under the influence of corporate contributions - then and now - make tax policy is the definition of conflict of interest and reveals the total corruption at the heart of the US system - and its drift toward oligarchy, now almost complete.

  51. Percent isn't about fair. It's about capacity. by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

    The percent is the only measure of fairness. Don't insult our intelligence.

    About "Fairness." Ok. Let's think about this. The government gives me a road to ride on. It also gives the rich guy a road to ride on. Is the road it gives the rich guy any better than the one it gives me? No? Then why does the rich guy have to pay more for it?

    The government gives me an army to protect me. It also gives the rich guy protection. Is the protection it gives the rich guy any better than the protection it gives me? No? Then why does the rich guy have to pay more for it?

    So no, it's not about fairness. What it's about is capacity. When there's a heavy object to be moved, you -- perfectly reasonably -- ask the little guy to hold the door, and the big guy to carry it. And he does. Because he knows his appropriate contribution is made in that scale, and he knows the little guy simply can't do it. The reason it's appropriate is because it's scaled to his capacity, and in society, we consider it appropriate -- not fair, but appropriate to contribute proportionally according to our abilities.

    Any rich person with any sense of honor at all doesn't grinch for one second about taxes.

    One last thing: If you're rich, your taxes weren't too high. The one precludes the other. And as long as you're taxed on earnings, rather than what you have, you're not going to get significantly less rich due to any change in income tax rates.

    On the other hand, when you already don't have enough money to have any left over from your earnings, and you have no savings, and someone decides to take more from your earnings... that's a whole 'nuther ball of wax.

    So rich people, buck up and do your part. If you want respect, that's the golden path, right there. That, and unforced charitable giving.

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
  52. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

    USSR had a really shitty space program. Oh, wait...

    --
    Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
  53. Re:Romney Kills Baby Seals by kenaaker · · Score: 1

    Huh..... (Gotta get something checked... I don't know if I didn't read it or didn't see it.)

  54. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by AK+Marc · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Eventually no one would be motivated to do the things that being to earn them such wealth. Progress would stop dead.

    We've had 94% income tax in the US. Progress was as fast in that time as it's ever been.

    Think people will play NFL football for $35,000 a year? Not in this lifetime.

    There are piles willing to play college ball for free. If you offered an "open" spot on the Cowboys for a lineman for $10,000 a year, I think you'd get more than 10,000 applicants.

    In short, you are wrong, so massively so, you should see a doctor about your brain damage.

  55. "Correlation..." by mariox19 · · Score: 1

    If this were any other subject, I can just imagine the screaming going on around here about correlation not proving causation. But since this is about those rich S.O.B.'s and their Republican shills, I hear nothing but crickets. High taxes hinder capital accumulation, and capital investment is the bedrock of modern civilization. I would like to see someone argue the contrary.

    No one with any sophisticated understanding of economics thinks that the relationship between taxes and prosperity exists in a vacuum. First of all, there are more taxes than simply federal taxes. Second, there are regulations. Third, there is a greater or lesser opportunity to invest abroad.

    Sorry, but it's just not that simple.

    --

    quiquid id est, timeo puellas et oscula dantes.

    1. Re:"Correlation..." by PPH · · Score: 2

      High taxes hinder capital accumulation, and capital investment is the bedrock of modern civilization. I would like to see someone argue the contrary.

      The subject study seems to argue the contrary. From the summary:

      The reduction in the top tax rates appears to be uncorrelated with saving, investment, and productivity growth.

      What these tax rates do change is who will be saving and investing in the economy. Let the rich accumulate wealth and yes, they will invest it. Let the middle class accumulate it and they will invest it as well. Or spend it and fuel the economy. Right now, capital is insanely cheap. What we need to kick start growth is customers.

      The other thing to keep in mind is the effect that income disparities have on the productivity of the working class. Eventually you get something like the Soviet system. Where the workers grumble that "they pretend to pay us and we pretend to work".

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
  56. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    Why do I feel like I was trolled by Poe's Law?

  57. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by rbrander · · Score: 1

    There were estimates early in Tiger Woods' career that his earnings would eventually hit a billion. So might JK Rowling. Whether they do or not, you take the point. Modern technology does allow a single person to entertain literally billions of people, and they only have to pay a nominal sum to return the favour with a billion dollars. The net itself can basically eliminate all entertainment middlemen.

  58. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by sjames · · Score: 1

    I'll bet Gates would have done everything he did for even 1% of what he actually made (a 'mere' 400mil). The top earners are vastly overpaid.

    $35K wouldn't be enough for NFL players since they will face a relatively early retirement forced by their accumulated injuries and because they spend a great deal of time on the road, but I'll bet PLENTY would play for $150K with a good retirement and compensation package.

    Of course, that wouldn't lower the cost of a ticket one jot, the owners would soak it all up.

  59. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by RabidReindeer · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You want to know what would happen if you attacked that wealth? Eventually no one would be motivated to do the things that being to earn them such wealth. Progress would stop dead.

    This is what randrrhoids actually believe.

    The first. most blatant and most fatal flaw in Atlas Shrugged is that it assumes that all the creative people are Conservative/Libertarian. No Ted Turners, no Bill Gatess, no Warren Buffets. Even as young and clueless as I was when I first read it I knew that was nonsense, just like the "30-minute" speech that patently isn't. The first time I actually skipped over part of a book, no matter how tedious ("how dim does she think I am that I haven't gotten the point by now and if I didn't is hammering me over the head with it going to help?")

    The idea that wealthy people will stop doing things that make them wealthy if you take some of that wealth away isn't actually codified in Rand's writings that I know of, but I think everyone pretty well agrees that after the first 200K or so of income you're no longer working to "make a living", you're working to Prove a Point. Money is just one of the more popular ways of keeping score. Naturally, everyone wants to be given things (like Lower Taxes Every Day [TM]) and nobody wants to have things taken from them, but it's not like anyone with a fat bank account is going to simply up and quit. Especially in times like these where the popular meme is that you become successful (implying wealthy) by doing something before anyone else does it first.

  60. Re:You think anyone actually paid 90%? by RabidReindeer · · Score: 1

    Tax fraud was rampant before everything was computerized.

    Now we have computers to make our tax fraud more complex and more efficient.

  61. Re:Plenty of data by c0lo · · Score: 1

    There is plenty of data loose on the internet to allow anyone to draw the same conclusion.

    where?!?

    --
    Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
  62. yes! by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    after richie rich sends your well-paying job to china and makes a bundle on the deal, someday you will get lucky, standing outside his gates, that he needs someone to wash his car. he'll give you a whole dollar for the privilege

    and as the soapy water drips off his rolls royce, he'll make a witty joke about trickle down economics, and you'll laugh heartily and smile, because you need that dollar to eat

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  63. Red herrings and irrelevancies by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

    > share of income accruing to the top 0.1% of U.S.
    > families ... 12.3% by 2007 before falling to 9.2% due to the 2007-2009

    So...when times are good, companies earn money and those who own them earn more, and when times are bad, it collapses rapidly. Meanwhile, fairly static income of those who don't own corporations shifts much more slowly.

    It also blathers on loudly about "income disparities", which is a related irrelevancy. What matters is quality and longevity of life on average, number of calories or wiis per person, not whether a rich person's income as multiple of "average worker's" skyrockets in good times, which you would expect it to.

    --
    (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
  64. censorship by shentino · · Score: 1

    Why are things even being removed from the LOC in the first place?

    This is blatant censorship.

  65. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by Chalnoth · · Score: 1

    Well, income inequality drives wealth inequality, and vice versa. Tackle one, and the other follows.

    That said, inheritance taxes really should be extremely high above a certain amount. The ability of the children of rich parents to inherit the wealth of their parents is one of the major things sustaining wealth inequality.

  66. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by aicrules · · Score: 1

    How is taxing income that comes with risk (investment income) more than income that comes with no risk (salary) fair? People lose money investing all the time, would they get those higher taxes back? Money being invested has already been taxed, why should it even be taxed again just because you invested it and it paid off? Let alone be taxed MORE or even the same as standard income? As far as the graduated tax brackets, those are also unfair. Why should anyone pay a higher percentage just because they earn more? They will already PAY more in number of dollars because they earn more.

  67. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by aicrules · · Score: 1

    While my statement does have a similarity to the plot of Atlas Shrugged, it is just a fact, and i'm not using a fictional book as the basis of my argument. If you think people who make more should contribute more in taxes AND those who are able to hold onto more should then be taxed EVEN MORE you're full on proponent of redistribution. Pretending like there are limits/thresholds where the excessive taxation ends assumes that the need to continue to take more to prop up those who view government provided sustenance as their right will actually level off. It won't, it will just keep growing. Even if the government was as close to 100% efficient with redistribution as it could be, eventually that bar of $250K will edge lower and lower till no one is making more than middle of the middle class. Now tell me, do you really think people will contribute to that sort of societal rape at the same level as they do now? Ted Turner, Bill Gates, Warren Buffet would all be down to $50K per year just like everyone else. If you don't reward exceptionalism, you're rewarding the opposite. Bill Gates is known as a philanthropist because he gives a buttload of his hard earned money ON HIS OWN. Not because he's coerced by taxation. You people who think redistribution will work...I hope beyond hope you won't have to see the true utter end that will come from it. I hope you'll see before it goes too far that it should not exist even at a small level.

    A lot of the details of Atlas Shrugged end up sounding a bit goofy today, almost a caricature of the conservative view of liberalism turned full on communist/socialist. And while I won't expect to ever find a hideout in the Rockies hidden from view by a massive cloaking system, you and everyone else will lose the creative genius that thrives in a free market. Not because they run off an hide, but because they will just lose the will to be exceptional when exceptional is seen as unfair to the less exceptional.

  68. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by aicrules · · Score: 1

    Also the false ideology WILL crumble exactly as it does in the book. Those who are meaningfully creative may label themselves Liberal or Democratic now, but when they see their work stolen from them, I guarantee you that more of them than not will react in a very libertarian way. Warren Buffet can give 100% of his wealth and income to the government, but that is the tiniest drop in the bucket of their budget. But that's his choice. If Bill Gates was still in charge of Microsoft and the government came along as said he had to give Windows and MS Office away for free because people "needed" it, you think he would allow his business to be crushed by such a ridiculous request? If Ted Turner had to give up all but one of his company assets...one channel for example, do you think he's still going to feel like running a media empire? I mean it wasn't FAIR that he had such a large percentage of the market. Atlas Shrugged shows things happening on a pace that I think even someone with your delusions would be able to realize that something terrible was happening. But it happens much more insidiously that is portrayed by Rand. Good business owners adjust to try to maximize their profitability within whatever regulations the government cooks up. Sometimes it seems like a back and forth struggle with business gaining ground as often as they lose it. But in fact it's more like business takes 3 steps forward for every 4 steps back. Harder to notice that it's all moving backwards, and it may not look like a cliff behind them, but it gets pretty steep and even the most business savvy CEO will not be able to withstand a government that presumes to redistribute based on greater societal needs.

  69. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by aicrules · · Score: 1

    The USSR fell apart from how they tried to keep pace with the nuclear and space races. Fear will drive people only so far. And without people who take the time and money to be smart enough to build a rocket that can safely make it to the moon and back with human cargo, how would that have happened? Even mother russia can't threaten a fry cook into suddenly understanding how to build a solid fuel booster system. What the heck is escape velocity again?

  70. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

    That's the version US propaganda invented. In reality it was completely different -- and I was there to see it.

    --
    Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
  71. Re:Romney Kills Baby Seals by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    lol.. you expect republican congress critters to be slashdot posters? Democrats congress critters might when it's election time and there is a need to astroturf. Do you expect some spokesman to come out and say "we requested this to be taken down"?

    How about it was taken down because complaints about it appearing bias was actually true enough to at least on the surface make that appearance. Its methodology is obviously in question as it says there is no economic change with the top tax rates but somehow there is a magical process happening that lower rates concentrate the wealth in the rich and takes from the poor. And if the difference in the income disparage is the amount of taxes the top earners make, in can't be the difference in some mythical magical tax rate because it wouldn't somehow put money into the lower end earner's pockets.

    But here is something to wrap you mind around, in economic good times, tax rates don't really matter. It's not until a slow economy that it matter and then only to the extend that other costs of doing business can be mitigated. The biggest costs will be the costs of energy and that is one thing that you can look back and actually pin to any growth or slowing (within a year or so) we have had. Energy costs has the most of an impact.

  72. Re:Romney Kills Baby Seals by AK+Marc · · Score: 2

    lol.. you expect republican congress critters to be slashdot posters? Democrats congress critters might when it's election time and there is a need to astroturf. Do you expect some spokesman to come out and say "we requested this to be taken down"?

    No, but when the press asks a simple and direct question like "was the Republican party responsible for the takedown" that they'd answer. They haven't. They refuse to comment.

    How about it was taken down because complaints about it appearing bias was actually true enough to at least on the surface make that appearance.

    Who complained? The Republicans haven't said they did it. That's what my complaint was. Nobody has come forward as the complainer.

    . Its methodology is obviously in question as it says there is no economic change with the top tax rates but somehow there is a magical process happening that lower rates concentrate the wealth in the rich and takes from the poor.

    Exactly what I said, the complaints are not about the methodology, other than "we don't like the answer, so we assert the methodology is flawed, though we have no specific problem with the methodology."

  73. Re:Income Taxes were higher? Not really... by kenh · · Score: 2

    With a tax rate of 80% the incentive to find loopholes is great, when the tax rate is 15 or 20%, the incentive is much less.

    Faced with a 95% tax on his income, John Lennon left England for the US as a tax exile.

    Faced with a similar tax rate, U2 moved out of Ireland, for tax purposes.

    The idea of "geting the rich to pay through the nose" relies on the mistaken belief that the rich have no alternative...

    --
    Ken
  74. Re:Romney Kills Baby Seals by Anonymuous+Coward · · Score: 1

    Most of this is from "Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World" (a great read): http://www.amazon.com/Genghis-Khan-Making-Modern-World/dp /0609809644 Other pieces

    Attila and Genghis Khan were completely different historical figures -- there was like a MILLENIUM or such between them.

    And anyway, trying to interpret old history through modern prejudices and stereotypes is, to put it mildly, cringeworthy.

  75. Bias in the other way by Jiro · · Score: 1

    One of the ways to do biased studies is to be selective about which ones you release. Just release the favorable ones and suppress the unfavorable ones; that allows you to be biased while using nonpartisan studies. You may point out that the Republicans wanted this study suppressed, but look at it the other way: how did this study get out in the first place?

    Wikipedia explains that not all of the reports produced by CRS are released to the public, and some only get out because they are leaked. Having a report that makes good anti-Republican headlines released less than two months before the election should immediately raise suspicions of how it was chosen to be released, and how many reports unfavorable to Democrats were not chosen.

  76. Re:News for nerds? by KDR_11k · · Score: 2

    It's a story about how nerdy things like numbers get pushed aside in favor of non-nerdy things like prejudices and gut feelings.

    --
    Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
  77. there is little evidence for any economic policy by kenorland · · Score: 1

    Yeah, there is little evidence that cutting taxes for the rich spurs economic growth. But there is also no good evidence that raising taxes and spending it on "stimulus packages" works either, or that subsidizing "renewable energy companies" works. There is no good evidence that welfare helps move people out of poverty, or that spending more money on public schools produces better outcomes. There is no good evidence that DHS works, that anti-terrorism efforts are worth their money, or that Obamacare improves outcomes or reduces costs. Economic policies of both the left and the right are based on guesswork and ideology.

    Both parties make wild assertions about what we need to spend money on at the federal level. And the real motivation behind all that spending is just paying off political constituencies, whether it's corporations, unions, the military, the rich, the poor, welfare recipients, or college students. And the solution is to spend less and tax less, across the board, not necessarily because that is "good for the country" in some grand economic scheme, but because it lets people keep more of what they earned.

    (Unlike federal taxes, local taxes generally produce tangible results and address identifiable needs. And at the local level, people understand that if taxes go to high, tax payers start moving away.)

  78. Report PDF Link by hardburlyboogerman · · Score: 2

    Want to read that report? go here and download the PDF -> http://maddowblog.msnbc.com/ Thanks to Rachael Maddow for making this available

    --
    Geek Hillbilly
  79. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by RabidReindeer · · Score: 1

    TRULY creative people are not in it for the money, unless their particular form of creativity is making money. The stereotype of the "starving artist" comes precisely because there were so many of them. Although the more common case is likely to be the "just-getting-by" artist. People like Vincent van Gogh, who only sold one painting in his life. People like Linus Torvalds, who was offered all sorts of cash when Linux went mainstream, but was content with a fairly modest employment, instead (not so modest that he can't afford a Mercedes, I note). Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, whose salary was not the miniscule amount popularly depicted, but about the equivalent of a decent software developer. J.R.R. Tolkien, who kept his day job, as did Albert Einstein. With a few exceptions, in fact, the creative people who are making the pots of cash are people of mediocre creativity but great at marketing themselves. J.K. Rowling is one of those exceptions, but she never gave the impression that becoming richer than the Queen was what she wanted or needed to do what she did - just getting off the dole sufficient.

    Anyway, the whole argument is specious. No one I know of is talking about cutting the Golden Goose open. For the most part the talk is about simply returning to historical taxation levels from back before everything went in the toilet and people didn't expect something for nothing as a matter of course. Back when I paid 30% and felt a whole lot more prosperous than I do now.

  80. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by makomk · · Score: 2

    How is taxing income that comes with risk (investment income) more than income that comes with no risk (salary) fair?

    I'd say there's plenty of risk associated with earning a salary. Every time you change jobs to increase your salary there's the risk of the company you work for going under and you being unable to get a new job. Then there's the risk of getting a mortgage or long-term lease near enough to your job that you can actually get to work, of buying a car so you can get to work, of money invested in education...

    What's more, even the unlikely event that a wealthy person who's earning income through investment does lose it all, they're still not any worse off than the salaried worker who never had it in the first place! In fact they're probably better off - they have better contacts, are less likely to have student loan debts, may well still own assets like their home outright with no mortgage...

  81. Re:Post-truth politics (on all sides) by Paul+Fernhout · · Score: 1

    Here is a sort-of rebuttal. As a disclaimer, I intend to vote for Jill Stein as a protest vote because I live in a "safe state" for Obama and both major US parties are IMHO right wing compared to the rest of the world, as "Hatta" below suggests. I certainly agree with a lot of the spirit of what you wrote -- however I feel you are being unfair to conservatives (even with a nod to William Buckley as you did) as well as post-modernists who all make several good *emotional* points even if their proposed solutions may be tragic. What follows are some examples.

    === Abortion

    Exactly when human life begins to have moral value during pregnancy is essentially a religious question with mystical origins. If you believe that human life begins at conception, then the fact that there are over a million abortions a year (a million annual murders from that point of view) pretty much can emotionally eclipse most other issues (as a "Holocaust" every decade). Personally, I feel many conservatives are hypocrites in arguing life must be protected from conception to birth, but then after birth it is OK to destroy families economically. In practice many conservative economic positions tend to increase the number of abortions because women fear a future without a social safety net. That is why so many US Catholics vote for Democrats, to reduce abortions by improving social conditions for everyone. Also, outlawing abortions may not really reduce the number much in practice. Did criminalization stop US drug use? But that ironic inconsistency in conservative policy does not deny the core emotional concern of a holocaust every decade of ten million or more defenseless human murdered (to those who think that way). On the other hand, if you think the moral value of human life begins sometime significantly only months after conception (or have some other metaphysical take on this), then this may just be a non-issue. In the 1800s, many US citizens saw little wrong with the enslavement of African Americans who were then seen by many as somehow less than fully human, which thus somehow justifying their enslavement similar to owning a horse. I'm not saying the abortion and slavery are the same, just that overall opinions on the moral worth of human lives can obviously change.

    === The politics of science

    Despite your dismissal of post-modernists, the fact is, science is heavily politicized. Read the book "Disciplined Minds" for the gory details. It is the conservatives who have been fighting most against the increase of institutionalized compulsory schooling (like by denigrating academia, or by fighting to legalize a homeschooling alternative to public schooling). Compulsory public schooling has its roots in 1800s Prussia. Formal compulsory schooling is a different thing than "education" which was previously done mostly at home or through tutors or via apprenticeships or on the job or at libraries. According to John Taylor Gatto, schooling was designed to reduce human beings to the emotional state where they were ready to be Prussian cannon fodder and Prussian wage slaves in the Prussian military machine. While as above I plan to vote for Jill Stein for her positions overall (especially her position on health issues), I disagree strongly with her position to expand formal schooling.

    === Economics

    US industrial productivity has more than doubled since the 1980s, but real wages for most workers (especially male workers) have been stagnant or declined. Where has all this extra productivity gone? Because wages have not kept pace, to buy this extra productivity, workers have had to take out loans if they can access it at all. Thus our recent financial crisis as it all collapsed. Between the increase in the workforce by women moving away from the home and childcare and into the workforce, and the rise in robotics and other automation, workers have less and less bargaining power. Meanwhile US families and communities fall apart from lack of volunteer labor. In practice US conservatives have no real answer to this question

    --
    A 21st century issue: the irony of technologies of abundance in the hands of those still thinking in terms of scarcity.
  82. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by Clubbah · · Score: 1

    >People lose money investing all the time, would they get those higher taxes back?

    They do. They only get taxed on net. If one investment earns $100 and the other loses $100, you have 0 net and therefore pay no taxes.

    >Money being invested has already been taxed, why should it even be taxed again just because you invested it and it paid off?

    All income is taxed. There are exceptions like income from a Roth IRA, but these exceptions have caps.

    >Let alone be taxed MORE or even the same as standard income?

    Capital gains tax (tax on investment income) is 20%. Most tech earning brackets are higher than that, plus you have to pay payroll and SS tax. During my early working years (Clinton) capital gains was taxed at 20% if you held your stock for a full year. Now it's 20% for day traders too.

  83. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by shoemilk · · Score: 1

    Think people will play NFL football for $35,000 a year? Not in this lifetime. This is just the stupidest concept you could have possibly brought to an already silly topic.

    Considering that people play Arena Football for $400 a game, I think they'd jump at the chance to get paid that much to be on a nationally televised game.

  84. Or xtians killing jews. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    If you're going to go all bollocks about Stalin being atheist, Hitler was a Christian.

    And it was Marx who came up with the communism AS A TRANSITION TO UTOPIA. It was

    a) Under capitalism, power corrupts and people decide that concentrating power in the ruling class is a bad idea so move to communism
    b) Under communism, power corrupts and people decide that concentrating power in the government is a bad move so decide to forbid concentration of power leading to Utopia.

    Then again, you have your ideology and it insists that even though you're a monster, everyone else is, so you shouldn't improve yourself.

  85. Irresponsible by microbox · · Score: 4, Informative

    Government research agencies were operating under extreme pressure from ultra left wing political interests to generate only the results they wanted, or risk losing their jobs.

    It is hard to believe how much projection there is on the extreme right. If you retargeted GOP words back on themselves, then they may well be more accurate. After-all, if you look at recent history:
    + The GOP are about big government. (Reagan, Bush & Bush)
    + They are fiscally irresponsible. (Reagan failed to balance the budget, but wasn't completely nuts. George W's own treasury secretary resigned because of his attitude towards money.)
    + They are obstructionist, but accuse Dems of not working across the table. (They will ask for the moon and more -- e.g., Debt ceiling, Eric Holder, the list is endless)
    + They believe Dems are engaging in voter fraud, and then aggressively engage in their own voter suppression campaign.
    + They believe they have the "truth" and others are just biased. (The kicker for me is that O'Reilly believes he's an independent, and his show is a "Spin Free Zone"
    + They believe their freedoms are restricted when they cannot restrict the freedoms of others. (The social conservative influence.)

    There is a lot to respect about the historical GOP, but recently, they have become irresponsible. + They are disliked by about 70-80% of the rest of the world

    --

    Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
    1. Re:Irresponsible by celle · · Score: 1

      "George W's own treasury secretary resigned because of his attitude towards money.)"

          So did Reagans OMB director, David Stockman, over the rising debt.

  86. It was released, you can get it here by microbox · · Score: 2

    "Romney wants to cut taxes for the rich, but a never-released economic report proves him wrong".

    It *was* released, and then quietly retracted. You can grab a copy here.

    One of the complaints was the phrase "Bush era tax cuts" doesn't set the correct tone.

    --

    Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
  87. Simple by microbox · · Score: 1

    47% of tax FILERS pay no net INCOME TAX (yes, they pay taxes on their cellphones, auto tires, gasoline, etc)

    They pay plenty of other taxes. Just no federal income tax.

    are you prepared to defend the idea that increasing taxes on higher income individuals will somehow stimulate the economy? I'd like to see that defense.

    Just take economics 101.

    This is pretty basic stuff. So, my question to you, is where is the substance behind all that outrage?

    --

    Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
  88. Re:You can also destroy civilization by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    i can also die from drinking too much water. not that that is a valid argument against drinking water

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  89. Taxes on the Wealthy by Tenebrousedge · · Score: 1

    Person A has an income of $200 and is taxed at 20%. Person B has $800 and is taxed at 10%.

    What happens?

    Changing the tax rate is one of the most fundamental things you can do to structure a society. If you opt for a proportionally lower tax rate on high income earners, over time they will control a greater share of the total wealth. The kicker is that you don't even need to have a nominally-higher tax rate, as long as it's not directly proportional to your income you still have the same effect.

    If you don't have an infinite supply of wealth, then when wealth shifts to the top, it comes from somewhere. Unless you believe that Warren Buffet is literally creating billions of dollars out of raw materials with his own two hands, then you must believe that value originated from others with lower income. Re-allocation happens all the time, it's more often called "making a profit" than "taxation". And when someone can create billions of dollars worth of wealth without taking or using anything from anybody, I'll think about letting them keep all of it.

    This country was founded on the principle of democracy, not oligarchy.

    --
    Those who advocate genocide deserve every protection afforded by law, and none afforded by common human decency.
    1. Re:Taxes on the Wealthy by terjeber · · Score: 1

      Person A has an income of $200 and is taxed at 20%. Person B has $800 and is taxed at 10%.

      Sigh. That isn't the case in the US. The bottom half of earners in the US pay ZERO federal tax. ZERO. It can't be more progressive than that. The median US wage earner pays NO federal tax.

      Of the total federal tax the vast majority is paid by the top 25% of earners, with the top 1% paying a huge share compared to the number of tax payers.

  90. Mistake! by microbox · · Score: 1

    I think you meant "Genghis Khan" at the top, and not "Attila the Hun". Two different people.

    btw, when the big G sacked Samarkand, he held up the head of a priest and declared to the crowd that he was God's punishment for their sins.

    Also, the old Roman Republic placed a great deal of emphasis on merit, but they were also handicapped by the (not completely inaccurate) notion that competent people have competent children.

    --

    Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
  91. non-partisan suicide by epine · · Score: 1

    I've never found terribly difficult to put the warts of the two big parties into one-to-one correspondence. Same warts, different wart hairs. Over the past decade or two, one especially large wart on the Republican side increasingly stands apart and alone: their raging mania to abolish the concept of non-partisan politics.

    I listen to political podcasts which frequently point out an outstanding and effective tradition of non-partisanship among the Republican ranks during the 1960s and 1970s that has subsequently withered on the vine. I doubt their forebears would be proud of how the party has evolved on this particular issue.

    When the Democrats are elected, there are many hard-core Republicans who increasingly refuse to concede their right to govern as the elected government, and who believe that obstructing every possible Democratic initiative is their gift to humanity. Actually, their gift to humanity would be allowing the elected government to actually govern, if you really believe in democracy after all.

    At the time of Lincoln, few people identified themselves as Americans. If you asked a person on the street he would say "I'm a Virginian" especially if he was a Virginian.

    Republicans are all Virginians these days. They aren't Americans. They're Republicans. There is either a Virginian in the White House, or they consider the country to be under the control of infidels to be resisted by any method permitted in love or warfare.

    This is a tragic evolution of the American nation promulgated by traitors to the founding fathers.

  92. Government is a Monopoly by Tenebrousedge · · Score: 2

    You're half right, and completely wrong.

    Government is a monopoly. It is a monopoly on the use of force. The "competitive market" for government is commonly called warfare.

    Government is a natural monopoly. It is the natural monopoly created to control other natural monopolies. When markets are more efficient, they should be used. When capital requirements to enter a market are high enough to preclude competition, or when services are required to be universal, markets are not efficient.

    Governments are evil, but a necessary evil. The state where private interests take over the duties and methods of government is commonly called Fascism. We must resist equally the government wishing to enslave its citizens, and the private interests wishing to do the same thing. At the moment, private interest has the upper hand. Be aware of what you are advocating: If you do not seek a fascist state, you should reconsider your views on government.

    The question of whether or not governments produce something is wholly irrelevant to the purpose of governments.

    --
    Those who advocate genocide deserve every protection afforded by law, and none afforded by common human decency.
  93. Did anyone actually read it? by Sumtingwong · · Score: 1

    There are a lot of CRS reports that are not available on the government's website any longer--a common occurrence; a quick Google shows that this is all over the web regardless. The NYT is becoming more and more known for its stretching of the facts to fit thier agenda. This is a great example!

    TFA, 1st Para: "The Congressional Research Service has withdrawn an economic report that found no correlation between top tax rates and economic growth, a central tenet of conservative economic theory, after Senate Republicans raised concerns about the paper’s findings and wording."

    What the CRS Report says: "This report attempts to clarify whether or not there is an association between the tax rates of the highest income taxpayers and economic growth...There is not conclusive evidence, however, to substantiate a clear relationship between the 65-year steady reduction in the top tax rates and economic growth. Analysis of such data suggests the reduction in the top tax rates have had little association with saving, investment, or productivity growth."

    TFA, 5th Para: "Republicans did not say whether they had asked the research service, a nonpartisan arm of the Library of Congress, to take the report out of circulation, but they were clear that they protested its tone and findings." == Contradicts their first paragraph.

    So we have a report, based on the variables that the authors of this report chose, that says that tax rates are not well correlated with economic growth. One of thousands.

    --
    Word!
  94. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by T+Murphy · · Score: 1

    If a company with only 10 employees managed to rake in $100 million a year, it only makes sense they would get paid ~$10 million salaries. Along those lines, I am (generally*) okay with athletes making ridiculous amounts of money for playing a game, as their teams bring in those millions of dollars anyways, and the players are doing the bulk of the work that earns that money. If the players didn't get those 8-figure contracts, it would be even more money in the pockets of managers and owners, which would be no better.

    *I do think sports teams/arenas need to stop getting subsidized by tax payers, but after the teams pay back their host cities they are free to pay their athletes as much as they can afford to.

  95. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by error_logic · · Score: 1

    Regardless of the specifics, it's a balancing act. Completely eliminating disparity in wealth despite differences in behavior would disincentivize personal responsibility and individual aspirations. Completely eliminating the redistributive effects of taxation. . .would result in a society fractured into the economic elite wielding power over the masses, wiping out democratic principles that the United States formed to exemplify. There's a reason for a constant tug of war between ends of the political spectrum, even if that is a simplification of economic vs. personal freedoms: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nolan_Chart

  96. Re:Romney Kills Baby Seals by aurashift · · Score: 1

    - It was fairly typical for him to take a city and then kill all of the political leadership, but not punish the populous. He then would let it be known that he knew who had commanded the opposition, and that the fight was now over with their disposal.

    I know who I'd vote for in this election.

  97. Reality begs to differ. by Tenebrousedge · · Score: 1

    Did you notice how that didn't actually invalidate my point in any way? I mean, you did read it, right?

    How much the people on the bottom pay in taxes doesn't actually have anything to do with anything. It's not like that's a tax bracket everyone is dying to be in. And while you may be correct as to the effective tax rate, the actual tax rate for the median income is 25%, without counting in payroll taxes.

    On the subject of tax brackets, the highest tax bracket is $388,351 and above. The highest incomes exceed this by about four orders of magnitude.

    Go ahead, justify that for me. Tell me how progressive that is.

    --
    Those who advocate genocide deserve every protection afforded by law, and none afforded by common human decency.
  98. Re:Romney Kills Baby Seals by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    Oh the joys of slashdot where down modding is a way of not dealing with facts that people do not like.

    And it can be undone by simply posting to it which invited any user who's interest is piqued to hit the parent button and see what was attempted to be buried.

  99. Re:name a single billionaire... by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

    UMAD capitalist pig? you say creating jobs, the jobs already existed because there is demand for the work. The capitalist uses abusive force of government to lay claim to the materials and lands used to meet the demand, by leveraging existing wealth in order to extract an unearned income from the worker.

    --
    Snowden and Manning are heroes.
  100. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by toddestan · · Score: 1

    Taxing wealth may be a bad (or at least hard to implement) idea

    Actually, wealth is taxed right now, indirectly through inflation.

  101. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by stymy · · Score: 1

    I'd say that it takes a fair bit more than 200k to get to the "prove a point" phase? Why? I make more than that as an actuary and from investments, but with it I make sure that I never have to clean, cook, do the laundry, buy groceries, change a light bulb, fix something, or do basically any manual labor. That isn't cheap in a first world country. The way I see it is, while I could retire and earn a middle-class income from 2 apartments and a house I rent out, I can instead work 7.5 hours 5 times a week and have the rest of my time be real free time, as opposed to spending most of that time doing mundane tasks required to keep a household going.

  102. Re:Did anyone get a copy first? by unitron · · Score: 1

    This is Slashdot.

    The only shame is in actually reading the summary or article or any of the links before posting.

    --

    I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

  103. Re:I can't tell you how surprised I am by this. by unitron · · Score: 1

    Captain Renault of the Casablanca police phoned in to say that he was shocked, shocked I tell you, that such a thing could happen.

    --

    I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

  104. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by unitron · · Score: 1

    ...Think people will play NFL football for $35,000 a year?...

    I'm sure there are any number of people currently unemployed who'd jump at that chance.

    The catch, of course, is that they probably couldn't perform the job as well as those currently making considerably more by doing so.

    --

    I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

  105. Re:Relavance??? by unitron · · Score: 1

    So tell me again what this has to do with science and technology???

    If the Republicans get what they want, we won't be able to afford to do either.

    --

    I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

  106. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by aicrules · · Score: 1

    You're calling my argument specious but you think we need to raise taxes to get back to a time where people didn't expect something for nothing? Raising tax rates on some and giving it to others is exactly what creates that expectation. I can't comment on your own personal financial situation, but if you feel more prosperous when paying more taxes, sign a check today making up the percentage you aren't paying now.

  107. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by aicrules · · Score: 1

    Please enlighten me, and tell me how that communistic regime was destined to succeed...

  108. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by aicrules · · Score: 1

    I am saying, and you know this but chose to pretend not to understand, that if someone actually nets negative, they don't get a check back from the government. That's risk. Even Roth IRA income is taxed eventually, it is just deferred. I don't even know what you're trying to say with the capital gains part of your response. So what? Day traders are taking on even more risk. Investments have a better chance of working out for you the longer you're willing to stick with them. You don't have an opportunity to make > 10% in regular investment as you MIGHT in Day Trading, but long term investment generally has less risk of negative return. Day Trading has a very high chance of losing principal.

  109. Re:name a single billionaire... by aicrules · · Score: 1

    Rewriting your last sentence first:
    The capitalist works within the law to buy materials and land to build a business they hope will succeed possibly based on knowledge of unfilled demand, by using capital they have raised or borrow and hire what they feel is the right number of people to make sure operations run profitably.

    You use negative words because you think capitalism and free markets are a bad thing, but without actual concrete reasons for that hatred, you make shit up and use mean sounding words.

    How many jobs would exist without private industry you moron? None. And without private income how would your private income stealing wealth redistribution programs work?

  110. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by aicrules · · Score: 1

    You use the term "exploiting" when referring to the fact that someone hires another person to do work. You are using a word that generally has a negative connotation to describe what happens every time someone works for someone else for a wage. If you consider that a bad thing, you are either 5 years old and congratulations on your superb abilities with computers, or you're just missing most of your brain.

  111. Re:Wealth disparity -- more important than income by airdweller · · Score: 1

    Way to show your ignorance :)

  112. Re:name a single billionaire... by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

    i guess nobody had jobs in the USSR or the PRC

    protip: the fastest advancements of societies have occured under communism

    Stalinist and Maoist forms of communism had significant social and moral defects, particularly the total lack of regard civil rights and for the well being of the people and the environment, a trait in common with modern republicans

    --
    Snowden and Manning are heroes.