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User: bluefoxlucid

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  1. Re:Progressive Consumption Tax on Bill Gates: Piketty's Attack on Income Inequality Is Right · · Score: 1

    That's a lie.

    In 2013, the US Government spent $960.8 billion on retirement benefits (social security taking up the lion's share); $160.4 billion on sickness and disability (social security again); $109.7 billion on food security; $170.7 billion on income security; $9.7 billion on other family and children focused welfare; $160.9 billion on unemployment; and $46.7 billion on housing assistance (I exclude other HUD activities, such as community building). This totals $1,618.9 billion in 2013, of which $1,268.7 billion was Federal spending.

    The total personal income in 2013 was $14,301 billion; income from welfare is taxed (stupid), so the base personal income comes to $11,884 billion.

    What percentage is $1,618.9 of $11,884?

    Stop manipulating the numbers. The per-capita income I calculate is $49k, but excludes anyone under age 18 and excludes income FROM WELFARE, because of course we tax your social security and unemployment income for some stupid reason; including taxes taken from welfare paid out, it's $59,340. Dividing out the amount the government spent on welfare, you get $6,717 per capita, or 13.7% (my number), 11.3% (including taxes taken out of welfare paid out).

    By the by, I tend to ignore the taxes from welfare when doing the math because I am looking at replacing the welfare system, and that so-called income will dry up--its replacement will be untaxed, because taxing it just adds complexity and is stupid. It's like a secret tax: we could tax you 3.6% more, but instead we'll just tax welfare 10%, and notice welfare isn't working because it's too low, and increase it, and raise the amount of tax collected to justify welfare. Taxing the poor on money you're giving them that you took from the rich is just a way to pretend you're not taxing the rich--if you didn't tax the welfare payout, you could just make it that much smaller! Anything I come up with for welfare says "untaxed" stamped right on the box, because why the fuck would we give you a pile of money and then come back to you and demand you give some of it back?!

  2. Re:Progressive Consumption Tax on Bill Gates: Piketty's Attack on Income Inequality Is Right · · Score: 1

    It appears that word does not mean what I think it means. How odd. Wasn't there a word of that structure that meant "to cut away"? As in surgery, when a tumor is [!excised]???

    If you're just trying to assert that the tax is made progressive, sure. It's a graduated tax system in some way I guess, although the described implementation is impossible to track (how do you know how much people bought? The government doesn't know what you paid in sales tax...). If you're trying to assert that this is a good plan or of any use.... no.

  3. Re:Once again proving ARM is awesome on Android On Intel x86 Tablet Performance Explored: Things Are Improving · · Score: 1

    Christ that's a complex architecture. How'd it do on power consumption? 0.01W?

  4. Re:Or a simple way to fix it. on Bill Gates: Piketty's Attack on Income Inequality Is Right · · Score: 1

    Because that wont get you money; it'll just leave you untaxed.

    I've done some exercises exploring high taxes on the poor. The results are astounding: jacking up taxes insanely doesn't actually hurt the poor. If you make $10,000, you pay 17.2%--10% income and 7.2% social security, a total of $1,700/year. If we jack it up to 25%, you wind up paying $2,500/year, or $67/mo more. That's annoying if you're poor, and will cause a crisis; but the fact is the poor are largely consuming cigarettes and booze at a higher cost than that, and any general instability (a flat tire, or being scheduled for fewer hours at K-Mart) will cause the same problem.

    By the same token, dropping taxes off the poor doesn't help. The standard deduction of near $6000 makes the above calculation laughable: you're talking about taxes on $4000, and the actual impact is about $27/mo, with the same consideration. Likewise, the taxes you pay in the first place are about $57/mo, which would be helpful, but is going to allow you to live the same slum lifestyle with just a tiny bit less worry each day, unless you get a flat tire or need a tooth filled and have to shell out $800 and your life is destroyed.

    By the time you've jacked up taxes on the poor enough for it to matter, you've exceeded the tax rate of a flat tax system. The top-tier income tax here is 39.6%; if we jacked taxes up on the poor, we could have a flat tax of 39.56%. At that rate, the resolvable crisis of being poor and losing $50 is no longer "other poor people live on like $200 less, so figure out how to survive"; it's "holy crap, half my money is gone!" and it's started to become a real social problem.

    I resolved this largely by eliminating all welfare taxes by eliminating all direct welfare, accounting for 36% of Federal spending. This, plus the state welfare services conjoined to these, drops $16.2 trillion from spending and taxes; I then add on a 14.5% tax to collect $17.2 trillion. At the bottom bracket, it comes to 11% + 17.2% = 28.2%, a bigger bite; but, at $10,000/year, you'd lose $1,820/year to that. The separate 14.5% tax is divided up evenly among every natural-born American citizen resident in country (territories, military bases, etc.), proving $7,125/year in the 2013 numbers I used for income and population.

    The result of this is a slightly increased tax on the rich (39.84% instead of 39.6%) and a smooth transition upwards. There's a sudden tax increase in the middle, around $120k income, because social security taxes cut off there and mine don't. Everyone under the per-capita income comes out slightly richer; everyone above it comes out slightly poorer. There's no unemployment because everyone gets a $600 check from the government (social security) every month: a family is getting $1200/mo, flat out; this number follows inflation and any increase in total income (individual and businesses), and of course the real buying power increases as the economy gains wealth.

    By a number of economic factors--largely the absolute lack of risk in housing the unemployed, as they will have a precisely-known amount of money for you to align your cost structure to and build out a sizable margin when deciding how much to charge them and what kind of flat to rent them--businesses become suddenly capable of drawing a tidy profit from the poor and downtrodden, mostly by taking their money. The poor, in exchange, gain access to housing and food, although the housing is small and the food is of most basic quality, along with other basic needs. Welfare traps evaporate, as you continue to collect the only welfare in existence until you die. Economic dips and downturns are buffered against, mass unemployment doesn't create as much of a crisis, and welfare costs don't spike in these situations.

    It's not as simple as people like to think. So many moving parts dependent on so many other moving parts. It took me a month to get it right.

  5. Re:Progressive Consumption Tax on Bill Gates: Piketty's Attack on Income Inequality Is Right · · Score: 1

    That's not enough taxes. The government spends 13.68% of all income across the country on welfare alone.

    As well, this tax excises taxes from the poor and shifts them solely on the rich. Taxing the rich as a cash cow isn't a good proposal, although a progressive tax system has many merits (the largest of which being that high taxes on the poor drive up wages, which acts as an avoidable tax on the rich by way of reducing human resources--eliminating jobs--through process management).

    I have a better system already anyway, one with many features beyond "eliminate income inequality." My target was to eliminate poverty and increase economic stability, and I have succeeded in that and more. Now I just need an implementation plan, and a wielding of power to have it pushed into public policy.

  6. Re:Once again proving ARM is awesome on Android On Intel x86 Tablet Performance Explored: Things Are Improving · · Score: 1

    You mean from the last 12 years. Come on now, we know this started post-Pentium 4.

  7. Re:Once again proving ARM is awesome on Android On Intel x86 Tablet Performance Explored: Things Are Improving · · Score: 1

    It was, at the time, largely speculated to be a marketing ploy to make MACs seem more like friendly PCs than as some weird PowerPC chipset that you play with in primary school. I speculate that virtualization has something to do with it, as it's easier and was more familiar at the time than JIT translation CPU-to-CPU (as LLVM does), and was interesting to the common man to run Windows upon a Mac.

  8. Once again proving ARM is awesome on Android On Intel x86 Tablet Performance Explored: Things Are Improving · · Score: -1

    These are RISC cores--occasionally ARM or a modified architecture--running an x86 or x86-64 translation layer as the decode cycle, such that the x86 instructions are cached as RISC instructions. ARM virtualizing x86 would be amusingly fast, too--faster than x86 running x86.

  9. Re:Why..... on "Double Irish" Tax Loophole Used By US Companies To Be Closed · · Score: 1

    It's only ambiguous in the context of a global political system, and only because the stance that a Liberal Democrat may take in America may be the Conservative stance in some small European country, while the Conservative Republican stance may be the Liberal stance in some South American country.

    Consider the socially conservative stance of retaining Catholic religion in society, in the good process of government, in schools, in laws; in ancient Rome, those who pushed for change from Romanism to Catholicism were the liberals. and so would those be in Pakistan or India who seek to throw out Islam!

    Liberals seek change, and seek it quickly; Conservatives seek stability, and only implement change in a slow procession. This is how you classify them, same as classifying a Male animal versus a Female animal: although birds have XX males and XY females (called ZZ and ZW), the XX Male is known male when XX Female is a Female in mammals because the Male produces the sperm and the Female the ovum. A political system may seem inverted because the ideals of the Liberals and Conservatives are reversed; yet the political atmosphere may also be inverted, such that conservative policies hold true to the current state of things, whereas the liberal policies seek major change, and where these relations are inverse in the opposite system's establishment.

    The term "Liberalism" has a good fifteen different definitions in the study of politics; in the study of political science, it is much more clear. I find simpler frameworks easier on the mind.

  10. Re:Not another scam! Right on! on Lockheed Claims Breakthrough On Fusion Energy Project · · Score: 1

    You make a terrible assumption: that energy is not scarce.

    You cannot measure the energy available by any fuel source. It cannot be done. You can measure its caloric output, its thermodynamic potential, you can measure and calculate and predict all these scientific things; but you cannot measure its availability.

    Humans, given infinite energy, will use a lot more energy than of current fashion. We manufacture molybdenum and cesium by fusion now, at great expense of energy; with unlimited energy--or with such ridiculous quantity such as from a dyson sphere, which should provide 13,000 TRILLION times our current energy usage after considering all losses in solar parabolic collection and transmission--we could doubtless fiss any matter by brute force, and then produce nuclear fusion on manufacturing scale to produce any element required in any quantity, at any expedience, for trivial cost.

    Imagine a ten-fold or even a hundred-fold increase in consumable energy. I can provide you a thousand-fold increase in energy use, and by that scale you will have only a tenth or a hundredth of the available energy as you do now, and soon find your oceans dried and lifeless.

  11. Re:Not another scam! Right on! on Lockheed Claims Breakthrough On Fusion Energy Project · · Score: 1

    We deforested the earth because of an endless supply of trees. Oil, similarly, was this thing that you found and it never stopped coming out of the ground; the reserves were estimated so large at one point as to rival the earth's oceans. I've had people as well tell me there is so much water, and so much of anything else we can fuse, that we will never run out if we run the fusion reaction at full force in earnest to supply endless and infinite power for all time.

  12. Re:Why..... on "Double Irish" Tax Loophole Used By US Companies To Be Closed · · Score: 1

    What you call "radical liberals", i.e., liberals who go back to the root, is better known as "classical liberals" or "libertarians" in the US.

    And in the scholarly pursuit of Political Science, "Liberals" are those who wish to move rapidly through new policies, and who spend money and go into debt sharply to do so (fiscal liberals); while "Conservatives" are those whose policies are slow and metered, and whose finances are concerned with fiscal sustainability.

    I don't care that you want to define "Conservative" as synonymous with "Christian Republican" and "Liberal" as synonymous with "Atheist Democrat"; these are religions and party affiliations, not political stances and behaviors. It would be the same as defining any red car as a "Race Car" and any black car as a "Town Car".

    Also, rapid change, even for a better system, often ends up much worse in the short term.

    It is this belief which is fundamental to conservative politics. What I said about not leaping if there is a ladder holds true in two ways: a set of metered steps, even deployed rapidly and sequentially, is better than one giant leap; but, at times, a policy is impossible or even catastrophic without at least a central upheaval, and so one should reason determinedly about the policy and the plan before accepting the need for such an undertaking. Such undertakings may be occasionally necessary, but they should be taken only when so, and only once having considered the dangers and the planning to contain them.

  13. Re:Visible douchebag on The Great Robocoin Rip-off · · Score: 1

    It's the look of a person who believes appearance and flamboyance wins friends, because he read it in some self-help book or he's just that stuck on himself. It's the way people who think they're so great that they can set trends or simply stand apart and make themselves a unique image, and people will praise them over it.

    You can see it right there: he claims he's worked with many people, his service is great, and that he's doing his client a great favor by being such a great guy giving them a refund when his company doesn't actually do that, yet simply ignores all other complains about other costs incurred by his company's mismanagement and failure to keep promises and meet contractual obligations. "I'm so fucking great though! Don't you see how great I am?!"

    The $2300/mo number was probably one guy somewhere whose BitCoin ATM provided a big spike of output when it first showed up due to novelty and a temporary crowd come to ooh and ahh over the spectacle. I'd bet money that's not typical.

    This is the kind of guy who would rape a college girl and then tell her she should quit bitching about it because he's got such awesome muscles and a big dick and is rich and totally awesome and she should feel awed by his awesome schlange.

  14. Re:Of course they're giving a 6-year transition on "Double Irish" Tax Loophole Used By US Companies To Be Closed · · Score: 1

    Well, yeah, okay. That works.

  15. Visible douchebag on The Great Robocoin Rip-off · · Score: 0

    Look at that Jordan guy. Just look at him. Are you fucking kidding me? With a haircut like that, you know he's a vacuous retard.

  16. Re:Of course they're giving a 6-year transition on "Double Irish" Tax Loophole Used By US Companies To Be Closed · · Score: 1

    No, it doesn't work that way. Taxes are aggregate. I used to file my own taxes for my business.

    That you bought and re-sold a license for $100 doesn't matter; that you sold a license for $100 profit, but bought furniture for the office and it depreciated by $100, will get you a net $0 profit.

  17. Re:Why..... on "Double Irish" Tax Loophole Used By US Companies To Be Closed · · Score: 1

    That's the reason why corporations are leaving. And they are going to continue to leave unless we bring our corporate tax rates in line with other countries, meaning lower them significantly.

    Yes, and this will be a conservative vs. radical argument as always, with conservatives who want to take it in small increments, and radicals who want to slash it all and implement a 9-9-9 plan. Of course we have very few conservatives in our countries; in truth, we have radical liberals who want to slash welfare and corporate taxes haphazardly, and other radical liberals who want to raise taxes and boost welfare haphazardly.

    Today, radical liberals have the public ear: the Democrats are in favor now, but the Republican opposition holds a large clout of power, and third-parties who gain the most attention are largely those wishing for immediate, sweeping upheavals of law to create a fantastic new nation. In all of these are fad policies falling under different ideals, but all holding the same liberal drive of making changes, now, immediately, to a direct end goal which we wish to see tomorrow in full.

    This is not the way of the conservative. The way of the conservative is to look before you leap--and to not leap at all if there is a ladder. We need in our political system a new generation of great conservatives whose aims are focused on correcting the deficiencies of our system, and whose methods are taken in close but metered steps so as to implement changes in a timely manner. Each year, we should carefully examine our system of laws, of taxes, of entitlements, so that we might detangle some small part of it and pass new law to excise that small complexity for something simpler, less costly, and more effective. Year after year, the effects of these changes should add up, so that in a decade our system is much better and more cleanly operating, so that the poor are less impoverished, so that our laws are less draconian, so that our social services are better and our taxes are lower because they are applied more efficiently.

    Instead, year after year, we bicker and rage, we demand immense and startling action, we propose whole systems not as plan but as policy. We propose an end result as a bill to pass, rather than as the final result of a few short years of a senator's term passing smaller measures and adjusting each in accordance with the results of the former, until he has at last with the whole of Congress implemented the whole of their great plan by small degrees. Accordingly, we see the risks are high in passing a sweeping measure as whole, rather than by parts; and the political opponents of those senators rage to the public on those risks, and frighten the public into moving power one way or the other, and by this oscillation prevent any real work from coming about.

    There will come an age when America either collapses or finds itself tired of running radicals against radicals, with the alternative of up-and-coming radicals.

  18. Re: Why..... on "Double Irish" Tax Loophole Used By US Companies To Be Closed · · Score: 1

    You now know why some of us become independent consultants instead of full-time workers. Company vehicle (tax deduction), company meal plan (tax deduction), employee housing as a benefit (tax deduction), write off 90% of your income and pay 10% taxes on the last 10%. Pay 1% taxes.

  19. Re:Why..... on "Double Irish" Tax Loophole Used By US Companies To Be Closed · · Score: 1

    I think that's how it works, and the companies just move their HQ to somewhere with lower income tax to save money on the second round of taxation.

  20. Re:Of course they're giving a 6-year transition on "Double Irish" Tax Loophole Used By US Companies To Be Closed · · Score: 2

    From what I understand, if Microsoft sells a software license in Colorado, it's US Income. If Microsoft sells a software license in Japan and it's accounted on the income for Microsoft Corp. in Redmond, it's also US Income.

    To avoid these taxes, Microsoft can set up shop in Dublin as a tax haven. When Microsoft sells a software license in Colorado, it's US Income, taxed before exporting to Dublin. When Microsoft sells a software license in Japan, it's Dublin income.

    It actually seems fair to me. It's the same way we do business with Porsche and Mazda; the only difference is Porsche is a German company, so we're okay with Porsche paying US taxes on Porsche cars sold in the US and not paying US taxes on Porsche cars sold in Japan. Microsoft is seen as a US company, so we get our panties in a knit when Microsoft only pays US taxes on Microsoft products sold in the US.

  21. Re:Not another scam! Right on! on Lockheed Claims Breakthrough On Fusion Energy Project · · Score: 1

    Fusion power is a huge scam.

    Fusion is often designed to fuse hydrogen into helium. This process seems sane because... I mean look at the world, just look at it. We're about as likely to ever run out of water as we are to ever run out of oil, or trees.

  22. Re:German illegal? on How English Beat German As the Language of Science · · Score: 1

    I don't care. That the system of government theoretically can't do a thing and that it aspires to do a thing it shall fail at are two different things; our system of government has succeeded in imprisoning anyone for being German or Japanese, for expressing a political ideal, and for any number of other things it is designed not to imprison people for. That they held hearings as such is itself a cause for alarm, and I don't give a damn what you have to say about what our government is designed to not allow those hearings to accomplish.

  23. Re:That's not the reason you're being ignored. on Flight Attendants Want Stricter Gadget Rules Reinstated · · Score: 1

    Look, as multiple scientific studies and Homeopathy have shown...

    ... yeah, it's easy to highlight yourself as ignorant by including something that shows you clearly lack critical thinking ability. A lot of scientific studies suggest things, or explore things, and find interesting but not strongly conclusive results. There are multiple scientific studies showing that global warming isn't real.

  24. Re:German illegal? on How English Beat German As the Language of Science · · Score: 1

    It was covered a lot at the time, and they even had hearings to follow-up, and hearings about the hearings. There were congressional hearings to discuss if the hearings were themselves illegal because of how they were targeting and proposing to target Muslim-Americans, and hearings to discuss the response of Muslim-Americans to the hearings about the civil rights of Muslim-Americans and their status as an internal threat to the security of the nation.

    It's funny looking back at news articles, at clips of the hearings, at a brief few minutes stolen here and there. At times, it looks quite tame. Watching them actually occur was ... disturbing. After a few minutes, I was already waiting for the ghost of FDR to appear and tell everyone to just throw those brown-skinned suicide bombers into the concentration camps with the Japs and Krauts.

    We talk about this once great nation; I wonder if it was ever great.

  25. Re:That's not the reason you're being ignored. on Flight Attendants Want Stricter Gadget Rules Reinstated · · Score: 1

    I have never understood the point of a life vest. By the time I am unable to retain my position in the water, I have frozen to death. I can rest in deep water.