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  4. Who do you REALLY side with?

Who do you REALLY side with?

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Run Your Mouth
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  • T Offline
    T Offline
    Trafik Jamz
    wrote on last edited by
    #44

    DaveH;326641 wrote:
    I like this thread. 🙂

    Here is a web site that allows you to enter your income, and it spits out a chart that shows where your tax money goes and how much they take, it's pretty cool. Basically all my income so far this year went to federal taxes. But from here on out I get to keep what I earn (less state taxes, sales taxes, etc). Pretty sad really.

    http://whatdoyouworkfor.appspot.com/index.html#

    That is kinda neat/disturbing, but not all that surprising. From what I can tell, starting today (literally) I get to keep everything I make. I was surprised that Medicare was lower than income security (which I'm assuming is unemployment taxes) and military. FWIW, I'm 100% in favor of making unemployment benefits an optional coverage that you can opt in/out of via a private system.... much like disability insurance, etc...

    Social security I'm ok with weaning us off of as well and privatizing... or at least making it optional. Not sure how I'd do it without completely destroying the funding for the currently retired individuals who rely on the system that they paid into their whole life.

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    • T Offline
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      thrash
      wrote on last edited by
      #45

      TJ: i think it's worth pointing out that there was no social welfare of any kind prior to 1930, no federal income tax prior to 1913..

      We had a much freer society at one point in history. Why can't we have one again? People just have to want it. Part of getting people to want it is to discuss the current situation and the other possibilities with them frankly.

      If you say, "yes, but over 50% of Americans are entirely dependant on the state and are net leeches on the system", you'd be right. And this is certainly an impediment to progress. This is why it is important to understand the inherent immorality of the current situation, and what the correct moral destination is. There is no way forward without common ground on morality, principles, objectives, etc.

      Once we establish that the military industrial complex, oil companies, welfare recipients, etc... do not DESERVE the subsidies they receive via theft (called "taxation" by some), then it is a straightforward matter to end such practices. Once we understand that we have no moral obligation to support these entities against our will, and that we have the power and the moral high ground, we can figure out a way out of this mess and a way forward.

      These things will end one way or another. The current system is unsustainable. The people are misinformed and the demogogues depend on this. The social safety net is wearing thin as we speak. We can engineer as soft of a transition as possible if we accept the inevitability of disaster. If we pretend that what we're doing is both sustainable and morally justifiable, the house of cards will surely collapse.

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      • T Offline
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        Trafik Jamz
        wrote on last edited by
        #46

        thrash;326648 wrote:
        TJ: i think it's worth pointing out that there was no social welfare of any kind prior to 1930, no federal income tax prior to 1913..

        We had a much freer society at one point in history. Why can't we have one again? People just have to want it. Part of getting people to want it is to discuss the current situation and the other possibilities with them frankly.

        If you say, "yes, but over 50% of Americans are entirely dependant on the state and are net leeches on the system", you'd be right. And this is certainly an impediment to progress. This is why it is important to understand the inherent immorality of the current situation, and what the correct moral destination is. There is no way forward without common ground on morality, principles, objectives, etc.

        Once we establish that the military industrial complex, oil companies, welfare recipients, etc... do not DESERVE the subsidies they receive via theft (called "taxation" by some), then it is a straightforward matter to end such practices. Once we understand that we have no moral obligation to support these entities against our will, and that we have the power and the moral high ground, we can figure out a way out of this mess and a way forward.

        These things will end one way or another. The current system is unsustainable. The people are misinformed and the demogogues depend on this. The social safety net is wearing thin as we speak. We can engineer as soft of a transition as possible if we accept the inevitability of disaster. If we pretend that what we're doing is both sustainable and morally justifiable, the house of cards will surely collapse.

        I can agree with most of this. We actually had an income tax in 1861 to help pay for the costs of the civil war. Our current income tax (16th Amendment) was ratified (some say unconstitutionally, though it has passed supreme court scrutiny) in 1913. As a representative government we chose people who decided that this was best for the good of the country (which is kind of what the basis of a representative government is all about) and there is literally no way that you, I or anyone else will be able to put that genie back in the bottle. We can wish it away, we can want it to go away but it will still be there. All we can do is shape what we have, little by little.

        I honestly believe that my system is less intrusive on your wallet than the current system. Thereby making it less immoral than what we already have.

        For those keeping track at home, the federal government funded itself with tariffs (primarily) prior to the start of income tax. Our current system is seeing less and less tariffs on imports/exports as we are trying to compete on a global scale with virtually all of our goods and services.

        Just out of curiosity, do you have a link supporting the >50% of Americans are entirely dependent on the system portion of above? I know lots of people and very very few are ENTIRELY dependent on the system... though I do know a few that do qualify as net leeches (taking in more than they pay out), and most of them are not poor people.

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        • JimJ Offline
          JimJ Offline
          Jim
          wrote on last edited by
          #47

          ... its because it's nowhere near 50%.

          http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2045863/How-half-U-S-population-lives-household-receives-state-benefits.html

          legacy image

          http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welfare_dependency#Measuring_dependency

          Measuring dependency
          The United States Department of Health and Human Services defines ten indicators of welfare dependency:[23]
          Indicator 1: Degree of Dependence, which can be measured by the percentage of total income from means-tested benefits. If greater than 50%, the recipient of welfare is considered to be dependent on it for the purposes of official statistics.
          Indicator 2: Receipt of Means-Tested Assistance and Labor Force Attachment, or what percentage of recipients are in families with different degrees of labor force participation.
          Indicator 3: Rates of Receipt of Means-Tested Assistance, or the percentage of the population receiving TANF, food stamps, and SSI.
          Indicator 4: Rates of Participation in Means-Tested Assistance Programs, or the percentage of people eligible for welfare benefits who are actually claiming them.
          Indicator 5: Multiple Program Receipt, or the percentage of recipients who are receiving at least two of TANF, food stamps, or SSI.
          Indicator 6: Dependence Transitions, which breaks down recipients by demographic characteristics and the level of income that welfare benefits represented for them in previous years.
          Indicator 7: Program Spell Duration, or for how long recipients draw the three means-tested benefits.
          Indicator 8: Welfare Spell Duration with No Labor Force Attachment, which measures how long recipients with no one working in their family remain on welfare.
          Indicator 9: Long Term Receipt, which breaks down spells on TANF by how long a person has been in receipt.
          Indicator 10: Events Associated with the Beginning and Ending of Program Spells, such as an increase in personal or household income, marriage, children no longer being eligible for a benefit, and/or transfer onto other benefits.
          In 2005, the Department estimated that 3.8% of the American population could be considered dependent on welfare, calculated as having more than half of their family’s income coming from TANF, food stamps, and/or SSRI payments, down from 5.2% in 1996.[24] As 15.3% of the population was in receipt of welfare benefits in 2005, it follows that approximately one-quarter of welfare recipients are considered dependent as per the official measures. In general, measures of welfare dependence are assessed alongside the statistics for poverty in general.[25]
          Government measures of welfare dependence include welfare benefits associated with work. If such benefits were excluded from calculations, the dependency rate would be lower.[26]

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          • T Offline
            T Offline
            Trafik Jamz
            wrote on last edited by
            #48

            Jim;326652 wrote:
            ... its because it's nowhere near 50%.

            http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2045863/How-half-U-S-population-lives-household-receives-state-benefits.html

            legacy image

            http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welfare_dependency#Measuring_dependency

            Measuring dependency
            The United States Department of Health and Human Services defines ten indicators of welfare dependency:[23]
            Indicator 1: Degree of Dependence, which can be measured by the percentage of total income from means-tested benefits. If greater than 50%, the recipient of welfare is considered to be dependent on it for the purposes of official statistics.
            Indicator 2: Receipt of Means-Tested Assistance and Labor Force Attachment, or what percentage of recipients are in families with different degrees of labor force participation.
            Indicator 3: Rates of Receipt of Means-Tested Assistance, or the percentage of the population receiving TANF, food stamps, and SSI.
            Indicator 4: Rates of Participation in Means-Tested Assistance Programs, or the percentage of people eligible for welfare benefits who are actually claiming them.
            Indicator 5: Multiple Program Receipt, or the percentage of recipients who are receiving at least two of TANF, food stamps, or SSI.
            Indicator 6: Dependence Transitions, which breaks down recipients by demographic characteristics and the level of income that welfare benefits represented for them in previous years.
            Indicator 7: Program Spell Duration, or for how long recipients draw the three means-tested benefits.
            Indicator 8: Welfare Spell Duration with No Labor Force Attachment, which measures how long recipients with no one working in their family remain on welfare.
            Indicator 9: Long Term Receipt, which breaks down spells on TANF by how long a person has been in receipt.
            Indicator 10: Events Associated with the Beginning and Ending of Program Spells, such as an increase in personal or household income, marriage, children no longer being eligible for a benefit, and/or transfer onto other benefits.
            In 2005, the Department estimated that 3.8% of the American population could be considered dependent on welfare, calculated as having more than half of their family’s income coming from TANF, food stamps, and/or SSRI payments, down from 5.2% in 1996.[24] As 15.3% of the population was in receipt of welfare benefits in 2005, it follows that approximately one-quarter of welfare recipients are considered dependent as per the official measures. In general, measures of welfare dependence are assessed alongside the statistics for poverty in general.[25]
            Government measures of welfare dependence include welfare benefits associated with work. If such benefits were excluded from calculations, the dependency rate would be lower.[26]

            Are you saying that Limbaugh, Hannety and Beck have been lying to me? How dare you!

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            • T Offline
              T Offline
              thrash
              wrote on last edited by
              #49

              Ok, so I was overzealous when i said "entirely dependant". There are a few data points that are right around that 50% mark, as the very first graph shows.

              1. roughly 50% pay no net federal income taxes
              2. roughly 50% are on some kind of government assistance program

              Regarding #1, i was wondering what this data looked like historically. I found this:

              legacy image

              from here: http://www.taxfoundation.org/news/show/1410.html

              Can you argue that about 50% of households are dependant, to some degree, on government handouts? Yes. Entirely Dependant? Probably not, although there's certainly a definitional aspect of that question.

              The point is: there are a lot of people who rely, to varying degrees, on gubmint handouts. They are the benficiaires of an immoral set of coercive arrangements.

              A friend of mine is a brilliant laser physcist at a public university. She posted a link complaining about the lack of federal science funding. She was pretty hostile towards my suggestion that her salary and research was paid for by money taken from people against their will.

              It's not just people on the poor end of the spectrum who are "bought in" to the current wealth-transfer based system and who don't want to see it go anywhere. Almost everyone can convince themselves that them getting a slice of other people's money is a great thing.

              Few attempt to claim that how they receive this money is ethical. Instead, they typically try to rationalize that it is ok, or that everyone steals from everyone else, or that nobody ever acheived anything without government help.

              Whether it is 5% or 50%, the immorality of coercive wealth redistribution is the core issue. Activities which further canonize the legitimacy of the principle of wealth transfer must be opposed, even if in practice they claim to be more fiscally effective and to immorally transfer less actual wealth.

              IOW, TJ, even if I agreed that what you're proposing would save money (which I don't, btw :)), I have to oppose it because it moves us in the wrong direction ideology wise. I'm prepared to accept a lower standard of living for an increased standard of morality.

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              • JimJ Offline
                JimJ Offline
                Jim
                wrote on last edited by
                #50

                Two quick situations that I can think of that have happened to me personally in the past week or two...

                1. Had a cold, went to the walk-in clinic. They open at 8am, I arrived at 11am. Gave the lady my medical insurance card and my debit card to pay for my co-pay. Their CC machine was down, but this was the first they had noticed it because I was the first person to NOT be on government medical assistance that morning. The waiting room was packed, and it took me two hours to see a doctor. This was absolutely mind blowing to me.

                2. I have a good friend who is a social worker, and I was all fired up one day about some statistics I read about the rampant abuse of the welfare system (like withdrawing EBT money at casinos and strip clubs, etc...), so I brought this discussion up with her. She noted that there is a VERY small percentage of the total number of welfare recipients that are classified as chronic welfare users (less then 5% here in Minneapolis). The vast majority of people are ashamed to take food stamps and such and thus gtfo of the situation as quickly as possible. She said that it mostly serves as a safety net for people who make bad choices (like saving money, wasting it on stupid shit etc...) and they fall in and out of the system.

                The huge increase in dependence on government handouts in the past few years can largely be put on the democratic extentions of unemployment benefits (which is whole-heartededly disagree with). My proposal would be to treat unemployment the same as the welfare system. Instead of giving people free-reign money, give them food stamps. On unemployment for an extended period of time? Move to section 8 housing. Want to extend your benefits? Mandatory temp work (which often leads to perm. positions). Now tell me that wouldn't light a fire under people's asses to go out and actually take a job. There's plenty of jobs available, but often times it pays better to stay on unemployment.

                Look, I'm not talking about the eliminating the safety net for short-term, emergency type use... I'm talking about these shits who sit downtown all day long, wearing $100 shoes, talking on a $500 cell phone, and still collect government handouts like it's owed to them.

                Edit: Also, I was shocked by the 50% not paying Federal income tax. What. The. Fuck?

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                • T Offline
                  T Offline
                  Trafik Jamz
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #51

                  Well said Jim.

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                  • RexwagonR Offline
                    RexwagonR Offline
                    Rexwagon
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #52

                    ‎10 mins. ago I am waiting in line at the gas station with two different women in front of me. Woman A.) Gets waters and pops, pays EBT, Then gets cigarrettes and cigarellos with cash. Woman B.) Gets a starbucks capaccino, pays Ebt. Pays cash for Marb reds. Then says that shes going to the bar tonight and "Gunna get fucked up". Really? Got money for Cigarettes and Booze but not for everything else.

                    legacy image

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                    • torbsT Offline
                      torbsT Offline
                      torbs
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #53

                      Not surprised here:

                      95%
                      Ron Paul
                      I side with Ron Paul on issues of Domestic policy, the Economy, Foreign Policy, Healthcare, Immigration, Social, and the Environment. More info

                      77%
                      Gary Johnson
                      I side with Gary Johnson on issues of Domestic policy, Healthcare, and Social. More info

                      74%
                      R. Lee Wrights
                      I side with R. Lee Wrights on issues of Domestic policy, Foreign Policy, the Economy, and Healthcare. More info

                      69%
                      Mitt Romney
                      I side with Mitt Romney on issues of Immigration and Science. More info

                      52%
                      Buddy Roemer
                      I side with Buddy Roemer on issues of Immigration. More info

                      25%
                      Jimmy McMillan
                      I side with Jimmy McMillan on issues of Immigration. More info

                      21%
                      Kent Mesplay
                      I do not side with Kent Mesplay on any major issues. More info

                      7%
                      Barack Obama
                      I do not side with Barack Obama on any major issues. More info

                      1%
                      Fred Karger
                      I do not side with Fred Karger on any major issues. More info

                      Who you side with by party...
                      89% Libertarian
                      31% Republican
                      21% Green
                      7% Democratic

                      Current vehicles: 90 Civic Hatch, 95 Civic Sedan, 93 Del Sol, 95 Civic Coupe, 99 Integra GS
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