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Scotty
 
Posts: n/a
Default Scotty's mistake

I have a 'sales tax exempt number', will that also work on
your new Fed. sales tax.

Scotty

"Maxprop" wrote in message
nk.net...

"DSK" wrote in message
...
No where else in society do the rich have to pay more

for things like
cars, bread, etc. The cost is the same for everyone

for the same
product.

True, but the rich have to pay less in proportion to

their means.


Maxprop wrote:
Of course. Are you one of those who favors

redistribution of wealth?


Not really, but any function of government is going to

redistribute wealth
in one fashion or another. I would rather see a

"redistribution" *from*
those with $1/4 mill & higher incomes than *to* them.


Why should any function of government redistribute wealth?

I don't recall
that provision in the Constitution.

That did sound dangerously close, didn't it.


Actually it sounded like dangerously common sense.


Which proves we so-called Neocons are not without heart or

conscience, as
you've implied heretofore.

Which is why I'm advocating a federal sales tax. The

rich buy more
expensive things, therefore pay greater dollar amounts

of sales taxes.


Hmm, that didn't work for boats. Remember the "Luxury

Yacht" tax?

Hardly a fair comparison. That tax was exclusively aimed

at the wealthy. A
federal sales tax, which would replace the current income

tax, would not
have the same ultimate effect as that ill-conceived luxury

tax.

I am against a Federal sales tax as it would impose yet

another Federally
mandated administrative burden on all business and would

also supress
aggregate demand.


Do you think the current income tax laws do not impose a

federally-mandated
administrative burden on businesses? My guess is that adm

inistering a
federal sales tax would be a snap compared with wading

through the ponderous
tax codes that exist today.


You claimed at one point to be a conservative, what

happened to slashing
Federal spending???


That should *always* be on the table. Sadly it almost

never is. And when
it is, it's lipservice, not substance.

Do they? I pay a lot of income tax to the federal and

state governments
annually, but have yet to see anything resembling

"greater services &
benefits from the government" so far.


Well, let's see... first of all, the police & the courts

keep poor people
from stealing all your nice stuff, so that's a *huge*

benefit to you that
actually punishes the poor.


Those same police and courts don't protect the poor from

rich people
exploiting them, robbing them blind, and such? I wasn't

aware our legal
system only worked in one direction.

... The poor have access to the same infrastructure

that I do.

Right. The poor pay the same gas tax, but don't ride in

as nice a car.

I fail to see what difference that makes. They drive on

the same roads.
I've had some absolutely horrible junkers in the past, and

frankly smooth
roads meant more to me than to the guy in the new S-Class

Mercedes.

The poor can visit the same parks if they can get the

time off work.

LOL. The wealthy generally get that way by working their

butts off. Most
of the poor that I meet don't work at all.

The poor breathe the same air, except that usually

polluting factories &
power plants are located closer to their neighborhoods

than to yours.

That's generally true, and unfortunate. Clean air should

be for everyone,
but it ain't. Visit Gary, IN, sometime for a graphic

demonstration of this.

Etc etc etc.

If being wealthy were such a bad deal, people wouldn't

be so eager to make
more money.


Who said being wealthy was a bad deal? Not I.

... They have access to the same government services I

do.

That's true, the SEC protects the investments of the

poor just as much as
they do yours (and mine)!


The SEC is a double-edged sword for the wealthy. But

that's not the
point--if you wish to give examples of services that

generally benefit the
rich, I'll be happy to produce as many or more that

benefit only the poor,
and typically at the expense of the rich and middle

classes.

...But *they* have access to benefits and services of

which I am denied,
such as Medicaid, welfare, WIC, educational grants to

the poor, etc.

You're not denied those benefits at all, you just don't

feel like waiting
in line & filling out all the forms & suffering the

condescension & hassle
of minor bureaucrats that one must go thru to get those

benefits.

Wrong. I don't qualify for those benefits. My income is

above the limits
of those programs. Or were you advocating I lie to obtain

such benefits?

Perhaps I enjoy greater benefits from our

socio-economic system than
they, but that's the way free enterprise works--you

work harder, earn
more, and live better.


Uh huh. So you started out by yourself, in the woods,

with nothing but
rocks & sticks, and built your business & home up from

there?

Pretty damned close, actually. I literally had nothing

when I graduated
from college. Oh, except for mountains of student loans,

all of which I
paid back.

... So far you haven't convinced me that I am the

recipient of greater
benefits and services than the poor.


That's because you haven't thought about it very long or

very hard.
Although to give you credit, you're further advanced

than I thought in
some ways.


Don't blow smoke up my ass. I've thought about it at

length, and I'm still
unable to find and substance to your claim that I benefit

more than the poor
from governmental spending.

I disagree--see above. But a federal sales tax would

nicely achieve what
you advocate, right or wrong.


Along with stifling business & hurting the economy.


Do you think that income taxes don't stifle business and

hurt the economy?
Remember when the marginal tax rate at the top end was

over 70%? You may be
too young, but I remember it well. And I also remember

people telling me
that it was advantageous to them to work less, make less,

and retain more.
Few spouses worked in those days, in order to lower the

marginal tax rates
which took a bigger bite out of a family's income than the

additional work
created. And we haven't even begun to discuss the effect

that less
disposable income (from over taxation) has on the economy.

Why? And what are you considering "exhorbitant?"


Well, let's put it this way... how much of the US

economy is gov't
expenditures, something like 22% right? So that means

that to finance the
gov't we'd need at least an 22% sales tax... do you

consider that
exorbitant?


Absolutely. But what you are failing to take into account

is the boon to
the economy that eliminating the federal income tax would

have. People
would have more to spend, boosting the economy, creating

jobs, giving people
more discretionary income for buying things that they

want. So it wouldn't
be necessary to tax at the 22% rate. Something more like

12-15% is
considered reasonable by some of the proponents of a

federal sales tax.

That's bull**** and you know it. How does he use up

more public
resources?


Occupies more road space


Really now. You can't believe this is significant. The

Bently is 20' long
while the Focus is 16'. Insignificant to the utilization

of roadways.

& pollutes more air.


Perhaps, but once again insignificantly. What is more

significant are the
smog-belching cars that the poor are often forced to

drive. They pollute
far more, or at the very least average out against the

wealthy's big utes
and sedans.

... Conversely he pays higher insurance premiums for

the luxury car,
burn more fuel, and go through tires more rapidly, as

well as spend far
more on maintenance. All those things help fuel the

economy, keep people
working, and generate tax revenue.


OTOH it does not generate any real wealth.


Tell that to the oil companies, who've recorded record

profits over the past
decade or so when big, consumptive vehicles became

popular. And tell that
to the companies that have created a mega industry in

aftermarket tires for
performance and larger vehicles. Not to mention that the

insurance company
stocks in my mutual funds are performing about as well as

any other facet of
those funds.


His corporation still pays sales tax.



???
No


Of course it does. If the company buys a new car for him,

it pays sales
tax. Or have you already written in an exclusion clause

to the non-existent
federal sales tax for corporations to buy their executives

nice cars??
We're not dealing with a federal income tax any longer, if

the fed. sales
tax takes effect.

Um, because he said he was in so many words?


Like the time he said that 'Freedom of speech means that

I can command
those who disgree with me to shut up.'


He was absolutely serious then, and he was right. And

those he commands to
"shut up" can tell him to go **** himself. That's free

speech.


Max