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Pinkie, um. I don't think I asked you if you had ever read any of my posts before. But now that I know the answer to a question I probably didn't ask... I'm kinda curious. Why haven't you ever read any of my posts before?
Pinkie, I blame myself for not bringing my posts to your attention earlier.
Sure! I'd love to discuss taxation. Let's start off with a practical exercise!
Step 1. I tell you that I have your best interests at heart
Step 2. You send me a lot of money
Step 3. I spend your money on things that are good for you
Then we'll switch roles. Sound like a plan?
Let's see if we have any areas of agreement, shall we?
We need government of some sort....public transportation, food safety, law and order, just to name a few.
If we can agree on that, perhaps we can also agree we cannot have government unless we pay for it via taxation.
So far, so good?
Can you offer an example of a public good that people would forget to fund? (hint, it's a trick question...by offering an example you automatically disprove your example)
This is all based on the idea "we cant afford". Yes we can, but some are willing to pay what is needed. And that is the real discussion.
Those households could be millionaires and billionaires, so while the figure seems like a lot, it could be just a little bit when averaged over all of the group. The real question is what would the top tax bracket or the top two tax brackets have to be to balance the budget?No, that is your made up claim.
Let's assume you meant "some areN'T willing to pay what is needed." Well I wonder who you think isn't willing to pay what is needed. Let's just take those making $250,000 a year or more. Leave the lower earners alone, they need all the help they can get, right? $250k+ is about 2% of US households, and with there being about 112 million households, that means about 2.24 million households make $250k+. What would each of those households need to be "willing" to hand over to the federal government to cover just this year's federal deficit?
About $714,000. Per household. This year alone.
So, what have we learned today? "We can't afford."
Those households could be millionaires and billionaires, so while the figure seems like a lot, it could be just a little bit when averaged over all of the group.
I guess simply put, you can say that we need a balanced budget, and even run a surplus in good times to cover the bad economic times. But we also need many programs that are working.
The trick is to cut from programs that don't work so well or are over-funded while not cutting the important programs.
Overall, we need a balanced approach that includes real spending cuts and also tax increases as well.
You're confusing worth, and what you're making. You're talking about people that have more than $250,000 per year not people that make more than $250,000. You don't pay taxes on what you own, you only pay taxes on income for income tax. So the families that you're talking about, that are gearing up to retire, would not be making more than $250,000 in one year, and would not be included in the group that pays $700,000. People that are making more than $250,000, paying $700,000 averaged over millionaires and billionaires may not be that much.By definition some of them are millionaires and billionaires, but there are only about 400 billionaires.
There are lots of millionaire households, by net worth. Most of these "millionaires" probably have between $1 and 3 million and are gearing up to retire. For example, a family's $300,000 house and $1.2 million retirement funds make them "millionaires," but that's what they need to retire. That's what they saved diligently to accumulate, on salaries that are not that large. How are people like these going to fork over half a career's worth of savings ($700,000) to cover "their fair share" of this single year's federal spending irresponsibility?
If you think tax increases are off the table like the Republicans do, then you are not being serious about solving the deficit. We need something like 50/50 spending cuts to tax increases to solve the deficit problem, maybe 60/40, but something around 50/50 spending cuts to tax increases.Unfortunately, tax increases and very careful spending cuts will not even make a dent.
You're confusing worth, and what you're making.
So the families that you're talking about, that are gearing up to retire, would not be making more than $250,000 in one year, and would not be included in the group that pays $700,000.
People that are making more than $250,000, paying $700,000 averaged over millionaires and billionaires may not be that much.
Again, the real question is what will the highest bracket have to be to balance the budget?
If you think tax increases are off the table like the Republicans do, then you are not being serious about solving the deficit.
We need something like 50/50 spending cuts to tax increases to solve the deficit problem, maybe 60/40, but something around 50/50 spending cuts to tax increases.
I said, those guys could be millionaires and billionaires, I didn't say every single millionaire fits in this group. And then you give a long explanation on someone who doesn't fit in that group. You are clearly confusing people who have money versus people who make more than $250,000. I never confused them and I never said anything that you assumed.I most certainly am not. You said "these people might be millionaires and billionaires." When you talk about these people, you're talking net worth.
No, I'm not confusing anything, you are not understanding everything said. There are people who make millions in one year and there are people who make billions in one year. Say someone made $50 million in one year, is $700,000 that much? No its not. Remember, the minimum someone makes in that group is $250,000. So averaged against people who make $25 million, $50 million, $30 million, $10 million, $700,000 may not be that much.Read that again a few more times. You don't understand what you're saying. You are the one who is clearly confusing wealth and income.
No, I figured it out, it's around 100%. The Tax Foundation - Summary of Latest Federal Individual Income Tax DataWell over 100%.
No, they do make an impact, depends on how much they are.It's not that they're off the table, it's that they do soooo little to address our runaway debt that it's sickening.
You're not understanding that part because that math does add up, its applied to the whole deficit. So that half the deficit is made up in spending cuts, and the other half is made up in taxes, so the budget is then balanced and its made up in 50/50 proportion of cuts to taxes. Around 60/40 would be better so that out of a deficit of $1.6 trillion you could do something like $900 billion in cuts and raise taxes by $700 billion to eliminate the deficit.You're making this up as you go, to sound "fair," but the math doesn't add up. This won't even come close.
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