Eric wrote:Do you believe that someone making $12,000 a year deserves to be taxed the same as someone making $70,000,000 a year? I sure don't.
Me either. I had in mind middle-class people with sufficient. People like me.
I would also agree to live on half of what I make if it meant the end of poverty. The rich, however, wouldn't.
I don't think it would mean the end of poverty. However, if it would, I would support it if we the people voted on it and agreed to it. If it's constitutional (I believe it is), and isn't something I'm unwilling to have happen to me, then I'll support it. I will also support funding programs we vote for but which I think are a bad idea. One example of that is a light rail project which I think is going down the wrong streets. I'll protest it while I can, but I will still fork over my taxes if we decide to go through with it and will quit speaking against it once the final decision is made.
Well, I think at a certain point this becomes unreasonable. Billionaires can still be billionaires after being taxed 80% of their income. I know working class people that could not survive on 20% of their paycheck.
That is true. Perhaps percentage of income isn't the proper measure. I certainly don't feel right taxing the working class much if at all when they have a hard time buying healthy food and keeping their homes in good repair but away from the repro man. However, the basic principle I believe in is that I should not make the rich bear a tax burden which I wouldn't want or would be unwilling to bear.
You and I are considered obscenely wealthy compared to people in, say, Haiti. I wouldn't like it if they got to set taxes and taxed me until I was what they considered rich but not obscenely wealthy.
It wouldn't make me feel any better about forcing my morals on the rich, no.
Why do you hold the rich in such high regard? What's wrong with forcing these very simple "morals" on people like my old boss, Angelo Mozillo?
The rich are people too. As much as I don't like it, I think people have the right to be rude and uncaring to each other. If we want to start forcing people to be nice to each other, then maybe we should force people to smile at each other, stop rickrolling each other, stop gossiping about and making fun of each other at school. Oh, and we can force people to stop saying rude things about other people's religion. Simon Belmont would like that one. I wouldn't mind it either.
Furthermore, I think many wealthy people are good people. Two of the wealthiest people in our country are also big philanthropists. I would rather let them donate to causes as they see fit over taking it from them and giving it to causes we like. Maybe some of their causes aren't the absolute best, but I do appreciate that they are trying and I like letting them have that feeling of accomplishment at doing it voluntarily instead of resentment from being forced into it.
But again, I'm not against raising their taxes if I make a sacrifice too.
I think the iPhone met its demise when AT&T started limiting data usage. I've always had a jailbroken iPhone, which makes things much better, but AT&T is a real drag.
True, but I did prefer AT&T's customer service and cell coverage to Sprint. Maybe I just got lucky though.