MeDotOrg wrote:Abraham Lincoln instituted progessive income tax.
ldsfaqs wrote:Shows how much YOU KNOW.....
1. Your "progressive" tax wasn't "progressive" in your meaning of the word.
Let's just start with this: What could my meaning be when describing this tax as 'progressive'?
ldsfaqs wrote:Doesn't matter.... The FACTS of the issue clearly state that it was meant to be a "temporary" measure to FUND THE WAR...!!!
Don't know about you, but in a time a CRISIS, no matter the kind, everyone tightens their belts and try to help out, and are asked to help out.
Deal with that fact, before we move on to the more intricate details.
In other words, stop misrepresenting the facts AND Lincoln first, and then maybe we can have more productive communication.
You can't call Lincoln "liberal" with that one time action, likewise you can't call Bush liberal because his one time initial bank help. Temporary assistance is far different from Government Welfare of businesses and otherwise. Obama's only slowed down because of two reasons, people don't want to give the government money as much, and because of the election, he doesn't want more fodder against him. But still, the time he did engage, good heavens!!!
ldsfaqs, when speaking of income taxes, the word progressive simply means that the rate of taxation goes up as your income goes up. It has nothing to do with 'liberal' or 'progressive' in the political sense of the word. Conversely, a regressive tax is a tax imposed in such a manner that the tax rate decreases as the amount subject to taxation increases.
From the description of Lincoln's tax at Politico:
In keeping with current levies, Congress based the tax on the principle of a graduated, or progressive, payments schedule. It imposed withholding at the source. Individuals earning between $800 and $10,000 a year paid taxes at the rate of 3 percent. The comparable minimum taxable income in 2009, after adjustments for inflation, would be about $19,000. Those with incomes of more than $10,000 paid taxes at a higher rate. Additional sales and excise taxes also made their debuts, as well as estate taxes.
Calling Lincoln's income tax 'progressive' had nothing to do with politics. It had to do with economics.
It was not 'misrepresenting the facts'. It was not a value judgement in a political sense. It was an objective evaluation in an economic sense.
Consider that when you say:
Me, I studied..... to know the actual truth. You, you regurgitate the propaganda..... and don't think and study for yourself.
I agree we can have a 'more productive communication' - but when you attack something I've said because you don't understand what 'progressive' means in a description of a tax, you make it very difficult.
Going back to the original subject of this post, it was that 'liberalism is a mental disorder':
"Like spoiled, angry children, they rebel against the normal responsibilities of adulthood and demand that a parental government meet their needs from cradle to grave."
I've worked my whole life. There was a time I was unemployed where I could have collected unemployment but didn't because I received a severance package. To say that everyone who is a liberal does so because they want to mooch off the government is just not reality.
My political opinions are my own. They were not given to me. They are very different from most people in my family. As I said in another post, all of us tend to filter out historical facts that don’t fit our narrative. Cable news and the internet have made it easier and easier to only hear those facts which amplify the points we wish to make in our narrative. Heaven forbid this country should be made up of people with good intentions on both sides of the aisle! That would make being right all the time so much harder!
The idea you put forward that "...most of both parties still had traditional American values" is to put forth a believe in a homogeneous America that may exist in some narratives, but never existed in reality. There was strife. There was conflict. There were anarchists, socialists, communists, progressives, laissez-faire capitalists and union-smashing Pinkertons. Do you think we have the 40 hour work week, vacation days, and employer-offered health insurance because Big Business just decided magnanimously to give them?
Behind democracy, what principle do we have? It is that sovereignty resides with the people. That there is virtue in our collective wisdom. Think about it: we are 300 million people trying to find a way to work together. YOU ARE NEVER GOING TO GET EVERYTHING YOU WANT. Utopias, whether religious, Marxist or Objectivist will never work because people have different ideals.
For our Government to become effective again, people have to come to the table understanding that half the people disagree with them, and that compromise is the only way our Democracy will move forward.
A strong middle class is the glue that holds a democracy together. It holds the center together. When political opinions become so divergent that compromise is impossible, democracy stops functioning. (That, to me, is the parallel between Modern America and pre-Nazi Germany. The destruction of the middle class and the loss of a political 'center'.) If you want that to happen, just keep on believing that the widening gap between the rich on one side and the poor and middle class on the other, is not a concern for our democracy. It is NOT, as Romney says, something to be discussed 'in quiet rooms'. It is central to a functioning democracy.
In the 1960s (despite Romney's rose-tinted reminiscences of his youth) we had the civil rights movement, race riots, lynchings, church bombings, and a huge divide over the war in Vietnam.
And yet despite all of that, at a time when unions were strong, when labor was strong, and helped in no small part by the strongest middle class in our history, our government continued to function, much more effectively than it does today. There may have been riots in the streets, but in Congress people were flexible. Congress passed Medicare, despite the protestations of Goldwater and Reagan that we would descend into a socialist hell. Nixon didn't try to stop it or destroy it. He moved on. Now Medicare, that great harbinger of socialism, is considered, sacrosanct by Paul Ryan (or so he says).
Americans like to think of themselves as uncompromising, but out whole system of Government is built on compromise. A binary, zero-sum game worldview is not productive in that context. And the idea of liberalism as a mental disease is just one ideologue making civil dialog more difficult.