S
Sochi
Guest
You are right. It seems to me that post 59 & 60 go in that direction.Interesting point.
Still though, I think weāre missing the core of the problem in solving it.
You are right. It seems to me that post 59 & 60 go in that direction.Interesting point.
Still though, I think weāre missing the core of the problem in solving it.
Wow! Soch, old sportā¦Great rant!What did you earn when you were an infant? OK then, infants have to earn their own way! How about the sick and dying? Right Let them rot! (you too, Zoltan, when you canāt earn any more, or if your savings run out) Soldiers what defended your way of life, returning to no jobs? Heck, let them die for their country and you Zoltan. Single mothers abandoned? Hey, there are plenty of jobs out there at minimum wage that donāt pay costs and keep the mom away from the kids! Tough luck, Mom! Streets? Fire protection? Police? Ambulances? Who the heck needs those? To hell with them all, right Zoli? (Itās ok, it was my Dadās name too. He spent his life fighting hardasses who had the attitude toned by your post.).
If you are living at a poverty wage, I sure donāt expect you to pay taxes. None. If you are making 5-10K an hour on other peopleās backs, it is responsible maintenance to take care of the citizenry. Even if you donāt want to. As history tells us, the best way for a republic to fail is to institutionalize great inequity. The question is in the word āearn.ā Printing money for free as loans isnāt earning, it is extorting. Breaking your back in hard labor to keep a family alive at minimum wage just is unfair and irresponsible.
Money in the worldās so called ādemocraticā nations has been created through debt for more than the last 200 years by the private banking system that has been restoring what was once in history a feudalistic (non-democratic) existence for the masses. The money created in this system has been, and is cause for all our booms and busts. We have got so used to its enslavement that we (especially governments believing in their economic advisers) cannot imagine the absence of ālegally fraudulentā banks. In a sane system, the kinds of questions we are fighting with wouldnāt exist, or be greatly alleviated.
Because I WORKED very hard to earn it. We all deserve what we earn.What makes you think you deserve what you earn?
But Iām not a killer.What if you some mafia killer?
No, giving willingly is a donation. Taking money out of peopleās checks to āredistributeā is theft. I am NOT talking about our current taxes, which go to support civil programs. Iām talking about people who want everyoneās paychecks chopped up and āredistributedā to āeven outā everything - setting aside the fact that how much a person earns is correlated to the skills, education and experience required to do the job.Redistribution need not be forced. If you gave willingly to help the less fortunate than that is redistribution. If everyone or most of us gave willingly of our time, treasure and talent, that is redistribution.
People assume redistribution is forced. It may. If it is forced itās nothing but theft. I donāt care who is doing it. It still is theft.
Now the sticking point is that the obligation of a citizen may include paying taxes. How much is the point of debate.
Because I WORKED very hard to earn it. We all deserve what we earnā¦
How much of what I earn belongs to you ā¦and why?
Yet when that labor is shifted back onshore, itās treated on the same level as blue-collar/back office dirty work. Canāt I say I remember the last person whoād want āFactory Workerā or āCall Center Agentā on their resume.If our corporations place factories in third-world countries to sell products to us, I think that gives us some responsibility towards them.
This is nonsense. The Biblical example of a āneighborā to the Jews is a Samaritan, not a Jew. The Samaritan recognized his duty to his neighbor and paid for his injured neighborās stay at the inn. Thatās what Christ would have us do.I have nothing to do with them. I do not know them, they have their own lives separate from mine. I will not help them regardless of emotion.
I will help my children, and everyone elseās children who live within my nation -the United States of America. I will sacrifice my life for these people only. These people are my only neighbors.
If I am starving, you have a moral duty to feed me. Maybe Iām starving because of my own poor life choices. Maybe Iām starving because Iām a kid who was never given a fair shot in life. It doesnāt matter. Weāre Christians. We donāt leave people to die when we could have saved them.How much of what I earn belongs to you ā¦and why?
And what do the starving children in the world deserve? Do they deserve to die a slow, agonizing death? Are you empathic enough to feel some of the pain and suffering that people living in extreme poverty experience? Remember the second commandment of Christ: Love your neighbor as yourself.Because I WORKED very hard to earn it. We all deserve what we earn.
We have to be very careful throwing around the word ādeserveā. At every mass we hear the words ādo not consider what we truly deserve, but grant us your forgiveness.ā. This is an acknowledgement that from Godās perspective, none of us truly deserve anything in any absolute sense. If we have āearnedā anything, it is by the grace of God that we have done so. It would be well for us to keep that in mind at all times. It is also clear from observation that āworking hardā does not correlate perfectly with earnings. A systems analyst who was lucky enough to get a good education and to be blessed with a quick mind does not have to work nearly as hard as a sanitation worker or drywall installer, and yet the former can get twice the pay as the later. Does he necessarily deserve it? Well, from a legal perspective, yes he does. Our economic system would collapse if we denied the workings of supply and demand. From from a moral perspective, which I gather is the perspective of this thread, the matter is quite different. A lot of the reason for individual prosperity is good luck (or Godās grace) more than it is our own merits. Hard work does play a role, but not so overwhelming a role as many would have us believe.Because I WORKED very hard to earn it. We all deserve what we earn.
Do government workers deserve what they earn? What about abortionists? What about the laborer in a developing country that earns $2 a day, are they getting just what they deserve?Because I WORKED very hard to earn it. We all deserve what we earn.
I do???If I am starving, you have a moral duty to feed me.
Of course not. I am a kind, benevolent person who respects others. But if you tell me that I am morally obligated to feed youā¦then kindness, benevolence, respect and the virtue of charity are all reduced to a cheap guilt trip.Now, you can ask for services or something, but what if I canāt offer them? What if Iām a stroke victim who is just learning to speak again? Are you going to tell me that since I havenāt earned my bread, Iām not allowed to eat?
I do feel some of the pain and suffering that people living in extreme poverty experience. Like you. I am praying for them.And what do the starving children in the world deserve? Do they deserve to die a slow, agonizing death? Are you empathic enough to feel some of the pain and suffering that people living in extreme poverty experience? Remember the second commandment of Christ: Love your neighbor as yourself.
LOVE!![]()
Very good points and worth a deep ponder.We have to be very careful throwing around the word ādeserveā. At every mass we hear the words ādo not consider what we truly deserve, but grant us your forgiveness.ā. This is an acknowledgement that from Godās perspective, none of us truly deserve anything in any absolute sense. If we have āearnedā anything, it is by the grace of God that we have done so. It would be well for us to keep that in mind at all times. It is also clear from observation that āworking hardā does not correlate perfectly with earnings. A systems analyst who was lucky enough to get a good education and to be blessed with a quick mind does not have to work nearly as hard as a sanitation worker or drywall installer, and yet the former can get twice the pay as the later. Does he necessarily deserve it? Well, from a legal perspective, yes he does. Our economic system would collapse if we denied the workings of supply and demand. From from a moral perspective, which I gather is the perspective of this thread, the matter is quite different. A lot of the reason for individual prosperity is good luck (or Godās grace) more than it is our own merits. Hard work does play a role, but not so overwhelming a role as many would have us believe.
NoDo government workers deserve what they earn?
Religiously and morally NO. Secularly, YesWhat about abortionists?
They are getting what they agreed to, so Yes.What about the laborer in a developing country that earns $2 a day, are they getting just what they deserve?
Then you should graciously trade places with your friend and not feel guilty.I would say that I am lucky that I live in a country with good wages. I have a friend in a less developed country who works harder than I do, yet he makes about 1/20 of what I do. So do I deserve the big money and he doesnāt? I donāt think so.
Yes, but this thread is about forced re-distribution, not charity. Iām with you on individual charity if thatās what we feel we should do.This is nonsense. The Biblical example of a āneighborā to the Jews is a Samaritan, not a Jew. The Samaritan recognized his duty to his neighbor and paid for his injured neighborās stay at the inn. Thatās what Christ would have us do.
Now, I can maybe understand opposing spending taxes on other countries, but that doesnāt mean that we as individuals donāt have a duty to help the poor, both in our own nations and overseas.
What youāre describing is a very competitive person. What about all the people who do not value senseless competition such as what you describe? Such people, given they are of good moral character, deserve a fair amount of prosperity.Very good points and worth a deep ponder.
I would only disagree with your take on individual prosperity. Luck plays a role for a lottery winner and makes him prosperous. From my perspective, hard work, courage, and risk are the main reasons for individual prosperity.
Why donāt government workers deserve what they get? They agreed to it, and someone agreed to pay it, so why are government workers any different than any other worker? For example, I lose workers in my department fairly frequently to other jobs because our pay scale is below market, yet those workers didnāt deserve what they were getting paid?
Actually, I am not competent enough to do his job. Also, there are immigration laws in both countries that would prevent switching places. Although I have toyed with the idea of bringing him here on a āvacationā and lining up some ways for him to bring in money.Then you should graciously trade places with your friend and not feel guilty.
People who do not value āsenseless competitionā are people without ambition. They do not want to work. They think the world owes them a living.What youāre describing is a very competitive person. What about all the people who do not value senseless competition such as what you describe? Such people, given they are of good moral character, deserve a fair amount of prosperity.
LOVE!![]()
Sorry. Itās a personal opinion of mine. All government workers are overpaid.Why donāt government workers deserve what they get? They agreed to it, and someone agreed to pay it, so why are government workers any different than any other worker? For example, I lose workers in my department fairly frequently to other jobs because our pay scale is below market, yet those workers didnāt deserve what they were getting paid?