Wow! Soch, old sport…Great rant!
So your dad was named Zoltan also. Wonderful! And he fought hardasses. My Dad did the same. He was tortured and killed by Russian hardasses during the Hungarian Revolution.
We have so much in common.
But, you still have not answered my question: How much of what I earn belongs to you …and why?
And please do not confuse a person’s benevolence with what is forced by a government.
Thanks! Always enjoy a good rant.
Sorry to hear about your Dad. Mine was lucky, and my Mom, or I wouldn’t be here. I was born in the DP camp where they met after trekking across the country to get out. It wasn’t torture or death, but the saw plenty of it. My Mom actually organized people into theft squads to steal food for the people in the camp.
They almost starved keeping me alive, so I have some gratitude for them as you might imagine. Your story must be full of such and more. Glad you made it.
How much of your money “belongs” to me? $0. And likewise mine to you. For my part, I live on $610 a month, a bit of savings, and work when I can get it. I do about 16 hrs volunteer work a month, more when my Mom was alive. The $610 is SS and isn’t more because I did a lot of years out of the Country doing what might be called humanitarian, work so while it isn’t as much as most, it is more than some get. I still donate to some charities. I figure out my tax, but I’m in the same category as GE and some other large profitable corporations: $0 income tax.
If I had a guaranteed living wage, which in my case might amount to about $2K/mo total, I’d be doing a heck of a lot more volunteer work. That would mean that, at my usual rates, the community would be getting a very nice bargain for services rendered. I’m invested in the well being of my community, attending County and City meetings on various issues, even being an activist on occasion, and work in both the mental health ans arts fields.
It in in that service capacity that I have come to certain conclusions. Basically they are summed up in this: It is far cheaper and overall of much greater benefit to the community to take care of those under the poverty line according to their minimal needs, including leisure, than to do rescue work and mop-ups during and after crises, most of which might be very well avoided had the individual a basic living wage and necessary care, whether they “earned” it or not. The community would be less stressed, and the exigencies of poverty would less contribute to the financial and security burden of the community.
Now there are people in this area who militate, quite literally, for no taxes and for guns, more guns and freer use of them, and the cutting of every imaginable social support program. Perhaps they would be happier in Somalia, as that is the logical conclusion of their aims. So the prevalence of greed in humanity has long ago convinced me that a free market means devolution into barbarism. That might be good for the robber barons, whom we already contend with in the form of banks.
Jefferson, as I said, wasn’t a fortune teller. Our pubic financial state is an inherent outcome of using fiat money operating with a fractional reserve system. Under that system, perhaps including some other factors, I understand why you are in fear for your finances. Most people are, and rightfully so. Everyone feels that they own the return of their labors. Yet those labors do not happen in isolation or without inherent dependency, except for banks, which can literally and legally produce money out of thin air by fractional reserve.
So to the end of a healthy civilization, which clearly we are not on the verge of yet, I kind of go with with what Jesus said about rendering unto Caesar. Seems He understood that civilization, or what passes for it, runs on taxes. Ideally, and I stress ideally, no citizen would go without basics in such a Nation as ours, which has a climbing GDP and soaring CEO and corporate bottom line, some way proportionally above the world average.And the buying power of the average laborer, by design, is also declining: it now takes $100 to buy what $10 would have in my birth year. Of course, here that is all legal. Financial predation is in fact a way of life here. But we also have to ask if legal and usual is necessarily good, and is our way really in our best common interest, or only in the excellent to superb interest of a very few.
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