S
sedonaman
Guest
A friend who is a life-long salesman once said that people would rather be lied to than told the truth, so they actually demand this “institutionalized dishonesty”, hence there is a lot of psychology involved in selling the current system.…When I looked at buying a house I was told about all the tax advantages, etc. But that’s no advantage to me since I’m sure the housing prices are simply higher because of it. It’s institutionalized dishonesty–telling us we’re getting a good deal, when for example, your tax subsidy for a mortgage is really only a benefit for the bank.
I posted this experiment before in which there are 10 taxpayers each with a dollar, and the government taxes each one 50 cents. The people would revolt. But the government taxes each one a dollar and gives each one back 50 cents, and they are happy.
This brings us to the second thing which is that the government has given everyone a stake in the current system. Look at the numerous deductions as supermarket discount coupons that give you dollars off. But a deal available to everyone is not a real deal. When Dick Armey proposed a flat tax of 17%, the first question out of the mouths of the reporters was, “Do we get to keep our home mortgage deduction?” His reply was that he’d have to raise the proposed 17% to 19%.
So, there is literally no hope for any sanity in the system because people would rather engage in a grand delusion that they are getting a lunch that costs less than the next guy’s.