First, do you understand the concept of “total dollars” vs. “percentage of income”?
You seem very upset and angry, so let me clarify. But first, let me provide my source…I’m going to be referring to data from Arthur Brooks’ own website. In case you missed it, he’s the guy that actually collected and interpreted the data in that article…you know, the data you keep saying you’re reading- that is, the data that you keep saying I’m misinterpreting. I guess the guy who collected it, interpreted it, and wrote a book about it must not understand his data better than you do…that’s weird, huh? Maybe you should let him know he got it all wrong…
source:
arthurbrooks.net/whoreallycares/excerpt.html
“In 2000, households headed by a conservative gave, on average, 30 percent more money to charity than households headed by a liberal ($1,600 to $1,227). This discrepancy is not simply an artifact of income differences; on the contrary, liberal families earned an average of 6 percent more per year than conservative families, and conservative families gave more than liberal families within every income class, from poor to middle class to rich.”
I know that, by itself, that one quote proves what I’ve been saying, but stay with me here…
What he’s saying is that conservatives gave 30% more money than liberals- that means that the total amount of money from conservatives was 30% more than the money from liberals. To clarify, that 30% isn’t referring to a percentage of their income- it is referring to the fact that to total amount of dollars given by conservatives was 30% greater than the total amount of dollars given by liberals.
Now, it also so happens that the article states “low-income people give almost 30% more as a share of their income.”
Ok, here is where I think you got confused… 30% shows up TWICE, but it refers to TWO DIFFERENT THINGS…that is, the two measures of 30% are measuring two different things, they aren’t the same thing just because they’re both 30%. Kind of like if I eat 30% of the apples, and 30% of the oranges, I’ve eaten both apples and oranges. It doesn’t mean that I think apples ARE oranges.
Let me sum that up again for you…
the first time 30% shows up is in reference to the fact that that conservatives give 30% more to charity than liberals- this 30% refers to the fact that their total giving is 30% greater than that of liberals.
the SECOND time 30% shows up is in reference to the fact that the working poor “give almost 30% more as a share of their income.” Now, before when I said that conservatives give 30% more, that was in total dollars. This time, when I say that the working poor give 30% more as a share of their total income, what I’m referring to is that, compared to rich people, the money that the working poor give to charity represents 30% more of their income than the % of income given by rich people.
you seemed very frustrated with my facts, so I hope that helps to clear everything up for you…if you don’t like my facts, I invite you to cite the sources where you got your facts.
As far as the rest of what you wrote…
Your ad hominem attacks are a thin attempt to disguise the fact that you still haven’t posted any evidence of your claims. Just saying “I looked at the source data of the articles you posted” doesn’t cut it- if you want to make a fact claim, you are going to have to post your sources and your data. I’m just going to go ahead and ignore everything you write from here on out until you actually start backing up your claims with data and sources.