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rlg94086
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Have you watered the magical, mystery money tree today?You’re hung up too much on your percentages. Persuader already explained to you how your percentage number don’t say much about the actual burden on the rich.
Have you watered the magical, mystery money tree today?You’re hung up too much on your percentages. Persuader already explained to you how your percentage number don’t say much about the actual burden on the rich.
I disagree.Yet, the simple household budget model is key to the problems with the national budget model. There is no misunderstanding. When one steps back at looks at the national budget from the simple household budget model, one finally can see the forest despite the trees. The simple concept holds true for the national budget.
We export life saving antiretroviral drugs for people in Africa suffering from HIV, among other things, we as Catholics can continue to speak for the good things done, and advocate for changes in policy that will better reflect our values.No. Where I disagree, with spending cuts in general, international charity is fair game for spending cuts. Given that our brand of international charity includes, in good measure, family planning centers, I don’t see how we do any good exporting our immorality.
Excuse me? Have I taken a tone in any of this thread that deserved this last comment?Sure, if we are not talking about Catholic social justice teaching. Sure, if you want to deny the Real Presence at the table of Catholic dialogue. What rankles - what draws rancour from serious Catholics - is the denial of the real presence of persons unborn in the name of Catholic social justice. The lack of acknowledgement by persons on this discussion thread, purporting to defend the interests of the “poor and vulnerable”, categorically refuses to bring the unborn to the table of their interpretation of Catholic social justice teaching. You want to know the truth? You can’t handle the truth.
Actually he didnt explain anyhting. ill ask you -if the top 25% of earners paying 84% of all taxes is not enough how much is? 90% 100%You’re hung up too much on your percentages. Persuader already explained to you how your percentage number don’t say much about the actual burden on the rich.
If you didn’t graduate from Enron’s School of Business…or Hogwarts, you wouldn’t understand.Have you watered the magical, mystery money tree today?
Or we could raise the tax on people who make more than 250,000 a year, close loop holes on corporate tax, AND yes make budget cuts carefully - with a goal of getting the budget covered within 10 years - because if we cut too deeply - from what I understand - we will inhibit growth only making the situation worse -But the problem is we currently need to tax everyone who makes like $75,000 or above at 100% of their income in order to cover the budget this year. Quite simply, this is not feasible. Deep budget cuts need to be made as well as tax hikes.
In the United States, how much do you have to earn before you are required to pay federal income tax?Actually he didnt explain anyhting. ill ask you -if the top 25% of earners paying 84% of all taxes is not enough how much is? 90% 100%
You and Persuader would have us believe that 47% of Amercians are so destitute they can not afford to pay taxes. As has been pointed out before when 47% pay no federal income taxe its easy to convince them to raise taxes on everybody else.
I don’t come anywhere close to approaching my credit limits. And I’ve seen them raised over time. But then I’m not a nation. Our nation is much larger than my household.How far is too far for our nation? Should we just keep upping the debt ceiling?
How about we just end the Bush tax cuts (all of them) and go back to the spending levels during the Clinton administration? Those were the glory days, weren’t they? I hear we had a surplus.Or we could raise the tax on people who make more than 250,000 a year, close loop holes on corporate tax, AND yes make budget cuts carefully - with a goal of getting the budget covered within 10 years - because if we cut too deeply - from what I understand - we will inhibit growth only making the situation worse -
Indeed. The bigger the debt, the harder they fall…I don’t come anywhere close to approaching my credit limits. And I’ve seen them raised over time. But then I’m not a nation. Our nation is much larger than my household.
I make over 40,000 US dollars and get paid to file my income taxes every year. Not only that, but my children qualify for free health care till their 18. My wife could have gotten a brand new, expensive, breast pump when my daughter was born and we could get free formula/baby food to feed her now. Plus we could also get free food for us as well.In the United States, how much do you have to earn before you are required to pay federal income tax?
Here in Australia, the tax-free threshold is $6,000pa. If you earn over $6,000 in the year, you pay federal income tax.
We could 4elise, but that would require a meetings of the minds to a greater extent than appears possible now on your number. I recall quite awhile back we were discussing the quarter million dollars a year figure and people here were saying that is middle class.Or we could raise the tax on people who make more than 250,000 a year, close loop holes on corporate tax, AND yes make budget cuts carefully - with a goal of getting the budget covered within 10 years - because if we cut too deeply - from what I understand - we will inhibit growth only making the situation worse -
I’ve seen a guy making nearly four times that and not draw a paycheck from the company to keep from having to fire employees.We could 4elise, but that would require a meetings of the minds to a greater extent than appears possible now on your number. I recall quite awhile back we were discussing the quarter million dollars a year figure and people here were saying that is middle class.
You and so many others really harp endlessly on that 47%. If you’re so committed to your ideal of fairness, what are you to make of all the people starving to death or dying of easily curable diseases in sub-saharan Africa? Why, exactly, does the 47% that supposedly does not pay federal income tax merit so much concern from you?Actually he didnt explain anyhting. ill ask you -if the top 25% of earners paying 84% of all taxes is not enough how much is? 90% 100%
You and Persuader would have us believe that 47% of Amercians are so destitute they can not afford to pay taxes. As has been pointed out before when 47% pay no federal income taxe its easy to convince them to raise taxes on everybody else.
Oh, and ‘you guys’ don’t do the exact same thing? Most people on welfare are just lazy frauds, and all that doesn’t sound familiar?I’ve seen a guy making nearly four times that and not draw a paycheck from the company to keep from having to fire employees.
But you guys will stop at nothing to lump him in with the rest of your numbers you want to consider rich and force him to fire people.
So, do you believe the tax rates prior to the Bush cuts were draconian for the lower 47%? Were they suffering endlessly and nearly to the level of the “people starving to death or dying of easily curable diseases in sub-saharan Africa?”You and so many others really harp endlessly on that 47%. If you’re so committed to your ideal of fairness, what are you to make of all the people starving to death or dying of easily curable diseases in sub-saharan Africa? Why, exactly, does the 47% that supposedly does not pay federal income tax merit so much concern from you?
I’ve said before, it can’t because of its financial significance, because you must know as well as I do that even if they were taxed as if in the highest bracket (what, almost 40%?), the bottom 47% of the population would still only be bearing maybe 2 or 3% of the total tax burden, and the top 25% would still be paying 84 (or maybe 83)% of the tax burden. And you would still have you talking point, you could say, “why on earth to 47% of the population pay only 2% of the taxes” and everyone would all indignant, failing to recall that that 47% of the population makes around only 10%, or perhaps even less, of the income. That;s why.
Life simply isn’t fair. That’s the short answer. Why, of all the undeserved injustices in the world, that 2 or 3% in lost tax revenue (which, if imposed, would have a negative effect on the economy not worth the money gained from it) irks you so much, I cannot understand.
The argument is more to point out the fact that the rich are already paying a majority of the tax burden. And that those in the lower income areas are not only paying no income taxes, but getting way more than they need from the system to survive. There is hardly any means testing below 50k. All you gotta do is walk into the local DHS office and they will start throwing welfare checks at you.You and so many others really harp endlessly on that 47%. If you’re so committed to your ideal of fairness, what are you to make of all the people starving to death or dying of easily curable diseases in sub-saharan Africa? Why, exactly, does the 47% that supposedly does not pay federal income tax merit so much concern from you?
I’ve said before, it can’t because of its financial significance, because you must know as well as I do that even if they were taxed as if in the highest bracket (what, almost 40%?), the bottom 47% of the population would still only be bearing maybe 2 or 3% of the total tax burden, and the top 25% would still be paying 84 (or maybe 83)% of the tax burden. And you would still have you talking point, you could say, “why on earth to 47% of the population pay only 2% of the taxes” and everyone would all indignant, failing to recall that that 47% of the population makes around only 10%, or perhaps even less, of the income. That;s why.
Life simply isn’t fair. That’s the short answer. Why, of all the undeserved injustices in the world, that 2 or 3% in lost tax revenue (which, if imposed, would have a negative effect on the economy not worth the money gained from it) irks you so much, I cannot understand.
Being from an area where everyone knew everyone’s business before there ever was a Facebook. I can take you to more people’s houses that are lazy frauds than I can those who actually need the help they get.Oh, and ‘you guys’ don’t do the exact same thing? Most people on welfare are just lazy frauds, and all that doesn’t sound familiar?
Excuse me? This was in reply toNice! Demonize those who disagree with you. I will have to share this with those I work with in my charitable organizations. They will enjoy a good chuckle.![]()
May I ask if you find anything offensive about this original post? Or does it deserve aOriginally Posted by iamrefreshed View Post
Catholics who want the government to do their charity work just don’t want to get their hands dirty. It’s much easier, I guess, to step over a homeless man and mutter “Why doesn’t he take advantage of a social program” than it is to stop.
I find the original post offensive, as well. My apologies, as I read your post but didn’t see the original person’s post. Mea culpa.Excuse me? This was in reply to
May I ask if you find anything offensive about this original post? Or does it deserve abecause you may agree with the inference?
I apologize if you took offense to my response but **it is my experience **that people who can make such comments and who hold such low opinion of the poor - ie calling people ‘wellfair queens’ are not people involved in direct care for the poor.
This direction toward tossing posts like the above into the discussion is what is discouraging - and perhaps I should avoid responding to inflammatory statements because even if I try to respond reasonably it is heard by those with opposing views as “Demonize” - never my intention. Very frustrating.
thud (the sound of my head hitting the computer)
You aren’t seriously going to say that the addition of the Department of Education in the 70s and the federal spending have actually improved the situation, are you? Are you saying we should throw more money at the problem?
Yes, education is different state-to-state. The schools in my state are better than those just across the river. I have a potential job in California, a VERY wealthy state with VERY high taxes, and one of the things that concerns me is the horrid quality of the schools down there. I’ve lived there (in fact, I’m from there), so I know the difference in quality.
We need to improve our education systems, but adding homosexual education requirements, as they just did in California, isn’t really going to make the schools that much better, is it? I don’t think it’s a money issue either…
I think that knee-jerk reaction is the same one I have - and of course you can disagree, you have free will, and I would not imply that to disagree is sinful - or that you don’t care about the poor - this discussion keeps degenerating to such implication -I think the USCCB statement is a knee-jerk, don’t cut anything for the poor, statement. I don’t believe it is saying that national programs are preferred. Even if it did, the committee has no authority, and I am free to disagree with its statement.