The_Technomancer said:My god its brilliant! And then when it all collapses we'll escape in our jets to somewhere nice in the Caribbean and let the rest of the people eat themselves.
But... Who will mow our lawns??
Can we take some with us?
The_Technomancer said:My god its brilliant! And then when it all collapses we'll escape in our jets to somewhere nice in the Caribbean and let the rest of the people eat themselves.
JoeTheBlow said:On Newsnight (BBC) last night a Chinese and American economic rep had some good stuff about this.
Mentioned was the fact that both America and China think that they are the centre of the world, but while China has thought this for the past 6000 years, only America feels the need to spread its influence. Like a shouty teenager.
China could have invaded the world many times over during the past 4000 years, they never have.
China is all about the motherland. And keeping up the symbiotic relationship with the US, nothing much will change. Keep looking for that bogeyman.
The Albatross said:People aren't serious about paying off debt. The people who talk about cutting defense spending when talking about reducing debt are so uninformed. Talk about "taxing the rich" and reducing defense spending will not make any discernable change to our debt -- To really begin to pay off debt, we have to raise taxes across the board, on every American, including that 50% +/- who do not pay any federal income tax and are the single largest burden on federal spending: This INCLUDES the elderly and retired. When Democrats talk about "ending Bush tax cuts" they're meaning "ending Bush tax cuts" on a miniscule American population -- an arbitrary number that they designate as "the rich." Enough of this rich/poor dichotomy bull shit, if you are serious about paying off debt, you have to raise taxes on everyone... And that will never happen because nobody is serious about paying off debt, they're serious about staying as career politicians.
On top of that, even if you do completely eliminate "bush tax cuts," as well as establish broad new taxes for all Americans, it would just trickle over the amount that we're going to be spending on interest on our debt alone (some $1t over 10 - 15 years).
So, not only do you have to raise taxes on all Americans and foreigners living in America but you have to cut entitlements across the board. The political effect of this is that a Democrat will never be elected to office ever again in our lifetimes because they'll be seen as selling out a huge portion of their voting block: working class, the "poor," union workers, municiple employees, and anybody who shares sympathies with the "working class." This is politically impossible, but entirely necessary unless we want to have this burden hanging over our generation and our grand, grand childrens generation. However, it will simply never happen. When Barack Obama came to office talking about having to make "tough decisions" and "tough choices" he didn't mean it for his party.
The other major problem with this is a political problem: Republicans are the only party who can effectively raise taxes and cut defense spending, and Democrats are the only party who can effectively cut entitlements. It's not really a catch-22 but it seems like one. Nobody wants to make tough choices though for their party... mainstream liberals who talk about helping to alleviate the debt problem do not take it seriously... they hammer on inneffectual talking points like "taxing the rich" or "eliminating Bush tax cuts" (for a miniscule population -- they don't dare eliminate Bush tax cuts across the board, or increase taxes to their voting blocs) or cutting defense spending. Get real.
Who Rules America: Wealth, Power, and IncomeThe Albatross said:People aren't serious about paying off debt. The people who talk about cutting defense spending when talking about reducing debt are so uninformed. Talk about "taxing the rich" and reducing defense spending will not make any discernable change to our debt -- To really begin to pay off debt, we have to raise taxes across the board, on every American, including that 50% +/- who do not pay any federal income tax and are the single largest burden on federal spending: This INCLUDES the elderly and retired. When Democrats talk about "ending Bush tax cuts" they're meaning "ending Bush tax cuts" on a miniscule American population -- an arbitrary number that they designate as "the rich." Enough of this rich/poor dichotomy bull shit, if you are serious about paying off debt, you have to raise taxes on everyone... And that will never happen because nobody is serious about paying off debt, they're serious about staying as career politicians.
On top of that, even if you do completely eliminate "bush tax cuts," as well as establish broad new taxes for all Americans, it would just trickle over the amount that we're going to be spending on interest on our debt alone (some $1t over 10 - 15 years).
So, not only do you have to raise taxes on all Americans and foreigners living in America but you have to cut entitlements across the board. The political effect of this is that a Democrat will never be elected to office ever again in our lifetimes because they'll be seen as selling out a huge portion of their voting block: working class, the "poor," union workers, municiple employees, and anybody who shares sympathies with the "working class." This is politically impossible, but entirely necessary unless we want to have this burden hanging over our generation and our grand, grand childrens generation. However, it will simply never happen. When Barack Obama came to office talking about having to make "tough decisions" and "tough choices" he didn't mean it for his party.
The other major problem with this is a political problem: Republicans are the only party who can effectively raise taxes and cut defense spending, and Democrats are the only party who can effectively cut entitlements. It's not really a catch-22 but it seems like one. Nobody wants to make tough choices though for their party... mainstream liberals who talk about helping to alleviate the debt problem do not take it seriously... they hammer on inneffectual talking points like "taxing the rich" or "eliminating Bush tax cuts" (for a miniscule population -- they don't dare eliminate Bush tax cuts across the board, or increase taxes to their voting blocs) or cutting defense spending. Get real.
Total Net Worth
Top 1 percent Next 19 percent Bottom 80 percent
1983 33.8% 47.5% 18.7%
1989 37.4% 46.2% 16.5%
1992 37.2% 46.6% 16.2%
1995 38.5% 45.4% 16.1%
1998 38.1% 45.3% 16.6%
2001 33.4% 51.0% 15.6%
2004 34.3% 50.3% 15.3%
2007 34.6% 50.5% 15.0%
In terms of types of financial wealth, the top one percent of households have 38.3% of all privately held stock, 60.6% of financial securities, and 62.4% of business equity. The top 10% have 80% to 90% of stocks, bonds, trust funds, and business equity, and over 75% of non-home real estate. Since financial wealth is what counts as far as the control of income-producing assets, we can say that just 10% of the people own the United States of America.
Mr. B Natural said:People do realize that the social security bar isn't budging because they keep pushing up the social security availability age, right? You do realize that they'll have to keep moving it up to prevent it from shooting up over the future too, right?
Maxim726X said:But... Who will mow our lawns??
Can we take some with us?
http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showpost.php?p=28899834&postcount=407. What were you trying to say then?Cujshi said:I didnt say - aliens, learn how to read, helps on forums such as this one.
Maxim726X said:Only taxing those groups isn't going to raise a lot of money, and they're barely getting by as it is. However taxing the richest 5% will raise a lot of money, and their lifestyles won't change drastically.
Spending also needs to be corralled, but the govt. needs more income too.
Just to clarify for the thread... Who exactly did you mean by "minority groups" here?The Albatross said:The idea that increased taxation of 95% of Americans will not raise money is ridiculous. The only reason we don't seriously talk about increasing taxes across the board is because it is not viable politically. On the contrary, it's really easy for the majority to increase taxes on a fractional minority.
Nobody is serious about the government getting more income when we're only talking about taxing minority groups. And nobody is serious about cutting spending when we're leaving out every group over age 55 or every group under $25k.
it may be ridiculous and very sad, but it's trueThe Albatross said:The idea that increased taxation of 95% of Americans will not raise money is ridiculous. The only reason we don't seriously talk about increasing taxes across the board is because it is not viable politically. On the contrary, it's really easy for the majority to increase taxes on a fractional minority.
Nobody is serious about the government getting more income when we're only talking about taxing minority groups. And nobody is serious about cutting spending when we're leaving out every group over age 55 or every group under $25k.
And it shouldn't because the point is to help the elderly and yet will only support the last 9 years of their lives (if the number doesn't rise, which it consistently will of course). And when the obesity epidemic and no nest egg epidemic rears its ugly head, yeah good times are ahead for the average american.Maxim726X said:And it should. The system was never meant to support as many as it is supporting now.
The Albatross said:The idea that increased taxation of 95% of Americans will not raise money is ridiculous. The only reason we don't seriously talk about increasing taxes across the board is because it is not viable politically. On the contrary, it's really easy for the majority to increase taxes on a fractional minority.
Nobody is serious about the government getting more income when we're only talking about taxing minority groups. And nobody is serious about cutting spending when we're leaving out every group over age 55 or every group under $25k.
mt1200 said:Get out of the middle east and raise taxes for billionaires and rich
Will never happenLegendofJoe said:The solution is to back 3rd party candidates like there is no tomorrow, i.e. people who don't have established constituencies and have less to lose by making contentious decisions. Please for the love of your family, friends, and yourself stop voting Democrats and Republicans into office.
The Albatross said:Will do nothing.
The Albatross said:The idea that increased taxation of 95% of Americans will not raise money is ridiculous.
and watch as demand plummets and the companies lose business and eventually go bankrupt because they couldn't handle a little bit less profit.Parch said:Double taxes.
Double the price of all consumer products.
The president just has to give another patriotic speech and the sheep will follow.
balladofwindfishes said:Will never happen
We've always been a country of two parties, who's names have been the only things that changed.
The concept of two widely different spectrum is ingrained into our psyche. Black and White, night and day, evil and good.LegendofJoe said:That's a self-fulfilling prophecy if I've ever seen one. If it's never been done before, clearly it's impossible and will never happen. *shakes head at that kind of attitude*
Tax Rates and Tax Burdens in the District of Columbia - A Nationwide Comparison 2009balladofwindfishes said:it may be ridiculous and very sad, but it's true
Those who share in <1% of the wealth of nation, should pay <1% of the taxes.
That 95% only share 5% of the wealth of the country, so they should only contribute 5% to the tax income.
It also included the bizarre notion--or maybe this was just the OP's addition--that the bailouts caused the recession. I'm not even sure how that's supposed to have worked.zou said:Hilarious article that is wrong on pretty much every single item.
*snip*
I know, I was only attacking the reason why poor people don't pay income tax. I didn't mean to imply that was the only form of taxation they pay.Evlar said:Tax Rates and Tax Burdens in the District of Columbia - A Nationwide Comparison 2009
They have a nice set of charts starting on Page 8 listing estimated TOTAL tax burdens for various cities around the country, by family income. A family of 3 earning $25,000 is estimated to pay an average $2,750 in taxes per year, or 11.0%. A family of 3 earning $150,000 is estimated to pay an average $12,165 in taxes per year, or 8.1%.
When you're told the bottom 50% (or whatever) doesn't pay an taxes it ought to set off your bullshit detector. Look a little deeper and discover they mean they don't pay any federal income taxes. Are these the only taxes Americans pay? No, certainly not. And many of the other forms of taxation fall disproportionately on the poor, as the above data suggests.
I'd like to see a chart about income. Because the other charts are about wealth.ClosingADoor said:If 80% of people own 20% of the income, it isn't wise to tax them more. The thing to do is tax the 20% that earn 80% of the income. That way you keep the majority of your population happy and get more money in taxes.
Same source I linked earlier: http://cfo.dc.gov/cfo/frames.asp?doc=/cfo/lib/cfo/09STUDY.pdfSkiptastic said:I'd like to see a chart about income. Because the other charts are about wealth.
Table 6: Distribution of income in the United States, 1982-2006
Income
Top 1 percent Next 19 percent Bottom 80 percent
1982 12.8% 39.1% 48.1%
1988 16.6% 38.9% 44.5%
1991 15.7% 40.7% 43.7%
1994 14.4% 40.8% 44.9%
1997 16.6% 39.6% 43.8%
2000 20.0% 38.7% 41.4%
2003 17.0% 40.8% 42.2%
2006 21.3% 40.1% 38.6%
Evlar said:Tax Rates and Tax Burdens in the District of Columbia - A Nationwide Comparison 2009
They have a nice set of charts starting on Page 8 listing estimated TOTAL tax burdens for various cities around the country, by family income. A family of 3 earning $25,000 is estimated to pay an average $2,750 in taxes per year, or 11.0%. A family of 3 earning $150,000 is estimated to pay an average $12,165 in taxes per year, or 8.1%.
When you're told the bottom 50% (or whatever) doesn't pay any taxes it ought to set off your bullshit detector. Look a little deeper and discover they mean they don't pay any federal income taxes. Are these the only taxes Americans pay? No, certainly not. And many of the other forms of taxation fall disproportionately on the poor, as the above data suggests.
balladofwindfishes said:The concept of two widely different spectrum is ingrained into our psyche. Black and White, night and day, evil and good.
Throwing a third notch into that would be exceptionally difficult and would require a restructure of our political and social system.
At the time of the invention of those things, military spending was proportionally a lot smaller than today.The Albatross said:*defense spending*
Finally, some sense! I beat you to the punch and pointed this out on page 4 or something, though.zou said:Hilarious article that is wrong on pretty much every single item.
The US government issues only USD denominated bonds and owes no sovereign debt whatsoever. It's it literally impossible for the US to go "bankrupt". Also, for all the hysteria about China owning the US, people tend to conveniently overlook that China is only among the biggest foreign debt holders. Around 2/3 of US debt is owned by US agencies and the American public. China's holdings amount to less than 10%. And as long as China wants to maintain its trade surplus with the US, it'll have to keep buying treasuries.
But most importantly, bonds aren't actually issued to fund future spending but instead target existing reserves in the system. And thus by design it is impossible for treasury auctions to fail.
RbBrdMan said:If the US goes bankrupt does that mean I still have to pay my federal student loans??
I really, really want some sort of bailout for student loans.
The middle class is fucked.Evlar said:Same source I linked earlier: http://cfo.dc.gov/cfo/frames.asp?doc=/cfo/lib/cfo/09STUDY.pdf
Code:Table 6: Distribution of income in the United States, 1982-2006 Income Top 1 percent Next 19 percent Bottom 80 percent 1982 12.8% 39.1% 48.1% 1988 16.6% 38.9% 44.5% 1991 15.7% 40.7% 43.7% 1994 14.4% 40.8% 44.9% 1997 16.6% 39.6% 43.8% 2000 20.0% 38.7% 41.4% 2003 17.0% 40.8% 42.2% 2006 21.3% 40.1% 38.6%
Cujshi said:I didnt say - aliens, learn how to read, helps on forums such as this one.
and, you know im right. US media makes Chinese people as if they were animals, savages, idiots and such - ok, please go into China and look for your self. Communism 10 times better than any other form of government.
1. Beijing, Hong Kong, GuangZhou, Shanghai and Shenzhen are better cities in terms of functionality than any other in the world. (I would place here Dubai and Abu Dhabi also)
2. System enables everyone to get what they deserve - no matter where and how in China you were born, based on your life and efforts you will be in a position to earn what you worked for.
3. China has no significant debt and a rising economy
4. China has total control of minority groups, so there is no possibility of Lybia, Egypt recent revolution scenario
5. there is no need for revolution cause government constantly improves living conditions
6. there are no unnecessary intellectual degradations such as "Jerry Springer" and other retarded western entertainment types. there are actually highly educated people that do the censorship
7. every city is dedicated to one particular production type (Shenzhen - techincs, Guangzhou - clothes) making China more productive than other countries
8. in order to reach certain levels of functionality in governments, you have to be highly educated and professionally dedicated, and not ex movie star (Arnold), or a thief from Serbia (Rod blagojevich)
and so on.
Communism ftw.
zou said:Hilarious article that is wrong on pretty much every single item.
The US government issues only USD denominated bonds and owes no sovereign debt whatsoever. It's it literally impossible for the US to go "bankrupt". Also, for all the hysteria about China owning the US, people tend to conveniently overlook that China is only among the biggest foreign debt holders. Around 2/3 of US debt is owned by US agencies and the American public. China's holdings amount to less than 10%. And as long as China wants to maintain its trade surplus with the US, it'll have to keep buying treasuries.
But most importantly, bonds aren't actually issued to fund future spending but instead target existing reserves in the system. And thus by design it is impossible for treasury auctions to fail.
Unless that is backed by a law that places price ceilings on higher education, it's going to force a lot of students to never be able to afford to go past High School.The Albatross said:And if the Feds had any sense, they'd also eliminate all of those grants and easy credit that drove up the cost of higher education in the 90s and 2000s.
balladofwindfishes said:Unless that is backed by a law that places price ceilings on higher education, it's going to force a lot of students to never be able to afford to go past High School.
That'll teach them a lesson for being successful.mt1200 said:Get out of the middle east and raise taxes for billionaires and rich
OK. I'm posting up data in defense of progressive taxation as a remedy for the flow of wealth to the very top, and also (I hope) an indication of the difference in means between the poor (undeniably poor- those families of 3 making $25,000 annually with little to no assets) and the undeniably wealthy (the top 1% or 10% from some of the other data I've posted). I have seen a trend in recent media of casting the people on the lower end of the income scale as free-riders because of the progressive taxation code... the "flat tax" crowd, I guess. I was responding to that craziness.The Albatross said:Just to reiterate, I was clear on this in my post that your poster quoted: They, largely, do not pay federal taxes (although there are still some small amounts income the federal gov't generates even on those who are under that "no-federal tax revenue" umbrella category).
I completely support the argument made by your numbers... But, seriously, no politicians of any national renown are talking about significantly raising taxes on people making $75,000/year.
Although, as an aside: Do Gaf posters think that $75,000/year qualifies you as being "rich" ?
louis89 said:
zou said:Hilarious article that is wrong on pretty much every single item.
The US government issues only USD denominated bonds and owes no sovereign debt whatsoever. It's it literally impossible for the US to go "bankrupt". Also, for all the hysteria about China owning the US, people tend to conveniently overlook that China is only among the biggest foreign debt holders. Around 2/3 of US debt is owned by US agencies and the American public. China's holdings amount to less than 10%. And as long as China wants to maintain its trade surplus with the US, it'll have to keep buying treasuries.
But most importantly, bonds aren't actually issued to fund future spending but instead target existing reserves in the system. And thus by design it is impossible for treasury auctions to fail.
beat said:As this graph shows (much like other graphs), the growth in SS is almost flat over the next few decades; the vast majority of the growth in entitlement spending comes from Medicare and Medicaid...
This is pretty sound adviceAstroLad said:i don't think smacking obama across the face would work:
-worst case you'd get literally annihilated by the secret service
-best case it seems like you would just make him literally defensive and definitely not in the mood to listen to your arguments