Night Strike wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Night Strike wrote: PLAYER57832 wrote:The REAL truth is that it is average wage earners buying things, spending money on services, working to produce things that make our country great, NOT a few people who decide to plop down money in a gamble to make millions. Sure, those plopping down money are smart and sure, to a point, they have a right to make money, BUT only to a point. For the past 4 decades, they have taken more and more from the working class and drove us into recession.
Thank you for admitting to your socialistic mentality.
Like I said.. much easier to just throw out terms you consider slurrs than to actually debate anything! But I am through attempting to educate you as to what socialism really means. Call me what you will, try debating the concepts, not just throwing out names.
Night Strike wrote:The very idea that people only have the right to make a certain amount of money is completely antithetical to freedom.
How? Please explain this statement. Because, it really seems to contradict itself.
If you don't have a socialistic mentality, then you are definitely wanting to spread the wealth around.
Again, you focus on labels instead of ideas. You hear a few words and then instantly have to pigeon hole them into some pre-defined categories. Problem is, you don't have your categories correct, never mind do you worry too much about whether they actually apply. And, you miss some pretty big details as a result.
Night Strike wrote:When you put a ceiling on people, you're automatically limiting the potential that they're supposed to have the freedom to achieve.
Yes, and are you claiming there is no ceiling now? Because from where I sit, education, access to wealth are all pretty big external ceilings.
And exactly what ceiling are you claiming I am trying to put in? None. I am saying that the upper income earners need to pay a bit more taxes, at least for now, for a lot of reasons. That is not a ceiling, it limits no one.
Night Strike wrote:In all honesty, what is the philosophical difference between limiting blacks from owning property and limiting business people from making millions of dollars? You say that the limits on business people are justified, and racists would say that limits on minorities are justified.
STOP right there. No, I am NOT saying that "limits on business are justified". I am saying that it is justified to require businesses to PAY THEIR OWN WAY! Saying that if you dump out garbage, you have to make sure it won't poison my kids first is not "limiting business". It is protecting the rest of the world.
Saying that companies have to pay their decent workers (not talking trainees or slackers or even,
necessarily disabled workers, etc .. though most disabled workers are able to pull their own weight if only given a change) enough that they won't end up dependent upon taxpayers.. be it welfare or Medicaid or any other government program, is saying that if you need work done, fine, but you cannot take a profit based on taxpayer subsidies and pretend you are taking a real profit.
Far too much of what winds up in the pockets of exectutives and stockholders today is not legitimate profit, its money they can withdraw because they can depend upon workers being subsidized by the government enough that they aren't "starving in the streets", etc.
Night Strike wrote:Almost everybody would say that limits on minorities is an infringement of their rights, so why isn't that the same for the rich?
No one is infringing on the wealthy. That is the point. The wealthy are free to earn money, but it has to be true earnings.
If you work on a farm, the first thing you learn is take care of the animals first. They get fed, they get tended FIRST. Farmers know that their entire income depends upon the health and safety of those animals. Take care of them and they will take care of him.
It used to be that most companies operated about the same. Many small businesses still do. In the US, most owners of even small businesses make more than employees, though there are plenty of exceptions (especially starting out!). However, it is most definitely NOT the case for large businesses. Employees of many businesses, no matter what the "PR" material says, are really nothing more than machines. They are valued no more than the floor polisher or broom, and just as easily discarded. The result is a lot of things. Poor moral, poor productivity, demand for more wages to make up for poor conditions, etc. etc. Ultimately, the result is that decisions are made to ship jobs overseas because, basically "Americans are spoiled". That is, those in the US want enough to have a house, eat, have clothes, etc. Those in the less developed world are not so picky.
And, well... pretty soon, if this keeps up, we will be that group.
You say "no problem", why should anyone have to pay more? Because I want to live in the USA, in a country with a decent education system, decent roads, utilities and yep.. even healthcare. I don't want to live in Bangladesh or Somalia where only a few get to have those things. I want to work for it, I DON'T want it given to me, but I also don't want to be told that expecting those things just means I am greedy.. but that the owners feeling they have to have their BMW and Bermuda vacations are "just deserving".
Night Strike wrote: ANY artificial or systematic limit on the abilities of the individual to achieve is inherently not free. To say that people should be limited by the government in how much they make leads to a socialistic government.
You are picking this out of your hat, not from what I said. No one is capping what anyone can earn.
In the case of graduated taxes, and mind you, we are not talking about huge graduations, a few percentage only, the concept is that if you take 10% of the income of someone making $5000, then you get $50. Take %10 of the income of someone making $5,000,000 and you get $50,000. Except, that $50,000 is not going to make a huge difference in how that milionaire lives, the decisions they make, what they can do. Double it and it still won't matter that much. It may "grate" and irritate, but it won't really and truly deprive that millionaire of anything. However, double the tax on the one making only $5000 and not only will you only get $100 (hardly worth the effort!), but that money is likely to mean a BIG difference in that person's life. It might mean the difference between eating every day or not, paying for electricity for one month or getting some new clothes for their child. Do the same for someone making $50,000 and while the difference might not be as great as for the one making only $5000, but it still matters a great deal in real, material ways.
There are other arguments, but a lot of them are esoteric or philisophical and right now, I just don't want to get into that.
Anyway, NO WHERE in any of that is there anything about "limiting" or "capping" the income of wealthy people. The problem is that wealthy people have not been paying for the costs they encure, not really.. AND right now, we are in some tough times, becuase past administrations (all of them.. back to Reagan) have refused to pay for expenses, have allowed costs to be pushed off until tommorrow. Well... "tommorrow" is here and we have to pay. Except, the economy right now is ALSO pretty bad, and bad not because all of us workers stopped working or decided we had to take too much in wages from employers. No, our economy is bad, largely because too many bigwigs decided to gamble with money that wasn't really theirs and then forced we taxpayers to bail them out when they lost.
Those same folks are the ones NOW "crying" that increasing taxes is "not fair". Well.. too bad. No, not everyone making millions or even a few hundred thousand made the gambles, took the risks. But, most did. Most people making over $250,000 have at least some stock/dividend/bond investments and many, many of those benefitted from the artificial booms of the past few years.
AND, this small increase in tax is not in any way going to deprive any of those people of making as much money as they wish. Now, some other rules.. like requiring that banks have more capitol on hand, etc.. those absolutely will impede some investments. But, that is because we taxpayers don't want to be left having to bail out the irresponsible banks again.
Asking, demanding that people be responsible, pay for the costs they encure and not expect the rest of the country to carry their personnal risk (but they alone get benefits), are absolutely reasonable.
Night Strike wrote:People should only be limited by their personal abilities and willingness to work hard and take the occasional risk. Letting anybody decide on non-market-based salary caps is preposterous.
It would be, which is why that is not what anybody, least of all myself, is suggesting.