| | Michael, 'The Fair Tax' is just one proposal for a consumption tax - a kind of national sales tax. And, you are right that the numbers aren't important, but let me add that this proposal also replaces all of the social security taxes, not just the employee side but also the employer side, and the unemployment tax - all of the payroll taxes paid by either the employee or the employer. It also replaces corporate taxes, income taxes, and inheritance taxes. And the proponents have added a feature to make their tax non-regressive - it has a "pre-bate" where everyone receives a check at the beginning of the year for an amount equal to about what the total fair tax would cost a person who is in a lower tax bracket. Everyone, no matter what their income or wealth level would get the same amount.
This means that everyone can spend as much as a person in a lower income bracket typically spends and, in effect, pay no taxes at all. This means that if a person who is in that lower income bracket spends less, they actually make money on this scheme. But like you said, the numbers aren't important. ------------
You wrote: The fact is that if you make $200,000 per year, a 30% national sales tax hurts you less than if you make $20,000 per year. Poor people have less margin, less discretional income. As it is now, they pay zero income tax. The "Fair Tax" puts them in the same 30% (or 23%) bracket as the rich. No. The 'pre-bate' means that they can be in the same situation of zero taxes, or even make some money. But that's just details of a particular proposal and I want to address the moral issue here.
You wrote: The words "progressive" and "regressive" are just arithmetic. On the one hand you pay more if you make more; on the other hand you pay more if you make less. That is all it means. That's so not true. Progressives favor progressive tax schemes and those are schemes that move towards the rich paying massive percentages and the poor paying nothing. If a someone like Bill Gates makes 100 million in a year, and pays 10%, he has paid $10,000,000. That is clearly more than the poor person who makes $12,000 in the same year and pays $1,200. Gates would have paid over 8,000 times as much - but progressives still think this isn't enough.
Applying the same percentage is far fairer AND it results in the rich paying more in a directly proportional fashion. And it is good for the economy. Most of our laws today, thanks to both progressives and to crony capitalism and special interests are in violation of the basic concept of equal under the law.
You talk about margin and discretionary income... Why would that change anything? If you have a lower discretionary margin than someone else, does that mean that you should be able to force a supplier of some service to provide it for less than what they want? -------------
Again, you aren't familiar with the Fair Tax proposal, at least not as it has been structured for the last few years, because it applies to everything - there are no exceptions. It applies to all tee-shirts, with or without logos, to food, shelter, everything. The 'pre-bate' is what they have put in a number of years ago to keep it from being 'regressive.' ---------------------
You wrote: Should we really tax food, clothing, and shelter at all? It's important to remember that we don't tax food, or clothing, or shelter - we tax a person. There are problems, large problems, with not taxing some people and taxing others - it is unfair. And there are problems with taxing people for some products and not others. The main problem in this area is that it opens up the giant can of worms: politicians working with special interests to create complex rat-warrens of rules that govern what is taxed and what is not. ---------------
You wrote: You cannot make taxation fair. Not when the person defines 'fair' as meaning that poor people get special priviledges and politicians have to decide how to deal every single kind of transaction. You can make taxation fairer - but it requires no politicians and special interests, the same rules and the same percentages for everyone.
Michael, you constantly harp on the same thing: The rich and the poor. You appear to have been infected with that class warfare meme, or altruism, some time in the past, and still retain some of it.
You are saying the same thing Karl Marx said in 1875, "From each according to his ability, to each according to his need." ---------------
You wrote: The income tax evolved over 100 years to what it is today. Anything else will only have different problems, not better ones. Please don't mistake the results of crony capitalism and Progressive political maneuvering for some kind of natural evolution. Saying something "evolved" isn't evidence of either good value or inevitability. Saying that anything else will be as bad is an absurd, bald statement. If we create better rules, we will get better outcomes. ---------------
There is nothing morally wrong with your suggestion of tying voting to paying taxes - in that those who have paid can be presumed to have a kind of ownership right that wouldn't apply as much to those that haven't. But if you keep the income tax which allows the politicians to make new decisions year after year, while consulting with their backroom special-interest buddies, and then with your proposal, they might be able to shape tax policy to exclude voters they think support the other party. I can see republicans saying that low income people don't have to pay any taxes, but that means they don't get a vote and putting a check box right on the bottom of the 1040 - "Check here if your total taxes due are greater than zero, but less than $1000 and you are willing to forego voting in order to reduce your taxes due to zero" ---------------
You didn't answer my questions. I'll ask them again: - Why should being rich mean you are forced to support the poor? Should the healthy be forced to sacrifice and pay for those who are sick? Should those who are tall, be taxed more than those who are short?
- How can anyone justify taking more from someone just because they have more? Why is having more a bad thing?
- Why does being rich invoke a penalty, while being poor creates a ticket for a free ride?
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