soccerballtux
Lifer
- Dec 30, 2004
- 12,553
- 2
- 76
Gawd. How are America's most affluent burdened by lower tax rates & much higher share of national income than 35 years ago? How does that compare to the burden of radically reduced income share and regressive consumption taxes that strongly affect median families?
Income tax burden follows income, until we get to the tippytop of the heap, where it simply falls away to the rates that Mitt pays.
Taxes are sacrifice for the common good. That sacrifice is significant at median income levels, because it affects lifestyle rather strongly. It doesn't really matter what form those taxes take, because they all cut into the bottom line just the same.
I've asked the question many times, but the usual shallow thinkers manage to rave around it- What's the difference in lifestyle paying 15% or 50% on incomes measured in tens or hundreds of millions? Billions?
I suggest that there is none. Really. The difference doesn't lie there, but rather somewhere else, in the power relationships of society, the power to run the lives of many, many other people. That's the entire point of enormous wealth, which is really very much at odds with egalitarian democracy in a constitutional republic. It's increasingly at odds with the idea of meritocracy, as well, given that it's heritable & fundamentally oligarchical, conveying enormous advantage to people who haven't earned them at all.
Taxing rich people isn't going to work. We have to reign in government spending, tarrif imports, and give all graduates a green card so we can build a middle class.
