dannybin1742
Platinum Member
- Jan 16, 2002
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don't forget to add in the x hundred billiuong dollars borrowed against social security funds that no one ever talks about, the figure is much much higher, you can thank the busheviks for that
You already showed with your link that the rich are paying the majority of this tax revenue increase. This indicates the rich are paying more relative to past years, it shouldn't matter if the poor/mid class pay a minimal amount more. The deficit needs to be paid down.Originally posted by: conjur
JESUS CHRIST!!!
I'm just tossing out numbers as an example of the possibility of how EVERYONE can see an increase but the rich see a GREATER increase! I'm not using numbers with any specific value. These are display-use only.
Geez.
Originally posted by: conjur
JESUS CHRIST!!!Originally posted by: Stunt
Most of the revenue increase came from the rich, as you already stated, the poor's exemption is raised with inflation, therefore the poor's tax would not go up, maybe even less; not 50%. There are far less rich people, therefore the increased burden, which we are discussing was significantly weighted to the rich. Even if taxes rised across the board (which i doubt, we are using arbitrary numbers), the increases were on the backs of the rich, why are you trying to bring it around as if the poor/middle class are getting screwed when they obviously are not in this situation?Originally posted by: conjur
Ok, let me break this down:
2004
Rich: Pays $1 million in taxes
Middle: Pays $15,000 in taxes
Poor: Pays $500 in taxes
2005
Rich: Pays $1.5 million in taxes
Middle: Pays $18,000 in taxes
Poor: Pays $1,000 in taxes
See what I'm saying? It's possible that everyone is paying more but that the rich are paying an even great amount.
I'm just tossing out numbers as an example of the possibility of how EVERYONE can see an increase but the rich see a GREATER increase! I'm not using numbers with any specific value. These are display-use only.
Geez.
Tax cuts aren't going to affect the working middle class as much as the wealthy because the wealthy tend derive more income from investments than the middle class do. If your only form of income is your job, a small tax cut will mean you pay a little less in tax. If your income is determined by how much money you have to invest (rich people) then the tax cuts leave you with more liquidity which you can invest in other endevors that make you even more money. (Ergo you make more / you pay more tax)
That might be an old statistic. I read "Mind of a Millionaire" and "Millionaire Next Door", both pretty recent studies of american millionaires. I'm not sure which one it was, but they stated that 95% of Millionaires are self made, only 5% inherited it from thier parents.Originally posted by: Whoozyerdaddy
...approx 20% of millionaires inherit their wealth...
Originally posted by: Train
That might be an old statistic. I read "Mind of a Millionaire" and "Millionaire Next Door", both pretty recent studies of american millionaires. I'm not sure which one it was, but they stated that 95% of Millionaires are self made, only 5% inherited it from thier parents.Originally posted by: Whoozyerdaddy
...approx 20% of millionaires inherit their wealth...
Originally posted by: dullard
Or Moore's law (which was valid far before and far after Reagan, pretty much unchanged by Reagan's policies) finally resulted in products that people wanted/needed. Which to believe - the fact that 16 years ago a president had a policy or the fact that the technology is finally ready. Hmmm.Originally posted by: Krk3561
As I said before, Reagan's supply side economics (business tax cuts) allowed many of the tech companies (i.e. IBM, Intel, Sun, Mircosoft, etc.) that fueled the 90's to grow, allowed them to hire more people, spend more money on R&D, etc.
http://www.webopedia.com/TERM/M/Moores_Law.html(môrz lâ) (n.) The observation made in 1965 by Gordon Moore, co-founder of Intel, that the number of transistors per square inch on integrated circuits had doubled every year since the integrated circuit was invented. Moore predicted that this trend would continue for the foreseeable future. In subsequent years, the pace slowed down a bit, but data density has doubled approximately every 18 months, and this is the current definition of Moore's Law, which Moore himself has blessed. Most experts, including Moore himself, expect Moore's Law to hold for at least another two decades.
Right but that's not why I started down this path. You made a claim the poor/middle were paying less. I'm saying that's not necessarily true unless you show links to reports showing taxes paid by middle and lower classes have dropped.Originally posted by: Stunt
You already showed with your link that the rich are paying the majority of this tax revenue increase. This indicates the rich are paying more relative to past years, it shouldn't matter if the poor/mid class pay a minimal amount more. The deficit needs to be paid down.Originally posted by: conjur
JESUS CHRIST!!!
I'm just tossing out numbers as an example of the possibility of how EVERYONE can see an increase but the rich see a GREATER increase! I'm not using numbers with any specific value. These are display-use only.
Geez.
Corrections in bold.Originally posted by: Train
Unemployment down....Unemployment number is obsolete. Look at Labor Force Participation Rate or the U-6 value (which rose slightly)
Jobs creation in the positive....But still not enough to maintain labor force equilibrium
Tax revenues up (despite tax cuts)
Spending under control....WTF are you smoking?!?
Deficit shrinking...But a LONG way to go and no signs of moves to more quickly accelerate paying down the debt
Dollar up....For the first time in 7 days
Exports up..."However, it's exaggerated because we had a large drop in oil prices. I think we'll see a bump up in the trade deficit when we get the June numbers."
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=...&sid=a8TmIx.W6YeI&refer=top_world_news]
But dont forget! the sky is falling, and the world is going to end tommorow!!
Originally posted by: conjur
Corrections in bold.Originally posted by: Train
Unemployment down....Unemployment number is obsolete. Look at Labor Force Participation Rate or the U-6 value (which rose slightly)
Jobs creation in the positive....But still not enough to maintain labor force equilibrium
Tax revenues up (despite tax cuts)
Spending under control....WTF are you smoking?!?
Deficit shrinking...But a LONG way to go and no signs of moves to more quickly accelerate paying down the debt
Dollar up....For the first time in 7 days
Exports up..."However, it's exaggerated because we had a large drop in oil prices. I think we'll see a bump up in the trade deficit when we get the June numbers."
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=...&sid=a8TmIx.W6YeI&refer=top_world_news]
But dont forget! the sky is falling, and the world is going to end tommorow!!
Take the tax revenues as a pie, where the rich already pay most of it. Now if the pie gets larger on the backs of the rich, the piece of the pie the lower classes account for is indeed less.Originally posted by: conjur
Right but that's not why I started down this path. You made a claim the poor/middle were paying less. I'm saying that's not necessarily true unless you show links to reports showing taxes paid by middle and lower classes have dropped.Originally posted by: Stunt
You already showed with your link that the rich are paying the majority of this tax revenue increase. This indicates the rich are paying more relative to past years, it shouldn't matter if the poor/mid class pay a minimal amount more. The deficit needs to be paid down.Originally posted by: conjur
JESUS CHRIST!!!
I'm just tossing out numbers as an example of the possibility of how EVERYONE can see an increase but the rich see a GREATER increase! I'm not using numbers with any specific value. These are display-use only.
Geez.
Originally posted by: conjur
Ok...but that's not what you said and it still doesn't mean the poor are NOT paying more in taxes than they were last year.
Originally posted by: Stunt
Take the tax revenues as a pie, where the rich already pay most of it. Now if the pie gets larger on the backs of the rich, the piece of the pie the lower classes account for is indeed less.Originally posted by: conjur
Right but that's not why I started down this path. You made a claim the poor/middle were paying less. I'm saying that's not necessarily true unless you show links to reports showing taxes paid by middle and lower classes have dropped.Originally posted by: Stunt
You already showed with your link that the rich are paying the majority of this tax revenue increase. This indicates the rich are paying more relative to past years, it shouldn't matter if the poor/mid class pay a minimal amount more. The deficit needs to be paid down.Originally posted by: conjur
JESUS CHRIST!!!
I'm just tossing out numbers as an example of the possibility of how EVERYONE can see an increase but the rich see a GREATER increase! I'm not using numbers with any specific value. These are display-use only.
Geez.
I know, I was dumbing it down for liberals who think money is a fixed amount and cannot grow. ie. Money is either taxed or it isn't.Originally posted by: Whoozyerdaddy
Originally posted by: Stunt
Take the tax revenues as a pie, where the rich already pay most of it. Now if the pie gets larger on the backs of the rich, the piece of the pie the lower classes account for is indeed less.Originally posted by: conjur
Right but that's not why I started down this path. You made a claim the poor/middle were paying less. I'm saying that's not necessarily true unless you show links to reports showing taxes paid by middle and lower classes have dropped.Originally posted by: Stunt
You already showed with your link that the rich are paying the majority of this tax revenue increase. This indicates the rich are paying more relative to past years, it shouldn't matter if the poor/mid class pay a minimal amount more. The deficit needs to be paid down.Originally posted by: conjur
JESUS CHRIST!!!
I'm just tossing out numbers as an example of the possibility of how EVERYONE can see an increase but the rich see a GREATER increase! I'm not using numbers with any specific value. These are display-use only.
Geez.
You've almost got it. You just need to address it from a different angle. The rich are creating the bigger tax "pie." While the poor and middle class make modest gains with a tax cut, the rich use the cut to make more. The more they make the more they pay in taxes.
It's not that the tax pie is getting bigger and the "burden" is heavier on the rich. The rich are expanding the pie themselves by virtue of their ability to use the tax cut to grow their wealth. Ergo the tax pie gets bigger and most of the increase is due to the wealthy cashing in on the benefits of their tax cut.
Greater investment = more jobs (which we are seeing)
More wealth = more tax revenue (which we are seeing)
LOL, youll end up winning this argument on pure relentlessness alone. Pitting a 35 post a day zealot against a 2.5 poster who would barely qualify as a lurker.Originally posted by: conjur
Corrections in bold.Originally posted by: Train
Unemployment down....Unemployment number is obsolete. Look at Labor Force Participation Rate or the U-6 value (which rose slightly)
Jobs creation in the positive....But still not enough to maintain labor force equilibrium
Tax revenues up (despite tax cuts)
Spending under control....WTF are you smoking?!?
Deficit shrinking...But a LONG way to go and no signs of moves to more quickly accelerate paying down the debt
Dollar up....For the first time in 7 days
Exports up..."However, it's exaggerated because we had a large drop in oil prices. I think we'll see a bump up in the trade deficit when we get the June numbers."
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=...&sid=a8TmIx.W6YeI&refer=top_world_news]
But dont forget! the sky is falling, and the world is going to end tommorow!!
Originally posted by: maluckey
Topic Title: Deficit Shrinks???
Topic Summary: Can't be!! And ahead of schedule it appears...
CNN
National Review
Christian Science Monitor
Why is this not getting much coverage on the AT Forums?? If it continues at half this rate, then it will be more than Bush promised.
Originally posted by: dmcowen674
Originally posted by: maluckey
Topic Title: Deficit Shrinks???
Topic Summary: Can't be!! And ahead of schedule it appears...
CNN
National Review
Christian Science Monitor
Why is this not getting much coverage on the AT Forums?? If it continues at half this rate, then it will be more than Bush promised.
Did you look and see why? It has nothing to do with Bush himself.
It was because a lot of the Enron style of fraud has been cut off from the corruption and the Government and States are actually starting to see some of the money that was long overdue.
Reading is a big problem here. Reading is fundamental.
I didn't bat an eye at the conspiracy theory, thats just Dave.Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: dmcowen674
Originally posted by: maluckey
Topic Title: Deficit Shrinks???
Topic Summary: Can't be!! And ahead of schedule it appears...
CNN
National Review
Christian Science Monitor
Why is this not getting much coverage on the AT Forums?? If it continues at half this rate, then it will be more than Bush promised.
Did you look and see why? It has nothing to do with Bush himself.
It was because a lot of the Enron style of fraud has been cut off from the corruption and the Government and States are actually starting to see some of the money that was long overdue.
Reading is a big problem here. Reading is fundamental.
LOL, it's because of less corruption. That is friggin hilarious. You libbies come up with some of the craziest conspiracy theories ever.
You really need to read more of a COMPUTER forum than just P&N. Moore's law is the observation that research has led to a doubling of transistor density every 18 months. Reality has kept up quite well with Moore's law. Over the past few decades, transistor density has doubled quite close to every 18 months.Originally posted by: Krk3561
How exactly is this applied to making CPUs? It's an observation.
Originally posted by: Train
I didn't bat an eye at the conspiracy theory, thats just Dave.Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: dmcowen674
Originally posted by: maluckey
Topic Title: Deficit Shrinks???
Topic Summary: Can't be!! And ahead of schedule it appears...
CNN
National Review
Christian Science Monitor
Why is this not getting much coverage on the AT Forums?? If it continues at half this rate, then it will be more than Bush promised.
Did you look and see why? It has nothing to do with Bush himself.
It was because a lot of the Enron style of fraud has been cut off from the corruption and the Government and States are actually starting to see some of the money that was long overdue.
Reading is a big problem here. Reading is fundamental.
LOL, it's because of less corruption. That is friggin hilarious. You libbies come up with some of the craziest conspiracy theories ever.
What made me spill my coffee was Dave, albeit not directly, AGREED WITH THE OP!! :Q
Originally posted by: dullard
You really need to read more of a COMPUTER forum than just P&N. Moore's law is the observation that research has led to a doubling of transistor density every 18 months. Reality has kept up quite well with Moore's law. Over the past few decades, transistor density has doubled quite close to every 18 months.Originally posted by: Krk3561
How exactly is this applied to making CPUs? It's an observation.
Observation #1: This density pace has NOT been affected by presidential policies. Since we have had wildly different presidential policies since the 1960s, and since the doubling every 18 months has not been affected by any of these policies, I conclude that the policies had no impact on this aspect of technology.
Observation #2: Doubing of transistors goes hand in hand with doubling of performance. While it is true that Moore didn't speak of performance, the reality has shown that his observation holds for performance as well. Performance of transistor chips has grown at a rate that has shown no changes to drastically different presidential policies.
Observation #3: Computers which are too slow do not have a wide user base. When computers were so slow that it took 10 minutes to boot, had no graphics, and had very few applications, there were very few customers. Yes there were some, but not that many. The technology just wasn't yet available.
Observation #4: The technology became available when performance was high enough to run programs that people needed: office software, software for school, and software for entertainment. The location of this performance had nothing to do with presidential policy. If a computer can't do what the user wanted, the user didn't buy it regardless of who was president.
Observation #5: The time when Moore's law gave enough transistors that CPUs could have the performance the users needed was in the mid 1990s. Computer use soared. Nearly every office, school, home, etc had computers. This was due to CPUs that were finally capable of meeting user's needs. Clinton got a huge windfall from this. It wasn't Clinton that caused it. Nor was it Reagan.
Conclusion: If Moore's law was affected by presidential policy, then I would agree with you that Reagan may have impacted the computer revolution. But the facts don't show any link there. I don't give the credit to Clinton either.
Originally posted by: dmcowen674
Well technically thanks to some of the corruption and I emphasize only some of the corruption, getting knocked down, that a very small fraction of trickle down that only works from the rich to more of the very rich is actually starting to be seen.
Trickle down does not make it down to the common man, never has and never will.
Originally posted by: RightIsWrong
Originally posted by: maluckey
CNN
National Review
Christian Science Monitor
Why is this not getting much coverage on the AT Forums?? If it continues at half this rate, then it will be more than Bush promised.
If only Georgie would include the totals from Iraq/Afghanistan in it. Please add $300B to what it is now and see if that schedule is still working for ya.
From one of your own sources listed:
At this pace, the 2005 deficit is on track to drop to $355 billion from $413 billion in fiscal year 2004.
That total gets adjusted up to $655B. Doesn't quite look as rosey, now does it?
