Envy Unleashed at the New York Times

CADsortaGUY

Lifer
Oct 19, 2001
25,162
1
76
www.ShawCAD.com
by George Reisman
In a front page editorial (Sunday June 5), thinly disguised as its lead news story, The New York Times has unknowingly provided a case study in envy and ignorance.

The ?article? is titled ?Richest Are Leaving Even the Rich Far Behind,? subtitled ?Tax Laws Help to Widen Gap at Very Top.? It breathlessly informs readers that ?The people at the top of America's money pyramid have so prospered in recent years that they . . . have even left behind people making hundreds of thousands of dollars a year.?

It goes on to bemoan the increase in incomes of the top one-tenth of one percent of tax payers: ?The share of the nation's income earned by those in this uppermost category has more than doubled since 1980, to 7.4 percent in 2002. The share of income earned by the rest of the top 10 percent rose far less, and the share earned by the bottom 90 percent fell.? In lecture-like fashion, it then instructs its readers to ?Next, examine the net worth of American households,? a statement which introduces more fuel for envy.

The continuation of the piece on page 17, provides almost a half page of graphics, a main purpose of which is to reinforce its claim that ?{u}nder the Bush tax cuts, the 400 taxpayers with the highest incomes?a minimum of $87 million in 2000, the last year for which the government will release such data?now pay income, Medicare and Social Security taxes amounting to virtually the same percentage of their incomes as people making $50,000 to $75,000. Those earning more than $10 million a year now pay a lesser share of their income in these taxes than those making $100,000 to $200,000.?

In fact, of course, there is nothing at all surprising in these percentages. This is because the Social Security tax rate, which has been 15.3 percent on income from self-employment ceases to apply on incomes above a certain maximum, which is currently $90,000 per year and was somewhat less in the years to which the ?article? refers.[1] What accounts for people in the upper brackets paying comparable percentages of their income overall in federal taxes, despite most of their incomes being exempt from the Social Security tax, is the far higher rates of ordinary federal income tax that apply to them, even after all possible legal deductions and ?loopholes.?

Although the Times makes no mention of it in the text of its alleged article, and the subtitle over the graphics, ?The Wealthiest Benefit More From the Recent Tax Cuts,? is designed to foster the opposite impression, an attentive reader, willing to go to the trouble of doing some simple addition based on numbers supplied along with the graphics, is able to see that the bottom 80 percent of all taxpayers in 2001 paid only 29.5 percent of all federal taxes, while the top 20 percent of taxpayers paid the remaining 70.5 percent of all federal taxes and that the top one-tenth of one percent of taxpayers paid 12 percent of all federal taxes.

The Times is upset because under the Bush tax cuts, in the year 2015 the top one-tenth of one percent of taxpayers is forecast to pay only 10.8 percent of all federal taxes. As part of its effort to create the impression that the rich are gaining at the expense of the poor, the Times chooses to ignore the further implication of its own data that in 2015 the share of taxes paid by the bottom 80 percent of taxpayers is actually forecast to decline slightly, to 29 percent. It simply cannot bear that the very rich might actually become richer still.

This article is the most recent in a clearly Marxist inspired series of at least ten articles all under the heading ?Class Matters.? Its envious spirit is well expressed in the title of one of the books its author appears to have consulted in preparation for writing it, namely, The Winner-Take-All Society: Why the Few at the Top Get So Much More Than the Rest of Us.[2]

The Times says of its series: ?A team of reporters spent more than a year exploring ways that class?defined as a combination of income, education, wealth and occupation?influences destiny in a society that likes to think of itself as a land of unbounded opportunity (p. 16).? It should go without saying that, apart from the service it renders in the Marxian exploitation theory, the only thing that can make ?class? matter is if class membership rather than individual merit were the basis for explaining economic success or failure. Thus no one should be surprised if what the Times tries to teach him with its series is that it is illusory to think of the United States (and more broadly the capitalist economic system) as a land of opportunity.

The specific alleged article in question turns for support to George Soros, Ted Turner, and Warren Buffet, three extremely wealthy individuals who are nonetheless apparently willing to denounce great wealth on occasion. Even Alan Greenspan is quoted as speaking against ?the increasing concentration of incomes.?[3] Such references are intended to make the article?s editorial message seem irresistible.

The article, and the wider series of which it is a part, may very well seem persuasive to most of its readers. It may very well serve in the obvious political agenda of the Times, incessantly pursued in its alleged news columns, to bring about the defeat of any political candidate daring to favor lower taxes on the hated rich, or practically any reduction in government interference in the economic system whatever. But this is only because of the incredible economic ignorance of the Times and most of its readership.

As a leading illustration of this ignorance, one should consider the fact that the official Times? bibliography for the series contains seventeen titles. Not one of them is by Ludwig von Mises, or any other member of the Austrian school of economics, or by anyone recognizable as possessing even the faintest glimmer of serious knowledge of economics. Yet to the Times and most of its readers the list appears authoritative and no objection of any kind registers to undertaking a series on economic inequality in total ignorance of the actual economic significance of economic inequality.

Let us consider that significance. The extremely high incomes to which the Times objects are overwhelmingly saved and invested. In this way, they bring about large-scale capital accumulation. Capital is the foundation both of the demand for labor and the supply of consumers? goods. Its continuous accumulation is the foundation of high and rising real wages and a high and rising standard of living for everyone.

The high incomes themselves, apart from cases of government subsidies and grants of one or another form of monopoly privilege, such as tariff protection, are earned on a foundation of positive productive contribution, typically as high rates of return on capital invested. As such, their foundation is innovation in the form of the introduction of new and improved products and methods of production and successful anticipation of changes in the pattern of consumer demand. (These last are themselves largely the result of new products and methods of production appearing elsewhere in the economic system.) High rates of return attract competition, which brings them down. To continue earning them, fresh innovation is required.

Thus, contrary to the beliefs of The New York Times and its ?reporters,? great business fortunes are in fact the result of repeated productive innovation and serve to bring those innovations and much more to the great mass of the public. Great wealth invested in business signifies precisely a great demand for labor and a great supply of consumers? goods. It does not signify the heaping up of a massive supply of food, or other consumers? goods, on the plates of fat capitalists who gorge themselves while the masses starve. But that is how the ignorant writers and editorialists of The New York Times and the whole ?liberal? ?intellectual? establishment see matters.

One can be grateful that there are at least some politicians who have achieved some measure of understanding that cutting taxes on the rich is in fact the way to achieve prosperity for all. What these politicians, such as the current President, and, before him, President Reagan, unfortunately have failed to understand is that the benefit of such tax reductions is largely nullified by the failure to reduce government spending to the same extent.

For example, no overall capital accumulation is achieved when taxes are cut by X dollars even if .9X is saved, if government spending continues unchanged and the government now borrows X dollars instead of taking them away in taxes. All that this represents is the government taking away X dollars of savings through its borrowing, while private investors manage to add only .9X dollars through their additional saving made possible by tax reductions. The key to capital accumulation here lies in cutting government spending along with reducing taxes on the rich. Then, indeed, there will be capital accumulation and all boats will in fact rise in a rising tide of prosperity.

Let no one think even for a moment that my implied criticism of tax cuts without benefit of government spending cuts puts me in any way in the camp of those whom I criticize. To the contrary, it actually greatly widens the gulf between us. This is because the spending reductions that are necessary are precisely in the massive entitlement programs that presently consume so much of the government?s budget and which are so beloved of the Times and all of its ilk.

In addition to government budget deficits, whether financed by borrowing from the public or by the creation of new and additional money, what also works to undermine the positive effects of any pro-capital accumulation, pro-business policies the government might enact is the imposition of ever more government intervention. The Times and the rest of the left repeatedly encourage the government to impose such vague and amorphous criteria as ?environmental impact? and ?product safety? with absolutely no consideration of the economic impact of such measures.

Hundreds of billions, trillions, of dollars of costs are imposed in this way in the mindless expectation that the only effect will be to achieve a better ?environment? or greater ?safety,? at no cost to anyone, except possibly the hated corporations and the rich, who do not matter in any case. But then, surprise, surprise, since the rise in costs must be met in some way and cannot come out of the rate of profit to any great extent, the standard of living of the average wage earner fails to rise or actually declines. No one sees that what is responsible is the diversion of immense sums from what would have been higher wages into paying for the costs of the government?s intervention.
The average person does not see these things because he has not been taught to do so by the intellectuals. The intellectuals do not see them because they are overcome with envy. They cannot tolerate the thought that in a capitalist society others whom they regard as their intellectual and cultural inferiors, mere businessmen and capitalists, earn so much more and live so much better than they do. This is what explains the willful blindness and dishonesty of the Times? ?article,? its series on ?class,? and of so much of what appears on its pages every day.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

George Reisman, Ph.D., Professor of Economics at Pepperdine University's Graziadio School of Business and Management in Los Angeles, is the author of Capitalism: A Treatise on Economics (Ottawa, Illinois: Jameson Books, 1996) and is the translator of Ludwig von Mises's Epistemological Problems of Economics (New York: D. Van Nostrand & Co., 1960). His web site is http://www.capitalism.net.This article is copyright © 2005, by George Reisman. Permission is hereby granted to reproduce and distribute this article electronically and in print, other than as part of a book. (Email notification is requested). All other rights reserved. Contact him, see his Daily Article Archive, and comment on this article at the blog.

[1] The Medicare portion of the Social Security tax, which is 2.9 percent, applies to all income.

[2]This title is listed in the official Times bibliography for the series. The bibliography is introduced with these words: ?Following is a selection of books that were consulted by reporters and editors working on this series.?

[3] In fairness to Greenspan, it must be said that his remarks actually appear to apply to inequalities in wage rates between skilled and unskilled workers, rather than to very high incomes. (See ?As Income Gap Widens, Uncertainty Spreads,? Washingtonpost.com, Sept. 20, 2004.) Nevertheless, even if that is so, it represents a major concession to egalitarianism.



IMO - the author is correct in pointing out the political agenda of the Times. The chant of Bush tax cuts for the rich rings hollow when faced with the facts - facts the Times likes to leave out whe talking about the tax cuts all taxpayers recieved under Bush.

CsG
 

BBond

Diamond Member
Oct 3, 2004
8,363
0
0
What facts are those "csg"?

The Times reported on a real change in the distribution of wealth in America. If you consider that biased then the bias is your own.

 

Steeplerot

Lifer
Mar 29, 2004
13,051
6
81
sure, this is why we got less taxes this year from federal....

It's not envy, poverty is a form of violence perpetuated from wealth-addicted's class warfare on this country.
 

Tab

Lifer
Sep 15, 2002
12,145
0
71
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
Originally posted by: Tab
So, do you feel better after posting this rant CaD? :D

There was no rant. I am reposting a topic that was locked on a technicallity.

Do you feel there is nothing to discuss in the OP?

CsG

This is rant and a example of how hate "democrats".

No, there really isn't anything to discuss.
 

umbrella39

Lifer
Jun 11, 2004
13,816
1,126
126
Nice to see you and Capitalizt got the same memo :roll:

Oh and I have your whine swinging nancy. I got nothing locked.
 

CADsortaGUY

Lifer
Oct 19, 2001
25,162
1
76
www.ShawCAD.com
Originally posted by: BBond
What facts are those "csg"?

The Times reported on a real change in the distribution of wealth in America. If you consider that biased then the bias is your own.

The fact that Bush's tax cuts went to all tax-payers - not just the rich. Yes, consistently leaving out those facts shows an attempt to sway readers into believing how they presented it is fact.

If you don't want the facts presented to the readers -then fine - you'd fit right in with many "news" editors today - it's no wonder you defend their dishonesty.

Now is there anything in the OP you want to discuss?

CsG
 

CADsortaGUY

Lifer
Oct 19, 2001
25,162
1
76
www.ShawCAD.com
Originally posted by: umbrella39
Nice to see you and Capitalizt got the same memo :roll:

Oh and I have your whine swinging nancy. I got nothing locked.

No memo - I just went to respond to that thread and it was locked. It deserves to be posted again and discussed - which it seems you leftists don't want to do - you only want to "duhvert"... :p

CsG
 

umbrella39

Lifer
Jun 11, 2004
13,816
1,126
126
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
Originally posted by: umbrella39
Nice to see you and Capitalizt got the same memo :roll:

Oh and I have your whine swinging nancy. I got nothing locked.

No memo - I just went to respond to that thread and it was locked.
CsG

Fair enough. But I did not report it, I simply stated the author did not comment. Who even knows if that is a rule anymore. Carry on.
 

Moonbeam

Elite Member
Nov 24, 1999
73,156
6,317
126
It was clearly Marxist inspired so right there I needed to know no more. Everybody knows that anything Marxist inspired is bad, not to mention the obviousness of the fact that it was. This is just so much more class warfare where people without class and wealth try to take from those who do by the vote, rather than doing it the right way by buying the vote. Just disgusting. Sheep are meant to be shorn, that's why we have them around. People who try to change the way the system are rigged are just the biggest scum.
 

her209

No Lifer
Oct 11, 2000
56,336
11
0
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
It was clearly Marxist inspired so right there I needed to know no more. Everybody knows that anything Marxist inspired is bad, not to mention the obviousness of the fact that it was. This is just so much more class warfare where people without class and wealth try to take from those who do by the vote, rather than doing it the right way by buying the vote. Just disgusting. Sheep are meant to be shorn, that's why we have them around. People who try to change the way the system are rigged are just the biggest scum.
He he...
 

BBond

Diamond Member
Oct 3, 2004
8,363
0
0
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
Originally posted by: BBond
What facts are those "csg"?

The Times reported on a real change in the distribution of wealth in America. If you consider that biased then the bias is your own.

The fact that Bush's tax cuts went to all tax-payers - not just the rich. Yes, consistently leaving out those facts shows an attempt to sway readers into believing how they presented it is fact.

If you don't want the facts presented to the readers -then fine - you'd fit right in with many "news" editors today - it's no wonder you defend their dishonesty.

Now is there anything in the OP you want to discuss?

CsG

Don't be ridiculous. The very rich received the bulk of Bush tax cut at the expense of middle and lower wage earners.

Year-by-Year Analysis of the Bush Tax Cuts Shows Growing Tilt to the Very Rich

Is there any lie Bush tells that you WON'T believe, "csg"?
 

BBond

Diamond Member
Oct 3, 2004
8,363
0
0
PS Not to mention that if Bush was so accutely aware of the impending "crisis" in Social Security, why did he rape the treasury for his friends rather than use that surplus to pay some of the debt the government owes to the Social Security system?
 

CADsortaGUY

Lifer
Oct 19, 2001
25,162
1
76
www.ShawCAD.com
Originally posted by: BBond
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
Originally posted by: BBond
What facts are those "csg"?

The Times reported on a real change in the distribution of wealth in America. If you consider that biased then the bias is your own.

The fact that Bush's tax cuts went to all tax-payers - not just the rich. Yes, consistently leaving out those facts shows an attempt to sway readers into believing how they presented it is fact.

If you don't want the facts presented to the readers -then fine - you'd fit right in with many "news" editors today - it's no wonder you defend their dishonesty.

Now is there anything in the OP you want to discuss?

CsG

Don't be ridiculous. The very rich received the bulk of Bush tax cut at the expense of middle and lower wage earners.

Year-by-Year Analysis of the Bush Tax Cuts Shows Growing Tilt to the Very Rich

Is there any lie Bush tells that you WON'T believe, "csg"?

The only lie at play here is the lie that Bush's tax cuts were for the Rich. They were for all tax payers. But hey - continue to wallow in your ignorance.

Anything to say about the OP?

CsG
 

Engineer

Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
39,230
701
126
It wasn't a tax cut. It was a "loan" against the accumulated yearly deficits that we are building.
 

BBond

Diamond Member
Oct 3, 2004
8,363
0
0
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
Originally posted by: Tab
So, do you feel better after posting this rant CaD? :D

There was no rant. I am reposting a topic that was locked on a technicallity.

Do you feel there is nothing to discuss in the OP?

CsG

A "technicality"?

I often wonder whose complaints led to the rule change in the first place, "csg"???

As they say, be careful what you wish for...

...you know the rest, I'm sure.
 

BBond

Diamond Member
Oct 3, 2004
8,363
0
0
"csg" read the charts. Don't exhibit your ignorance so willingly. The tax cuts went to the very richest of wage earners at the expense of middle and low wage earners.

It's right there in black and white, and everything I've been saying I've been saying about the OP.

WTFU. Are you one of the top ten percent? Is that why you defend this robbery?
 

Moonbeam

Elite Member
Nov 24, 1999
73,156
6,317
126
Originally posted by: Engineer
It wasn't a tax cut. It was a "loan" against the accumulated yearly deficits that we are building.

Yup tax bonanza for the rich and a pittance for the rest as a bribe for votes now that some other responsible President will have to repay by raising taxes and being voted our of office.
 

BBond

Diamond Member
Oct 3, 2004
8,363
0
0
Originally posted by: Engineer
It wasn't a tax cut. It was a "loan" against the accumulated yearly deficits that we are building.

Precisely.

I wonder when the people who took the bulk of the money will pay it back? :roll:
 

BBond

Diamond Member
Oct 3, 2004
8,363
0
0
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: Engineer
It wasn't a tax cut. It was a "loan" against the accumulated yearly deficits that we are building.

Yup tax bonanza for the rich and a pittance for the rest as a bribe for votes now that some other responsible President will have to repay by raising taxes and being voted our of office.

Then the criminals who committed this theft will label those fiscally responsible enough to pay for it "tax and spend" and the American public, ever the ignorant-lazy-too-many-details-for-me-to-ever-comprehend fools, will vote the same criminals back in to re-run the same scam on them again.

And "csg" will defend the thieves and tell the victims that the money went to all of us. :roll:
 

Engineer

Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
39,230
701
126
Originally posted by: BBond
Originally posted by: Engineer
It wasn't a tax cut. It was a "loan" against the accumulated yearly deficits that we are building.

Precisely.

I wonder when the people who took the bulk of the money will pay it back? :roll:

As Charrison states (very well), people have discovered that they can vote themselves the treasury.

It will never be paid back. Rolled over into new debt, but never eliminated.
 

CADsortaGUY

Lifer
Oct 19, 2001
25,162
1
76
www.ShawCAD.com
Originally posted by: BBond
"csg" read the charts. Don't exhibit your ignorance so willingly. The tax cuts went to the very richest of wage earners at the expense of middle and low wage earners.

It's right there in black and white, and everything I've been saying I've been saying about the OP.

WTFU. Are you one of the top ten percent? Is that why you defend this robbery?

WTFU - the tax cuts clearly benefitted everyone who paid taxes.

Anything else besides your ignorant spew about taxes you wish to discuss? There is more there than just the dishonest tax description by the Times.

CsG
 

BBond

Diamond Member
Oct 3, 2004
8,363
0
0
Originally posted by: Engineer
Originally posted by: BBond
Originally posted by: Engineer
It wasn't a tax cut. It was a "loan" against the accumulated yearly deficits that we are building.

Precisely.

I wonder when the people who took the bulk of the money will pay it back? :roll:

As Charrison states (very well), people have discovered that they can vote themselves the treasury.

It will never be paid back. Rolled over into new debt, but never eliminated.

Well, we did a pretty good job of paying it back from 1992 through 2000.

Unfortunately, during that election year a criminal syndicate from Texas stole the election and emptied the treasury into the pockets of their rich benefactors in return for record contributions to "the campaign".
 

BBond

Diamond Member
Oct 3, 2004
8,363
0
0
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
Originally posted by: BBond
"csg" read the charts. Don't exhibit your ignorance so willingly. The tax cuts went to the very richest of wage earners at the expense of middle and low wage earners.

It's right there in black and white, and everything I've been saying I've been saying about the OP.

WTFU. Are you one of the top ten percent? Is that why you defend this robbery?

WTFU - the tax cuts clearly benefitted everyone who paid taxes.

Anything else besides your ignorant spew about taxes you wish to discuss? There is more there than just the dishonest tax description by the Times.

CsG

You are truly a champion fool.

edit to add link that "csg" obviously missed the first time.

Year-by-Year Analysis of the Bush Tax Cuts Shows Growing Tilt to the Very Rich