Originally posted by: BigDH01
Originally posted by: 351Cleveland
Awww... arent you cute. Let's pick andchoose what aspects of socialism we talk about by limiting ourselves to a view of socialism supported by ONE literary work. Since I never mentioned a single work or a single author, merely discussed the ideas of socialism, bite me. I didnt limit the discussion. You did... and in a very poor fashion I might add. I never said it was in any document, but it doesnt take a rocket scientist to figure it out. However, since you seem to have a need to have direct quotes in order to know it is there (in other words, not be able to take two ideas and derive a probable outcome), here it is:
I've read Kapital as well, and I know you haven't. The only idea of "Socialism" you've ever mentioned is the redistribution of wealth and then mentioned that progressive taxation is not. Obviously, progressive taxation has been used in Socialist ideology.
You've inherently limited the discussion by your lack of knowledge and history. I asked you earlier in the thread to define Socialism and describe why Obama is a Socialist. You didn't answer and went on some tirade about redistribution of wealth. You've clearly demonstrated your lack of education on the subject.
The reason I don't derive your probable outcome (the government taxes therefore it owns all wealth) is because you are using a slippery slope fallacy. When the government actually seizes control of private industry, you can call it Socialist. Until then, it is ignorant fear mongering.
"From each according to his ability, to each according to his need" - Karl Marx, "Critique of the Gotha Program", 1875
Now, I havent read it in context, but to the point where you can provide context for that quoe that DOESNT end up socialist, please, by all means give it to me.
Okay... where do you put the moneys obtained from a progressive tax system? Do you give them back to the rich people you took them from? No you dont. You give them to the people who "need" them.
So the rich don't benefit from the taxes they pay? What about schools, roads, police, military, communications, etc?
Quite honestly, I find Marx's tenet about progressive taxation to be superfluous anyway due to
Marx and Engels:
Extension of factories and instruments of production owned by the state; the bringing into cultivation of waste lands, and the improvement of the soil generally in accordance with a common plan.
Equal obligation of all to work. Establishment of industrial armies, especially for agriculture.
The state owns your body anyway, and they don't need to tax you to own your labor.
No shit there wouldnt be a tax in socialism... but at a certain point where the government confiscates enough of the rewards from industry, then they might as well own the means of production. In other words, if those means of production hold no promise of return for the private sector, they become worthless to anyone BUT the government, and are effectively owned by the government at that point.
If the government confiscates all profit then it de facto owns the company. However, you are still making a slippery slope argument. It also goes something like, "If the government can tax anything from you, they can tax everything from you." It's a false argument. The only solution to your dilemma is to tax nothing at all. Most Western nations realize this and have a mixed economy. You can tax without owning the corporation you are taxing. When the government does actually confiscate all wealth, then you'll have a case.
You might try discussing instead of acting like an intellectual and looking down your nose at people. I am more than happy to listen and learn, but only to and with people who are willing to do the same in return.
I'm not trying to act like an intellectual, I just get frustrated when people throw around titles for people when they don't understand the accusation they are making. I've asked several people on this board to defend their Socialist accusations and rarely do I get a response. This also applies to people I've asked in real life. Worse yet, in my opinion, when Americans think Socialism they think the Soviet Union which really belittles the people that actually suffered under the USSR's authoritarian regime. To try to get people to envision Stalin and the Soviet Union when they hear Obama's tax plan is really an insult.
It also small-minded. Yes, there are things about this country that are Socialistic in the Marxist sense. That includes progressive taxation but not redistribution of wealth. Taxation of corporations != public ownership of those corporations. Marxism also promotes free public education, something which the United States made universal in the 1800s. In fact, during the Reconstruction, the US achieved one of the highest literacy rates in the world due to an idea that was also grasped by Marx. But believing in free public education does not make one a Socialist. Neither does enjoying national parks although Marx believed that private land should be eliminated to be made public lands.
To call someone a Socialist because of him saying "spread the wealth" or because they believe in progressive taxation is just too simplistic. Hell, even Adam Smith discusses progressive taxation.
Adam Smith in The Wealth of Nations: The necessaries of life occasion the great expense of the poor. They find it difficult to get food, and the greater part of their little revenue is spent in getting it. The luxuries and vanities of life occasion the principal expense of the rich, and a magnificent house embellishes and sets off to the best advantage all the other luxuries and vanities which they possess. A tax upon house-rents, therefore, would in general fall heaviest upon the rich; and in this sort of inequality there would not, perhaps, be anything very unreasonable. It is not very unreasonable that the rich should contribute to the public expense, not only in proportion to their revenue, but something more than in that proportion.
This isn't on income specifically, but the idea is the same. Ultimately, the rich will, and should depending on your viewpoint, contribute more to the public good than the poor. This is redistribution of wealth and progressive taxation and it seems to be a nearly universal concept.