The rich already pay most of the taxes in this country. I don't think the government is very capable of making sound financial decisions, so before people are asked to give the government more money, the government should cut the sh!t out of things that need to be cut. Government needs to be less intrusive in things they should not be involved in, and more efficient in things they should be doing.
http://www.usdebtclock.org/
The Democrats' great creation of Medicare and Social Security has created an unfunded liability greater than all of this nation's wealth, including the evil corporations you despise. Cuts are necessary.
Public union busting is one step forward for America.
Th rich also make most of the money, a much larger % of national income than pre-Reagan. And as their share of income skyrocketed, their effective federal tax rates fell by a third. I didn't notice rich people having trouble making ends meet pre-Reagan, but today they'd tell us that the world was coming to an end if they were asked to pay pre-Reagan tax rates on much, much larger inflation adjusted incomes.
SS isn't an unfunded liability- there's a $3T trust fund, whose growth was set in motion by that Hero of the Right, RR. He "saved" SS, remember? And his fan club thought it was all wonderful when SS contributed monies to the general fund, but now, well now that it's time to honor the obligations to the Trust, well, uhh, err, they want to welch on it, right? While holding effective top tier tax rates at the lowest in the first world, of course.
Righties love to rave about smaller govt, but when it comes right down to it, they're not willing to make the cuts they promise. Hell, republican governance has increased debt a lot more than democratic governance over the last 30 years because they've cut taxes willy nilly w/o reducing expenditures. This congressional go-round will be no different. They want big govt just as much as Dems, except they want to spend money on blowing up brown people and corporate welfare rather than on feeding people or anything else that might improve the lives of average Americans.