awm, on 2012-August-25, 18:44, said:
Rather than cut spending on these things, then use the revenue loss later down the road (because people are too uneducated or sick to work) as an excuse to cut spending further, we need to invest.
in the final analysis, it comes down to ones philosophy of gov't... believe it or not, some feel that it isn't the job of the gov't to pick winners and losers, because it isn't very good at it... as obama has shown us, he is very poor at such "picking"... let the free market do the picking then, if necessary, the gov't can help out in the form of tax credits, etc...
the objection to this is, why would anyone invest in something the success of which is so nebulous? but that's exactly the kind of thing that has gone on throughout our history... many entrepreneurs went broke, some more than once, before their investments paid off
having said that, i do agree there are some things in which the gov't should "invest"... infrastructure would be one... almost any (proven) weapons- and/or health-based technology would be another
blackshoe, on 2012-August-25, 20:52, said:
As for the tax-code, I'd love to see a rational (and simple) tax code but I gave up on the idea more than thirty years ago. It's just not going to happen as long as we elect politicians whose driving force is garnering power for themselves (most of them). Frankly, we should only elect honorable people who don't want the job, who we will then drag kicking and screaming to the Capital.
i'm not positive
this data has the latest version of his plan, but part of it reads:
Quote
Individual income tax rates decline by 20 percent, as shown:
Current Rate 10% 15% 25% 28% 33% 35%
New Rate 8% 12% 20% 22.4% 26.4% 28%
Of particular importance are details of applying the exemption of investment income (long-term capital gains, dividends, and interest income) for most taxpayers with income less than threshold amounts ($200,000 for married couples, $100,000 for single returns and $150,000 for heads of households). We assume that all other income is counted first in determining whether investment income is subject to tax. Therefore, for any married couple with income from other sources above $200,000, all capital gains, dividends, and interest would continue to be subject to current tax rules.
i'm not crazy about his plan, though it is much better than what we have... it doesn't address spending that i can tell, and it's not simplified enough for me, but i might have just missed those parts...
has anyone read up on the mack-penny plan? nothing is ever as simple as one would hope, but this plan basically cuts one penny of every dollar spent and, beginning in 2018 (i think), caps spending at 18% of GDP... a lot of people, even liberals, have come out in support of this
"Paul Krugman is a stupid person's idea of what a smart person sounds like." Newt Gingrich (paraphrased)