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Flat Tax and Tithing

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Cheezus, are some of you actually in favour of a flat-tax?!?




I love Canada more and more with each passing day
I'm not arguing a flat tax.. but tax reform, sure.

As a self-described novice in economics... where are you coming from, btw?
 
So which part entails the injustice, wealthy people being able to have things they want above and beyond their needs or poor people not being able to have much beyond what they need to live?

If wealthy people having things they want is not an injustice in and of itself then they don't deserve to be penalized for it. Also, if that's an injustice then there is no problem with the poor, they're living exactly the way a person ought to live.

If the problem is that poor people don't have things they want, the solution is not to take it away from someone else and give it to them.
 
Cheezus, are some of you actually in favour of a flat-tax?!?




I love Canada more and more with each passing day

Feel free to make your case against it. I look forward to your insight.
 
Nothing like a good dose of victim-blaming and self-justification to get you through the day.

Nevertheless, he raises a valid point.

It is hard to stomach especially by someone like yourself that has come so far from so little. But there ARE people that are poor because they make bad decisions, have misaligned priorities, etc. Again, sad to say, but no amount of throwing money, welfare, goods, services, or otherwise at them is going to help them.

The key here is education. Can we teach them to make better decisions, to think objectively and have logical priorities, etc.? Yes.

But yet another key here is their desire to be educated.

They have to want to learn... they have to want to better themselves... and a significant portion of those that are poor do not want to go to the effort. They just want what they want.

I think that's the biggest threshold to be determined here.
At what point is it just to take from one to give to another who is in need?
And at what point is it unjust to take from one to give to another who will waste it and/or not use it wisely?

The differences in opinion arise from varying viewpoints on where those thresholds are, and which has priority.
 
I don't often agree with One Brow on social issues, but I do here. I am completely against a flat tax structure for this same reason. Now should the current tax rules be changed? Almost certainly. But a flat tax is not the answer.

I think many (including me) are simply arguing the merits of the flat tax from the perspective that it is the best way to close tax loopholes and exceptions. Even though I understand why they feel that way, I find it a little ironic that there are those that rail against the current tax code because it's so unjust, and yet when you put forward a system that will not allow anyone to exploit anything, it's entirely too strict for them.

EDIT: Arguing the merits of something does not necessarily mean agreement with said principles. My mind is still not made up. But it takes an educated mind to consider the merits of an argument they don't agree with in principle.
 
Colton, what should be changed, then? What is the "fair" amount that should be taxed for different levels? Why exactly is it harder for the $10k earner to pay 10% and how do you quantify that? Is it easier for the $100k earner to pay $30k in taxes than for the $70k earner to pay $1k?
 
A bit of levity.. my wife (who knows NOTHING of taxes, finance, economics) looked over my shoulder and said, "the flat tax just needs some implants."

Not really funny as I type it.. but a little funny when she said it.
 
I can hardly imagine anything that could be be more unfair than this.

Some folks justly view our present tax code and the system we have in place to administer it as perhaps one of the greatest RICO operations on Earth. Too many lobbyists, too many politicians, and too many bureaucrats, and everybody working for their own personal benefit.

The IRS agent who can't run ten-key with no sense of humor for the taxpayer who laughs at that incompetence has the power to just destroy the citizen with the courage to laugh. Seize the cash in the till, close the shop, and sell it at auction. Many federal departments of government have their own "courts" and their own "judges", and you don't get to contest the rules they make. No jury, no right to appeal their decisions, and no vote to change the officials.

Anyone who really means to be "fair" has got to start with taking down this whole system.

Let's use his bloody logic against him:

*Heterosexuals with children need/value marriage more so no equality under the law for you homosexuals.

*Also he says "separate is inherently unequal" then we can't have separate tax brackets for anyone.

Suck it, lib!
 
I said that very poorly. I didn't mean to imply most conservatives aren't sympathetic to those in tough economic conditions.. I just meant to say that I may lean more left in that regard than most.

Your core assumption is wrong. That the left is some how more "sympathetic" by giving away other people's money.

I would say most right-wingers think compassion is volunteering your own goods and time, not asking the government to do it for you.
 
$1000 means a lot more to a person living on $10000/year than $10000 means to someone living on $100000/year. It's not equality.

I agree. My simplistic idea to make it more "fair" (I guess) is to make the first $20 to $30k for everyone tax free, and then have a flat tax on the amount made after that.

I'm sure there are hundreds of economists who have some sort of problem with that idea, but to me it seems pretty fair.
 
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