tin00can wrote:It's cool how eanax has to keep reminding everybody that ugmo is mattbro.
Dude, we know. Really, we do. But hey, feel free to throw it in every post you quote him from.
LOL
I didn't.
Moderator: Metal Sludge
tin00can wrote:It's cool how eanax has to keep reminding everybody that ugmo is mattbro.
Dude, we know. Really, we do. But hey, feel free to throw it in every post you quote him from.
LOL - it's alright. I guess he thinks he's scoring points or something, but it doesn't bother me. I outed myself a year or so ago anyway, which is the only reason anyone knows that Ugmo is Mattbro.tin00can wrote:It's cool how eanax has to keep reminding everybody that ugmo is mattbro.
Dude, we know. Really, we do. But hey, feel free to throw it in every post you quote him from.
eanax wrote:All of them were far more Progressive/Socialist-oriented than they were Federalists -- in the tradition of the Founding Fathers, who would not have supported a Federal income tax.
That level of taxation was insane. And JFK, who would have been a fiscal conservative by today's standards, dropped that level to 70%. His famous phrase was "a rising tide lifts all boats." And he was right.
You're right, I am not in favor of a progressive income tax system. And, you're wrong because a progressive income tax has everything to do with getting to Socialism. It's soaking the rich and redistributing the proceeds to those whose votes can be bought. Soak the rich and create a disincentive to make money. Thus, eventually and effectively, tightening the tourniquet on capitalism. It's a different path to get to Socialism, but it's still effective.
And they are all Socialist countries. Socialism is just one step from Communism -- the supposed ideal. You should know that. Seeing how you claim to know so much about Marxist philosophical thought.
And just because every other "first-world country" has it does not mean the U.S. should. Applying your logic in another scenario, just because all of your friends jumped out of the second floor window and didn't get hurt, doesn't mean you should do the same thing thinking you won't get injured.
You should read America Alone by Mark Steyn. He points out why Socialist states in Europe will eventually fall into ruin.
Your hyperbolic claims of victory ring hollow and show an immaturity rivaled by an 8th grader. The difference is an 8th grader sometimes listens.
That includes the Clinton years, by the way, whose tax rates Obama is reinstating. So don't worry, even under Obama the wealth will continue to be redistributed out of your pocket and into Bill Gates' pocket. No reason for you to get all hysterical, because things aren't going to change much under Obama.Data from the United States Department of Commerce and Internal Revenue Service indicate that income inequality has been increasing since the 1970s,[9][10][11][12][13] whereas it had been declining during the mid 20th century.[14][15] As of 2006, the United States had one of the highest levels of income inequality, as measured through the Gini index, among high income countries, comparable to that of some middle income countries such as Russia or Turkey,[16] being one of only few developed countries where inequality has increased since 1980.[17]Data from the United States Department of Commerce and Internal Revenue Service indicate that income inequality has been increasing since the 1970s,[9][10][11][12][13] whereas it had been declining during the mid 20th century.[14][15] As of 2006, the United States had one of the highest levels of income inequality, as measured through the Gini index, among high income countries, comparable to that of some middle income countries such as Russia or Turkey,[16] being one of only few developed countries where inequality has increased since 1980.
Yeah yeah, he also pals around with terrorists, we know.thejuggernaut wrote:He hangs around with communists, appoints communists and he's a liberation theologist. He sure seems a fabian socialist and his first step in trying to implement it is having the government preside over everyone's medical history.
Ugmo wrote:Yeah yeah, he also pals around with terrorists, we know.thejuggernaut wrote:He hangs around with communists, appoints communists and he's a liberation theologist. He sure seems a fabian socialist and his first step in trying to implement it is having the government preside over everyone's medical history.
And he wants the government to take over healthcare! Which is weird, because he also dropped the public option (not even a more sweeping proposal like single payer, but just a public option to compete with private insurance companies) like a bad habit as soon as he realized Joe Lieberman wasn't going to support it, yet somehow he is a Marxist.
So much idiocy in this thread.
Eurabia
Mark Steyn believes that Eurabia — a future where the European continent is dominated by Islam — is an imminent reality that cannot be reversed. "The problem, after all, is not that the sons of Allah are 'long shots' but that they're certainties. Every Continental under the age of 40 — make that 60, if not 75 — is all but guaranteed to end his days living in an Islamified Europe."[25] "Native populations on the continent are aging and fading and being supplanted remorselessly by a young Muslim demographic."[26] Steyn claims that Muslims will account for perhaps 40 percent of the population by 2020, but Globe and Mail correspondent Doug Saunders labels the assertion false:
Slightly more than 4 percent of Europe's population is Muslim, as defined by demographers (though about 80 per cent of these people are not religiously observant, so they are better defined as secular citizens who have escaped religious nations). It is possible, though not certain, that this number could rise to 6 percent by 2020. If current immigration and birth rates remain the same, it could even rise to 10 percent within 100 years. But it won't, because Muslims don't actually have more babies than other populations do under the same circumstances. The declining population growth rates are not confined to native populations. In fact, immigrants from Muslim countries are experiencing a faster drop in reproduction rates than the larger European population.[27]
Ugmo wrote:
1) I really am not interested in the Founding Fathers. Most of them owned slaves fer chrissakes, and things have changed a little over the past 250 years, you know? It's a little strange to be basing your entire political philosophy on a time when the world was completely different than it is today.
Tommy wrote:And THAT right there is why people give you shit.
They also made it hard as fuck to pass an amendment...for a reason.Ugmo wrote:Tommy wrote:And THAT right there is why people give you shit.Oh, is that it? Seriously - they got a lot of things right back in 1787 or whatever, but basing modern policy strictly on what the Founding Fathers believed over two centuries seems like a dodgy idea to me. They themselves provided for amendments, because they realized circumstances change, you know?
In other words, I think a lot of people wrongly invoke the Founding Fathers to justify their own loony beliefs, especially nowadays with all these Tea Party lunatics around. I have very little doubt that the Founding Fathers would look at those guys and go "Man, what a bunch of morons."
"Admittedly" - when did I admit I don't know much about them?Tommy wrote:So, you admittedly don't know much about the people who started this place but you have every idea in the book on how to change it. Gotcha.
Ugmo wrote:"Admittedly" - when did I admit I don't know much about them?Tommy wrote:So, you admittedly don't know much about the people who started this place but you have every idea in the book on how to change it. Gotcha.
Seriously, if you think the world should be run in 2010 the way it was in 1787, then I question your sanity.
Ugmo wrote:Dude, no need to get hysterical or paranoid or whatever is happening to you right now. There are no black U.N. helicopters flying overhead. Both the world and the U.S. are much different places than they were in 1787. It's just a friggin expression - like "the world is a scary place" or whatever. Capiche? (Maybe I shouldn't use foreign words so as not to insult your sensibilities.)
The discussion in this case pertains to a federal income tax. Eanax maintains it's a bad idea because he believes the Founding Fathers wouldn't have wanted one. Well that's just grand, because the Founding Fathers probably also wouldn't have forseen trying to balance a 3.8 trillion dollar budget without one. Hence this is an example of how completely inane it would be to base all policy decisions on what the Founding Fathers would want (or more accurately, on what some interpret the Founding Fathers to have wanted based on what they themselves want).
Which is why I said I'm not interested in "what they'd want", because it's not very realistic in the 21st century. They probably wouldn't want to invade a Middle Eastern country either, but tough shit, it's already happened and there's a 3.8 trillion budget to be paid for.Tommy wrote:If you read a book you'd know that people aren't assuming what the FF's would want.
I hate to break it to you but the FF's wouldn't want an income tax at all. It's an American thing to not want to pay your taxes.
LOL - that's the only argument you've got. I can just as easily read the news over here as you can over there, and apparently I spend more time doing it than you.Tommy wrote:Again, playing Monday morning QB from 5000 miles away is bad for your arguments.
Ugmo wrote:Which is why I said I'm not interested in "what they'd want", because it's not very realistic in the 21st century. They probably wouldn't want to invade a Middle Eastern country either, but tough shit, it's already happened and there's a 3.8 trillion budget to be paid for.Tommy wrote:If you read a book you'd know that people aren't assuming what the FF's would want.
I hate to break it to you but the FF's wouldn't want an income tax at all. It's an American thing to not want to pay your taxes.
LOL - that's the only argument you've got. I can just as easily read the news over here as you can over there, and apparently I spend more time doing it than you.Tommy wrote:Again, playing Monday morning QB from 5000 miles away is bad for your arguments.
Ugmo wrote:Tommy, you keep bringing that up, but this isn't the 18th century. I don't have to wait six months for the boat to show up with the news, you know? I have the exact same access to the exact same news you do. It's just a matter of being willing to follow it.
Whether or not you like me spouting off is another issue. I submit that I care even less about that than about whether the Founding Fathers were in favor of a federal income tax.
Yeah, the Republican Party has changed lots in the last two decades.Tommy wrote:Ugmo wrote:Tommy, you keep bringing that up, but this isn't the 18th century. I don't have to wait six months for the boat to show up with the news, you know? I have the exact same access to the exact same news you do. It's just a matter of being willing to follow it.
Whether or not you like me spouting off is another issue. I submit that I care even less about that than about whether the Founding Fathers were in favor of a federal income tax.
I keep bringing it up because it's a fact.
You don't live here and yet by your own words you "hate" the GOP. What kind of sense does that make? You come off as intolerant yet you really only know what an American Republican is by what the internet tells you.
I don't know, I don't think it's something you can just brush aside.
And it's not just a matter of following the news. Perspective is kind of important, don't cha think?
Wait, is this about you being personally insulted about the way I think of the GOP? If so, let me reiterate once again that I am not talking about regular Joes like you and me, for whom I have no hard feelings at all (in fact, a majority of the people I consider myself to be friendly with here at Sluge probably lean more to the right than the left). I'm talking about national elected officials. And those fuckers have earned my contempt. They spent eight years fucking things up not just for the country, but in many cases for the rest of the world as well. And now, sore losers that they are, they are devoting all their energy to making sure nothing gets done at all. It is effortlessly easy to observe what they're up to, even from over here.Tommy wrote:I keep bringing it up because it's a fact.
You don't live here and yet by your own words you "hate" the GOP. What kind of sense does that make? You come off as intolerant yet you really only know what an American Republican is by what the internet tells you.
I don't know, I don't think it's something you can just brush aside.
And it's not just a matter of following the news. Perspective is kind of important, don't cha think?
Ugmo wrote:Wait, is this about you being personally insulted about the way I think of the GOP? If so, let me reiterate once again that I am not talking about regular Joes like you and me, for whom I have no hard feelings at all (in fact, a majority of the people I consider myself to be friendly with here at Sluge probably lean more to the right than the left). I'm talking about national elected officials. And those fuckers have earned my contempt. They spent eight years fucking things up not just for the country, but in many cases for the rest of the world as well. And now, sore losers that they are, they are devoting all their energy to making sure nothing gets done at all. It is effortlessly easy to observe what they're up to, even from over here.Tommy wrote:I keep bringing it up because it's a fact.
You don't live here and yet by your own words you "hate" the GOP. What kind of sense does that make? You come off as intolerant yet you really only know what an American Republican is by what the internet tells you.
I don't know, I don't think it's something you can just brush aside.
And it's not just a matter of following the news. Perspective is kind of important, don't cha think?
For that matter, I grew up in America and all of my immediate family members still live there. AND I vote in America, so not only am I well within my rights in despising the Republican Party for its greed and selfishness, I express that democratically every two years.
As well as vociferously for hours a day on the Internet!
The American thing about taxes is simply that taxation WITHOUT REPRESENTATION is tyranny. The Ff initially simply wanted voting delegates in Parliament in accordance with population, as citizens of the Home Isle had. The King said "Fuck off, I own you, you don't have the same rights citizens of Britain itself do."Ugmo wrote:Which is why I said I'm not interested in "what they'd want", because it's not very realistic in the 21st century. They probably wouldn't want to invade a Middle Eastern country either, but tough shit, it's already happened and there's a 3.8 trillion budget to be paid for.Tommy wrote:If you read a book you'd know that people aren't assuming what the FF's would want.
I hate to break it to you but the FF's wouldn't want an income tax at all. It's an American thing to not want to pay your taxes.
LOL - that's the only argument you've got. I can just as easily read the news over here as you can over there, and apparently I spend more time doing it than you.Tommy wrote:Again, playing Monday morning QB from 5000 miles away is bad for your arguments.
Heh.....the FF didn't want to tax? Ever hear of the Whiskey Rebellion? And the way the Whiskey act was structured, small producers wound up being dunned for a lot more....the large producers only had to pay a flat fee, the smaller ones, taxed by the gallon. Guess who one of the larger whiskey producers was? The father of our country.Tommy wrote:
I hate to break it to you but the FF's wouldn't want an income tax at all. It's an American thing to not want to pay your taxes.
Again, playing Monday morning QB from 5000 miles away is bad for your arguments.