
I couldn't resist making a counter-topic seeing that the "Liberal view" thread has exploded like crazy.
http://www.americanthinker.com/2009/12/ ... socia.htmlWe need not go beyond our own recent history to find examples of the demoralizing effect of depriving people of the personal responsibility of being free. In response to the urging of our social engineers, many Americans are trying to avoid this responsibility by voting for men who promise to install a system of "government-guaranteed security", a partial return to the old slave laws of some of our Southern States that guaranteed to all slaves "the right to food and raiment, to kind attention when sick, to maintenance in old age." And the arguments used in defense of this present-day trend toward the bondage of a welfare state are essentially the same as those used formerly to defend the bondage of outright slavery.
For example, many of the slaveholders claimed to know what was "best for the slaves". After all, hadn't they "rescued" the slaves from a life of savagery? Our social reformers who advocate "government-guaranteed security" also claim that they know what is best for the people and they say, "After all, haven't the American people shown conclusively that they are incapable of handling the responsibility for their own welfare?"
Many of the slaveholders believed sincerely that the "dumb, ignorant slaves" would starve to death unless their welfare were guaranteed by the masters. And the social engineers say, "Are you in favor of letting people starve?"
The easy way to eliminate off shore tax havens is to lower taxes.JoeOh wrote:Ohh please, Conservatives are just as thieving too. Even more so with off-shore tax havens and the erosion of the American dream for the average worker.
Nice try-
Ah. The zero sum theory of economics.No, you're to easy. If we eliminate all the income taxes, the ones that have the money will have even more money (and horde it)
http://www.americanthinker.com/2009/12/ ... socia.htmlIn response to the urging of our social engineers, many Americans are trying to avoid this responsibility by voting for men who promise to install a system of "government-guaranteed security", a partial return to the old slave laws of some of our Southern States that guaranteed to all slaves "the right to food and raiment, to kind attention when sick, to maintenance in old age." And the arguments used in defense of this present-day trend toward the bondage of a welfare state are essentially the same as those used formerly to defend the bondage of outright slavery.
For example, many of the slaveholders claimed to know what was "best for the slaves". After all, hadn't they "rescued" the slaves from a life of savagery? Our social reformers who advocate "government-guaranteed security" also claim that they know what is best for the people and they say, "After all, haven't the American people shown conclusively that they are incapable of handling the responsibility for their own welfare?"
Many of the slaveholders believed sincerely that the "dumb, ignorant slaves" would starve to death unless their welfare were guaranteed by the masters. And the social engineers say, "Are you in favor of letting people starve?
Yes, I do very much remember that too. My company was at the end of a long line of companies that were going down, because a big company had wrongly invested in the .com bubble.Yea, I remember the (dot)com boom.......and bust. After the bust, the jobs went bye-bye and the wages went down-down. Doesn't sound too stable an idea to me.
Actually the main reason why they invest is because they can write off their investments from taxes. If you take the taxes out of the equation, you might see a lot more money lying in savings accounts than you do these days.In fact the rich do not (a la Scrooge McDuck) swim in piles of gold coins and bank notes. They invest.
Note that it was one sector of the economy that provided most of the growth. Now think of what would happen if the economy was firing on all cylinders. Lower taxes can do that.JoeOh wrote:Yea, I remember the (dot)com boom.......and bust. After the bust, the jobs went bye-bye and the wages went down-down. Doesn't sound too stable an idea to me.