Dr Kynes
Well-Known Member
when the investment class has incentive to invest their money without punitive taxation, they are more likely to risk their money in investments that create jobs rather than hiding it in the tax free bond markets, foreign currency exchanges, or dancing horses.and every time you fail to address the documented expansion and contraction of income inequality as it relates to historical tax rates, you make yourself look more and more like a paid poster with lots of creative abilities but no juice to attack the facts.
let's go back and cut to the chase of this thread: defend the successes of trickle down economics.
the current tax scheme is designed to extract money from anyone who has it, regardless of their ability to afford the taxation. the rich, having the ability to hide their dough, do so. this money is taken out of circulation and placed in investments that will prevent it's seizure by the tax man. those of us who live on our wages have no such ability to hide our income and thus take the full brunt of the tax man's wrath.
when the wealthy must hide their wealth or risk losing it to the government's greed, industry suffers, the economy suffers and the lowly wage earner is squeezed harder to get as much gravy as possible to feed the tax man's insatiable lust for green.
if the tax rates were flattened, and many of the exemptions and loopholes were closed more wealth would be invested in our economy instead of being sequestered in the back yard as a sack full of krugerands.
likewise reducing the regulatory burden on industry (especially small start ups and small-medium businesses) would help to reduce the extraction of america's industry from manufacturing to agriculture and maybe bring some of that shit home with the judicious use of tariffs and import taxes.
further, all US corporations who employ workers overseas should be required to pay into OUR social security, workers comp, and unemployment insurance systems just as if they were employing US citizens at the same wage. this would place upon those who employ foreign workers the same wage pressures that US employers must bear.