Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Originally posted by Socrates
The US wastes 250 million dollars a year paying interest on Reagan's debt. Of course I care about this. It hurts me financially since it costs me hundreds of dollars per year, every year (it has cost me thousands of dollars over the years). Clinton raised taxes on the rich, and he started paying off the debt. That was good policy. He also cut spending a lot which was also good (including more welfare reform than either Reagan or Bush have done).
To say that the debt is caused by spending is, of course, true by definition. The only way to build up debt is to spend. The question is: Exactly what spending do you want to cut? The military, social security, health care, and interest on the debt make up almost all of the budget. Which of these do you want to cut? I'd rather tax the rich their fair share than cut any of the first three. I'd like to pay off the damn debt so we could get 250 billion (!) extra dollars every year to use for whatever purpose we choose. But spending more on the military, more on social security, more on health care, and just continually increasing the debt is irresponsible and harmful. And that is exactly what Reagan did and what Bush II is doing now.
Originally posted by Socrates
The answer is that the government should not make them sell their family farm, and the government does not...
Originally posted by MtnBiker
Not exactly true.
Originally posted by Socrates
I have no problem with spouses wealth not being taxed until both of them die since they really co-own it. But when it gets transferred to someone else- whether that be their kids, friends, or whoever- it's income for the new person and should be taxed.
My parents' money is not my money. I have no right to any of it. If they choose to transfer it to me during their lives or after they die, it's income for me and (like everyone else) I should pay tax on my (unearned) income.
Originally posted by OCA
Here ya go, read it and weap.
Real Truth About Reaganomics
Originally posted by OCA
Marx's class theory rests on the premise that "the history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles."16 According to this view, ever since human society emerged from its primitive and relatively undifferentiated state it has remained fundamentally divided between classes who clash in the pursuit of class interests. In the world of capitalism, for example, the nuclear cell of the capitalist system, the factory, is the prime locus of antagonism between classes--between exploiters and exploited, between buyers and sellers of labor power--rather than of functional collaboration. Class interests and the confrontations of power that they bring in their wake are to Marx the central determinant of social and historical process.