A certain segment certainly does fit that mold, but many others (or perhaps most others) are either born into it or got lucky. Either way, the coded language embedded into this discussion is that people who are poor are just lazy and deserve to be poor.Hell's Bells wrote:most people are rich because of hard work and lifestyle/career choices.mquast53000 wrote:Gary do you assume that the rich people that we are discussing are rich because of their hard work?gtapp wrote:I don't care what the impact is, It is just fare! Why punish the rich. Again, if it has to work that way then come out and say we are going to screw the rich because that is the only way it works. And make sure that fire truck gets to their home 10x faster.
The rich people that we are discussing on this thread are rich through inheritance not hard work. Why should they have no significant tax burden? Look at the homes and cars that they own simply because of their last name? It isn't like the government is taking all their well earned money. This conversation is ridiculous. You would want a flat tax that would most likely increase poverty in America simply to be "fair" to rich people? We would solidify our caste system with such a move! Our government already does too much for wealthy America. Lets at least make the rich people pay for all the benefits that they reap from our society.
My family certainly benefitted from lower marginal tax rates when they were starting out, and I am now more than happy to pay a higher rate of tax than somebody making $20K a year (like my brother, a first year teacher in MT). It just seems to make sense to me, and I have no problem with it. If we changed the system to a pure flat tax, it would simply shift the tax burden from the rich people to the poor people. That just makes no sense.
If we want to go to a philosophical level and talk about the value that government provides various people, it can be argued that rich people benefit more from government than poor people, and should therefore pay more. The theory holds that rich people have a lot more to lose than poor people, so it is in their best interest to maintain a stable society to protect their assets. In the lack of a functioning government, the poor people take all of the rich people's stuff by force. That would be bad for rich people, so they have incentive to pay more to uphold the current structure of our government.
This was the mindset that ultimately brought us the New Deal in the 30s. It was guys like Joe Kennedy who supported such plans of wealth redistribution, not out of overt altruism, but because a society that falls into anarchy sucks for soon-to-be-former rich people (see French Revolution). That's why we have the structure we do -- to maintain the status quo to some extent with a few idealists hoping that we can actually lift the poorer people into a better position in life by putting most of the tax burden on those who can afford it.
It seems to be a pretty good system, actually. We can argue forever about what tax rates are perfect, but the idea of a progressive tax rate structure is virtually a no-brainer these days, outside of discussions like this.