Weena wrote:
Raising taxes in a recession, by just about every economic school, is a bad thing. Even Keynesians feel taxes cut consumption and consumption is paramount to them.
Not true. I eagerly subscribe to Henry George economics and I think that's exactly what this country needs.
Weena wrote:
We could just raise it on the rich though huh, course anybody that becomes unemployed due to that is tax revenue lost and probably money doled out. So then not only are we as stagnant as before, but less productive and in a long run, losing money.
Trickle-down economics doesn't work any more than it worked in the days of Marie Antoinette or Julius Caesar. If the rich were investing their funds in real enterprise, we wouldn't be in this "jobless recovery" in the first place.
If we have lower taxes for these people than ever before and no job growth to speak of, what is our basis for believing that lower taxes will correlate to their creating more jobs?
Weena wrote:
We don't need higher taxes, we need more people paying them. And I'm giving the benefit of the doubt on the premise that we have a revenue problem, which we don't.
When we are talking about "the rich" we are talking about a basically invisible .1% of the population. The middle class is drained dry.
The rich have never enjoyed greater prosperity in either absolute or relative terms, and at this time are a greater expense to the government in the form of bailouts and services than ever before. How is it unfair to expect them to contribute more?
Weena wrote:
And when it's not only not a disaster, but a good thing, it'll be mud on the faces of those dems screaming it would be complete ruin. If you don't believe me, look at how bad Minnesota isn't doing.
It's not that simple. Yes, life will go on, but it makes the US look like a banana republic and that will damage our interests. It also will cost money because the obligations are already set in stone and what will happen is a bunch of litigation and high-interest short-term IOUs.