Eturnalshift wrote:
I think the public good is beneficial and worth saving, not through handouts and entitlements, but through incentive to better oneself and by accepting some degree of personal responsibility. I'm not in the begrudged $250000 tax bracket, but I believe I could make it to that point some day, and when I do, that my hard work and efforts shouldn't be demonized for it.
There's a difference between being "demonized" and just paying slightly more as a result of being able to bear it. Nobody makes it anywhere on their own. You're one of the few people who's actually gotten farther with less help, but you still hitched a ride with the government (serving counts) and made the most of what you had thanks to federal programs. Truth is, hard work isn't always enough for livable circumstances. We need factory workers. We need farmhands. We need street cleaners. Those people will never, ever be wealthy. But they should, since their work is necessary until we make machines to replace them, be paid enough (or otherwise taken care of through federal/state-mandated programs) to eat, live somewhere that doesn't require a two-hour commute, and occasionally have some free time.
Should people hate you if you become rich? No. But you should subsidize them a little more in turn, because they're the reason your standard of living is possible.
Eturnalshift wrote:
I believe that individual families, communities and states -- not the Federal government -- know what is best for them. I trust in individuals, families and even companies -- not the Federal government -- to know how to best manage their personal and financial affairs. When people fail to handle their personal and financial responsibilities, I don't think they should always be bailed out. I have faith in business and markets to provide opportunity for the people. I don't mind Federal taxation and regulation, but I think there is a point where too much of either is a determent to economic prosperity.
I don't think the states are in any better position to manage themselves than a federal bureau is. "States" are a relic of a premodern age, which we've kept mostly out of habit and tradition, but the whole concept is ludicrously outdated now that communication is instant and infrastructure supports rapid transit. But truth is, I don't trust individuals to manage their personal and financial affairs. People are underinformed, lied to, and manipulated. How the hell can they successfully manage themselves when half the stuff they think they know is misinformation? There's a reason people have financiers, and that's because they don't want to learn how to handle their money all by themselves. And it makes perfect sense, because financiers are good at that sort of thing. There's a reason people hire lawyers and psychologists, and that's because they can't manage their personal affairs on their own. The entire service sector exists because people aren't multi-disciplinary geniuses.
I don't think people should be entitled to keep (relatively) extravagant lifestyles when debt crushes them. I don't think those who live above their means deserve to be bailed out to such a point that they continue living on credit. But I think hunger and homelessness in a country like this is appalling. We have more than enough food and housing to fix those problems. Forcing people to downgrade and live modestly is fine. Forcing people to die on the streets isn't fine.
And I don't ever trust companies to do the right thing. I realize you said you have no problems with certain regulations, but I just want to reiterate. Without regulation, as Aestu pointed out, we'd have no clean water, no clean air, not a single acre of arable land in the midwest, no seat belts, no minimum wage, no job security in any field, no caps on fees for certain services rendered, no guarantee to running water or electricity, no construction standards, no safety in the workplace standards, etc.
Oh and React, Obama's not a pacifist. I'm well aware of that. He's just more in-line with what I stand for than the other party, and I'm gonna vote instead of doing nothing.