Author Topic: Oh my! Bush has lost his luster?!? Let the fun begin!  (Read 3238 times)

Offline 1776

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Oh my! Bush has lost his luster?!? Let the fun begin!
« Reply #60 on: February 10, 2001, 12:19:00 AM »
He heeee, am gonna get me tax cut      

The Libs are going to take it in the butt!!      
TAX CUT, TAX CUT, TAX CUT NA,NA,NAA,NA,HAAaa  

So, what does the leader of the democrats,Al Gore, think of the tax cut?  Al? Al? Where are you AL?  Anyone seen Al?

 



[This message has been edited by 1776 (edited 02-10-2001).]

Offline ljkdern

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« Reply #61 on: February 10, 2001, 01:49:00 AM »
I dont know why Im doing this but....what the heck.
In a perfect world people with the God given ability to succeed in society would help those in need without being forced to do so. Unfortunately the sad reality is that most humans dont really give a damn about anyone but themselves. Governments allow the higher mind of humanity to prevail where humans alone would not do the right thing. Without Government we would not have gone to the moon, neutralized the threat of communism, or helped the poor. To think that everyone has the capability of achieving self actualization or even getting enough food to live in todays society is false. Everything that one gains in this life is attributable to God and NOT onself. Taxing the rich is not communism....its morality.

Offline leonid

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« Reply #62 on: February 10, 2001, 08:17:00 AM »
Kieren,
None taken, guy.  I'm a Buddhist now, but part of me will always be Catholic    There's definitely something to be said about taking something to heart, so I can only respect that about Baptist  

Toad,
Sorry, but I'm not going to play that game with you.  This is not about debating for me, but has more to do with finding a common ground.

While going to college in Hawaii, I played an awful lot of soccer, and it's still my favorite sport.  We used to have pick-up games on campus down in the quarry where all the fields were.  A large number of guys from Hong Kong used to show up, and I got to know them fairly well.  Even was on their team for a year in amateur league.  Well, the people from Hong Kong had a peculiar way of picking teams for ad hoc games.  Basically, we all just formed one line, then one by one, starting with the first in line, we'd each call out 'One!' or 'Two!' in an alternating fashion: 1-2-1-2-1-2-1.  Once done all the 'Ones' formed a team, and the 'Twos' formed another.  It goes without saying that some games were a bit lopsided, and that bothered me.  Finally, I went to one of me Hong Kong friends and said we should just pick two captains, and have them choose players one by one until everyone was picked.  He kind of dismissed it, but didn't really say anything further.  So, I pressed on, trying to convince him why it would be a good thing, resulting in more even teams.  Finally, he just said it wouldn't be good, which had me confused at first.  Then it dawned on me why they picked teams the 1-2 way.  No one was ever hurt by being picked last.  I never brought that up again.

Like this example, we can choose to go for freedom of opportunity at the possible expense of our fellow man.  Or, we can forego the possibility of great individual wealth, yet insure that every citizen is well cared for.

ingame: Raz

Offline Toad

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« Reply #63 on: February 10, 2001, 10:09:00 AM »
Leonid, <please read it all before hitting the reply switch>

It seems to me then that you are simply not interested in discussing this subject. Rather you wish to state YOUR position, implyling that all other positions are incorrect and then leave the thread.

Sorry, but this seems a lot like "intolerance" to me. If you're really interested in "seeing this country becoming more socially conscious and responsible of its own citizens" it would seem that you will have to educate those of us that don't meet your standards.

That's why I asked you to define the term "wealthy". You propose "penalizing" those who accumlate wealth, partially I suppose, through the progressive taxation system.

All right then. Let's look at the stats again:

1998 Tax Statistics

% Of Taxpayers/Income Split Point/Group's Share of Total Taxes

Top 1% - above $269,496 pay 34.8%

Top 5% - above $114,729 pay 53.8%

Top 10% - above $83,220 pay 65.0%

Top 25% - above $50,607 pay 82.7%

Top 50% - above $25,491 pay 95.8%

Bottom 50% - below $25,491 pay 4.2%

I think most people would consider those in the top 1% as "wealthy". They are paying about 35% of the total US tax bill already.

Perhaps most would also consider the top 5% "wealthy" as they are all above "six figures". This group is paying ~54% of all US taxes.

I doubt many would consider the $83k - $114K group as "wealthy". Well-off perhaps but certainly not what most people consider incredibly rich.

So looking at the top 1% and 5% respectively, how much more of the tax burden do you suggest they shoulder? I assume that this would allow releasing those in the bottom 50% from any obligation at all, since the 4% is essentially negligible if we increase the upper bracket share of taxes.

In short, what do you suggest given these statistics? Or do you not want to talk about it other than to generalize that we phillistine capitalists don't meet your personal moral standards?    

Further, please look at Maslow's hierarchy of needs. Surely you've stumbled across Maslow in your studies?

     

 http://www.connect.net/georgen/maslow.htm


"Maslow set up a hierarchical theory of needs. The animal or physical needs were placed at the bottom, and the human needs at the top. This hierarchic theory can be seen as a pyramid, with the base occupied be people who are not focused on values, but just staying alive.  A person who is starving dreams about food, thinks about food and nothing else.  Each level of the pyramid is some what dependent on the previous level for most people. <Note: I think this is a KEY point. You move up one level at a time, without skipping a level. Toad>  Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs (rephrased) includes seven levels:

Physiological Needs. Biological needs such as oxygen, food, water, warmth/coolness, protection from storms and so forth. These needs are the strongest because if deprived, the person could or would die.


Safety Needs. Felt by adults during emergencies, periods of disorganization in the social structure (such as widespread rioting). Felt more frequently by children who often display signs of insecurity and their need to be safe.


Love, Affection and Belongingness Needs. The needs to escape loneliness and alienation and give (and receive) love, affection and the sense of belonging.


Esteem Needs. Need for a stable, firmly based, high level of self-respect, and respect from others in order to feel satisfied, self confident and valuable. If these needs are not met, the person feels inferior, weak, helpless and worthless.


Self-actualization Needs. Maslow describes self-actualization as an ongoing process. Self-actualizing people are... involved in a cause outside their own skin.  The are devoted, work at something, something very precious to them--some calling or vocation, in the old sense, the priestly sense.  When you select out of a careful study, very fine and healthy people, strong people, creative people, saintly people, sagacious people... you get a different view of mankind. You ask how tall can people grow, what can a human being become?"  


Leonid, I will suggest to you, given Maslow's theory, that "wealth" is not necessarily dependent upon income. I will suggest that "true wealth" begins when one has reached the "self-actualization" level of Maslow's hierarchy. Further, my hypothesis is that, until that point, no matter how much money a person makes, that individual isn't going to be truly interested in creating your personal idea of a basically "socialist utopia" here in the US.

Obviously,  different people reach that level in different ways. I suspect Mother Teresa reached it much earlier and with far less money than the johnny-come-lately philanthropist Bill Gates.

My point is, it's NOT just about money, although money (for some) is a key factor in ascending Maslow's pyramid.

Therefore, a simplistic "tax the rich" solution is highly unlikely to generate the necessary level of Self-Actualization Needs that will accomplish your personal goals for the US.

In fact, I think it is likely to have exactly the opposite effect on those that have the most to share. It may well delay the reaching of the Self-Actualization level in those most able to "do good works".

Sorry this is so long.

   



[This message has been edited by Toad (edited 02-10-2001).]
If ye love wealth better than liberty, the tranquility of servitude than the animated contest of freedom, go from us in peace. We ask not your counsels or arms. Crouch down and lick the hands which feed you. May your chains sit lightly upon you, and may posterity forget that you were our countrymen!

Offline 1776

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Oh my! Bush has lost his luster?!? Let the fun begin!
« Reply #64 on: February 10, 2001, 10:54:00 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by leonid:
 

Like this example, we can choose to go for freedom of opportunity at the possible expense of our fellow man.  Or, we can forego the possibility of great individual wealth, yet insure that every citizen is well cared for.
----------------------------------------------


Good Grief!!  This has never worked and will never work!!!  This kind of thinking has always produced the destruction of society and the human spirit!!  The "well cared for" are being destroyed by your thinking.  They will have no incentive to do better if you are willing to "help" them.  Sure it makes you feel good and you are viewed as the compassionate one, however, you are destroying that persons ability to figure out how he can improve his situation!!  Ya, in your mind it may seem harsh,but in reality a hand up is worth a heck of alot more than a handout!!

Government has no hand in "helping" people.  Government only makes people dependent on government!!!

Each of us is given the ability to withstand any situation.  Each has his or her way of dealing with it.  Turning to government isn't the answer for any of us in a situation!!  Each has to find his own way out of the situation.  That is the way it has been and that is the way it will always be!!  No if's, no ands, no buts!!

 



[This message has been edited by 1776 (edited 02-10-2001).]

Offline Eagler

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« Reply #65 on: February 10, 2001, 11:28:00 AM »
Sounds like some people need to read "A Brave New World" by Aldous Huxley.

Then again maybe it's the "soma" that has already influenced their thinking and motivation..

Eagler

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« Reply #66 on: February 10, 2001, 05:44:00 PM »
its the future baby , the excesses of the wealthy lead to socialism in every democracy. see the poor outnumber the rich and eventualy win every battle . god i love democracy.

muhaaaaaa power to the people baby!!!

Offline mietla

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« Reply #67 on: February 10, 2001, 08:49:00 PM »
leonid and -towd-,

what do you guys do for a living?
do you guys have families?
Any children?
Do your montly bills include school tuition?
a new set of books every year?
braces for kids?
car payment?
mortgage perhaps?

have you started a college fund?
have you started to save for the retirenment, or are you relying on Social Security?



[This message has been edited by mietla (edited 02-10-2001).]

Offline StSanta

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« Reply #68 on: February 11, 2001, 01:28:00 AM »
"Self actualization is idiosyncratic, since every person is different....The individual [must do] what *he*, individually, is fitted for. A musician must make music, an artist must paint, a poet must write, if he is to be ultimately at peace with himself. What a man *can* be he *must* be (Maslow, 1968, p.33; 170b, p. 46)."

If yah ain't got the dough to be a musician, yer screwed   .

Maslow's pyramide has also come under fire. Some say he has an overly optimistic view of human nature, which is only helped a little by his acceptance of Freudian principles. Some people think his ecclecticism isn't that well constructed; more like a picking and choosing of favourite theorists while excluding others.

In his study of self actualization he also define individuals subjectively and then apply his own personal criteria. Some suggest this means that the behaviour he characterizes is an ideal one, based on his personal tastes, and not the truth. And the sample is not big enough to be statistically valid.

There's also a problem with the empiricism involved - Malsow claims that his theories are empirically testable, but modern pshychologists disagree. Toad is hinting at this also. Mostly because his constructs are vague and imprecise and give no measure of the level of satisfaction needed to go from one level to another.
[An introduction to theories of personalities, fifth edition, Robert B Ewen, ISBN 0-8058-2719-6]

One can also quite easily argue that steps higher in the hierarchy can be reached despite lower ones not having been met - a need to know as a substitute for absent love, or whatnot.

Despite this, overall, I think he probably is quite close to the truth with the pyramide, even if some of his support for it could be stronger.

Money is a major player when it comes to self actualization - they can prevent you from becoming what you must become. Not the only player, but a significant one.

Then again, we are all really in our hearts owners of the Playboy mag   .

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9./JG 54 "Grünherz"
"If you're not living on the edge, you're taking up space"

[This message has been edited by StSanta (edited 02-11-2001).]

Offline Toad

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« Reply #69 on: February 11, 2001, 08:13:00 AM »
Santa that was a pretty cogent review.

I'd give Maslow a good rating overall, especially considering the period in which he published his ideas, but I do see some of the same faults you mention. I wouldn't argue with his first two steps on the pyramid; they seem pretty obvious. After that...yes, he's getting into the "it depends" area and it depends on the person.

Just MHO.

However, you will note that the "bomb-throwers" NEVER address this sort of thing. The leonids and the blurs just toss in an explosive statement, raise a bit of heck, point out that the world <or most of this community> isn't as pure as they are and then beat feet out of the thread.  

Points to you and Dowding for at least having the balls to hang around and try to defend/explain your positions.

 

....and points to towd for always providing the comic relief!
If ye love wealth better than liberty, the tranquility of servitude than the animated contest of freedom, go from us in peace. We ask not your counsels or arms. Crouch down and lick the hands which feed you. May your chains sit lightly upon you, and may posterity forget that you were our countrymen!

-towd_

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« Reply #70 on: February 12, 2001, 12:44:00 AM »
toad like it better when you are posting roadkill made up  storys about war. at least its better than the psudointellectual crap your spouting now.
it ever occur to you that the 50% of people who pay 4% of the tax pay the bills that kill? work dead end 70 hour a week jobs for rabid aggresive managers who are rewarded for screwing people. they have  no real hope of improvement till they are put out to pasture with a 200 buck check to keep them warm.
ohh yea they arent intelligent like the cream of the crop that gets 90% of the goods and services and then fixes the system so that mostly the rest gets nothing. have seen this same argument over and over . it leads nowhere but the rich get richer and the poor get poorer. some of us are turncoats who have seen the insidious evil that is american capitalism and how it erodes what was a decent middle class country to the part time no benifits pile o crap that tipifies the american experience now.

the upper clase of this country lives not of their own labor but off the backs of the poor always has always will . throwing around graphs and neat sounding bull crap is well and good . but its really just crap to make you feel better. if the richest 5% up and left this country it would be the best thing that ever happend to this country ( since they made the richest 5% of this country quit enslaving people)

self actualization my hairy ass. trancendence ask somone at a inner city high school what that means. he will probly shoot you .


nice try tho

Offline Eagler

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« Reply #71 on: February 12, 2001, 06:04:00 AM »
 
Quote
Originally posted by -towd_:
transcendence ask someone at a inner city high school what that means. he will probably shoot you .

And what, give to everything and everyone is even?? This type couldn't handle it. Look at your million dollar rap stars and athletes. You can take the boy out of the ghetto but you can't take the ghetto out of the boy ...

get a grip and work for what you want, it'll have value then..

Eagler


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Offline straffo

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« Reply #72 on: February 12, 2001, 07:16:00 AM »
I frankly can't understand the troubles you got with tax.It depend heavily on the return of what you pay for...

ie : each month about 5% of my total income go directly to the equivalent of the french health care system (medical system to be more precise) .
But in case I've an accident who for exemple left me paralytic my familly and I will be supported by the whole nation even if I'm no more able to have a proper job and we will be able to live without major problem and my daughter will have the same access to education/high school so I'm an happy tax payer.

That's my point of views (provided I've correctly understand the posts above)

Offline Kieren

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« Reply #73 on: February 12, 2001, 07:36:00 AM »
"Insidious evil that is American capitalism"?

Try the Japanese work model- you know, no individual, only the company good.

Towd, this is precisely why we have workers' unions in America, you know, to protect the rights of the workers. I might add these unions are pretty powerful, and have raised the benefits and wages of hourly workers around the country.

On your other vein, yes, our economy is turning from a production economy to a service economy. Yes, there are many people working part-time. I myself needed three jobs to stay in college. Guess what? It paid off. I stuck with it and managed to get a degree, and have been doing just fine ever since.

Want to know something else, the dirty little secret of all societies? The world doesn't owe you a living. America is the land of opportunity- but only that. It isn't guaranteed success. You seem to be saying that people have little chance of succeeding, and sorry, I see too many people making it every day. You say the poor are getting poorer- just how do you define that? By the administration's lowering of the poverty standard?

I would never deny we have poor. I would never say that there are not people who honestly need help. I will say that our welfare system is abused by people who want nothing more than something for nothing. I think that many politicians refuse to address that abuse as this is a political stronghold, a sure source of votes (as you have already admitted). What galls me is that you are ready to have the government come in and take from me, a person that was raised poor, what I have worked a lifetime to acquire and give it to someone who will not help themselves.

I am religious, as you know. I know we must help our fellow man. I have no problem with charity, and giving to the needy. I do however have a problem with a society that gives and gives and gives without any accountability from the recipient- what are they doing to improve their situation?

Not everyone who is poor is just some poor guy who caught a bad break, neither are they all crack potatos. And again, America doesn't guarantee success to everyone, only the opportunity to succeed. You make the most of the chances you get, work hard, and be the best person you can be.

[This message has been edited by Kieren (edited 02-12-2001).]

TheWobble

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Oh my! Bush has lost his luster?!? Let the fun begin!
« Reply #74 on: February 12, 2001, 08:14:00 AM »
I agree with Kieren on all of that ESPECALLY the Japanise work model, its just plain disgusting,  People are encouraged to put work ahead of everything even and ESPECALLY family, it is not uncommon for a worker to be denied permission to leave work for a reason as trivial as his wife going into labor, I remember reading a while back how a auto plant worker who had worked for a company there for over 9 years was FIRED when he left work against the "orders" of his boss....His reason:  His son was hit by a car and was in the hospital in a coma.  

Thats just one example and not even a very extreme one by their standards.

Often Men are denied a job position just because they have a family, beause they wouldent want a worker that would be constantly distracted by something as trivial as a life.

Next time anyone wants to bash the US work system think of that crap going on over there.

[This message has been edited by TheWobble (edited 02-12-2001).]