Zeb_Carter
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- Joined
- Jun 15, 2006
- Posts
- 20,584
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Now that's a rather interesting statistic when you consider the fact that almost 50% of Americans don't pay income taxes in the first place.
"The sky is falling! The sky is falling!"
It is? Where? It's bright and sunny in Texas.
I am not afraid. I saw my Uni fee increase from $1500 to $3000 in one year. I still plugged on and I made it.Are you ready for it? It's gonna come whether you are or not. An increase of 81%. Taxes we are talking taxes here.
Read about it here.
According to a Rasmussen poll, 32% of Americans say they'd be willing to pay higher taxes so that the government could provide health insurance for all Americans.
Now that's a rather interesting statistic when you consider the fact that almost 50% of Americans don't pay income taxes in the first place.
Who do you think those 50% are, Zeb?
Gee I don't know? It's sure not me. My tax liability each year would make a horse choke.
"The sky is falling! The sky is falling!"
That article uses particularly dodgy math to hyperbolize the point. For example, an increase from 1% to 1.5% is a 50% increase, but it's very different from going from 40% to 60%, which would also be a 50% increase. Plus, he's basing all his numbers on forecasts, not actual results. I'm sure there are other factors and assumptions in the forecasts that could have a larger effect on them than tax rates. I wouldn't put it past this writer to argue that lower taxes will actually boost the economic growth rate in the forecast, so that it appears the shortfall will disappear.
At any rate, if you're rich enough that all you care about is how much you pay in taxes, fuck y'all. You don't deserve it. No one does.
A single payer health care system would save 400 billion per year. If you're truly concerned about taxes, there's your solution.
So if I earn enough to have a tax burden I don't deserver what I work for? Well fuck you and the horse you road in on!
Wait, I'm confused. Doesn't the taxation-phobes on this forum always claim that public healthcare would be disastrous because of all that horrible, horrible, guv'mint buerocracy?That's what we've got. That's what you could have. Yes, your taxes would go up - a bit. But, if you have healthcare insurance now, your overall outgoings would come down sharply. It's just so much cheaper to provide healthcare when you don't have all the overheads of all that bureaucracy. And if you don't have healthcare insurance now, well, your taxes will go up - a bit. But you never need worry about getting ill, or having an accident, again.
Wait, I'm confused. Doesn't the taxation-phobes on this forum always claim that public healthcare would be disastrous because of all that horrible, horrible, guv'mint buerocracy?
I did some research because it raised my curiosity. Here are some of the things I found:
If you live exclusively on Social Security with little or no additional income, you don't even file a tax return. I am sure that this group is going to grow as a percentage as the baby boomers retire over the next twenty years. Also as the life expectancy continues to grow, this group will grow as well.
A single person has to make at least $9,000 before they have to file.
A single parent with two children under 17 has to make over $21,000 taxable income before they might have to pay. Other rules apply.
A married couple with two children under 17 have to make over $27,000 taxable income before they might have to pay. Again, other rules apply.
A married couple with four children under 17 have to make over $36,000 taxable income before they might have to pay. Again, other rules apply.
The numbers above for HOH and Married are roughly 133% of Poverty Level. Poverty level for a family of four is approximately $20k.
Numbers above ignore itemized deductions and EIC.
Median Income for the US is aproximately $50k.
Interesting data.
But they won't replace any of them. They will still exist and we still pay for them. No Govt worker will lose a job over this. There will be more hired. Look at the latest job numbers, the most jobs filled in the last month were Govt.The point is you get to replace half a dozen different private bureaucracies with competing aims with one single bureaucracy with one aim. So you don't have to pay for the other five.