Frisco_Slug_Esq
On Strike!
- Joined
- May 4, 2009
- Posts
- 45,618
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Any plan that you have to sell with lies and mis-statements is no better than, say, Anthropogenic Global Warming.
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.77(.23)=.1771
.77+.18 = .95
A savings of 5¢ and and exclusive rate of...,
77/1 as 18/x = 18/77 = .2337
Now, the assumption you keep making is that we HAVE to get a dollar to get the "FairTax" to make a dollar for dollar match and thus we will need a $30% tax. This, again is trying to mash-up micro-and macroeconomics.
Lower taxes mean increased business activity which results in greater tax revenue.
Fire is either exceedingly math challenged, or he's just fucking with you bro. Either way he's a waste of time on this particular subject.
Ishmael
lmao
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You wanna explain to firespin where you got $1.30?
Fire is either exceedingly math challenged, or he's just fucking with you bro. Either way he's a waste of time on this particular subject.
Ishmael
As an example of EPA misconduct and bad science, none of the important studies on air pollution can claim to comply with the rule on size of effect. That's true of so many other toxicology claims from population studies used by the EPA and other government agencies. Most public health journals are full of studies that break this rule.
Why scare the public with bad studies and exaggerated warnings? That's easy -- follow the money, the power, and the noise. The agencies are the source of funding, and the scientists must find something an agency can work with, or they won't have any funding or job.
If the journals don't let the authors bend the rules, then the authors don't get published, and their status as experts is compromised -- but the journals won't have much to publish, so it will compromise the survival of the journals that are part of the academic infrastructure.
Would climate scientists have work tomorrow if today the U.N. said the global warming panic was revealed as a hoax? Same for public health panics and toxicity scares: The academic researchers, agency apparatchiks, and research programs would shrivel if tomorrow the EPA said, "Sorry...we were exaggerating. The planet is actually pretty safe, and only a few things are really toxic. We're shuttin' down the panic division -- get on with your lives."
The only people making "mis-statements" are the detractors of the plan and fuzzy math is about all the have aided, in a large part, by the state of our educational system.
I think it's the latter...
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You rolling on the floor, or do you have Throb on iggy?
I hate to break it to you, big guy, but your criticism of me doesn't change the underlying math, or AJ's attempt to propagate (charitably) wishful thinking or (more likely) misunderstanding or (can't be ruled out) outright lies.
In fact, you could say that your disapproval is more likely a sign that I'm on to something.
Sorry if I'm not meekly acquiescing to your giant intelect [sic], and even disagreeing with a book you like. That stuff happens when you're a wack job. Get used to it.
Since you're so smart, here's another way to prove it. Show us any typical cash register transaction, breaking out the part that the consumer pays, the part that goes to the feds in the form of sales tax, and the part the retailer then keeps to pay the supplier(s). (For extra credit, you can even show the state's cut.)
Then show us the ratio of the federal sales tax to the part the retailer keeps.
For example, today in my state, I pay $1.05 for a candy bar...the state gets five cents, the retailer keeps a dollar, it's a 5% tax rate.
I've had him on ignore for years now.
Ishmael
You see, those were the exact kind of posts that were directed towards us as we patiently tried to explain the flaws in the glow-ball warning thinking and models...
The consensus is always self-assured, self-righteous, and abusive to thoughts outside their sphere of understanding and belief which always manifests itself into making the discussion "personal."
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I hate to break it to you, big guy, but your criticism of me doesn't change the underlying math, or AJ's attempt to propagate (charitably) wishful thinking or (more likely) misunderstanding or (can't be ruled out) outright lies.
In fact, you could say that your disapproval is more likely a sign that I'm on to something.
Sorry if I'm not meekly acquiescing to your giant intelect [sic], and even disagreeing with a book you like. That stuff happens when you're a wack job. Get used to it.
Very nice irrelevant deflection. Gold star for you.
Now, explain why your 95 cent transaction price and 77 cent base price isn't illegal under the fair tax?
For extra credit, do it without talking about global warming, the American Thinker, or references to me. I'm pretty sure it can be done.
It just keeps getting funnier...
Trying to change the subject?
Avoid the question?
I'll bet you've piqued firespin's curiosity with that last one...
At this point, there's no way I can prove to you that it's "illegal."
You're ignoring Occam's basic principle.
You take the Fairax widget, which has been stripped of the hidden FairTaxes and tax it 30%. Whatever means you then use to calculate the rate is meaningless and a not-so-nice deflection from the reality of the applied rate. You're looking at it as a rate of outcome, and we've been pointing this out since page two.