Tell me about it. But I wouldn't trade the family for anything in the world. Believe me, I'm fighting the anti consumerism fight with every ounce of my fiber. There's still hope.Chizzang wrote:kalm wrote:
Again, try having kids. You have no idea.
Sounds like you "chose poorly"
Good luck - we are raising a nation of little mass consumers who believe that piles of stuff is the norm
Why the Rich Pay More in Taxes
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Re: Why the Rich Pay More in Taxes
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Re: Why the Rich Pay More in Taxes
kalm wrote:Tell me about it. But I wouldn't trade the family for anything in the world. Believe me, I'm fighting the anti consumerism fight with every ounce of my fiber. There's still hope.Chizzang wrote:
Sounds like you "chose poorly"
Good luck - we are raising a nation of little mass consumers who believe that piles of stuff is the norm
Do not resist...
All you need is a middle management position piles of stuff and debt up to your ass and you too can have the American Dream... and if you're lucky you can pass that heritage on to your children
Want more than you need
spend more than you have
believe in your every fiber that a car is more than transportation it's a statement about you
Hold dear the myth that a house far beyond your means is critical to your future success
Getting married is actually "important" even though 52% end in divorce and 68% are unhappy
Having kids is a sacred honor bestowed on the righteous (or something like that) 6 billion and counting
I think I'm going to write a book called "Re-thinking the America Dream"
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Re: Why the Rich Pay More in Taxes
Chizzang wrote:contrary to popular myth I also do not have an iron
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Re: Why the Rich Pay More in Taxes
Not IMO. It leaves out one very important piece... you can play and enjoy the music while you're on the track.Ursus A. Horribilis wrote:Pretty good there skjelly!Skjellyfetti wrote:
Alan Watts nailed it:

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Re: Why the Rich Pay More in Taxes
You got me here. No idea what you're talking about. Best guess is "on the track" = heroin?89Hen wrote: Not IMO. It leaves out one very important piece... you can play and enjoy the music while you're on the track.
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Re: Why the Rich Pay More in Taxes
Didn't we already have a discussion of that study on this board? Maybe it was on the other once but it'd have had to be snuck in since they don't have a political wing anymore.
I think that if people think there is some ideal or desirable weaith distribution they are wrong.
Like what if I have two situations. One is one in which another guy and I control a certain amount of wealth with him having 99% of it and me having 1% of it. Another is one in which we each have 50%. But the fact that I have as much as the other guy does in the second scenario does not mean I'm better off. If the total amount of wealth in the first scenario is a million dollars I've got $10,000. If the total amount in the second scenario is $1,000 I've got $500. Should I prefer $500 over $10,000 just because I don't want someone else to have $990,000?
Aside from that, the idea that one person has a right to the wealth generated by another person is bogus. If one guy has the brains and drive to go to medical school, become a great surgeon, and make $500,000 per year he has earned that. Some other guy who didn't have the brains and/or drive or desire to do the same thing does not have any right to anything the first guy has earned just because of some fantasy about how wealth should be distributed.
Wealth is not something dropped out of the sky by God, like some great pie that was given to mankind. Wealth is generated. There is no fixed amount. One person having more wealth does not mean other people are necessarily limited to less wealth over the long term. It's often the manifestation of someone's talent and efforts. It's not like mommy came in with 20 bon bons and gave 19 to one kid while giving only 1 to the other.
I think that if people think there is some ideal or desirable weaith distribution they are wrong.
Like what if I have two situations. One is one in which another guy and I control a certain amount of wealth with him having 99% of it and me having 1% of it. Another is one in which we each have 50%. But the fact that I have as much as the other guy does in the second scenario does not mean I'm better off. If the total amount of wealth in the first scenario is a million dollars I've got $10,000. If the total amount in the second scenario is $1,000 I've got $500. Should I prefer $500 over $10,000 just because I don't want someone else to have $990,000?
Aside from that, the idea that one person has a right to the wealth generated by another person is bogus. If one guy has the brains and drive to go to medical school, become a great surgeon, and make $500,000 per year he has earned that. Some other guy who didn't have the brains and/or drive or desire to do the same thing does not have any right to anything the first guy has earned just because of some fantasy about how wealth should be distributed.
Wealth is not something dropped out of the sky by God, like some great pie that was given to mankind. Wealth is generated. There is no fixed amount. One person having more wealth does not mean other people are necessarily limited to less wealth over the long term. It's often the manifestation of someone's talent and efforts. It's not like mommy came in with 20 bon bons and gave 19 to one kid while giving only 1 to the other.
Well, I believe that I must tell the truth
And say things as they really are
But if I told the truth and nothing but the truth
Could I ever be a star?
Deep Purple: No One Came

And say things as they really are
But if I told the truth and nothing but the truth
Could I ever be a star?
Deep Purple: No One Came

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Re: Why the Rich Pay More in Taxes
Hmmmmm...I am attached to what ideology?Chizzang wrote:
First
You'll need to work on your basic math skills
600 plus 1000 = 1600 (not 1900)
Second
It's not that I don't have "things'
Indeed if you considered my meager possessions in comparison to your average American I have very little - but - in comparison to your average human on earth I have an abundance (an over abundance)
It's all perspective
I see you are very attached to your ideology
But there is nothing that keeps any American from living with less "stuff" we all could do it if we chose - instead - we choose to be the worlds largest consumers... Kids and jobs and money have nothing to do with choosing to live with less crap and less debt... I live well within my means - most Americans live far beyond their means and look to buy more and own more and get more and have more
More - more - more
There is nothing keeping us from having less and deciding to live smaller... Nothing
I consider our rampant consumerism a kind of insanity
A neurotic compulsion that at it's core leads to unhappiness
Hey, I make money off of other people spending...but it doesn't make me believe that is the correct ideology. It just makes me a person who makes money off other's obvious behaviors. And I am not buying your theory that the gathering of things leading to unhappiness. You are looking at a symptom, not a cause.
As for you, as you said, you have a lot more than most...so stop the silly idea that you are not a consumer.
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Re: Why the Rich Pay More in Taxes
I don't mean to speak for him... but, I don't think he said he isn't a consumer. He said he is against consumerism.Cluck U wrote:
As for you, as you said, you have a lot more than most...so stop the silly idea that you are not a consumer.
"The unmasking thing was all created by Devin Nunes"
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Re: Why the Rich Pay More in Taxes
Consumers practice consumerism...just at different levels. Cleets has more than most on this planet.Skjellyfetti wrote:I don't mean to speak for him... but, I don't think he said he isn't a consumer. He said he is against consumerism.Cluck U wrote:
As for you, as you said, you have a lot more than most...so stop the silly idea that you are not a consumer.
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Re: Why the Rich Pay More in Taxes
Not in the sense Cleets was using it: "a preoccupation with and an inclination toward the buying of consumer goods"Cluck U wrote:
Consumers practice consumerism...just at different levels.
Almost everyone is a consumer... only a small percentage are consumerists/materialists.
"The unmasking thing was all created by Devin Nunes"
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Re: Why the Rich Pay More in Taxes
Stuff and nonsense, John. There isn't a factory owner on the planet who agrees with that statement.JohnStOnge wrote:Didn't we already have a discussion of that study on this board? Maybe it was on the other once but it'd have had to be snuck in since they don't have a political wing anymore.
I think that if people think there is some ideal or desirable weaith distribution they are wrong.
Like what if I have two situations. One is one in which another guy and I control a certain amount of wealth with him having 99% of it and me having 1% of it. Another is one in which we each have 50%. But the fact that I have as much as the other guy does in the second scenario does not mean I'm better off. If the total amount of wealth in the first scenario is a million dollars I've got $10,000. If the total amount in the second scenario is $1,000 I've got $500. Should I prefer $500 over $10,000 just because I don't want someone else to have $990,000?
Aside from that, the idea that one person has a right to the wealth generated by another person is bogus. If one guy has the brains and drive to go to medical school, become a great surgeon, and make $500,000 per year he has earned that. Some other guy who didn't have the brains and/or drive or desire to do the same thing does not have any right to anything the first guy has earned just because of some fantasy about how wealth should be distributed.
Wealth is not something dropped out of the sky by God, like some great pie that was given to mankind. Wealth is generated. There is no fixed amount. One person having more wealth does not mean other people are necessarily limited to less wealth over the long term. It's often the manifestation of someone's talent and efforts. It's not like mommy came in with 20 bon bons and gave 19 to one kid while giving only 1 to the other.
This thread is a masterpiece of frucking a fly's azz. The simple fact is that the rich pay more in taxes because it isn't very lucrative to tax people that don't have any money.
You matter. Unless you multiply yourself by c squared. Then you energy.
"I really love America. I just don't know how to get there anymore."John Prine
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Re: Why the Rich Pay More in Taxes
"Tax the Rich
Feed the poor
Til there are no
Rich no more"
Alvin Lee 1970
Damn I'm getting hungry
Feed the poor
Til there are no
Rich no more"
Alvin Lee 1970
Damn I'm getting hungry
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Re: Why the Rich Pay More in Taxes
I have an abundance (that much is obvious)Cluck U wrote:Consumers practice consumerism...just at different levels. Cleets has more than most on this planet.Skjellyfetti wrote:
I don't mean to speak for him... but, I don't think he said he isn't a consumer. He said he is against consumerism.
Especially considering that almost one billion humans on earth don't even have access to safe drinking water
Cluck is a little fuzzy on what "consumerism" is...
but that's okay it makes for a fun (but long) conversation
Apparently by recognizing that I have an abundance in relation (relative) to so many other humans on Earth is the same as being a rampant consumerist - however - compared to your average French garment factory worker or Moroccan fisherman I am a HUGE consumer...
but compared to your average American I am an oddity
* About 46% of American families spend more than they earn each year (2008)
* Average households carry some $9,000 in credit card debt (2003)
* Personal bankruptcies have doubled in the past decade (2005)
American consumers owe well over $2 trillion today
It was $1.9773 trillion in October 2003, according to the latest statistics on consumer credit from the Federal Reserve. That's about $18,654 per household, a figure that doesnt include mortgage debt. The number is up more than 41% from the $1.3999 trillion consumers owed in 1998.
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Re: Why the Rich Pay More in Taxes
Welcome to supply side economics. We'll artifically create demand while paying you less but need you to spend more to drive perpetual growth.Chizzang wrote: * About 46% of American families spend more than they earn each year (2008)
* Average households carry some $9,000 in credit card debt (2003)
* Personal bankruptcies have doubled in the past decade (2005)
American consumers owe well over $2 trillion today
It was $1.9773 trillion in October 2003, according to the latest statistics on consumer credit from the Federal Reserve. That's about $18,654 per household, a figure that doesnt include mortgage debt. The number is up more than 41% from the $1.3999 trillion consumers owed in 1998.

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Re: Why the Rich Pay More in Taxes
I prefer "stop to smell the roses along the way". Watts makes it sound like schooling and careers serve no purpose. Not everyone can be a philosopher and experiment with LSD for a living.Skjellyfetti wrote:You got me here. No idea what you're talking about. Best guess is "on the track" = heroin?89Hen wrote: Not IMO. It leaves out one very important piece... you can play and enjoy the music while you're on the track.

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Re: Why the Rich Pay More in Taxes
I think "stopping to smell the roses along the way" is precisely what Watts is saying. He's not saying you should drop out from society, sit on a mountaintop and contemplate God. He's not endorsing hedonism. Schooling and careers serve a purpose... but, the purpose isn't the end result. The purpose of going to school isn't to get a piece of paper that says you graduate college.89Hen wrote: I prefer "stop to smell the roses along the way". Watts makes it sound like schooling and careers serve no purpose.
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Re: Why the Rich Pay More in Taxes
I agree that's what it should mean, but I don't think that's how it comes across, at least in that clip. Maybe I need a longer clip from that reading.Skjellyfetti wrote:I think "stopping to smell the roses along the way" is precisely what Watts is saying. He's not saying you should drop out from society, sit on a mountaintop and contemplate God. He's not endorsing hedonism. Schooling and careers serve a purpose... but, the purpose isn't the end result. The purpose of going to school isn't to get a piece of paper that says you graduate college.

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Re: Why the Rich Pay More in Taxes
You may just need to look at it from a different perspective 89. Everybody has their own interpretation I guess but I really took it as more of a "stop & smell the roses" type thing.89Hen wrote:I agree that's what it should mean, but I don't think that's how it comes across, at least in that clip. Maybe I need a longer clip from that reading.Skjellyfetti wrote:I think "stopping to smell the roses along the way" is precisely what Watts is saying. He's not saying you should drop out from society, sit on a mountaintop and contemplate God. He's not endorsing hedonism. Schooling and careers serve a purpose... but, the purpose isn't the end result. The purpose of going to school isn't to get a piece of paper that says you graduate college.
Education or anything only has value if the person doing it thinks it has value and treats it as valuable instead of treating it like a stepping stone to get a piece of paper to truck on with your life. Of course that goes along with what I think anyway so maybe I molded it to my belief.
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Re: Why the Rich Pay More in Taxes
Sorry, It's Keynesian. Create the permanant boom. Money is the root of all evil unless you are printing or borrowing or spending it.kalm wrote:Welcome to supply side economics. We'll artifically create demand while paying you less but need you to spend more to drive perpetual growth.Chizzang wrote: * About 46% of American families spend more than they earn each year (2008)
* Average households carry some $9,000 in credit card debt (2003)
* Personal bankruptcies have doubled in the past decade (2005)
American consumers owe well over $2 trillion today
It was $1.9773 trillion in October 2003, according to the latest statistics on consumer credit from the Federal Reserve. That's about $18,654 per household, a figure that doesnt include mortgage debt. The number is up more than 41% from the $1.3999 trillion consumers owed in 1998.![]()
But it was a good try
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Re: Why the Rich Pay More in Taxes
So, 54%, a majority, dont spend more than they earn each year...and you consider yourself an "oddity"?Chizzang wrote:
I have an abundance (that much is obvious)
Especially considering that almost one billion humans on earth don't even have access to safe drinking water
Cluck is a little fuzzy on what "consumerism" is...
but that's okay it makes for a fun (but long) conversation
Apparently by recognizing that I have an abundance in relation (relative) to so many other humans on Earth is the same as being a rampant consumerist - however - compared to your average French garment factory worker or Moroccan fisherman I am a HUGE consumer...
but compared to your average American I am an oddity
* About 46% of American families spend more than they earn each year (2008)
* Average households carry some $9,000 in credit card debt (2003)
* Personal bankruptcies have doubled in the past decade (2005)
American consumers owe well over $2 trillion today
It was $1.9773 trillion in October 2003, according to the latest statistics on consumer credit from the Federal Reserve. That's about $18,654 per household, a figure that doesnt include mortgage debt. The number is up more than 41% from the $1.3999 trillion consumers owed in 1998.
As you noted, your stats are old...and deceptive. Care to guess what percentage pay off their balance each month? Care to guess whether that number is going up or down? How many people have credit cards? How many actually use their cards? How many use debit cards? Lots of information out there...not all of it gloom and doom "consumerism". In fact, you'll find a majority of people are not the bloated "keep up with the Jones" types...but don't let that spoil your rant.
Now, back to "consumerism". Lots of definitions, and you can always find some hoitie-toitie- person who likes to think they are above the fray. You might not collect many things...although we've already discovered that you and your girlfriend have a bit more things than most (and you never did answer whether she has a few collectibles or not), but you sure enjoy consuming things. How many times do you fly per year? Where? For what? Hmmmm...kinda' makes that bike comment seem a bit silly. Do you cook at home or do you eat out often?
Yup, all sorts of ways to be into consumerism.
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Re: Why the Rich Pay More in Taxes
Cleets isn't an oddity, he's just odd.
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Re: Why the Rich Pay More in Taxes
Cluck U wrote:So, 54%, a majority, dont spend more than they earn each year...and you consider yourself an "oddity"?Chizzang wrote:
I have an abundance (that much is obvious)
Especially considering that almost one billion humans on earth don't even have access to safe drinking water
Cluck is a little fuzzy on what "consumerism" is...
but that's okay it makes for a fun (but long) conversation
Apparently by recognizing that I have an abundance in relation (relative) to so many other humans on Earth is the same as being a rampant consumerist - however - compared to your average French garment factory worker or Moroccan fisherman I am a HUGE consumer...
but compared to your average American I am an oddity
* About 46% of American families spend more than they earn each year (2008)
* Average households carry some $9,000 in credit card debt (2003)
* Personal bankruptcies have doubled in the past decade (2005)
American consumers owe well over $2 trillion today
It was $1.9773 trillion in October 2003, according to the latest statistics on consumer credit from the Federal Reserve. That's about $18,654 per household, a figure that doesnt include mortgage debt. The number is up more than 41% from the $1.3999 trillion consumers owed in 1998.![]()
As you noted, your stats are old...and deceptive. Care to guess what percentage pay off their balance each month? Care to guess whether that number is going up or down? How many people have credit cards? How many actually use their cards? How many use debit cards? Lots of information out there...not all of it gloom and doom "consumerism". In fact, you'll find a majority of people are not the bloated "keep up with the Jones" types...but don't let that spoil your rant.
Now, back to "consumerism". Lots of definitions, and you can always find some hoitie-toitie- person who likes to think they are above the fray. You might not collect many things...although we've already discovered that you and your girlfriend have a bit more things than most (and you never did answer whether she has a few collectibles or not), but you sure enjoy consuming things. How many times do you fly per year? Where? For what? Hmmmm...kinda' makes that bike comment seem a bit silly. Do you cook at home or do you eat out often?
Yup, all sorts of ways to be into consumerism.
I must have hit pretty close to a nerve there...
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A: The actual teachings of Jesus
A: The actual teachings of Jesus
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Re: Why the Rich Pay More in Taxes
I'd say so.......Chizzang wrote:Cluck U wrote:
So, 54%, a majority, dont spend more than they earn each year...and you consider yourself an "oddity"?![]()
As you noted, your stats are old...and deceptive. Care to guess what percentage pay off their balance each month? Care to guess whether that number is going up or down? How many people have credit cards? How many actually use their cards? How many use debit cards? Lots of information out there...not all of it gloom and doom "consumerism". In fact, you'll find a majority of people are not the bloated "keep up with the Jones" types...but don't let that spoil your rant.
Now, back to "consumerism". Lots of definitions, and you can always find some hoitie-toitie- person who likes to think they are above the fray. You might not collect many things...although we've already discovered that you and your girlfriend have a bit more things than most (and you never did answer whether she has a few collectibles or not), but you sure enjoy consuming things. How many times do you fly per year? Where? For what? Hmmmm...kinda' makes that bike comment seem a bit silly. Do you cook at home or do you eat out often?
Yup, all sorts of ways to be into consumerism.
I must have hit pretty close to a nerve there...
Dude called you "hoitie toitie".
You matter. Unless you multiply yourself by c squared. Then you energy.
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Re: Why the Rich Pay More in Taxes
For the same reason people rob banks. 
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