Topic: The Permament Activist II

Long ago I wrote about being a permament activist.

This is a mentality, a lifestyle, a choice.

And it is extremely effective.

So what is a permament activist?

A permament activist is someone who at any opportunity attacks socialism, promotes Conservatism, debunks Green science lies, shows knowledge of issues, and does not let up EVER!

For a generation Democrats controlled the topics, they framed us in terms most unappealing, gathered their momentum. We were called ignorant, uneducated, unsophisticated, and more... always more.


Thomas Jefferson said the price of freedom was eternal vigilance.

My fellow Conservatives, vigilance is not just watching, but acting too. We have failed to be vigilant

We have tried... The Minute Man project, the Contract with America, the 9-12 project, and more. But evidence shows this is not enough... Illegals still enter this nation in a flood, 51% of the nation does not pay taxes, there is still no balanced budget amendment, and so forth.

Yes a lot of seats changed hands in 2010... but should we be satisified with a temporary upswing? NO!

The price of freedom is eternal vigilance!

We are cheering a turnicate over an arm that may still be amputated!

We need to be permament activists against the evils of socialism, big government, green activist lies, crony capitalism, judicial activism, and more.

How do you become a permament activist?

First you run for office. Precinct Committeeperson spots exist throughout the Nation, the States, the counties, the cities, in your neighborhoods. It is an unpaid volunteer position.

Next - Learn the issues, learn to talk about the issues, and always be prepared regardless of the topic.

Third you need to actively challenge falsehoods, you need to engage people, regardless if they are misinformed, or agents of the enemy...   The source of the poison matters not, you still need to bring the cure!

Fourth: Reinforce your allies. If you find a Conservative engage him in political talk. If a Libertarian try to point at wise regulations... he is close, now just get him to convert! Build their skill up subtely, help them with their ability to challenge the enemy.

Fifth in the rules is find a way to initiate communication beneficial to our cause. This can be offering a joke that mocks policy or politicians, or an off hand comment about some controversy.



Remember this always... Silence loses. Be loud, be proud!

They will try to fight you. In one forum a man tried to tell me the Cain 999 plan is a VAT tax, to which I broke down how a VAT versus a Sales tax entirely. This is a win. He may try to 'salvage' his situation, he will fail. His effort allows a moderate a chance to hear my words.

Recently I was at a Denny's... I sat at the bar counter next to another truck driver. He had been in a conversation with a server on Global Warming. The driver was using his Conservatism, but his mojo was weak. I entered the conversation and added to his future skill and converted three servers before I was done with my meal.

I say again, IF YOU ARE QUIET YOU LOSE, OUR PARTY LOSES, AND OUR NATION LOSES! Be proud, be loud!

Your efforts must always be on, you must try to use everything you can, you must always communicate!

Then, and only then, are you a Permament Activist!

Everything bad in the economy is now Obama's fault. Every job lost, all the debt, all the lost retirement funds. All Obama. Are you happy now? We all get to blame Obama!
Kemp currently not being responded to until he makes CONCISE posts.
Avogardo and Noir ignored by me for life so people know why I do not respond to them. (Informational)

Re: The Permament Activist II

> Einstein wrote:
>
>51% of the nation does not pay taxes

You've said this twice now within 24 hours of your having claimed that even a pauper making only $1000/mo pays a 23% tax rate.

Which is it?  You can't have it both ways.

3 (edited by Justinian I 22-Nov-2011 07:49:09)

Re: The Permament Activist II

Hawaii,

Although a low income earner may pay 23% in taxes, 51% of the population receives their taxes back after deductions.

While true, what Flint fails to mention is this is a recent phenomenon resulting from temporary measures intended to relief households.

Re: The Permament Activist II

politics in the name of a nation is so old fashioned. start to think globally, vote for Pirates! wink

Re: The Permament Activist II

yeah, liquid democracy is the way to go:)

Re: The Permament Activist II

> Justinian I wrote:
>
> Hawaii,
>
>Although a low income earner may pay 23% in taxes, 51% of the population receives their taxes back after deductions.

No, that's false, as Flint himself brought up just the other day.

51% of the population pays no *income tax* because of deductions and due to things like EITC some even get more money back than was withheld.  But the income tax isn't that big of a deal in the first place.  It doesn't supply half of federal government revenues and gathers about as much for the federal coffers as payroll taxes do.  And poor people pay a lot in payroll taxes.  15.3% of that low-earner's income is getting collected by the taxman right there.  That's quite a bit.  Bigger share of their income than most wealthy people pay (payroll taxes phase out for six-digit incomes).  And we really haven't gotten started on federal excise taxes (gasoline?  alcohol?  cigarettes?) that low-income folks tend to spend a large portion of their incomes on.  Nor have we gotten into state and local taxes (sales tax?  property tax?) that not only do low-income workers have to pay, but that they generally pay at much higher rates (in proportion to their income) than do their wealthy neighbors.

If poor people weren't paying large chunks of their income in taxes to federal, state, and local governments, I wouldn't contest this, but the fact is that they do pay taxes.  There are very few people in the United States who don't pay any taxes and I'm not jealous of their unfortunate situations.

>While true, what Flint fails to mention is this is a recent phenomenon resulting from temporary measures intended to relief households.

Nah, I'm trying to figure out what's with Flint's sudden amnesia.  He seemed aware of this reality just the other day and now he's forgotten it.  I guess amnesia can be politically expeditious, unless you get called out.  And really, you do deserve to be called out when it's plain as day that you are either suffering from amnesia or that you know better than what you're prattling.  Dishonesty deserves scorn.

Re: The Permament Activist II

Compare and contrast these two statements by Flint made 26 hours apart:

"51% of the nation does not pay taxes"

and

"For this example I shall use a low wage of $1000 a month... First we have standard payroll taxes. Everyone pays these, regardless if they earn $10 a year or ten million a year... Social Security. [12.4%]...  Medicare. [2.9%]...  Unemployment tax of 6.2%...  Next the Federal Government assess the Federal Income Tax. In this case it is 10%. After standard deductions this is... an additional 4.5%.  This is prior to State Taxes.  So an average person making what is damned low wages is already paying 23.3845% in taxes prior to State and local Taxes."

In the latter he doesn't just prattle off some random number or say "poor people pay taxes too".  He actually provides very specific details of exactly what taxes poor people are paying and how much a hypothetical fry cook would have to pay.  Given that we know Flint understands this issue, how do we get the mistake in his first statement that "51% of the nation does not pay taxes"?

I really doubt amnesia is the culprit, but that doesn't leave me with many polite explanations as to why Flint is flip-flopping all over this.

8 (edited by RisingDown 22-Nov-2011 22:04:36)

Re: The Permament Activist II

that's a lot of words you use to attack your opponent, without giving arguments, and advertising your own party, without giving reasons.


Why would a person who isn't sure of who to vote for vote for you? do you really think a program of slander and no input of its own is going to persuade people to help you win your elections?


"The price of freedom is eternal vigilance!"
Empty slogans like these make me puke.

Although somewhere it does sound vaguely like a cheap rip off of some of the slogans mentioned in George Orwell's "1984"
"War is peace! Freedom is Slavery! Ignorance is strength!"


Just remember, Big Brother is watching you...

Maar doodslaan deed hij niet, want tussen droom en daad,
Staan wetten in de weg en praktische bezwaren,
En ook weemoedigheid, die niemand kan verklaren,
En die des avonds komt, wanneer men slapen gaat.

Re: The Permament Activist II

It's not an empty slogan at all.  It is a comment by a barrister arguing against British usurpation of the common rights of Irishmen.

"Nor is it strange that, in those times, a board, consisting of so small a number as twenty-four members, with advantages of a more united interest, and a longer continuance in office, should have prevailed, even contrary to so evident principles of natural justice and constitutional right, against the unsteady resistance of competitors so much less vigilant, so much more numerous, and therefore, so much less united.  It is the common fate of the indolent to see their rights become a prey to the active.  The condition upon which God hath given liberty to man is eternal vigilance; which condition, if he breaks, servitude is at once the consequence of his crime, and the punishment of his guilt."  John Philpot Curran, Speech upon the Right of Election of the Lord Mayor For Dublin, 1790.

http://books.google.com/books?id=Nb8sAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA91&dq=speech++upon+the+right+election+of+lord+mayor&hl=en&ei=6zPMToa5Ku3SiALLtdjnCw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CDAQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=speech%20%20upon%20the%20right%20election%20of%20lord%20mayor&f=false

I hear the same thing from people about the lack of honor in IC

The core joke of Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is that of course no civilization would develop personal computers with instant remote database recovery, and then waste this technology to find good drinks.
Steve Jobs has ruined this joke.

Re: The Permament Activist II

" But the income tax isn't that big of a deal in the first place.  It doesn't supply half of federal government revenues and gathers about as much for the federal coffers as payroll taxes do.  And poor people pay a lot in payroll taxes.  15.3% of that low-earner's income is getting collected by the taxman right there.  That's quite a bit.  Bigger share of their income than most wealthy people pay (payroll taxes phase out for six-digit incomes)."

Are we pretending that 7% to Social Security is govt revenue?  Cause, I'm guaranteed every penny back, FDR said so!

"  And we really haven't gotten started on federal excise taxes (gasoline?  alcohol?  cigarettes?) that low-income folks tend to spend a large portion of their incomes on.  Nor have we gotten into state and local taxes (sales tax?  property tax?) that not only do low-income workers have to pay, but that they generally pay at much higher rates (in proportion to their income) than do their wealthy neighbors."

1. I'm sure the rich pay more property tax than the poor.
2. Sober poor people who don't smoke probably pay less than Rush Limbaugh in alcohol and tobacco taxes.
3. No shit $1/$18000 is a bigger fraction than $1/$50000.  Shall we subsidize 99CentsOnly to help out?

The core joke of Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is that of course no civilization would develop personal computers with instant remote database recovery, and then waste this technology to find good drinks.
Steve Jobs has ruined this joke.

11 (edited by SavingHawaii 23-Nov-2011 02:24:02)

Re: The Permament Activist II

> Demotivator wrote:

>Are we pretending that 7% to Social Security is govt revenue?  Cause, I'm guaranteed every penny back, FDR said so!

FICA isn't 7%.  It's 15.3%.  And it also counts for about as much federal revenue as the income tax does.  And yes, honestly, there's no real distinction between the SS trust fund and the general fund.  Congress treats them as one and the same for all intent and purpose.

>1. I'm sure the rich pay more property tax than the poor.
>2. Sober poor people who don't smoke probably pay less than Rush Limbaugh in alcohol and tobacco taxes.
>3. No shit $1/$18000 is a bigger fraction than $1/$50000.  Shall we subsidize 99CentsOnly to help out?

1. But they often don't pay proportionally more.  Property taxes tend to be in the vein of "1% of assessed value" or something like that, causing poor people and rich people to pay similar rates.  Still, my parent's $200,000 house is more than double their yearly income.  Bill Gates's $5,000,000 mansion is a small fraction of what he makes every year... in all respect, he probably pays a lower property tax rate than they do.

2. This really doesn't change the fact that many poor people do smoke and drink and pay large chunks of their income towards alcohol and tobacco excise taxes.  Much larger portions of their income than their wealthier counterparts.

3. Flint claimed that 51% of Americans don't pay taxes.  I think you're agreeing with me here that Flint is completely full of it.  Dishonesty deserves derision and Flint does know better than what he's saying.

Re: The Permament Activist II

I just want to note that, on tobacco and alcohol taxes, they really shouldn't count in this calculation, because unlike income or gas taxes, these taxes are absolutely 100% voluntary, because nobody needs to drink or smoke.  The tax is specifically intended to be high in order to price people out of the market, but without being so high as to be indistinguishable from a general ban on the good (which the prohibition period showed would be a terrible idea).  So yeah, if someone has a higher tax burden due to tobacco and alcohol taxes, and the big impact of the higher tax burden is that their personal economic situation is hampered, it's extremely different from an income tax burden, specifically because those people are choosing to pay those taxes (granted, there are specific exceptions, such as an alcoholic who became an alcoholic before a particularly large increase in the cost of alcohol, but that's honestly stretching it on this particular issue).

Make Eyes Great Again!

The Great Eye is watching you... when there's nothing good on TV...

13 (edited by SavingHawaii 23-Nov-2011 03:46:30)

Re: The Permament Activist II

> Zarf BeebleBrix wrote:

> I just want to note that, on tobacco and alcohol taxes, they really shouldn't count in this calculation...

What you're saying is correct but many poor people do drink and smoke.  Them's the facts jack.  Whether or not they have to, or should smoke and drink, there's a lot of poor people who do pay a lot of money in taxes to the federal government in the form of alcohol and tobacco excise taxes.  Just sayin'.

The whole "51% of the nation does not pay taxes" is completely at odds with reality.  And Flint knows that.  http://www.imperialconflict.com/forum/viewtopic.php?id=151223

Re: The Permament Activist II

> SavingHawaii wrote:

> What you're saying is correct but many poor people do drink and smoke.  Them's the facts jack.  Whether or not they have to, or should smoke and drink, there's a lot of poor people who do pay a lot of money in taxes to the federal government in the form of alcohol and tobacco excise taxes.  Just sayin'.




No... they're two completely different types of taxes, and you're just ignoring the substantive differences:

1: Yes, poor people drink and smoke.  But a cigarette or beer is a purely elastic good, where an income is inelastic (okay, you could be a subsistence farmer, but I'm willing to assume that since you're on the Internet, you're not Amish, so you'll probably be much worse off being outside the economic interdependence of the city-state as opposed to being part of that system).  With cigarettes or beer, a person could avoid the tax simply by avoiding the product.  But they choose not to, despite the best efforts of the government to make it a terrible financial decision with added taxes... because people like to get wasted.

Would it be legitimate for me to use 100% of my income on beer, assuming 50% of the cost of beer is taxes, and claim I have the highest tax burden in the country?  Or how about if I just outright wrote the government a big check in the amount of my total year's salary, then complained that 100% of my income went to the government?  No... because I willingly made the decision to be a dumb ass with my money.  That's what's happening here... not that everyone buying beer an cigarettes is a dumb ass, but they chose themselves to make that income commitment, including the tax, without any form of state intimidation regarding the product... and in fact, with many states actively hoping to reduce their tax revenue from these sources in order to reduce the amount of use of the goods in question... it's one of the few taxes where people aren't compelled to pay the taxes... they're compelled against paying them.  tongue

Remember, this is a debate about tax burdens.  If I willingly decide to pay an amount to the government when I could have easily avoided paying that amount to the government without significant loss to life or liberty, it's not a tax burden.  In contrast, income taxes, property taxes, or other taxes place requirements to pay for specific goods necessary for life or liberty, so it's very rare the individual has much of a choice in how much of their taxes to pay (with the exception of income that could go to either income tax revenue or other sources such as donations, to be used as a write-off).  THAT is a "tax burden."

Make Eyes Great Again!

The Great Eye is watching you... when there's nothing good on TV...

Re: The Permament Activist II

Zarf... I absolutely do not disagree that cigarette and alcohol excise taxes are avoidable.  Nor do I disagree that most people would be wise to avoid them.  Nor do I feel that somebody who spends his entire income on pall malls and thus pays a very high tax rate has a right to complain.  I agree that the general purpose of cigarette and alcohol excise taxes is to deter behavior, not to generate revenue.  (By the way, what are your opinions on gasoline excise taxes?)  I'm simply stating that most poor people do actually pay quite a bit of money in taxes.  And Flint himself has stated as much.  He didn't mention excise taxes but he talked about payroll taxes, state and local taxes; all of which poor people pay.  And they pay excise taxes too.  Even the ones who don't smoke and drink generally pay gas taxes.

So my question is thisi: Is Flint's statement that "51% of the nation doesn't pay taxes" right or wrong?  And given what Flint has stated within the past week, is it reasonable to expect that Flint should know better?  That ignorance is not an excuse for his flip-flopping?

16 (edited by Zarf BeebleBrix 23-Nov-2011 06:18:24)

Re: The Permament Activist II

> SavingHawaii wrote:

> Zarf... I absolutely do not disagree that cigarette and alcohol excise taxes are avoidable.  Nor do I disagree that most people would be wise to avoid them.  Nor do I feel that somebody who spends his entire income on pall malls and thus pays a very high tax rate has a right to complain.  I agree that the general purpose of cigarette and alcohol excise taxes is to deter behavior, not to generate revenue.  (By the way, what are your opinions on gasoline excise taxes?)  I'm simply stating that most poor people do actually pay quite a bit of money in taxes.  And Flint himself has stated as much.  He didn't mention excise taxes but he talked about payroll taxes, state and local taxes; all of which poor people pay.  And they pay excise taxes too.  Even the ones who don't smoke and drink generally pay gas taxes.




Okay... that's a fair point, and I was watching to see most of that debate evolve.  At the point where you're agreeing on the issue of tax burdens with regards specifically to alcohol and cigarette taxes, my one and only argument to show in this debate's been agreed with... and thus I really don't have a stance on the issue as a whole (I wasn't in this debate to prove Flint right or wrong, but wanted to address one concern within your argument... even if it was just a microcosm of the debate, I thought the generalization was worthy of clarification).  Back to hiding in the corner and watching the debate for me.  smile


As for gas excise taxes... honestly, it really depends on what you want to achieve.  Taxes generally have two purposes: revenue generation and disincentive creation.  For example, although import tariffs used to be a revenue-generating tax for the US (accounting for I believe 60% of government revenue in the 1800's), they account for about 1% of US revenue today... not just because the US has reduced its trade barriers, but because the amount of international trade as a percentage of US production has declined.

So back to gas taxes... how much do they generate?

http://www.taxpolicycenter.org/taxfacts/displayafact.cfm?Docid=401

In 2007, the highest point up to this time, total gas tax revenue from the state and local levels... $37 billion.  If the purpose of the tax is revenue generation, that's a terrible tax.  Revenue generators are supposed to minimize the perceived impact, so people don't really worry about them too much... and don't need to make too much compensation to change behaviors... the gas tax is a problem here because it's a hidden tax, and because it's on a good that, because the price is high already, the tax gets blamed as a partial cause... so it gets the added effects of tax burden claims...

But what if its purpose is to be a disincentive?  What if the purpose is to increase the effective cost of gasoline, in effect creating a market for alternative energies?  It would pretty much have the same effect as an import tariff on a specific industry.  In that case, the government actually wants to do the exact opposite... "oooh, look at the big scary tax... wouldn't you want to avoid this tax?  Well, there's this perfectly good alternative that is cheaper than this product you want, but does the exact same thing... maybe you could... oh, I dunno... buy that?"  In that case... yes, the tax would be doing exactly its job!  It's supposed to be a tax burden... because it's supposed to get people to say "wait a sec... this is expensive... this sucks... I'm switching to non-polluting!"  Now whether the gas tax is used to that effect is a different story... it could just be a pile of legislation that had an intent at one time, but now just sits there due to legislative inertia...

Make Eyes Great Again!

The Great Eye is watching you... when there's nothing good on TV...

Re: The Permament Activist II

if a pack a week smoker saved and invested what he blows on smokes he wouldn't be poor in a few years.

The core joke of Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is that of course no civilization would develop personal computers with instant remote database recovery, and then waste this technology to find good drinks.
Steve Jobs has ruined this joke.

Re: The Permament Activist II

>>1. But they often don't pay proportionally more.  Property taxes tend to be in the vein of "1% of assessed value" or something like that, causing poor people and rich people to pay similar rates.  Still, my parent's $200,000 house is more than double their yearly income.  Bill Gates's $5,000,000 mansion is a small fraction of what he makes every year... in all respect, he probably pays a lower property tax rate than they do.<<

POOR people don't own houses at all.  And no, the county sets the assessment at a fixed percentage of value so the RATE is identical.

Any person, even Bill Gates, even Michael Jackson, can CHOOSE to spend themselves into a point where their voluntary lifestyle is "dangerously" out of line with their income.  The answer to that is to choose to live more cheaply, or choose to earn more.  Complaining the "system" puts you in a place where a middle-class lifestyle is proportionately expensive to you is destructive. 

Once upon a time people built a system that set out to deny anybody wealth from selling food and housing and medicine and education, that took the ownership class out and shot them...the result was still a society where some people were waiting in line to be given food and housing and medicine and education, and were denied any shot of earning it by work.

The core joke of Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is that of course no civilization would develop personal computers with instant remote database recovery, and then waste this technology to find good drinks.
Steve Jobs has ruined this joke.

19 (edited by SavingHawaii 23-Nov-2011 07:56:10)

Re: The Permament Activist II

>Demotivator wrote: if a pack a week smoker saved and invested what he
>blows on smokes he wouldn't be poor in a few years.

And if a pack a day smoker keeps puffing along, he's going to pay $368.65 in taxes over the course of year.  Call him stupid but that's a good chunk of change for a poor person committing the only honorable form of suicide.  And in the context of Flint's "51% of the nation doesn't pay taxes" it's pretty much devastating.  He's completely wrong and he knows it.

>Demotivator wrote: POOR people don't own houses at all.

I live in a house.  So do most poor people.  I don't own my house.  Neither do most poor people.  When my landlord realizes that he has to pay property tax on his rental properties, who exactly do you think is actually coughing up the dough for that bill?  Taxes routinely get passed along to the consumer.  The Chamber of Commerce has been arguing this point for years and in a lot of ways they're correct.  Corporate taxes get passed on to the workers and the consumers.  Property taxes get passed on to the tenants.  My landlord doesn't pay property tax on the house I live in out of the goodness of his heart.  He charges me that cost in my rent payments.  I and most poor people very much do pay property taxes.  Even if we aren't the ones doing the paperwork, we're the ones coughing up the cash.

>Demotivator wrote: And no, the county sets the assessment at a fixed
>percentage of value so the RATE is identical.

The rate on property value is identical, but the value of property in relation to income is not.  My parents own a $200,000 home and make about $100,000/yr.  That's a 2:1 ratio.  Bill Gates owns a $5,000,000 home (and a few more) and makes fat wads of money.  I doubt he's even close to a 1:1 ratio.  In the context which Flint so happily used, most poor people are paying a much higher proportion of their income and resources on property tax than their wealthier neighbors are.  Also too, some property-type taxes (especially in rural areas) are based on simple ownership of a lot and somebody with a $25m house and somebody with a $50k house would pay the exact same dollar amount.

>Demotivator wrote: [snip]

The rest of your post ranged from strawman to red herring.  Not going to play that game.  Stay on topic, stop punching strawmen, and maybe we can have a fruitful discussion.

Re: The Permament Activist II

> Zarf BeebleBrix wrote: As for gas excise taxes... honestly, it really depends on what you
>want to achieve.  Taxes generally have two purposes: revenue generation and disincentive
>creation.  For example, although import tariffs used to be a revenue-generating tax for the
>US (accounting for I believe 60% of government revenue in the 1800's), they account for
>about 1% of US revenue today... not just because the US has reduced its trade barriers, but
>because the amount of international trade as a percentage of US production has declined.

Back when tariffs accounted for a large portion of government revenue, they were as much a means to generate revenue as they were a mechanism to affect industrial policy.  They were both.  Look at Hamilton's commentary on the matter.  They were designed to protect domestic industries.  That they also generated revenues was a bonus.  Today where they exist they tend to be used for foreign policy or industrial policy, but the latter is relatively rare.  On to gas.

>So back to gas taxes... how much do they generate... In 2007, the highest point up to this time,
>total gas tax revenue from the state and local levels... $37 billion.  If the purpose of the tax is
>revenue generation, that's a terrible tax.  Revenue generators are supposed to minimize the
>perceived impact, so people don't really worry about them too much... and don't need to make
>too much compensation to change behaviors... the gas tax is a problem here because it's a
>hidden tax, and because it's on a good that, because the price is high already, the tax gets
>blamed as a partial cause... so it gets the added effects of tax burden claims...

First you highlight a dollar figure that only accounts for state and local gas taxes.  Federal gas taxes generate more revenue than those two combined.  Secondly, gas taxes are primarily designed as a user fee.  To utilize roads (which generally requires utilizing gas) you end up paying a gas excise tax to help fund those roads.  Federal roads (generally US highways and interstates) are almost entirely funded on gasoline excise revenue.  As for state and local roads (which account for a larger portion of pavement) it's usually a fraction of the actual cost (typically much less than 50%).  Even in user-fee friendly Texas there isn't a single state or locally-funded road that pays for itself with excise tax revenue (http://www.christianforums.com/t7377651/#post52117162).

Gasoline taxes are designed to be revenue generators (as user fees) and should probably be somewhat higher than they currently are (hear that Flint?).  In contrast, most toll booths have a dual purpose which is revenue generation and disincentive.  They're designed to generate taxes and to also discourage excessive commuting.  I don't really think your discussion of a gasoline tax as a disincentive is relevant.  Given that current gas taxes don't even support the societal costs of providing roads to drive your car on, it's probably fair to say that gasoline today is subsidized by the government.  (Still, it's a tax that poor people pay Flint!)

21 (edited by SavingHawaii 23-Nov-2011 09:22:39)

Re: The Permament Activist II

I'm just still trying to figure out how Flint went from "poor people making $1000/mo pay 23% of their income in taxes" to "51% of the nation does not pay taxes" within 24 hours.  Not even Mitt Romney flip flops that hard and John Kerry didn't come close.

Re: The Permament Activist II

>>The rest of your post ranged from strawman to red herring.  Not going to play that game.  Stay on topic, stop punching strawmen, and maybe we can have a fruitful discussion.<<

Who are you talking to?  Are you twelve years old?  "No, I dismiss your points as off my topic. Stick to my assumptions, my concerns, accept without question my priorities.  Maybe you'll measure up to my standard of a good conversation."

As we do not allow graduated pricing like medieval societies that had one price for the poor and one for the wealthy, there is absolutely no point complaining about "relative portion of income".  $1.89 coffee is hard on the poor, sniff sniff.

The core joke of Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is that of course no civilization would develop personal computers with instant remote database recovery, and then waste this technology to find good drinks.
Steve Jobs has ruined this joke.

Re: The Permament Activist II

Hmmm, I thought nobody was posting since it was not highlighting posts... weird... hope I am not hacked :s

In reference to your dogmatic attack on the 49% versus high tax payouts... I did math myself to determine the high payouts.

I have not had a chance to solve how the 49% part works.... but I know it must be true. The guy I am hoping replaces Wu said it... and the shocking part... the Oregonian confirmed it. This is almost on par with (fictional here) Boehner saying taxes should be much lower and then Obama agreeing!!

Trust me... I want to know... just I figure it is more complex than reading this forum and I want to memorize it.

So I accept there must be some algorithm to examine services received, or perhaps something unexpected for that specific year... I just do not know yet.

Everything bad in the economy is now Obama's fault. Every job lost, all the debt, all the lost retirement funds. All Obama. Are you happy now? We all get to blame Obama!
Kemp currently not being responded to until he makes CONCISE posts.
Avogardo and Noir ignored by me for life so people know why I do not respond to them. (Informational)

Re: The Permament Activist II

Btw tax talk here is off topic, this topic is about activism.

Please conduct tax talk in the appropriate thread.

Everything bad in the economy is now Obama's fault. Every job lost, all the debt, all the lost retirement funds. All Obama. Are you happy now? We all get to blame Obama!
Kemp currently not being responded to until he makes CONCISE posts.
Avogardo and Noir ignored by me for life so people know why I do not respond to them. (Informational)

Re: The Permament Activist II

1. You describe a conservative "permanent activist". this is a false generalization. permanent activism is possible for the whole political spectrum.
2. crony capitalism is a special of conservatism. to control the industry place your political friends at the right positions.
3. "green science lies". maybe they are lies, but who cares as long as they result in jobs? e. g. energy efficiency lowers costs, rises profits and creates new jobs and the US needs jobs.
4. In the most western nations the majority does not pay taxes. In most cases they are simply too poor. Living standarts in the US drop. People have no jobs, no food, no hope. But this would be okay if they pay taxes?
5. calling for a balanced budget is good. here in europe we struggle for balanced budgets. can you see the riots in the streets? this is a "balanced budget".
6. you talk of "freedom" and call for manipulations of the US-people
7. "be proud be loud" sounds like the Nazi slogans in the 1920s and early 1930s
8. Think about this: How many people did you in effect convert to conservatism and how many did just agree with you to end their meal in peace?