Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Response to Mark...

This blog post is a response to a convoluted comment in a Facebook thread. Since Facebook comments do not allow the formatting options I needed to create a reasonable response, I decided to compose my response here.


Andy, again this is not a personal attack. I do not know more about your business experience except that you work in IT.


When you don't know something about someone, don't assume that their business experience is "limited" simply because they don't subscribe totally to your ideology.



As for the principles discussed, you did not state why you felt there to be a logical fallicy or a strawman.

The logical fallacy specifically has to do with these lines from the quote you provided...

"You cannot strengthen the weak by weakening the strong.
You cannot help little men by tearing down big men.
You cannot lift the wage earner by pulling down the wage payer.
You cannot help the poor by destroying the rich.
You cannot build character and courage by destroying men's initiative and independence."


Using taxes to create a social safety net is not "weakening the strong," "tearing down big men," "pulling down the wage payer," "destroying the rich," or "destroying men's initiative and independence." Anyone who makes these claims is engaging in the logical fallacy of creating a straw man. You are misrepresenting the effects of using taxes to pay for the social safety net when you use the second half of each of the quoted sentences.

Since we are in a forum more conducive to discussing this at length, I will address the other lines of your quote as well...

"You cannot further the brotherhood of man by inciting class hatred."

Though there are certainly many people who hate and/or are jealous of the upper class, this sentence applies just as much to the right as to the left. In the Facebook thread alone, there were several references to the "entitled class." In other words, you have engaged in just as much "class hatred" as the people who you are accusing of the same.

"You cannot keep out of trouble by spending more than you earn.
You cannot bring about prosperity by discouraging thrift.
You cannot establish sound security on borrowed money."

For these lines, I am going to copy and paste from the Facebook thread...

I completely agree about the "discouraging thrift" line. That is the reason I am such a strong proponent of replacing the income tax with a consumption tax (the FAIR tax, with a couple of caveats) so that our tax policy encourages and rewards saving money over spending it.

I further agree with the "borrowed money" line, which is the reason that I find all the talk from the GOP about our deficit and debt disingenuous. Reagan and GWBush are the two biggest reasons that we have the debt we have now. I would rather have a tax and spend Democrat than a borrow and spend Republican any day.

The "spending more than you earn" line is true to a point, though there are legitimate times and reasons to run a deficit. Nobody would have said to FDR "we can't fight the Japanese, we don't have enough money" after Pearl Harbor.

Then there is the one I haven't talked about directly...

"And you cannot help men permanently by doing for them what they can and should do for themselves."

This is another quote with which I completely agree. As I said several times in the Facebook thread, I would be happy to see further welfare reform to ensure that it is a hand up rather than a handout, but I continue to maintain that the number of people who depend entirely on welfare, food stamps, and the like is minuscule.



If we can stick to one area of discussion more can be accomplished as I too am willing to listen and consider all opinions.

This is an interesting comment given what followed...


By the way, I am not a Fox junkie. It is usually Morning Joe on msnbc mixed with Squawk Box on cnbc in the am. I usually get some c-span during the day. I do watch Brett Bair on Fox in the evening.

My personal opinion is that all of the 24 hour "news" networks are steaming piles of manure. They are entertainment in news clothing, and do nothing but add to the vitriol and venom present in our political process. My advice: read your news, you will get a better picture of what is actually happening and you will be able to fact check it more easily than you can a television personality's comments.



Your data about Texas and California were fairly limited comparisons. My stories were not just about people moving out, but reflected discussions with business leaders in both states.

Exactly, your stories were just that, stories. You talked with a few businesspeople in California and made a conclusion based on those stories. I posted that Texas has a $19 billion budget shortfall in a $1.2 trillion economy while CA has a $25 billion shortfall in a $1.8 trillion economy. In other words, Texas has a larger deficit to GDP ratio than California does. You would have had a much better argument if you had researched the issue and posted this article from Politifact which states that 61 businesses moved from CA to TX from January to August of 2010. Even that factoid doesn't indicate massive waves of businesses moving out of California as the data includes branch openings and moves where the headquarters stayed in CA while an office moved or opened in Texas.




My opinions are my own. You accuse of dishonesty, while acting like you didn't know that John was referring to income tax in his opening remark.


Of course I knew what he was talking about, but what he said wasn't accurate, it was dishonest, it was a lie. Anyone who says that half of Americans don't pay taxes deserves to be called out as a liar because they are lying.



You have not responded regarding moral haszards of 47% percent not paying any income tax. If you want I can go find the msnbc link to the supporting information. You have not responded regarding 50% of income taxes being paid by 5% of the population.

The problem here is that you are ignoring ALL of the other taxes, most of which are extremely regressive (affect the poor and middle class more than they do the wealthy). When you ignore the other taxes, you miss the fact that the wealthy actually pay a smaller percentage of their income in taxes than the middle class, much less the poor. I don't see any moral hazards at all in 47% not paying income tax, nor in 50% of income taxes being paid by 5% of the population. I am part of that 5% and since I enjoy the benefits of living in American society, taxes are the price I have to pay.




You casually treat a 3% tax increase as if it were nothing. That figure applied to a business profit & loss is the difference between a company profit and a company loss, the stuff that jobs depend on.

You're right, I treat a 3% increase in the marginal tax rate for income over $212,300 as exactly what it is, virtually nothing. Your second sentence goes on to conflate business taxes (which we aren't discussing in this context) with personal income taxes. Someone with an income of a half million dollars a year (all wages, no dividends or capital gains, which are taxed at a lower rate) would see a tax increase of $9,834 for a total net increase of 1.96% of their total wage income. That isn't enough money to hire even one person, so claiming that this kind of small increase in taxes is going to keep people from hiring is hyperbolic at best.


As for your support of a Health Care Act. Obama promised a new error of transparent government. We got exactly the opposite with that process.

I disagree. Congress spent 14 months designing and debating the bill. Obama invited GOP and Democrat Congresspeople to a seven hour long meeting to discuss healthcare on C-SPAN (I know, I watched the entire thing). That is about as transparent as you can possibly get.



The President said that people could keep their existing insurance if they liked it. Talk about dishonesty. Many small businesses cannot afford to maintain health insurance with the rising premiums.

I'd love to see where you are getting you opinion, given that in one year, it is estimated that small businesses will save $6 billion from the time ACA was passed in 2010 through 2011.



People are loosing coverage, not gaining it.

I would like to see any data that supports your assertion here. Given that 30 million people are set to receive coverage that was previously unaffordable or unavailable to them, it seems unlikely that enough companies would drop coverage to make up for the millions who will be covered under the Act.



The costs will be picked up by higher taxes not stable premiums. Many major corporations have had huge premium increases in health premiums including Federal employee programs. You cannot reduce costs with the proposed increase in benefits and numbers covered.

If you read the reports on the Act, there are cost controls that will come into effect over time. I agree that the cost controls were not as extensive as they could be, but that is due to the GOP and conservative Democrats ditching the ideas of single payer and the public option. Those are things we can get right as we amend the Act over time. As far as huge premium increases, those are not due to the Act, those have been happening for more than a decade...




The Federal government has never been able to deliver a product or service for less than private enterprise has. Amtrack and the USPO immediately come to mind. Health system changes are needed indeed, but his is absolutely not it.

Let's focus on healthcare. The federal government does provide healthcare to a population that consumes more of those services than any other group, the elderly. The government is able to do this because its administrative costs are so low compared to private insurers. Here is a description based on the Kaiser Foundation's attempt to debunk what they call the "myth" of the 3% overhead. In the discussion, he specifically says that the Medicare overhead cost is about double the estimates of ACA supporters, which puts the overhead at a whopping 6%. That is compared to the insurance industry's low end estimate of 15%, two and a half times as much overhead as Medicare.

Then, you need to remember that absolutely nothing in the ACA can be reasonably construed as the federal government directly providing healthcare to more people than it already does. There are plenty of regulations being put onto the insurance industry, but even the people who the government is proposing to cover (the aforementioned 30 million) are going to be covered in the private insurance market. There isn't any expansion of Medicare, no public option, no single payer, nothing like that.



Aside from the economics, there is not the small loss of freedom being forced. Today you must buy an insurance policy, tomorrow you will be dictated to buy a particular car.

Everyone in America is a healthcare consumer. Hospitals are mandated to treat people regardless of their ability to pay (as it should be). I say that we are mandating personal responsibility, nothing more. The states currently do this with auto insurance for people who make the choice to own and operate a motor vehicle. Humans these days begin consuming healthcare resources starting at about their eighth week in the womb. It seems reasonable to me that if you are not willing to purchase an insurance policy, the government should be able to recoup in taxes some of the money that you will eventually cost the taxpayer when you go to the ER as the result of an accident or when you get a horrible disease for which you must be treated.

Of course, this is a "slippery slope' argument, which cause an involuntary eye rolling for me because the "slippery slope" is rarely anything more than a scare tactic, no matter which side uses it.


You haven't addressed my comments about the real estate bubble or mortgage markets either.


I didn't address this (except to say that blaming it on one political party is silly) because we weren't talking about it. However, if you would like to discuss it, please read this article for some background so that we are both dealing with facts and available evidence rather than blaming one or the other political party for a crisis that was years in the making and caused by thousands of different players.

2 comments:

  1. Andy,

    I posted a respnse on the facebook thread. I tried to copy and paste here, but this comment box did not accept a paste. The blog offered you some formatting benefits, but if we take it in chunks a useful discussion can be continued where we started it. Thanks.

    Mark

    ReplyDelete
  2. I am not sure what this blog says about Fairtax.

    But I know about Fairtax, I was a big fan of it early on. Then I read the fine print.

    Oh it sounds GREAT -- the underground economy will have to pay! No forms! No IRS! Mostly, it was simple, no BS, no double talk. I'd gladly pay 23% sales tax on everything for that kind of honesty.

    But then I read the fine print. Yes fine print.

    For 13 years we were told ONLY PEOPLE pay taxes. Fine. Corporations can't pay taxes, Fairtax told us that was a "cruel hoax" that corporations paid anything.

    Corporations would pass the cost along. Fairtax was going to be "transparent." No more hoaxes, double talk, fine print.

    Oh but that's the problem. Fairtax has plenty of fine print.

    Like the fine print in the bill itself. Fairtax is based on a massive tax on city and state governments.

    California state goverment, for example, under Faritax plan, would have to pay the federal government 16-18 billion. That's right, billion.

    And every city in California would have to pay. Los Angeles city government would have to pay 400 million. Fantastic sums of money. Really a massive tax.

    Here is the ONLY sentence, from Fairtax books, in 13 years which mentions this massive tax.

    ""Under our plan, all city and state governments will pay to the federal government a tax on all their spending -- on all their purchases, on services and goods, including labor (wages)." Fairtax Answer Book, page 138 "

    Of the hundreds of thousands of sentences for the public-- there is the only sentence which mentions this. No explanation, no details, no nothing.


    Which is EXACTLY why they are not candid about. They have no intention of making the state of California pay a massive tax.

    They have no intention of making Los Angeles city government pay a massive tax.

    So why did they put the fine print in there?

    Because their math was a trillion dollar short, that is why. When they were figuring their tax receipts -- they came up a trillion dollar short.

    So they lied. Yes, they lied. They pretend to tax city and states for that trillion. That way their math adds up -- it's goofy math, and they know that. It's not going to pass, and they know that.

    They have hid from hearings under oath for 13 years because of this. They know their entire plan is based on BS.

    In fact, they may as well pretend to tax moonbeams and baby farts, as to pretend to tax city and state governments with a hidden tax.

    There is NO WAY ON EARTH they can get city and states to pay this trillion dollars. No way. So they may as well hide a moonbeam tax, or a baby fart tax. It's exactly the same. It's impossible to tax city and state governments -- city and state governments would have to pass the cost along.

    Only people pay taxes -- Fairtax says. Did you know what Fairtax dot org says their "#1 Axiom" is? Their number one axiom, according to their web site, is that ONLY PEOPLE PAY TAXES.

    Yet they have a trillion dollar tax in their fine print.

    http://fairtaxunmasked.blogspot.com/

    ReplyDelete