Brad Wardell's views about technology, politics, religion, world affairs, and all sorts of politically incorrect topics.

 

Today’s USA Today has a bombshell – at least for people who haven’t been paying attention: Nearly half of Americans pay no federal income taxes.

I’ve tried to explain this before to my liberal friends who insist that “rich people” don’t pay their fair share and whenever I’ve brought up that nearly half of Americans pay zilch to the fed in income taxes they scoff that it’s probably some far right propaganda. Nope. It’s real.

As April 15th comes up and I look at the million+ I pay in taxes (on behalf of myself and my S-corporation) I wince at all the economic opportunities that are missed because of the money being siphoned off.

To understand the real impact of taxes, this year’s tax bill will delay the completion of our new studio by about 6 months which in turn delays the hiring of approximately 23 new workers (not count the # of jobs that simply won’t be created period or the opportunity costs).

Taxes don’t hurt “the rich”. They hurt the people who work for a living.


Comments (Page 6)
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on Apr 20, 2010

I think his point is that in the board game Risk you can only move into North-America from Mexico (if we rule out the northern connection) whereas in the real world a fleet coming over the Atlantic works just as well, especially when it is the British fleet attacking a (then) weak USA.

It always astounds me when someone outright dismisses the power of the British fleet especially at that time in history. Even today very few countries can afford to dismiss a British naval attack.

But the simple power of the British navy is not the same thing as an all-out amphibious attack to conquer the USA. That was way beyond the capacity of England, specially at the time when they were still struggling to beat Napoleon.

and anyway, a British navy attack wouldn't have to be dealth with an army, but with a navy. the only way to effectively mount a navy capable of rivalring the British's was by direct government effort, not by located armies and citizen taking up arms in defense of themselves.

Which is why I was saying that the only real danger by land for your land was Mexico, and that was settled somewhat unilaterally. So you never had any need to preserve the security of your citizens against a foreign potential invader the way France, Germany or Russia had. So you never delopped a culture of having to trust your government for protection, as the worst you had to face was the Indians, and it's not like they were a real threat to your country.

on Apr 20, 2010

I think the Civil War was quite a threat...

 

on Apr 20, 2010

I think the Civil War was quite a threat...

Amen to that. But then again, it was internal. No foreign.

hum.. isn't that poetic? The Americans' greatest ennemies were themselves.

on Apr 20, 2010

Amen to that. But then again, it was internal. No foreign.

hum.. isn't that poetic? The Americans' greatest ennemies were themselves.

Apart from the odd Mongolian invasion all of Europe's wars were also internal.

Maybe the poetic part is that the Americans somehow managed to have only one major war among themselves in over 200 years while Europe cannot go even two decades without a war and no century without getting the entire planet into a fight.

 

on Apr 20, 2010

Apart from the odd Mongolian invasion all of Europe's wars were also internal.

Yhea.. But, I don't know if you know, but Europe isn't 1 nation.

While the USA are.

No points

on Apr 20, 2010

I think his point is that in the board game Risk you can only move into North-America from Mexico (if we rule out the northern connection) whereas in the real world a fleet coming over the Atlantic works just as well, especially when it is the British fleet attacking a (then) weak USA.

Bingo. Leauki you nailed it. One doesn't need military experience to discuss military related topics IMO, but one also should not reduce a complex topic to something so vague, at best, even in a casual topic of taxes.

Good of you and Doc to pick up on the "Risk" analogy. I loved that game as a kid, but haven't played it in over 30 years. As, I recall, I even modify it to rely less on luck and more on strategy. That was one thing that always bothered me about it. A poor played game could be won through sheer luck.

on Apr 20, 2010

Yhea.. But, I don't know if you know, but Europe isn't 1 nation.

While the USA are.

No points

The American nation is made up of individuals from every European nation plus non-European nations plus local Indians (those that joined the settlers).

Americans are a nation because they want to be. That state of affairs was not forced on them, they made it happen.

Somehow the Americans managed to do, apparently without you noticing, what in Europe we consider the most difficult task of all: they united, despite national differences.

Americans formed a new nation.

That was their solution to Europe's problem of constant wars.

I don't see why we should dismiss the solution just because you want to make the point that Americans didn't have the same problems as Europeans.

If children in one playground play together in peace while children on another playground fight, the argument "but in the first playground the children agreed not to fight" doesn't sound like a good argument for why the second group is so dumb.

on Apr 20, 2010

The American nation is made up of individuals from every European nation plus non-European nations plus local Indians (those that joined the settlers).

Americans are a nation because they want to be. That state of affairs was not forced on them, they made it happen.

Somehow the Americans managed to do, apparently without you noticing, what in Europe we consider the most difficult task of all: they united, despite national differences.

Americans formed a new nation.

That was their solution to Europe's problem of constant wars.

I don't see why we should dismiss the solution just because you want to make the point that Americans didn't have the same problems as Europeans.

You are comparing apples and orange

Europe is a land where the people have been entrenched in their respective territory for thousands of years. They've had different culture, language, tradition. They've warred against each other, had developped independant states from one another.

The USA is a land where the people came over less than 500 years ago. The initial people who arrived have progressively imposed their culture on their newcomers, with variable level of success, but still has established a strong paradigm of unity on the people. I will repeat what I said in another thread: France and Germany, even close together than Florida and the Maine are, are more different from one another than these 2 states will ever be, or ever has.

I really doubt the leaders of New Hamshire ever got afraid that the leaders of New Jersey would invade them. You always had an overseeing authority to deal with common elements between the states, and have acted united since day 1.

Don't you know what you are talking about? Guy, help me a little here. Arguing that the Americans are better because they have achieved a single nation while the European haven't?

It's like saying my matches are better than yours because they light up gasoline, while yours cannot light up water.

on Apr 20, 2010

Europe is a nation when Europeans want to brag about some supposed advantage (like economics or something) and it's not a nation when Europeans don't like the implications (no European-wide welfare, healthcare, internal wars, etc.).

on Apr 20, 2010

You are comparing apples and orange

I am comparing apples that want to be oranges and apples that have become oranges.

 

I really doubt the leaders of New Hamshire ever got afraid that the leaders of New Jersey would invade them. 

My point exactly.

And except for the Civil War, Americans were always able to trust each other, despite being Italians and Germans and Irish and English and French and Polish and so on.

Yes, Americans are better because they achieved a single nation if you want to put it that way. Europeans are still trying. We have the European Union. It's considered the project of a millenium. But few European proponents of the European Union would readily admit that the Americans have already done it.

 

 

on Apr 20, 2010

Nitro Cruiser
Good of you and Doc to pick up on the "Risk" analogy. I loved that game as a kid, but haven't played it in over 30 years. As, I recall, I even modify it to rely less on luck and more on strategy. That was one thing that always bothered me about it. A poor played game could be won through sheer luck.

There is a game probably more to your liking (but it does require at least 3, and best more, players).  it is called Diplomacy.  It is set up initially like Risk, but you get to create alliances (and break them), plus your armies/navies are directly related to the supply points you hold (unlike risk where you can have unlimited armies/navies).  A good game can go for weeks!

I have not played that in over 30 years.  I no longer have the board. but I still have the pieces (lost the board in a flood).  Great game!

 

on Apr 20, 2010

Europe is a nation when Europeans want to brag about some supposed advantage (like economics or something) and it's not a nation when Europeans don't like the implications (no European-wide welfare, healthcare, internal wars, etc.).

"European" is a civilisation, with a common history and base culture that'd encompass also Canada, USA and Australia. Pretty much like the Arab civilisation, the Persian civilisation, the Indian civilisation, etc...

The only thing differenciating Europe from India is geographical features much more pronounced in Europe, which allowed for much more concentrated cultural difference where in India, it's a huge melting pot of micro-cultures intertwined and none actually imposing a single order. So, barring the evident religious clash between the Pakistani and India, there is no actual defined "nation" forming India the way the "nations" form Europe.

The Parisis managed to impose their ways on what is now known as France, and thus became a nation. The Prussians managed to unite Germany. If the whole of Europe had been as generic as India (geography-wise) and did not had the Alps, the Pyrenes, the Channel, we'd have become much like them, with no massive cultural difference from one another.

What is the USA? It's just the most proeminent nation of our civilisation, one that has been created by feeding on Europe's demographic and economic problems of the time and turned it into a good thing. People came from over the Atlantic and integrated into a big single culture, that has been more unified to each other than any European nation ever has been, because of technological development allowed it.

on Apr 20, 2010

There is a game probably more to your liking (but it does require at least 3, and best more, players). it is called Diplomacy. It is set up initially like Risk, but you get to create alliances (and break them), plus your armies/navies are directly related to the supply points you hold (unlike risk where you can have unlimited armies/navies). A good game can go for weeks!

It's a very nice game, if you don't mind losing your friends...

on Apr 20, 2010

Don't you know what you are talking about? Guy, help me a little here. Arguing that the Americans are better because they have achieved a single nation while the European haven't?

To repeat what Winger said?  "Our forefathers have been kicked out of every decent country in the world"?

I do not think Leauki is arguing Americans are better (in many respects Canada is a kissing cousin to America, except it never assimilated Quebec, while Louisiana was assimilated), except at nation building.  Let's take a look at 3 countries - basically all in the same boat.

Canada never had a civil war, but perhaps that would have been better.  They have had a problem since France was kicked out of the new world, and that is Quebec.  hardly a model for the Europeans to follow as they want something that can unify them, not have them remain as they are today.  Canada is very similar to where Europe will be in 20 years, but that is not the end of their Journey.

Mexico is like Canada and the US in many respects.  But in one, they are woefully behind.  Like Europe, they are saddled with Classes - real classes, not made up ones for political purposes.  And that has stymied their development into a first world country (they have all the gifts of the US, except a constitution that says all men are equal and the belief in that doctrine).  Mexico is where Europe does not and cannot go.  So where is Europe going to look for hope in maintaining its position as a world power (as that has dwindled with the ascendancy of the Asian countries)?

America.  Yea, America has a lot of problems, many worse than other places.  But it is a work in progress, and Europe figures they can either adapt or die (actually just become irrelevant, which is as bad as death to the ego).

To get back to the natural borders, 3 countries with almost identical natural assets.  Yet one is at the top of the heap, and the other 2 are not.  back in the 18th century the populations of Canada and America were not that different.  But America grew through immigration (lots and lots of it).  Why?

being a native born citizen, I cannot really answer other than with opinion.  But I do listen to friends who were not born here, but chose to make a life here.  Hope.  America offers hope.  is there racism?  yes, but not on every street corner.  if it bleeds, it leads makes great headlines, but does not really tell you the story of every day life in the US.  Millions of minorities will go years, and some even a life time, and never worry about being called a name, beat up, shot, stabbed, or in any way discriminated against.  You will never hear those stories.  They do not bleed.  And so they go quietly about their lives, assimilating, and living free.  They want to be American, because it means more to them than an accident of birth.  it represents an ideal.  An ideal that has not been duplicated elsewhere.

So yes, in that respect, America is better, and Europe knows it.  it is what Europe wants to be, and may be someday.  As you say, they have 1000 years of history to over come.  But America was not born from the garden of Eden.  The bloodiest war of all time for one nation (as a percent of the population) was the American Civil War.  Perhaps we just did it all at once, as Leauki says, instead of inflicting it by a thousand cuts, as Europe did.

on Apr 20, 2010

Cikomyr
It's a very nice game, if you don't mind losing your friends...

So you have played it? (the game, not life).

As long as you can leave your feelings on the board, it is fun!

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