madmallard wrote:
i think "get rid of it" is perfectly reasonable legislative policy these days.
It certainly hasn't been tried before... and whats the Chinese proverb? "Don't keep doing what doesn't work?"
----
I just don't think that's really accurate. We can agree "it's not working" right now, the way we're doing things today. But it worked famously for a very long time. Now, before I move on, let me say again, I absolutely agree we need major changes to Medicade, Medicare and the Military. I don't personally believe we need major changes to Social Security, but we do need to "fix" some of the screwy accounting going on there.
madmallard wrote:
The 'seriousness' you speak of is the simple realisation that government does too much. You either have to pay for it and quit complaining, or change people's expectation of what government should do, and cut cut cut.
Okay, now we're getting down to it. That's exactly what I've been saying. You can have the programs, or you can have the low taxes. You can't have both. And right now, you can't have either.
But the way we got here is at least in some large part due to politicians who promised that we could indeed have both. I do think to some degree it was by design. Reagan said "take away their checkbook". I think a lot of folks who don't like those programs sold tax cuts because they're easy to sell. But I think they intentionally misled people to believe that tax cuts would pay for themselves and we could keep all the expesive programs. Now that they're out of money they can say "See? We just can't afford it!" Well, no, we can't anymore! You berkeleyed it all up!
madmallard wrote:
I use the military as a common example because its an easy target for Democrats to drum up their base. "Why buy bombs when we can build roads?" makes for an easy war cry to the intellectually vacant. I also use it because it is a large chunk of change that moves thru it, and still is a smaller problem than any of the entitlements.
Well, again, you're calling the entitlement programs a "problem". Many don't believe they are. They want the programs, and some even want them if that means we have to pay for them. That's a matter of personal opinion. I happen to think all of those programs are great and I want all of them. But I do think at this point the only reasonable thing to do is scale them back dramatically.
I just can't seperate myself from the real world effects of eliminating Medicare, for instance. I'll spare you the personal saga, but I know childred who didn't do a damn thing wrong but pick the wrong woumb to climb out of. One kid born with a hole in his heart. Needs an opperation he'll never get and likely won't live to see 30. But at least he's gotten some care. I just can't see how we can look at that kid as a baby and say "sorry, you just die." How do we square that with the belief that abortion is wrong?
madmallard wrote:
I say this from the context of, for those people that DO actually pay income taxes, they're high enough from my ethical view. I work until April every year to pay MY taxes alone, and only from May on is money that I keep. Raising taxes to fix a government/governing shortcoming I find unethical as the only direct contribution the people taxed make is their money and their vote. I equate this to be no different from using taxes to change social behavior. Taxes SHOULD be reduced to their core meaning; funds collection for the affairs of government.
If the affairs of government can't be satisfied with the collected taxes, then the government is too big. That is not the direct fault of the voter, as we are a representative government (not a democracy). It is the fault of the government machine itself. ALL government's natural state of existance is to secure more power for itself to better exert its authority or influence over the governed.
Well, you can belive that, but you need to convience everyone else that popular programs need to go. Otherwise, it's just as easy to say taxes are too low. Holding firm on either position isn't likely to move us forward.
madmallard wrote:
I want to break all thinking that just raising taxes fixes anything.
I can't speak for anyone but myself, but I don't believe that. As I said, though, I don't belive cutting spending can fix it either.