Quote:
Originally Posted by MysticCat
Anyway, life may indeed not be fair, but there can be consequences to taxing those with lower income to the point that they can't pay for essentials.
Is it preferable to have structured rates that encourage more self-sufficiency for those with lower incomes?
|
Thank you for saying this more clearly and succinctly than I ever could.
Quote:
Originally Posted by DGTess
I don't think the government should be in the business of validating people's choices. Those who choose to have families on incomes of $15K or of $250K make choices. Taxes are paid on income, not on how one chooses to spend it.
Likewise housing. While I believe access to adequate housing is a right, I don't think home ownership is a right, and don't think the government should reward me more than the couple next door who has been renting their house for 35 years, by their choice.
|
Is it that person's income? Or the family's income? I have never thought of my income as just mine. That money belongs to me and my children, not just me. I don't think many stay at home moms would be happy to say that the money their husband makes working outside of the home belongs to their spouses. I guess this is a major philosophical difference about you think about a family unit.
Home ownership is a huge boon for our economy. The building, selling and buying of homes creates jobs. All of the people with those jobs then pay taxes. It's all a big flow chart and the taxes paid by all of those people add up to far more than the tax savings of the mortgage interest.
I'm of the mindset that if it is good for society for as a whole, I'm willing to ante up more money to pay for it. That would include education, defense, health care, roads/transportation, medical research, etc. I do feel like there is a lot of waste in our government but I can't put my finger on exactly what it is. We all heard reports of the government paying outrageous amounts for toilet seats, for example. I do think there is too much wealth in this country to tolerate people dying for lack of health insurance, lack of food, lack of heat or shelter... in short, lack of compassion. I know people who work the system and I know people who need help but can't get it from anywhere. I can't even believe they haven't approved spending to help the people suffering damage from Sandy, for example.
I have a feeling the biggest issue is corruption, but where that corruption is, I don't know. And whether ending that corruption would really help the deficit in the long run, I don't know.