[quote name='dohdough']Ok...enough with this IQ bullshit. [...] Needless to say bob source is once again borked.[/quote]
Said pretty much all I meant to convey by dropping that one link. Though, I would like to clarify, I don't put a whole lot of faith in what was included with that link.
The argument could be made that white people scoring low on a test designed for white people by white people is news,
It still ties into a lot of what you said in the first half of your post - there's a lot of cultural aspects to the development of those who tend to be more "conservative" vs. those who tend to be more "liberal" as well (which, I'm sure, has a lot to do with why you tend to find big pockets of one or the other instead of a real mixture of the two). But, no doubt, we're on the same wavelength on this one.
[quote name='nasum']Well duh, of course investments are made in order to make money 98% of the time.[/quote]
That's what I've been saying for several posts now... It's just that someone was trying to argue otherwise...
[quote name='nasum']Not always. Sometimes it is to loose money to cover gains elsewhere. Sometimes it is for influence.[/QUOTE]
hm.
You're veering of course of your argument however.
Your premise is that raising the capital gains and dividend tax will hinder investment. That is wrong.
Think about your basic point. Investing is done to make money. Will people stop investing if the outcome is still making money, even if it is less money? Then you follow it up with they'll go elsewhere. Fine. Where?
Two things:
A) They may go elsewhere. I'm not even sure if I touched upon that much, aside from pointing out the idea of using a different service to trade stocks.
B) Again, back to my original point - Return on Investment vs. Risk. If the potential for return isn't high enough, some folks won't take the risk. They may sit on their money. They may invest it into something else that's safer. They may send it all to China and build Foxconn II. Again, you cannot deny that raising taxes has a negative impact on the potential return and that investors use the amount of the return to determine if the risk is worth investing in.
That is also wrong. Sure, I can shop around for the lowest fee, but the tax rate is there and is not a variable in the equation.
This is assuming that there is only one country with only one tax rate in which one can invest their money.
Your assertion that I'm a lush is 100% accurate and correct.
Never said or implied that you were a lush. I was very careful not to, as I have no idea if your DUI was for drinking or drugs.
If you live in the state with lower taxes but work in the one with higher, you'll likely be fine. Vice versa, you will pay 100% of the income tax due to the lower state as well as the "difference" to the other state.
When I worked in Indiana and lived here in Illinois, I was in this boat as well. Had to file two sets of state tax returns. The idea that the business transaction takes place in another state, so the third state has to butt out is a nice one - but invalid.
[quote name='nasum']
RE: GM Bailout funds
Here we enter the realm of equity again. GM has a structured stock buyback plan with the govt to pay it back.[/QUOTE]
GM could blow up tomorrow and be worth Zero. Until the money is back in our proverbial pockets, the stock is meaningless and we're $27 Billion in the hole. Counting chickens before they hatch and all that.
Let's pretend that the Federal Government announced tomorrow that they were going to sell off all their GM stock and they were no longer going to participate in re-distributing wealth to any corporate entities. How much would that stock be worth then?
[quote name='camoor']If he said - "My tax return is a clear example of what's wrong with America today and I'm going to change it" then I'd have some respect for him.[/QUOTE]
Really?
I have no love for Mittens, but what you suggested, IMHO, is worse than the alternative. Someone who says "I'm doing this and it's okay" is, again, IMHO, better than someone who says "I'm doing this and it's wrong, but I'm going to keep doing it."