[quote name='Koggit']you're wrong though. the numbers you're being fed are deceptive. not only are those people bringing in enormously disprorpriate amounts of the wealthy (e.g. something you ask yourself is "how much of the nation's income is that top 50% pulling?" because if they're pulling in 90% and being taxed 90% then that's flat), but fed income tax is a large portion of our tax burden but it can't be looked at exclusively, unless you want propaganda instead of an accurate pulse. just by including social security those numbers (percent burdens of the wealthy) drop substantially, and even more when you consider other tax burdens. some taxes, such as those on gambling, alcohol, cigarettes, roads, electricity, tariffs on food, etc, are actually regressive and hit the poor harder than the rich, equalizing the field a bit.
yes, the rich pay a disproportionate amount of america's taxes, that's the idea, progressive taxation has historically proven to improve general welfare, the fantasy Randian arguments against it are unfounded... it's really unfortunate that our system isn't more progressive -- its just too bad the wealthy hold far more power than the poor in a democracy.
edit: too lazy to research a lot and get really solid numbers, but check this -
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taxation_in_the_United_States#Progressive_nature
cliff's notes: the top 20% bring in 52.4% of the nation's income, and pay only 65.3% of the federal income + social security burden. this is without factoring in the regressive taxes mentioned above, which would only lower that number further.[/QUOTE]
And that's my biggest beef with the Democratic party. They are happy to put forth the above argument all day long. But when you point out that major firms like Goldman and Sachs make billions in profit each quarter and pay pretty much no taxes - you'll get winks and nods.
Coincidently, they were the biggest private contributor to Obama's campaign (and McCain, I believe).
We have to tax the holy bejeezus out of rich individuals because we are unable/unwilling to tax the megacorps.
This is a great
Rolling Stones article about just that. I considered making a thread on it but I know it would just get filled up with the usual CAG's calling it conspiracy theory (even though it's all fact based, as far as I can tell).
As long as we keep allowing the long standing tradition of certain government positions having revolving doors to executives of banks and financial institutions, and continue our apathy about the fact the Fed can't be audited - this will never change.
We are only maybe a decade away from officially changing the country name to "United States of Goldman Sach's and friends".