Here's how your take-home pay could change if Trump's new tax plan is passed
Hmm....I keep wanting to believe that a plain 10% "flat Tax" would be the best way to do this, since the looters ARE going to loot, no matter what. All of this "talk" keeps adding up to just making the smoke a different color and making the mirrors more polished. It still is a game where you have to try to "out loot the looters" using all their weird gambits and tricks. There is still way too much money to be taken by keeping the current system, and all the "donations" it causes to be made, to political campaigns.
I can remember back in the day when there was NO withholding of money from paychecks. I am sure we will never go back to that now, but it was preferable to the current system for us citizens.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/jamesgla...
The overall increases get even more skewed if you measure them by percentage of debt to each President, Obama added 8 Trillion to the debt, and it surprisingly drops little over the last 5. FDR had the largest percentage increase going from 23 Billion left by Hoover, to 250 billion, but 210 billion was spent on WW2. Yet FDR's percentage was a whopping 1,046%. Overall, no president has ever NOT increased the debt. The rate is accelerating as they keep spending more on whatever the hell they want. I hate to see what Trump comes out at.
https://www.thebalance.com/us-debt-by...
If it were possible to start up and defend a galts gulch, I would check out moving there and would encourage others of like mind to
do the same. I agree that It would not cause the statist USA to change into a free society but it would accelerate the decline of the USA into a Venezuela type state as it’s wealth declined.
It’s very disturbing that we all willingly support statism in the pursuit of our own lives.
"Ford Hall" was an annual celebration that drew fans from across the country and sometimes foreign countries. The auditorium was packed, usually with an overflow crowd listening from outside the auditorium. The lectures were followed by questions from the audience lining up in the aisles to try to find out more on all kinds of topics. Some were also followed by a book-signing and further questions, with a long line of fans stretching out across the room and out into the lobby, eager to meet her. That was followed by informal gatherings in Boston and Cambridge as friends got together for further celebration and discussion.
Who among us has not encountered at some point punishment from government policy that caused us to stop doing something? Who with any kind of self esteem would not revolt? But that is all it is, not a "strike" intended or expected to itself change some policy, let alone the direction of the country. (J Brenner on this forum encountered the same kind of punishment for medical devices in the same field as you, most recently because of the Obamacare tax.)
Ayn Rand did not misjudge the attraction of collectivism or its cause: the intellectuals constantly preaching altruism and collectivism then using them as justification for public pronouncements and government policy.
You must not support or condone it, but that doesn't mean to "strike" and try to collapse the economy; and it won't change without replacing the ideas with reason and individualism. Quit yourself and no one will notice, let alone change policy because of it. The most that happens when it occurs on a large scale is that people start to notice a shortage of competence and quality that they used to take for granted. Those who understand why quietly remark, "Atlas is shrugging"; the rest have no idea and keep following the same path.
wrote the novel, but I do remember she was very upset and disappointed that it was pretty much ignored. I have seen in my own life the folly of Dagny taggart and hank
Rearden and the truth of orren Boyle comment about tearden’s success will enable them to bring him down. The fact of this all is that collectivism demotivates human beings. I was a successful innovator in medical device manufacturing, but got out of the business when the medical device regulations came in 1976. I did a “dagny” thing for a few years until the fda required premarket approval from them before I could make any medical device not substantially similar to one that was in commercial production in 1976. That was essentially the end of small company innovation
By 1991. I was able to sell the companies I had started and was done with medical devices. Now I make off road lighting, still free of regulations.
Every dollar I make and am forced to give to the statists only makes them stronger and allows them to steal from me even more. The “strike “ element of John galt lives in us all and is the underlying reason statist civilizations fail
Is AR thought AS would awaken some people, she was right. But she misjudged the attraction of collectivism. I don’t understand it, but it amazes me that the abject failure of it in the world is just passed over and the obvious solution rejected.
This is why I think that a simple refusal to support statism in any way might be the only way to stop it. What’s happening now is not an organized strike , but an unorganized reduction in the desire to work under the regulations and taxation
After she arrived in this country, she had always wanted to prevent the US from following what she had seen in Russia and in Europe because upon arriving here she found the same collectivist ideas being promoted and gradually implemented. But her primary goal was to portray her idea of the ideal man and what is proper for man, a goal for fiction she had formed while still in Russia, and AS remained a statement of what should be and the ideas required for it, not just a warning of the negative, let alone a call to 'strike' against it as a means to correct it.
When AS was finished and she saw the difficulties of getting it published for its ideas, and saw its hostile treatment by almost all intellectuals in the reviews, she was discouraged. She had expected that intelligent people would immediately recognize what she was saying and embrace it. Instead she encountered the swill in The New York Times, and Whittaker Chambers in William Buckley's National Review.
After she saw the hostile reaction she decided to start lecturing and writing on non-fiction to explain her philosophy more explicitly. As part of that she observed, as in her 1964 Ford Hall Forum lecture "Is Atlas Shrugging?" https://estore.aynrand.org/p/11/is-at..., how productive people were cutting back in response to punishment and explained the solution; she never advocated a 'strike' as a means of reform.
When she decided to write a novel with a plot-theme based on showing the importance of the mind in human survival by showing in the plot what happens when it is withdrawn, the logic of her philosophy had to predict also what was happening in reality. But she didn't start out to write a warning.
In "Is Atlas Shrugging?" she said that her purpose was “not to boast nor to leave you with the impression that I possess some mystical gift of prophecy, but to demonstrate the exact opposite: that that gift is not mystical. . . .history is not an unintelligible chaos ruled by chance and whim—historical trends can be predicted, and changed.
“There is only one power that determines the course of history, just as it determines the course of every individual life: the power of man's rational faculty—the power of ideas. If you know a man's convictions, you can predict his actions. If you understand the dominant philosophy of a society, you can predict its course.”
“Atlas Shrugged is not,” she said, “a prophecy of our unavoidable destruction, but a manifesto of our power to avoid it, if we choose to change our course.” The power to avoid it is the power of the rational mind armed with the right ideas, not an a-philosophical 'strike' expected to correct the course of the nation without regard for the ideas required.
There were no surpluses during Reagan's administration, or any other administration for a very long time. Revenues from taxes increased under Reagan and spending and the debt increased more.
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