TwinTownBisonFan wrote:Buffet's point is well made - to a point.
The super-wealthy aren't catered to in the tax code because they are donors, or because many pols are wealthy. Their tax burden is falling because of the GOP's desperate and undying devotion to "starve the beast" policies that they hope will someday force our nation in to a fiscal crisis and then they can use that moment to return us to the 1920's... where they can slash all spending to pre-new deal levels (except of course DoD which should for some reason still be funded at Cold War levels and never questioned)
The blame isn't solely on the Repubs for making their absurdest claims about taxes - Democrats have, for 20 years or more have bailed on fighting on the issue because it's not a good issue to run on. So what we end up with is what we have now...
We learned in MN that you can have electoral success arguing for taxing the top 2% - there is broad support for this (cue Z with his tired mantra of "well of course..." blah)
But the problem is two-fold... one - the Republican Party has become so completely obsessed with NEVER EVER raising revenues in any way, ever... that not one of their presidential candidates would accept a budget with $10 in cuts for every $1 in increases... and the Dems are still too gunshy to use this rampant extremism to bash their heads in...
Right out of the democratic playbook...
Republicans are all for raising revenues to the government, but not by raising marginal tax rates on those who already paying a disproportionate share of the income tax revenue. The way to raise revenue is by incentifying spending by small business owners who will then invest, hire, grow the economy creating more tax payers thus growing revenues.
As for the capital gains tax vs. income tax, that's an economic principal akin to what is written above. Capital gains are profit on investment. Taxing those profits at a lower rate gives those with capital added incentive to invest which creates more opportunity and liquidity in the economy, which spurs growth, creates jobs, and benefits everybody.
Warren Buffet knows better.. why he would spew such drivel is ridiculous. Incentifying and removing excess regulation, compliance and barriers to growing business is the way to jump start the economy, not by more government spending. All government spending is a) either more money borrowed from future generations, or b) money taken from somebody who has rightfully earned it at the point of a gun and given to whoever the politicians deem worthy as it will empower the politician and serve to solidify, retain, and expand their power.
This is sophmore level economics folks...