dagblog - Comments for "The 9.9 Percent" http://dagblog.com/link/99-percent-25374 Comments for "The 9.9 Percent" en Excellent writing, and also http://dagblog.com/comment/253754#comment-253754 <a id="comment-253754"></a> <p><em>In reply to <a href="http://dagblog.com/link/99-percent-25374">The 9.9 Percent</a></em></p> <div class="field field-name-comment-body field-type-text-long field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even"><p>Excellent writing, and also very accurate.  My best take-aways:</p> <blockquote> <p> </p> <p>Consider, for starters, the greatly exaggerated reports of our tax burdens. On guest panels this past holiday season, apologists for the latest round of upwardly aimed tax cuts offered versions of Mitt Romney’s claim that the 47 percent of Americans who pay no federal income tax in a typical year have “no skin in the game.” Baloney. Sure, the federal individual-income tax, which raised $1.6 trillion last year, remains progressive. But the $1.2 trillion raised by the payroll tax hits all workers—but not investors, such as Romney—and it hits those making lower incomes at a higher rate, thanks to a cap on the amount of income subject to the tax. Then there’s the $2.3 trillion raised by state and local governments, much of it collected through regressive sales and property taxes. The poorest quintile of Americans pays more than twice the rate of state taxes as the top 1 percent does, and about half again what the top 10 percent pays.</p> </blockquote> <p>Snip</p> <blockquote> <p>The American idea has always been a guide star, not a policy program, much less a reality. The rights of human beings never have been and never could be permanently established in a handful of phrases or old declarations. They are always rushing to catch up to the world that we inhabit. In our world, now, we need to understand that access to the means of sustaining good health, the opportunity to learn from the wisdom accumulated in our culture, and the expectation that one may do so in a decent home and neighborhood are not privileges to be reserved for the few who have learned to game the system. They are rights that follow from the same source as those that an earlier generation called life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.</p> </blockquote> <p>i kept reading, anxiously hoping for a prescription for a fix, but the wet blanket at the end was when he said the solution has to come from the federal government.   Not likely.</p> </div></div></div> Sun, 17 Jun 2018 14:33:18 +0000 CVille Dem comment 253754 at http://dagblog.com I’ve joined a new aristocracy http://dagblog.com/comment/253742#comment-253742 <a id="comment-253742"></a> <p><em>In reply to <a href="http://dagblog.com/link/99-percent-25374">The 9.9 Percent</a></em></p> <div class="field field-name-comment-body field-type-text-long field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even"><blockquote> <p>I’ve joined a new aristocracy now, even if we still call ourselves meritocratic winners. If you are a typical reader of <em>The Atlantic</em>, you may well be a member too. (And if you’re not a member, my hope is that you will find the story of this new class even more interesting—if also more alarming.) To be sure, there is a lot to admire about my new group, which I’ll call—for reasons you’ll soon see—the 9.9 percent. We’ve dropped the old dress codes, put our faith in facts, and are (somewhat) more varied in skin tone and ethnicity. People like me, who have waning memories of life in an earlier ruling caste, are the exception, not the rule.</p> </blockquote> <p>Written in the first person (as a group), it's a good read.  It's well done, not the usual dry, eye-glazing economic dissertation that most of us struggle to get through.</p> </div></div></div> Sat, 16 Jun 2018 21:31:17 +0000 barefooted comment 253742 at http://dagblog.com