Seattle
Valued Senior Member
Exactly. Ask pjdude.What does that even mean?
Exactly. Ask pjdude.What does that even mean?
No.Do you think doing away with the step-up basis and double the capital gains tax would be a good idea?
Sure, when the options are drive when drunk and go fast and drive when drunk and slow down, slow down is best but those aren't the only options or the best options.No.
But when the options are:
1. Increase spending and decrease income or
2. Increase spending and increase income
Option 2 is better than option 1.
That is exactly right. But when your options are narrowed down to those two, you choose the better of the two options.Sure, when the options are drive when drunk and go fast and drive when drunk and slow down, slow down is best but those aren't the only options or the best options.
Absolutely. But if your choice is to eliminate the step up basis and drive drunk, or eliminate the step up basis and NOT drive drunk, the latter option is preferable.If you don't think it's a good idea to eliminate the step up basis and if you don't think it's a good idea to double the capital gains tax then don't do it would be the logical response.
OK. You can "see" whatever you like. In the real world, we often have to make choices between less than ideal and WAY less than ideal.I don't see the logic of "more taxes and unneeded programs as being better than less taxes and unneeded programs" as being a serious argument.
Of course, cheap, fast and good are all reasonable attributes as is any 2 of them.That is exactly right. But when your options are narrowed down to those two, you choose the better of the two options.
Absolutely. But if your choice is to eliminate the step up basis and drive drunk, or eliminate the step up basis and NOT drive drunk, the latter option is preferable.
It would be great if we could make choices in a democracy that lead to ideal outcomes. We generally do not have that option. So we choose the best of several bad choices.
OK. You can "see" whatever you like. In the real world, we often have to make choices between less than ideal and WAY less than ideal.
I mean, an engineer can hold out for cheap, fast and good. But he will get beaten every time by the engineer who chooses two out of those three - even if you don't think that arguing against (for example) cheap is a "serious argument."
Sometimes yes. That's called an MVP - minimum viable product. If a startup is struggling for cash, then selling something (even if it's not very good) will provide funding to keep the company solvent - and fund improvements to that product.As an engineer, is cheap and not good an acceptable choice when the other choice is expensive and not good?
Again, I agree. And if the choice was:Getting rid of the step up basis and doubling capital gains taxes punishes the wrong people (to say nothing of the economic disincentives) for an unnecessary spending program, IMO.
As usual you are arrogantly confident and completely wrong.The US can't actually default since the debt is in dollars (they can just create more). None of this is going to "destroy" the global economy. Creating more money isn't helpful of course but that's what we are already doing by not addressing continually adding to the debt.
Please don't push your buttons ignorance on meExactly. Ask pjdude.
The statement in question was quoting your post.Please don't push your buttons ignorance on me
The statement in question was quoting your post.
To be clear: The statement, "Trying to reduce debt is going to destroy the global economy", is yours. It's right there in #17↑. That is, the statement in question is a juxtaposition of your invention, and thus something only you can explain.
Don't ever wonder why some things take a lot of words, especially when people are expected account for the extraordinary need of explicitly observing the difference between what someone said and what someone else says it means insofar as one person said something, and another person said something, and what that other person said is actually what that other person said. It's only confusing if we must explain it to someone who is confused for no apparent reason and thus cannot give any reference point by which others might help resolve that confusion. More directly: It can easily become confusing if there is confusion about why one is confused.
Which, in turn, is not at all unusual among conservatives.
This is ridiculous. The statement that you are attributing to me is a statement that PJdude made and I simply added the question mark as in "what are you talking about".
Let's take a look at this claim:
• Seattle in #17↑: "Trying to reduce debt is going to destroy the global economy?"
• Seattle in #33↑: "The statement that you are attributing to me is a statement that PJdude made and I simply added the question mark as in 'what are you talking about'", explaining, "Look at his rant in post 14."
• Reviewing #14↑ as indicated, we do not find the statement, "Trying to reduce debt is going to destroy the global economy". It's a hell of a run-on sentence, but, no, the phrase Seattle insists is PJ's does not exist in #14.
I do see attribution of societal ruin to an underlying mindset that misrepresents reality while discussing taxes, and while that point could be better crafterd, it's not necessarily wrong.
It's kind of like your bit on the "Achilles heal"↗ of liberalism and something about "economic illiteracy"; it's a narrative we've heard since the Reagan years, and doesn't really reflect reality. These generations of voodoo economics have brought us not quite to the brink of ruin, but we're closer to the chasm than any promised land, or even a hill upon which we might be a beacon. It's one thing if the dumbest thing Clinton did was adopt reaganomics, but that was what voters wanted and that's a big part of how he won; and, moreover, he helped balance the budget and set a pathway to paying off the national debt. It was Republicans who undid that. And it was a Republican president who tanked a war we didn't need to be in, an administration of oilmen having an oil fight, running up the debt and the price of oil. And let's not forget the glorious GOP tax bill, partially written in crayon, and how a lot of Trump's working-class supporters saw their tax bills increase; moreover, tax increases that occurred in 2021 were part of that 2017 GOP tax law. So, yeah, PJ isn't wrong; simplistic mush about spending and tax, with the regular talking points about GDP and budgets and no debate and all the same boo-hoo we hear from Republicans, anyway, is actually part of an historical discussion fouled nearly to the point of being delusional. That is, it's a fine discussion about fancy, but it is also true that Americans will destroy the place with this voodoo, and inasmuch as it's partisan, we should remember these are also the presuppositions of those who would murder government.
Inasmuch as PJ might sound at least a bit melodramatic about his expression, it does stand out that so-called moderate Republicans aren't really any different from the House Freedom Caucus. In fact, part of the reason we're having any discussion about a "House Speaker solution", at all, is because there isn't any real moderating influence against the House Freedom Caucus, who undermined Boehner and Ryan, and now have compelled McCarthy to concede so much that House Republicans want to keep the terms of agreement secret. The House GOP is so proud of itself that it wants to keep some House Rules secret, even from other members.
So, if this seems like a lot of words to make the point, the short form is to remind that, sure, I can accept that you really are that stupid, if you insist. It's like your cluelessness↗ about racism. The whole bit where ostensibly educated and informed people can't manage anything better than the murmur and buzz of base superstition is what it is, but, no, it's not credible, and neither are they.
Trying to reduce debt is going to destroy the global economy?
first off they aren't trying to lower the debt.
Now I don't expect that this group will actually contribute to financial stability and I doubt that they will be effective or positive in any contribution that they make but, at least in theory, they are right regarding the debt issue.
I really don't think their agreeing to breach the debt is as funny or as ironic as you want to make out. I guess they could say "No! We're not going to increase the debt ceiling!" and so send the US into shutdown and default on its debt. But no sensible party would do that given the consequences it would have on their own and the global economy.Just, that made me think of the time this guy was doing that thing about Republicans and reducing the debt, and it turns out they were making the agreement to breach the debt ceiling quite literally as he was saying it.」
So this example you've used is nothing more than the Reps acting sensibly in as much as agreeing to increase the debt ceiling.
When any politician is presented with two options - vote to not raise the debt ceiling, and force the US into a shutdown and a default (an action that would destroy the US economy) or vote to raise the debt ceiling and avoid those outcomes - then a responsible politician will vote to raise the debt ceiling. Thus, in this particular case, republicans (and democrats) are acting sensibly.Could you please explain that sentence?