nano-bug wrote:
What I found is the person may have the right to grudge the aim of his/her taxes, but this priority is so far off the mark. Trillions of dollars are spent on wars and billions are spent on space exploration and yet this does not bother the tax payer in the same infuriating way. On one hand, taxes go toward the killing of people and the quest to find water on mars, while dirty water remains here. On the other hand, taxes go toward feeding people and keeping them warm with shelter. Why does the humane one cause outrage, but not the other. There is abuse and there is fraud in every area of a society that looks to capitalize on one another.
I agree with you completely on this point. I've personally found space exploration not to be a worthless endeavor, per se, but an endeavor that should be one of extreme excess. Bascially, when we have full employment (read: everyone that WANTS to work working) and every American is a homeowner and has enough to eat, then we can worry about space.
It seems clear that the money that comes from people and returns to people should not incite people. But it does. The very act of a handout upsets a large section of people. But I ask why, in comparison to the cost of war? Why do these people favor blood money over donations? That type of perspective is twisted.
I think you're ignoring a basic economic principle which happens to be that war makes more money and creates more jobs than, "Hand-outs." You have such things as increased military numbers, gun manufacture, ammo manufacture, fighter jets, tanks, communication systems, satellites, intelligence technology. There's money everywhere, and from sources that otherwise do not come into play. Food Stamps at WAL*MART? It's a drop in the ocean for agriculture and a drop in the ocean for WAL*MART.
It seems that the question is, do you want someone fed or someone shot, and people are choosing shot, but it's not really as simple as all of that.
The welfare of others is one of survival, not lifestyle. Capitalism is based on the idea of winners and losers. To win, someone must also lose. One business offers better prices and another business goes extinct. Livelihoods are affected everyday by this type of unsympathetic competition. But the one time the loser gains off the hard work of another, this becomes the ultimate taboo of the tax payer.
It's about placating. Nobody wants starving kids, the thought of starving kids pisses off the masses. You have to give them something somewhere, at least enough to keep them quiet, or you're going to have a full-out revolution. Most revolutions were not a result of haves and have-nots, they were a result of haves and have-nothings. That's why you don't tax really low wage-earners to death, like they did in other countries (maybe some still today?) and in other centuries.
That was just to your first sentence, I guess. Concerning the rest of it, I'm not terribly alarmed by Capitalistic Competition as long as all-out monopoly can be avoided. Smaller businesses should theoretically (and in practice) be better at finding niches, something that huge corporations can't do because everything needs to be done a set way. The small businesses can survive a failure to price-compete; the small businesses don't survive because of a failure to adapt to the changing market by carving out a niche for themselves. You can usually carve out such a niche by exceeding expectations with respect to the level of service you provide, the big businesses can't touch it.
I've noticed the complaints usually come from people who hate their jobs. The complaints are in direct correlation to how much they want to crawl back into bed on monday morning. They suffer, so should everyone else, is the their motto. In the same way someone might have jealousy towards the wealthy, these crabs have jealousy almost over free time. My question is why, if these people show unsympathetic views toward the needy, should the needy care about affecting the wallets of the advantageous? Capitalism is unfair. Why point the finger at one unfair way taxes are misused, but ignore/condone the rest as being fair? This is a terribly narrow view.
Yeah. I suppose some people could stand to modify their thinking a little bit in this respect and maybe look at it from a standpoint of, if some of the people receiving substantial welfare assistance were more intelligent and/or motivated, then maybe some of the people complaining about such recipients would not have their jobs! I do agree that there is a lot of bitching over the free time that such welfare recipients have, although, I don't think that people fully appreciate what that free time is spent doing. I remember on one occasion in my life I could not work for one week due to a medical reason, and the life of the, "Welfare bum," became intolerably dull after about three days.
The worker can have hope for a promotion, and when he does have substantial free time, he might afford to take a vacation. The welfare recipient can hope for nothing, other than maybe some kind of COLA increase, although, I don't think those always apply to welfare.
Ultimately, resentment is, unfortunately, a fact of life for many people. I'm also guilty of it, but I'm trying to improve myself in that respect by really mulling over things and trying to find a sort of empathy for everyone. I have often failed to spend an adequate amount of time considering things from the standpoint of how other individuals feel. In any case, though, it all comes down to resentment, and while everything is case-by-case, there are a few generalities for who is to blame. The welfare recipient could be more motivated to work instead of blaming others, the workaholic (like me) could probably find a way to make as much money and spend a lesser portion of his life doing it, and the very rich could often do a little more to share the wealth.
In fact, I read an article about the, "Worst Celebrity Tippers," you could probably Google it, the article literally made me sick. For God's Sake, at least you have someone out there who gives a damn enough to try and you cannot give him the gratuity that he/she, and all in that occupational field, rely upon? Disgusting.
Truth is, if welfare is abolished or social security fails the working class might get the righteous moment in the sun, whereby the disabled must work or die. But not before long, when the working class sits down to eat the dinner they've earned, do the poor start prying at their windows and doors. This is not a threat, but the stark reality of basic survival. Sure, taxes are for paving over potholes in the street. If welfare was abolished, taxes would go to removing dead bodies from the street. Take your pick.
I very seriously doubt if the placation will ever cease, so I don't think we're going to have to worry about haggard and gaunt masses prying our doors and windows to get to our mashed potatoes, but I guess it is a frightening possibility. I will reiterate that one possibility is that, when all of these people are (possibly) forced to attempt to enter the workforce, some people currently in the workforce will be displaced out of the workforce, and there will also be a race to the bottom with respect to the wages/salaries people are willing to work for because the labor market will be even more employee-saturated.
In short, it will be a fucking mess.