Khross wrote:
Actually, a downgrade was unavoidable once S&P knew were going to break 100% of GDP in actual debt. And it was going to happen last week regardless of the outcome of the Debt Ceiling Debate. And it would have had happened had we passed a standard budget with a customary and silent increase.
S&P stated outright before the downgrade that they would have maintained our rating had we cut $4 trillion in spending. You're saying they would have turned around and gone back on that?
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Actually, what's insane is the claim that a country with our actual tax burden per citizen on this planet should even consider raising taxes. What's even more insane is this 20th Century, post-World War II delusion that individual income should be the primary revenue source for governments.
It makes you wonder how society and nations got through the last 6500 years of human history using excise taxes, tariffs, duties, and other such consumption based implements.
It's really pretty obvious how 19th-century governments got by on only those. No standing army, no entitlement programs. I'm sure we could fund the government on only excise taxes, duties, and tariffs if we didn't have either of those.
I cannot really refute your tax claim because you understand the tax code much better than I do, but pretty much all mainstream sources claim that the US has one of the lowest tax burdens per individual of all first-world countries, not the highest. I understand the Heritage Foundation is fairly conservative, but even they rate the US tax burden as fairly low compared to other first world countries.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_tax_revenue_as_percentage_of_GDPhttp://www.heritage.org/index/rankingAccording to this data, the US collects 26.9% of GDP in tax revenue. Compare that to 40.6% for Germany, 39% for the UK, 46% for France, 42.6% for Italy, and 36.8% for Israel. The Scandinavian countries, Belgium, and Denmark are also all above 45%. The US is only "high" when compared to areas that are well known to have tiny militaries and next to no entitlement programs, like Hong Kong and Singapore.