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PostPosted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 12:02 pm 
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Talya wrote:

Welfare subsidies, at 176B, are over $500 per US citizen. Farm Subsidies, at 20B, run only about $66 per US citizen.

Welfare is by far the bigger drain.


I wonder if the average person saves more or less than $66 as a result of lower food prices. That wasn't sarcastic. I honestly don't know. 66 is probably less than my monthly food budget if you count going out to eat. Some people probably spend more and some probably spend less (per person: larger families may get benefits per person that I don't) . Let's say I'm average. So if getting rid of food subsidies raises the prices of food more than 9% it would be a net loss to the country. Interesting.

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Last edited by Rorinthas on Thu Sep 01, 2011 12:07 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 12:07 pm 
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I don't know how, but I missed the entire second page somehow. Disregard my last post, I guess.

Although the distinction still doesn't seem very clear to me. Nevermind the poor; let's look at the "middle class" (however one wants to define that...). If you make, say, $45,000/yr., your income tax rate is certainly less than if you make $200,000/yr. So, should people making $45k a year STFU because the government is subsidizing their lifestyle? Seems kind of arbitrary to me.

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 12:11 pm 
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Stathol wrote:
I don't know how, but I missed the entire second page somehow. Disregard my last post, I guess.

Although the distinction still doesn't seem very clear to me. Nevermind the poor; let's look at the "middle class" (however one wants to define that...). If you make, say, $45,000/yr., your income tax rate is certainly less than if you make $200,000/yr. So, should people making $45k a year STFU because the government is subsidizing their lifestyle? Seems kind of arbitrary to me.


Woah, woah, woah.

"Paying your proper tax rate" is not a subsidy. Let's not pretend anybody giving more money to government than they receive from government is being subsidized.

It's my understanding that a lot of farms are simply not viable/profitable at all without government subsidy. The government becomes their primary source of income.

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 12:22 pm 
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Talya wrote:
Foamy wrote:
Talya:

My ultimate point really is that absolutely NO ONE should have to consider whether or not it is OK to harm/kill any animal at all if it is threatening their life or the lives of their family.


I agree, 100%.
My sidepoint was simply that there are several people whom I think should be eaten by bears. ;)



I can agree with that.

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 12:23 pm 
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Arathain Kelvar wrote:
Aizle wrote:
Midgen wrote:
Prepared to back that up ?


Not beyond using simple logic. The cost of keeping an urban family of 4 in section 8 housing and food stamps has to be a fraction of the cost for proping up a production farm with a family of 4.

That said, Talya raises a better point, that it would be interesting to see what the total dollars are. The problem is that there are so many subsidies that artificially prop up the food industry as a whole, I'm not sure you'd be able to isolate the dollars on the farm end.


Rough numbers, from WIKI, so... find better date if you like.

In short, US pays roughly $20B in subsidies, for 2% of the population. Assuming 300 million, that's $3,333 each.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agricultural_subsidy#United_States

Total welfare spending, from the Federal government only (not sure if the ag subsidies were fed only) is $176.6B (from link below, added family and children + housing).

http://www.usgovernmentspending.com/us_welfare_spending_40.html

From here:

http://www.numberof.net/number-of-americans-on-welfare/

It looks like around 50.1 million are on welfare. That's $3,525 per individual.



Advantage Arathain. Aizle, you're up.

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 12:47 pm 
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From a recent USA Today article, using officially published numbers:

Quote:
Americans got an average of $7,427 in benefits each in 2010, up from an inflation-adjusted $4,763 in 2000 and $3,686 in 1990. The federal government pays about 90% of the benefits.


And from another article:

Quote:
USA TODAY analyzed data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis and the Census Bureau to determine the importance of government benefits in each state. The benefit numbers represent average amounts received per person — not just for those in a program.

The benefits include what people receive for Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, food stamps, veterans' programs, college scholarships and many other government programs.


Quote:
The state's Medicaid program is the most expensive in the nation, driving the average cost of all government benefits in New York to $9,442 per person.


And for the list of states + DC:

1. New York $9,442
50. Utah $4,731


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PostPosted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 12:59 pm 
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Talya wrote:
Woah, woah, woah.

"Paying your proper tax rate" is not a subsidy. Let's not pretend anybody giving more money to government than they receive from government is being subsidized.

It's my understanding that a lot of farms are simply not viable/profitable at all without government subsidy. The government becomes their primary source of income.

That's not really the point I was trying make. Perhaps it was a bad example. Nevertheless, I don't doubt that you can easily find people in the middle class (as popularly understood) who are net tax consumers.

But more generally what I'm getting at is that RD's argument has the implication that a person's "worthiness" of complaining about the federal government is a function of dollars contributed to the federal government vs. dollars received from the federal government. Whether or not this argument is correct, it strikes me as being peculiar for someone who, I think, would claim to be a "social progressive". This is why I bring up income taxation. A major plank of that platform is that the wealthy should pay more taxes than the middle class, who should pay more than the poor, etc. But that being the case, then the wealthy would have more of a "right" (not in the legal sense) to criticize the government than the middle class, and so on. Again, I'm not saying this is necessarily wrong, just ... peculiar, coming as it is from a political group who also likes to complain quite vocally about the influence of money on politics, especially and particularly the issue of campaign contributions.

That said, let's revisit this:
Talya wrote:
"Paying your proper tax rate" is not a subsidy.

Ah, but how you define "proper" tax rate? If your tax rate isn't proportional to your portion of federal outlays (good luck calculating that, by the way), then what makes it "proper"?

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 1:02 pm 
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Oh look a bunch of **** I pay into and will never benefit from. Nothing like buttrape every two weeks to sour my view on "benefits".

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 1:12 pm 
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Here's the thing about farming subsidies... How many of you like to eat on a regular basis?

Farmers on the government dole are producing something valuable to society, unlike other government subsidies. The current state of the subsidies, and whether they're a good idea as written is a separate matter that I'm not attempting to address. I'm simply addressing the idea that the government has a right to push you around, and you don't get to say anything about it if you're receiving government assistance, subsidies, or any other aid. Fifty percent of the population carries no tax burden, so be careful about going down that road. Unlike farmers, the half of us who aren't paying into the system aren't feeding the world - not the community, not the state, not even the country - the world.

You've all collectively decided that you don't want to pay a lot to eat. Food should be more valuable to you than health care, electronics, automobiles, or even housing, but you want it to be cheap. Clean water is the same way. It's a great equalizer. Unlike lack of health care, lack of food and water kills you even if you're the picture of health. You want it to be cheap. You do not want to pay a lot for this muffler loaf of bread. You've decided that you deserve food because you draw breath. If a farmer doesn't make a profit, he does something else with his time and his land. If you want to eat, than you need him on that farm. That means you want him to make a profit. That's it. There's no discussion or argument about that. The only thing left to talk about is how we make sure the farmer earns enough to decide it's worthwhile to continue farming.

This isn't about civic responsibilities or debts to society. It's about whether you like to eat, and would like to continue doing so.

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 1:17 pm 
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Talya wrote:
It's my understanding that a lot of farms are simply not viable/profitable at all without government subsidy. The government becomes their primary source of income.


The sad part is that the Gov't interference is what keeps farms from being profitable. The good old vicious circle of Gov't dependence.

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 1:22 pm 
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Corolinth wrote:
You do not want to pay a lot for this muffler


Oooh, I know this one. Is it Meineke? And you really should have posted that in this thread

Also, I can't believe the direction this thread has turned.

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 1:24 pm 
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In general, what makes or breaks a farm as far as profitability is whether or not they embrace modern agricultural methods. American farming technology transplanted into Siberia could feed Russia.

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 1:38 pm 
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Not everyone in society needs to be working, since everything is getting so automated, I am fine with giving people welfare.


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PostPosted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 1:43 pm 
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Lex Luthor wrote:
Not everyone in society needs to be working, since everything is getting so automated, I am fine with giving people welfare.

I suppose you're also fine with those that object?

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 2:12 pm 
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Taskiss wrote:
Lex Luthor wrote:
Not everyone in society needs to be working, since everything is getting so automated, I am fine with giving people welfare.

I suppose you're also fine with those that object?


I am fine with them expressing their opinions, but I would favor welfare coming out of tax money.


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PostPosted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 2:18 pm 
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And how do you qualify for these free handouts?

I would like some of my money back!


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PostPosted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 2:18 pm 
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Arathain Kelvar wrote:
Aizle wrote:
Midgen wrote:
Prepared to back that up ?


Not beyond using simple logic. The cost of keeping an urban family of 4 in section 8 housing and food stamps has to be a fraction of the cost for proping up a production farm with a family of 4.

That said, Talya raises a better point, that it would be interesting to see what the total dollars are. The problem is that there are so many subsidies that artificially prop up the food industry as a whole, I'm not sure you'd be able to isolate the dollars on the farm end.


Rough numbers, from WIKI, so... find better date if you like.

In short, US pays roughly $20B in subsidies, for 2% of the population. Assuming 300 million, that's $3,333 each.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agricultural_subsidy#United_States

Total welfare spending, from the Federal government only (not sure if the ag subsidies were fed only) is $176.6B (from link below, added family and children + housing).

http://www.usgovernmentspending.com/us_welfare_spending_40.html

From here:

http://www.numberof.net/number-of-americans-on-welfare/

It looks like around 50.1 million are on welfare. That's $3,525 per individual.


So several problems with your info here.

The first is obviously that the data is pretty old. Those farm population numbers are from 1997. I highly doubt that they have gone up in the last 14 years. The second is that it doesn't say when those dollar numbers are from. I took a quick look at the Evironmental Working Groups site on Farm Subsidies and they don't have things easily broken down and as I've already indicated I'm not interested in doing a ton of data mining on this. The other issue with the population number is that is all people living on farms, not just those getting subsidies. If you want to do an apples to apples using the Wiki numbers, then you'd have to include all urban residents or something similar.


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PostPosted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 2:20 pm 
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Midgen wrote:
And how do you qualify for these free handouts?

I would like some of my money back!


I am just speaking very generally. I don't know the most effective way.

Prisons are essentially welfare anyways, and you qualify by committing crimes, and 1% of the population is in prison... I'm sure we can improve upon this.


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PostPosted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 2:21 pm 
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Talya wrote:
Foamy wrote:
Talya:

My ultimate point really is that absolutely NO ONE should have to consider whether or not it is OK to harm/kill any animal at all if it is threatening their life or the lives of their family.


I agree, 100%.
My sidepoint was simply that there are several people whom I think should be eaten by bears. ;)



The bears are working on it

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 2:22 pm 
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Ladas wrote:
The benefits include what people receive for Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, food stamps, veterans' programs, college scholarships and many other government programs.


I have problems with this. Some of these things are not "welfare". Social security and veteran's programs as an example. I think you're throwing too much in the welfare pot.


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PostPosted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 2:25 pm 
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Corolinth wrote:
Here's the thing about farming subsidies... How many of you like to eat on a regular basis?

Farmers on the government dole are producing something valuable to society, unlike other government subsidies. The current state of the subsidies, and whether they're a good idea as written is a separate matter that I'm not attempting to address. I'm simply addressing the idea that the government has a right to push you around, and you don't get to say anything about it if you're receiving government assistance, subsidies, or any other aid. Fifty percent of the population carries no tax burden, so be careful about going down that road. Unlike farmers, the half of us who aren't paying into the system aren't feeding the world - not the community, not the state, not even the country - the world.

You've all collectively decided that you don't want to pay a lot to eat. Food should be more valuable to you than health care, electronics, automobiles, or even housing, but you want it to be cheap. Clean water is the same way. It's a great equalizer. Unlike lack of health care, lack of food and water kills you even if you're the picture of health. You want it to be cheap. You do not want to pay a lot for this muffler loaf of bread. You've decided that you deserve food because you draw breath. If a farmer doesn't make a profit, he does something else with his time and his land. If you want to eat, than you need him on that farm. That means you want him to make a profit. That's it. There's no discussion or argument about that. The only thing left to talk about is how we make sure the farmer earns enough to decide it's worthwhile to continue farming.

This isn't about civic responsibilities or debts to society. It's about whether you like to eat, and would like to continue doing so.


No, it isn't. It's about whether you want to eat cheap. Without subsidies, many farms would collapse, but there would still be enough food to feed everyone. The reason prices are so low is that there's way way WAY too much farming.

If we didn't have the subsidies, we'd be paying more for food at the grocery store, but we'd be paying less in debt that we don't need. The only thing these subsidies are doing is disguising the real cost of food from us.

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 2:26 pm 
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Arathain Kelvar wrote:
Ladas wrote:
The benefits include what people receive for Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, food stamps, veterans' programs, college scholarships and many other government programs.


I have problems with this. Some of these things are not "welfare". Social security and veteran's programs as an example. I think you're throwing too much in the welfare pot.


Veteran's programs' are not intended to be welfare and shouldn't be, but in actual practice there are a lot of people getting benefits that really don't need them, making them de facto welfare in many cases.

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 2:36 pm 
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Diamondeye wrote:
Corolinth wrote:
Here's the thing about farming subsidies... How many of you like to eat on a regular basis?

Farmers on the government dole are producing something valuable to society, unlike other government subsidies. The current state of the subsidies, and whether they're a good idea as written is a separate matter that I'm not attempting to address. I'm simply addressing the idea that the government has a right to push you around, and you don't get to say anything about it if you're receiving government assistance, subsidies, or any other aid. Fifty percent of the population carries no tax burden, so be careful about going down that road. Unlike farmers, the half of us who aren't paying into the system aren't feeding the world - not the community, not the state, not even the country - the world.

You've all collectively decided that you don't want to pay a lot to eat. Food should be more valuable to you than health care, electronics, automobiles, or even housing, but you want it to be cheap. Clean water is the same way. It's a great equalizer. Unlike lack of health care, lack of food and water kills you even if you're the picture of health. You want it to be cheap. You do not want to pay a lot for this muffler loaf of bread. You've decided that you deserve food because you draw breath. If a farmer doesn't make a profit, he does something else with his time and his land. If you want to eat, than you need him on that farm. That means you want him to make a profit. That's it. There's no discussion or argument about that. The only thing left to talk about is how we make sure the farmer earns enough to decide it's worthwhile to continue farming.

This isn't about civic responsibilities or debts to society. It's about whether you like to eat, and would like to continue doing so.


No, it isn't. It's about whether you want to eat cheap. Without subsidies, many farms would collapse, but there would still be enough food to feed everyone. The reason prices are so low is that there's way way WAY too much farming.

If we didn't have the subsidies, we'd be paying more for food at the grocery store, but we'd be paying less in debt that we don't need. The only thing these subsidies are doing is disguising the real cost of food from us.


What if the price of food actually goes up more than cost of the subsidies? Not saying it would, but saying it could.

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 3:14 pm 
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Midgen wrote:
One case, the guy actually had video of a bear trying to pry open his trash bin, which was out at his curb awaiting pickup (they use bear proof garbage cans up there). The family dog was barking at the bear in a frenzy. When the bear got frustrated with the garbage can, the bear turned on the dog. They property owner, who was on a second level deck/patio, then shot the bear and (if I recall) killed it.

Lol - nicely timed story on TDW:

22-year-old Brooke Collins of Juneau spotted a black bear biting her dachshund’s neck, so she did what any normal dog lover would do: She ran over and punched the bear square in the nose.

“It was a stupid thing but I couldn’t help it,” she told the Juneau Empire. “I know you’re not supposed to do that but I didn’t want my dog to be killed.”

Collins says that when she let her dogs out Sunday evening she didn’t see that a bear was nearby. It was only after she heard Fudge barking that she realized something was amiss. “That bear was carrying her like a salmon,” she says. The next few minutes went by in a blur. she approached the bear and struck it in the face, causing it to let go of the pup. “It was all so fast,” Collins is quoted as saying. “All I could think about was my dog was going to die.”

She sustained very minor injuries, and Fudge made away with a few shallow claw and bite marks.

Seriously bears, do not **** with people's dogs. I don't care if you're a 1000-lb hunk of toothy death, dog-owners will take you down, even if we have to do it with our bare hands.


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PostPosted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 3:41 pm 
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Rorinthas wrote:
What if the price of food actually goes up more than cost of the subsidies? Not saying it would, but saying it could.


At the very least, we'd be just paying the cost and not piling it on top of our existing debt.

In the short term I could see that being a problem, but I don't think it would persist in the long term. If the price shot up like that, it would attract people back to farming, which would mean more food and costs coming down. Eventually a nice balance would be met.

The only real downside I see is the fact that fewer farms means less purchasing and use of farm equipment and supplies. PRedicting the cascading effects is not something I think we can do accurately.

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