cff
Kilk'dymga'qith laq Ik'vikvi
part 2/2
By that mindset you'd have to eliminate all and every insurance. My problem here is really the one of the grasshopper versus the ant (I think that was the story - anyways). The grasshopper celebrates all summer long while the ant works and works and puts back resources. Then winter comes. The grashopper demands that the ant hels him out because it has resources left, completely ignoring that the work it needed to build them.
You see if I enforce that the grasshopper takes care for himself in time this problem doesn't arise. With pulic healthcare you actually insure that at least a part of the insurance is payed for by the person himself. However in your charity model its just the reverse. Most people won't care at all and if something occurs they'll be a burden for society. OTOH those few that did insure themself are the stupid ones.
I'll come back to car insurance becaus ehere it is much more evident. I don't pay the insurance for me. I pay it for the others. Similar I could say ok, you don't need an insurance. Pay all the cost yourself. So if someone damages my car isn't insured and is broke, what then?
I am all for the right to pick when it comes to insurances as long as we talk about low insurance values. However if we talk about stuff like fire insurance, health care and so on that have incredibly low rates and incredibly high returns in case of emergency I am all for forced ones, because noone sans millionaires can survive a case where he wouldn't need an insurance but doesn't have one.
This is very I strongly have to disagree. Of course it is unfair to the rich, but this is a price I'd be very willing to pay.
Well you forget one thing: Earnings that aren't spent. What about a one man company that gets $1000000 a year, but the person owning it only takes $10000 for himself. What about the $990000 that remain. Some sort of tax would have to be applied to them as well. But in general I'd agree.
But you know what are even more disgusting taxes in my eyes?
Taxes on ground.
Even higher taxes on ground if you are allowed to build there, but don't do it.
Taxes if you inherit something.
Taxes on your wealth as a whole (each and every year again).
We got the first 3, the 4th one was in effect prior to the KEST (local the tax on earnings you get on the bank). Now it is temporarily gone, but they are already talking about reviving it. So you get penalized for for saving money versus spending it.
IE market share: 98%. Now tell me again how was the monopoly broken?
Hmm I'll give you the victory on that one. But if you look around present time and look who introduced stuff like TIA, biometric passports,... you'll see nearly all of those are right wing.
Let me ask you something else to get the discussion into another related direction: As you country will be member soon, what is your stance versus the EU? For it or against it and why?
Quarto said:For me, it's also just a nuance - it's still wrong. I personally do not want healthcare insurance at all. So why should I be forced to take it?
Why don't I want insurance? Well...
If I go into a casino, I have a tiny chance to win huge amounts of money. But I pay every time I want to try my luck. Insurance is also a form of gambling - I pay every month, and there is a tiny chance that one day, I will "win" huge amounts of money. There is one, very significant difference, however. If I go play cards at the casino, I actually want to win the money. I do my best to win. With insurance? Quite the opposite...
By that mindset you'd have to eliminate all and every insurance. My problem here is really the one of the grasshopper versus the ant (I think that was the story - anyways). The grasshopper celebrates all summer long while the ant works and works and puts back resources. Then winter comes. The grashopper demands that the ant hels him out because it has resources left, completely ignoring that the work it needed to build them.
You see if I enforce that the grasshopper takes care for himself in time this problem doesn't arise. With pulic healthcare you actually insure that at least a part of the insurance is payed for by the person himself. However in your charity model its just the reverse. Most people won't care at all and if something occurs they'll be a burden for society. OTOH those few that did insure themself are the stupid ones.
I'll come back to car insurance becaus ehere it is much more evident. I don't pay the insurance for me. I pay it for the others. Similar I could say ok, you don't need an insurance. Pay all the cost yourself. So if someone damages my car isn't insured and is broke, what then?
I am all for the right to pick when it comes to insurances as long as we talk about low insurance values. However if we talk about stuff like fire insurance, health care and so on that have incredibly low rates and incredibly high returns in case of emergency I am all for forced ones, because noone sans millionaires can survive a case where he wouldn't need an insurance but doesn't have one.
Quarto said:1. It's not just progressive income tax that's wrong - income tax in general is wrong. If I pay 20% of my income, I'm still being punished for having a better job than some other guy (whose 20% is lower than mine).
This is very I strongly have to disagree. Of course it is unfair to the rich, but this is a price I'd be very willing to pay.
Quarto said:2. Companies should not be taxed at all. Taxing a company means double taxation - it's as if you taxed the husband and the wife separately, and then in addition taxed the incomes of the entire household.
Well you forget one thing: Earnings that aren't spent. What about a one man company that gets $1000000 a year, but the person owning it only takes $10000 for himself. What about the $990000 that remain. Some sort of tax would have to be applied to them as well. But in general I'd agree.
But you know what are even more disgusting taxes in my eyes?
Taxes on ground.
Even higher taxes on ground if you are allowed to build there, but don't do it.
Taxes if you inherit something.
Taxes on your wealth as a whole (each and every year again).
We got the first 3, the 4th one was in effect prior to the KEST (local the tax on earnings you get on the bank). Now it is temporarily gone, but they are already talking about reviving it. So you get penalized for for saving money versus spending it.
Quarto said:Actually, the monopoly (ex-monopoly!) in the OS sector shows that capitalism always works out in the end. Microsoft had a near-monopoly, and as monopoly-holders inevitably do, it abused its position to screw the customers. It was beaten... by some guy from Finland that nobody had ever heard of. Just like that - to him, Microsoft's monopoly was not a problem, but an opportunity. Of course, he wouldn't have gotten anywhere had there not been rules in place preventing Microsoft from, say, sending a death squad out to kill him - but all capitalists would firmly agree that such rules are a good idea.
IE market share: 98%. Now tell me again how was the monopoly broken?
Quarto said:This is a really, really strange claim - especially when you consider than 1984 was written as a critique of communism. Furthermore, while I can give offhand examples of several left-wing 1984-like police states, I cannot think of a single right-wing example.
Hmm I'll give you the victory on that one. But if you look around present time and look who introduced stuff like TIA, biometric passports,... you'll see nearly all of those are right wing.
Let me ask you something else to get the discussion into another related direction: As you country will be member soon, what is your stance versus the EU? For it or against it and why?