Danke
Top Rated Influencer
- Joined
- Nov 6, 2007
- Messages
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I live in OK right now. I am planning on re-locating to Denver in the next two weeks in search of greener grass.


I live in OK right now. I am planning on re-locating to Denver in the next two weeks in search of greener grass.
A lot of commenters seem to be missing the bigger point here. Even if it is not quite literally true that OP is worse off than those who make $20K, it is still ludicrous that it is even close. There's not a whole lot of incentive to 'move up', work hard and make a decent middle class income, if your real gains are partly eaten up by taxes and partly nonexistent because the government would have given you all that stuff for free anyway. I mean, suppose you make the case that OP is actually $10K per year better off (in some sense), rather than worse off, compared to those with a $20K income... that still means that the vast majority of the gains are completely eaten by government.
If the OP is making $80,000 there is no way they are paying 30% in taxes unless they are doing something seriously wrong on their tax return.
7.65% SS and Medicare (15.3%, with half of it deductible, if self-employed)
15% federal
6% state
Finally, someone gets it. I was wondering if I was on the right forum, after reading some of the responses. "He just wants to diss the poor" is about what they say at TNR also, about a similar article:
http://www.tnr.com/article/82962/conservatives-economic-chart-fox-de-rugy
Marginal rates at $80,000, if married:
7.65% SS and Medicare (15.3%, with half of it deductible, if self-employed)
15% federal
6% state
So he's paying a marginal rate of at least 28.65%, with the effective rate of course being lowered by deductions, and lower rates being applied to part of his income.
Plus he has student loans he needed to take out, to be able to make the $80,000. And all the free stuff that isn't being handed to him. And the extra leisure time he would have had, were he to work fewer hours. (That would apply to other examples, not so much the $20,000 full-timer.)
He's still better off financially at $80,000 than someone making $20,000, but I thought the idea around here was that he should be $60,000 better off. I must have stumbled onto the Socialist Worker's Party forum. ;-)
Marginal rates at $80,000, if married:
7.65% SS and Medicare (15.3%, with half of it deductible, if self-employed)
15% federal
6% state
So he's paying a marginal rate of at least 28.65%, with the effective rate of course being lowered by deductions, and lower rates being applied to part of his income.
Plus he has student loans he needed to take out, to be able to make the $80,000. And all the free stuff that isn't being handed to him. And the extra leisure time he would have had, were he to work fewer hours. (That would apply to other examples, not so much the $20,000 full-timer.)
He's still better off financially at $80,000 than someone making $20,000, but I thought the idea around here was that he should be $60,000 better off. I must have stumbled onto the Socialist Worker's Party forum. ;-)
If the OP is making $80,000 there is no way they are paying 30% in taxes unless they are doing something seriously wrong on their tax return.
Student loans is a luxury he chose, not a government theft.
My post goes in a slightly different direction than previously mentioned.
I've heard of people living off of less than 8k of their own money per year and living in a camper in a Wal Mart parking lot that talk about living happier lives than they ever did making 30K+ living in a standard home. I really think it all boils down to the fact that people who make less money typically have less external stress to deal with. They don't have to rely on others or have others rely on them to get a job done.
I have often thought, which would I rather be? A slave to society where 33% of my paycheck isn't even mine and I have to deal with everyone else's problems. Or would I rather be a slave to myself, having to deal with more straight-forward problems like having to grow my own food and find and treat my own water.
Self sufficiency is where it's all at in my opinion and this is what I'm working towards in my life.
Student loans is a luxury he chose, not a government theft. He doesn't want to claim his donations for deduction but then complains he "can't afford" a new laptop, LMAO.
I agree, but the issue is somewhat complex. We're stuck in a market where people are forced to pay extraordinary fees for college education. It's a classic "prisoner's dilemma" economics issue. The government needs to get rid of student loan guarantees completely. All they do is perpetuate a costly, inefficient, and archaic education system. One person can't buck the system by himself, though.
State licensure laws ensure that degrees at expensive institutions are requirements for many to work. Is that theft? Not necessarily. Is that "a luxury"? No fucking way.
it's not fair to say it's archaic.
Sitting in a lecture hall listening to some stinky old prof with no real world experience lecture on about irrelevant stuff is archaic. It's a throwback to Roman times when you had "grammar schools" that taught Roman grammar and then "public schools" that indoctrinated the few select plebs into the Roman administrative system.
You'll learn more browsing RPF for a day or two than you will in a semester's worth of university government classes. The same can be said of things like engineering and science. The internet has changed everything and the education system hasn't caught up. It should cost 1/100 what it currently costs, but administrators, lecturers, profs, and bureaucrat's jobs are on the line, so it doesn't change.
What industries are you talking about?
Industries that require accredited university degrees (depending on state).
Medicine
Nursing
Civil Engineering
Surveying
Architecture
Law
Accounting
Mechanical Engineering
To name a few