Suppose you and I go to a fancy restaurant. Under which scheme would
it would be more likely for me to order a $150 bottle of Chateau LaFite
Rothschild Bordeaux wine, chateaubriand and a $200 bottle of Chateau
d'Yquem to go with our dessert -- if you're paying the bill, or if we
each pay for what we order? The answer's a no-brainer. If you're paying
the bill, why not sock it to you?
That scenario explains why Republicans who call for tax cuts don't
enjoy more popularity. It also explains successes Democrats have in
exploiting the issue. According to the most recent U.S. Treasury
Department figures, in 1997 the top 1 percent of income-earners (those
with income of $250,000 and higher) paid 33 percent of all federal
income taxes. The top 5 percent of income-earners ($108,000 and over)
paid 52 percent, and the top 50 percent ($36,000 and over) paid 96
percent of income taxes. Guess what the bottom 50 percent of income
earners paid?
If you're among those who pay little or no federal income taxes, what
do you care about tax cuts? Moreover, if you think tax cuts pose a
threat to government handout programs, you might be openly hostile and
support Al Gore's silly "risky scheme" talk. So many Americans paying
little or no federal taxes makes for a natural spending constituency.
It's like me in the restaurant: What do I care about extravagance if
you're footing the bill?
We hear political demagogues like Vice President Gore and Rep. Dick
Gephardt, D-Mo., in their efforts to create class warfare and envy,
whine about "winners in life's lottery" and "tax cuts for the rich." It
would seem that by now at least one of our know-it-all media elite might
have asked: At what income level does being a "winner in life's lottery"
begin? How much income qualifies one as being rich?
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Does being rich start with that 5 percent of Americans who earn
$108,000? Or, does it start at $250,000? Why not some media interviews
with men earning $108,000 or $250,000 a year with a wife, two youngsters
in college, a home mortgage and car payments and ask, "Do you feel
rich?" A $100,000 or $200,000 yearly salary is nice, but it hardly
qualifies as rich. It's not even yacht, Learjet and country club money.
Another question not asked of "risky scheme" politicians is how can a
person be given an income tax cut if he doesn't pay any income taxes?
Gore's idea of targeting tax cuts to the lowest 50 percent of taxpayers
is a devious scheme to avoid tax cuts -- and keep more money in
Washington.
This year's political demagogues whine that treatment decisions
should be left with patients and their doctors, not some HMO "bean
counter." But early in the Clinton-Gore administration, there was that
failed attempt to socialize our entire health-care system. Had Clinton
and Gore been successful, there would have been government "bean
counters" who would have been dictating to doctors.
Right now if you are dissatisfied with your HMO, you can purchase
other forms of medical insurance or even pay out of your pocket. Under
the Clinton-Gore socialized medicine scheme, those options would not
have existed. You would have no recourse to federal government medical
edicts. In countries with socialized medicine, the government decides
who does and who does not get medical treatment. For example, 20 percent
of kidney dialysis centers in Europe, and 50 percent in England, refuse
to treat patients over 65.
Ignorance creates a fertile climate for demagogues; maybe that's why
politicians give so much support to the public education establishment.