Tuesday, November 28, 2006

ben stein has some opinions on the tax system, our national debt, and fiscal prudence.


In Class Warfare, Guess Which Class Is Winning - New York Times:


The final argument is the one I really love. People ask how I can be a conservative and still want higher taxes. It makes my head spin, and I guess it shows how old I am. But I thought that conservatives were supposed to like balanced budgets. I thought it was the conservative position to not leave heavy indebtedness to our grandchildren. I thought it was the conservative view that there should be some balance between income and outflow. When did this change?

Oh, now, now, now I recall. It changed when we figured that we could cut taxes and generate so much revenue that we would balance the budget. But isn’t that what doctors call magical thinking? Haven’t the facts proved that this theory, though charming and beguiling, was wrong?

THIS brings me back to Mr. Buffett. If, in fact, it’s all just a giveaway to the rich masquerading as a new way of stimulating the economy and balancing the budget, please, Mr. Bush, let’s rethink it. I don’t like paying $7 billion a week in interest on the debt. I don’t like the idea that Mr. Buffett pays a lot less in tax as a percentage of his income than my housekeeper does or than I do.


i want a balanced budget. i want a federal surplus. if i have to have a balanced budget, then so should the federal government.

you can argue that traditionally, the republicans have been for a balanced budget and for surpluses and for this that and the other thing.

you cannot reasonably argue that that's what they're for now.

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