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Playinghardball

(11,665 posts)
Tue Apr 17, 2012, 10:59 AM Apr 2012

Sen. Bernie Sanders blasts economic inequality: This is not what democracy looks like

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) railed against the growing economic inequality in the United States during a Senate speech in support of the Paying a Fair Share Act of 2012.

“It is absurd that at a time when our country has a $15 trillion national debt and enormous unmet needs, the wealthiest people in this country have an effective tax rate that is lower than many middle-class workers,” he said on Monday. “It makes no sense that the richest 400 people in our country, who earned an average of more than $270 million each in 2008 pay an effective tax rate of just 18 percent, which is less than many small businessmen, nurses, teachers, police officers, et cetera. That is wrong from a moral perspective, it is also very bad economic policy.”

The Paying a Fair Share Act would enact the so-called “Buffett Rule” and place a minimum tax rate on millionaires. The legislation would require those who earn more than $1 million a year to pay at least a 30 percent effective tax rate on their income.

Sanders said the United States was moving towards an “oligarchic form of government,” where the wealthy have a disproportionate amount of political power. He said a recent study found that in 2010, 93 percent of all new income went to the top 1 percent of income-earners.

http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2012/04/16/bernie-sanders-blasts-economic-inequality-this-is-not-what-democracy-looks-like/

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Sen. Bernie Sanders blasts economic inequality: This is not what democracy looks like (Original Post) Playinghardball Apr 2012 OP
Sorry to disillusion you ... GeorgeGist Apr 2012 #1
I don't think it's the majority davidthegnome Apr 2012 #3
Reich just wrote: We can have wealth concentration or democracy, but not both. pampango Apr 2012 #2
Money = speech, and the money has spoken. nt Romulox Apr 2012 #4

GeorgeGist

(25,323 posts)
1. Sorry to disillusion you ...
Tue Apr 17, 2012, 12:24 PM
Apr 2012

but this is what democracy can look like when the majority of voters are ignorant.

davidthegnome

(2,983 posts)
3. I don't think it's the majority
Tue Apr 17, 2012, 01:22 PM
Apr 2012

If you're talking about voters (those who vote) rather than potential voters. We really need to consider voting for more progressive candidates - perhaps we'll ultimately have to draft them just to get them nominated.

There's certainly a lot of ignorant people in America - but the majority of them do not vote. Although I suspect that if more people DID vote, we'd have a much better situation on our hands now. Ignorance can be cured, but the lobbying, the super PACs, the corruption, intolerance and ignorance in government will be all but impossible to be rid of, whether we're ignorant or not makes no difference.

pampango

(24,692 posts)
2. Reich just wrote: We can have wealth concentration or democracy, but not both.
Tue Apr 17, 2012, 12:29 PM
Apr 2012
Well, actually he quoted Justice Brandeis to that effect.

Income inequality is at its worst in nearly a century, with the highest earners paying low tax rates in the face of a massive federal deficit and crumbling public services. To lessen income inequality, we must curb the political power of the very rich.

I worry about the political power than comes with great wealth – such as the power of the wealthy to reduce their taxes, cut the public services most other Americans depend on, while at the same time garnering special subsidies and tax breaks for their businesses – big oil, big pharma, big agriculture, military contractors, big insurance, Wall Street.

I worry about the well-financed big lies that the very rich are the nation’s “job creators,” that the benefits from tax cuts on the rich “trickle down” to everyone else, that American corporations will create more jobs if only their taxes are lowered and if regulations protecting health, safety, and the environment were jettisoned.

I worry about the increasing dominance of Wall Street over our economy and democracy, and the near political impossibilities of closing the “carried interest” loophole that allows private-equity and hedge-fund managers to treat their income as capital gains subject to only 15% tax; of resurrecting the Glass-Steagall Act separating investment from commercial banking, and of breaking up the big banks to protect against another financial crash and bailout of the Street.

It was another justice of the Supreme Court, Louis Brandeis, who wrote in 1897, “we may have a democracy or we may have great wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, but we cannot have both.”

http://www.csmonitor.com/Business/Robert-Reich/2012/0417/Income-inequality-highlighted-on-Tax-Day
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