The Progressive Income Tax in U.S. History

Mr Neutron

Well-Known Member
The root of much evil.
Burton W. Folsom Jr.


America’s founders rejected the income tax entirely, but when they spoke of taxes they recognized the need for uniformity and equal protection to all citizens. “[A]ll duties, imposts and excises shall be uniform throughout the United States,” reads the U.S. Constitution. And 80 years later, in the same spirit, the Fourteenth Amendment promised “equal protection of the laws” to all citizens.

In other words, the principle behind the progressive income tax—the more you earn, the larger the percentage of tax you must pay—would have been appalling to the founders. They recognized that, in James Madison’s words, “the spirit of party and faction” would prevail if Congress could tax one group of citizens and confer the benefits on another group.

In Federalist No. 10, Madison asked, “[W]hat are the different classes of legislators but advocates and parties to the causes which they determine?” He went on to say, “The apportionment of taxes on the various descriptions of property is an act which seems to require the most exact impartiality; yet there is, perhaps, no legislative act in which greater opportunity and temptation are given to a predominant party to trample on the rules of justice.”

During the 1800s economic thinking in the United States usually conformed to the founders’ guiding principles of uniformity and equal protection. One exception was during the Civil War, when a progressive income tax was first enacted. Interestingly, the tax had a maximum rate of 10 percent, and it was repealed in 1872. As Representative Justin Morrill of Vermont observed, “in this country we neither create nor tolerate any distinction of rank, race, or color, and should not tolerate anything else than entire equality in our taxes.”

When Congress passed another income tax in 1894—one that only hit the top 2 percent of wealth holders—the Supreme Court declared it unconstitutional. Stephen Field, a veteran of 30 years on the Court, was outraged that Congress would pass a bill to tax a small voting bloc and exempt the larger group of voters. At age 77, Field not only repudiated Congress’s actions, he also penned a prophecy. A small progressive tax, he predicted, “will be but the stepping stone to others, larger and more sweeping, till our political contests will become a war of the poor against the rich.”

In 1913, almost 20 years later, the ideas of uniform taxation and equal protection of the law for all citizens were overturned when a constitutional amendment permitting a progressive income tax was ratified. Congress first set the top rate at a mere 7 percent—and married couples were only taxed on income over $4,000 (equivalent to $80,000 today). During the tax debate, William Shelton, a Georgian, supported the income tax “because none of us here have $4,000 incomes, and somebody else will have to pay the tax.” As Madison and Field had feared, the seeds of class warfare were sown in the strategy of different rates for different incomes.

It took the politicians less than one generation to hike the tax rates and fulfill Field’s prophecy. Herbert Hoover and Franklin Roosevelt, using the excuses of depression and war, permanently enlarged the income tax. Under Hoover, the top rate was hiked from 24 to 63 percent. Under Roosevelt, the top rate was again raised—first to 79 percent and later to 90 percent. In 1941, in fact, Roosevelt proposed a 99.5 percent marginal rate on all incomes over $100,000. “Why not?” he said when an adviser questioned him.

After that proposal failed, Roosevelt issued an executive order to tax all income over $25,000 at the astonishing rate of 100 percent. Congress later repealed the order, but still allowed top incomes to be taxed at a marginal rate of 90 percent.

Subsidies for Friends, Audits for Enemies
Roosevelt thus became the first president to practice on a large scale what Madison had called “the spirit of party and faction” and what Field had called the “war of the poor against the rich.” With a steeply progressive income tax in place, Roosevelt used the federal treasury to reward, among others, farmers (who were paid not to plant crops), silver miners (who had the price of their product artificially inflated), and southerners in the vote-rich Tennessee Valley (with dams and cheap electricity).

In the 1936 presidential election, Senator Hiram Johnson of California, a Roosevelt supporter, watched in amazement as the President mobilized “the different agencies of government” to dole out subsidies for votes. “He starts with probably 8 million votes bought,” Johnson calculated. “The other side has to buy them one by one, and they cannot hope to match his money.” In that campaign, Roosevelt defeated the Republican Alf Landon by an electoral vote of 523–8.

The flip side of rewards for supporters was investigations of opponents. Senator James Couzens of Michigan, who supported Roosevelt even more vigorously than Johnson did, had said before Roosevelt took office, “Give me control of the Bureau of Internal Revenue and I will run the politics of the country.”

Couzens lived to see the bureau begin to investigate Roosevelt’s opponents. It started with an investigation of Senator Huey Long of Louisiana, who had threatened to run for president against Roosevelt. Next came an audit of William Randolph Hearst, whose newspaper empire strongly opposed Roosevelt for president in 1936. Moses Annenberg, publisher of the Philadelphia Inquirer, vehemently opposed Roosevelt’s re-election campaign in 1936; the next year he had a full-scale audit, which was followed by a prison term.

Elliott Roosevelt, the president’s son, conceded in 1975 that “my father may have been the originator of the concept of employing the IRS as a weapon of political retribution.” But he was quick to add that “each of his successors followed his lead.” That is a key point: once the machinery of retribution is in place, it is hard for politicians to resist using it. When Richard Nixon, a Republican, became president, he sounded like his Democrat counterparts when he described whom he wanted as commissioner of internal revenue. Nixon said, “I want to be sure that he is . . . ruthless . . . that he will do what he is told, that every income-tax return I want to see, I see. That he will go after our enemies and not go after our friends. It is as simple as that.”

If we want to lessen “the spirit of party and faction,” as Madison recommended, and if we want to avoid a “war of the poor against the rich,” as Field anticipated, we would do well to scrap the progressive income tax.

original article
 

mame

Well-Known Member
a constitutional amendment permitting a progressive income tax was ratified.
Nuff said really, but I'll bite...

First, the more money you have the easier it is to make money. In a market economy, it is natural that over time the rich will hold more and more of a nations wealth. This is bad economically, as it creates instability due to ever contracting consumer demand. With a progressive tax system and government spending, they work to counter act this effect by effectively and necessarily redistributing wealth. A flat tax by comparison does not counter act the "vacuum effect" the wealthy few have. Also, with a flat income tax the poor would have less revenue to spend on essentials such as food, clothing, shelter, etc while a progressive tax does not deprive a wealthy individual of any of these things.

Politically, the "vacuum effect" the wealthy have causes them to over time gain more and more political power - and the working class loses it's voice as a result. All advanced nations impose a progressive tax to protect against aristocracy or oligarchy; there is nothing wrong with limiting power in politics to ensure fair elections and government that truly represents the people - and not just a few moneyed interests.

The social effects from the vacuum effect are obvious: as the wealthy few own a larger share of a nations revenue, the rest of us get more and more poor. A rise in inequality is associated with a rise in poverty, crime, lack of education, etc.. class mobility becomes more limited because fewer people can afford higher education, etc.

Sure, a flat tax seems more "fair" but the consequences of being fair in this case outweigh the "injustice" of having the wealthy pick up the slack for the poor a bit...
 

olylifter420

Well-Known Member
too long, but seems interesting, didnt read it, but by the amount of words in it, i would say it is average
 

olylifter420

Well-Known Member
Really? You again! Damn trolls keep popping up! Yooo, guidooh,, thats not my interest... I would rather spend my time reading my journals and articles... I heard the water up there aint too bad! Downside to that, is that it makes a db, so ill stick to my water




really, too long?

what do they put in the water down there in texas?

people like you are the doom of our nation.
 

redivider

Well-Known Member
mame pretty much covered it but i'll add this:

economic thinking during the late 1800s through the early 1900s stated that there were to be different 'classes' of people.

1800s it was the aristocracy and the not. there were clear divisions established between the haves and have-nots and these lines were not to be crossed.

in the 1900s the middle class began to emerge yet the aristocracy established first, second and economy classes on nearly every service sector available at the time. and it was social, political, and economic suicide for an aristocrat to intermingle with somebody from the middle class. unheard of.

it wasn't until the progressive movement attempted to blur these lines and to actually attempt to achieve some sort of equality, not just talk about it, that real economic development began and the US started kicking some ass.

you seem to forget most of the founding fathers were aristocratic slave owners who believed that the elite few should rule the uneducated, unimportant many. our consitution was written during a time when it was unconscionable that somebody who was not of the aristocracy would have enough money to generate the kind of publicity that would win an election.

equality my ass....
 

Cali chronic

Well-Known Member
Yeah I think America is going to need a revolt and strip all those amendments away. Start over, It is a good foundation there has been to many shady contractors along the way. I will be dead soon enough and probably wont see it, But I am sure as I am sure America don't take no shit from no one; we will get her back and hopefully the next guy who starts talking that amendment shit is taken out and hanged before anyone stops and gets a bite to eat. Kinda sucks to be in this 1960 onward era of crooks and criminals, as I am sure if I were around in the early 1900's I would have kept a rope with me.
 

Charlie Ventura

Active Member
So, if one works his/her ass off to get a great education and/or learns a trade, and through this effort attains wealth, how on earth does that hold a poor person down? Would one of the Progressives in this forum please explain? Thanks.
 

NoDrama

Well-Known Member
Its only because of the progressives we aren't all still living in caves and eating insects out of each others hair.
 

redivider

Well-Known Member
So, if one works his/her ass off to get a great education and/or learns a trade, and through this effort attains wealth, how on earth does that hold a poor person down? Would one of the Progressives in this forum please explain? Thanks.
that holds nobody down. in fact, hard work and effort should be rewarded.

the question YOU should be asking is:

how does increasing the tax burden of the ultra-wealthy by a few percentage points somehow reduce THEIR ability to acquire more wealth using the same smarts you are vehemently defending, or how doing so would for some reason lead to this nations' collapse?? especially when doing so would amount to returning to policies which successfully led the united states to become the largest, most important, most influential nation on earth.

the only way it makes sense is if you are completely blinded by partisan political ideology.

no historical scientific analysis of facts that you can perform can EVER prove to me that reducing taxes for the wealthy and reducing services for the poor somehow leads to long term economic development.

consider yourself DARED.

I DARE YOU, CONSERVATIVES, PROVE ME WRONG.
 

NoDrama

Well-Known Member
especially when doing so would amount to returning to policies which successfully led the united states to become the largest, most important, most influential nation on earth.


I DARE YOU, CONSERVATIVES, PROVE ME WRONG.
You want to return to the old policies? That means NO INCOME TAX!!! The country was founded on ZERO income Tax, and it worked that way for 140 years, which by the way is much longer than WITH the income tax. Sure sure, the government gets larger and more powerful the more taxes it receives, but I declare it is not the Government that makes this country great, but the people who occupy it.

Just to set a fact straight here, the USA has NEVER EVER EVER been the largest nation. Not once.
 

Mr Neutron

Well-Known Member
that holds nobody down. in fact, hard work and effort should be rewarded.

the question YOU should be asking is:

how does increasing the tax burden of the ultra-wealthy by a few percentage points somehow reduce THEIR ability to acquire more wealth using the same smarts you are vehemently defending, or how doing so would for some reason lead to this nations' collapse?? especially when doing so would amount to returning to policies which successfully led the united states to become the largest, most important, most influential nation on earth.

the only way it makes sense is if you are completely blinded by partisan political ideology.

no historical scientific analysis of facts that you can perform can EVER prove to me that reducing taxes for the wealthy and reducing services for the poor somehow leads to long term economic development.

consider yourself DARED.

I DARE YOU, CONSERVATIVES, PROVE ME WRONG.
Well, I'm not a conservative but... why would anybody waste their time trying to convince you otherwise, when you've already stated that nothing would change your mind?

I think you are distorting the debate by adding "and reducing services for the poor" and that shows weakness in your argument. Nobody is suggesting that. Just another "quote from the liberal handbook" under scare tactics.

Why are we not completely and admittedly a socialist nation? You control the schools and colleges. You control the main stream media. You control that bastion intellect called "the entertainment industry". You control the only two viable political parties in the country and therefore, most of the politicians. You control a large portion of the judiciary. Yet you cannot seem to take over completely. Just because of few REAL Americans who still know how to think for themselves and love their country for what is was founded for... LIBERTY.
 

undertheice

Well-Known Member
..... it is not the Government that makes this country great, but the people who occupy it.
how dare you speak such blasphemy!!!

the proper party line, what is considered undeniably true (until it's inconvenient), is that the people are the government and that it is the power of government that makes a country great. the individual is weak, so the story goes, and prone to the myriad sins of the flesh, but united we are far superior to any one man. united we are capable of facing adversity and pushing past it into a brave new world, a world where all men are truly equal. "the people" are merely an assemblage of these inferior individuals until they are united under the thumb of the benevolent government. the individual is merely a tool of the state, a state dedicated to the betterment of those ignorant individuals.

of course there is a price to pay for these watchdogs of society. as the bumper sticker on my twelve year old (but paid for) pickup clearly states, "gas, grass or ass, nobody rides for free". each of us must pay and pay dearly. we must each pay in whatever currency we possess. the wealthy must be drained dry of funds, the aspiring must give up their dreams, the parent must indenture his children and those who enjoy their liberty must toe the line or face the violent wrath of the state. only those with nothing, no funds, no dignity, no future, are immune to the grasping claws of the tax man. they and the taxman himself are the only true beneficiaries of this authoritarian scheme. the latter growing fat with his bureaucratic cronies and the former merely abiding, neither sowing nor reaping. we owe these two all, the state because it is the wellspring of all our freedoms and the downtrodden poor because their tireless labors have built this country.

at least so i've been told.:roll:
 

Dan Kone

Well-Known Member
You want to return to the old policies? That means NO INCOME TAX!!! The country was founded on ZERO income Tax, and it worked that way for 140 years, which by the way is much longer than WITH the income tax.
Yes, for 140 years the government was funded entirely by libertarian magic dust. There were no taxes on anyone ever, the invisible hand of the free market simply put gold under your pillow every night and everything worked out great. :roll:
 

Dan Kone

Well-Known Member
Do you guys honestly believe that the right of the ultra-wealthy to make even more obscene amounts of profits is more important than social mobility and the American middle class? What you guys advocate would destroy the middle class. The end result of your libertarian wet dreams would be a two class system where the ultra-wealthy passed down their wealth from generation to generation while everyone else was dirt poor with little chance at ever becoming anything more than a peasant. Is that really the country you want to live in?
 

NoDrama

Well-Known Member
Do you guys honestly believe that the right of the ultra-wealthy to make even more obscene amounts of profits is more important than social mobility and the American middle class? What you guys advocate would destroy the middle class. The end result of your libertarian wet dreams would be a two class system where the ultra-wealthy passed down their wealth from generation to generation while everyone else was dirt poor with little chance at ever becoming anything more than a peasant. Is that really the country you want to live in?
I think you are confused, No one is saying give the rich more tax breaks, we are saying give everyone a tax break, no more taxes on wages. The progressive tax system was using class warfare to get itself passed.

You guys are funny, really you are. Most of the time I think you don't even read the posts, you just mindlessly start the hating.

BTW the USA survived those first 140 years just fine by charging for services it provided, duties, posts and excises. No magic dust involved and no taxes on wages either.
 

undertheice

Well-Known Member
Do you guys honestly believe that the right of the ultra-wealthy to make even more obscene amounts of profits is more important than social mobility and the American middle class?
do you honestly believe that's what this is about, the war between the ultra-rich and the struggling, impoverished masses? if so, i really feel sorry for you and i can understand your desperation, but this is a battle of an altogether different sort. i couldn't care less about the rich maintaining their wealth, i'm sure they're quite capable of doing that on their own, and i'm all for seeing the underdog come out on top and rise above adversity. what is objectionable is that the majority or the government or whatever has decided that, just because someone has more, the rest of society is entitled to a piece of their pie. what is ludicrous is that a massive, unwieldy, incompetent bureaucracy has been built specifically to arm that underdog and emasculate his foe and that we are all expected to fund that enterprise. this isn't about class warfare, no matter how hard the liberal establishment may try to sell that point. this isn't robin hood flaunting prince john's authority for the good of the serfs. it's prince john pillaging the neighboring realm and using a bit of the proceeds to re-thatch the occasional serf's lowly cottage.

i used to have this little figurine. it depicted a sad eyed little schlub with a huge screw driven through his midsection and inscribed on the base was the motto "work hard, be faithful and you will get your just reward". even though i was very young at the time, i understood perfectly well the message of that little statuette, that it takes more than hard work and honesty to succeed. it takes a determination beyond the everyday and even a little luck to keep from getting screwed. today's interpretation of that motto, the one that we are all indoctrinated into by big brother's none too kindly tutelage is that everyone is out to screw you, so screw them first. this nonsense has led to the creation of a false middle-class, janitors and bus drivers believing their labors entitle them to the white picket fence, 2 cars in the garage and 2.4 children or more. it has created a welfare society that expects to be able to buy big screen televisions and gorge on fast food. it has given us a populace that sees nothing wrong with demanding that someone else foot the bill for all the little niceties we all enjoy. all this is the result of a creed that insists we take what we can, as quickly and as often as possible, and damn the consequences. gone are the concepts of self-reliance, accepting personal responsibility and gracefully enduring the curve-balls that life occasionally throws our way. they have been replaced by a series of government sponsored safety nets, all paid for by, wait for it, someone else's money.

as much as you may want to claim that this is part of our social contract and that it is our responsibility to see to the welfare of our neighbors, we have negated that contract and bypassed that responsibility by eliminating the matter of choice from the equation. the use of governmental force to "even the playing field" has turned the virtues of the few into the vices of the many and created a useless army of insufferable bureaucrats, armed with red tape and fattened on the middleman's cut from trillions of dollars of our stolen earnings.


end soapbox. i think i'll roll another number and see what's on the tube.
 

redivider

Well-Known Member
Well, I'm not a conservative but... why would anybody waste their time trying to convince you otherwise, when you've already stated that nothing would change your mind?

I think you are distorting the debate by adding "and reducing services for the poor" and that shows weakness in your argument. Nobody is suggesting that. Just another "quote from the liberal handbook" under scare tactics.

Why are we not completely and admittedly a socialist nation? You control the schools and colleges. You control the main stream media. You control that bastion intellect called "the entertainment industry". You control the only two viable political parties in the country and therefore, most of the politicians. You control a large portion of the judiciary. Yet you cannot seem to take over completely. Just because of few REAL Americans who still know how to think for themselves and love their country for what is was founded for... LIBERTY.
didn't say nothing would change my mind. i said that nothing would prove otherwise. if you do so it'll probably change my mind. there's no way that's going to happen though, because i've studied the kind of ridiculous subjects like operations management, financial markets, economic development, macro, micro economics.... blah blah blah.. .damn college degrees... helping the smart, and not so smart gain knowledge about the world around them.... so pointless....

i am right.

"and reducing services for the poor" = "cutting government budgets".

if you don't believe me, look at florida. the budget has been cut, and one program exemplifies the above equation: education. public education has been loosing money in FLA, and most who use public education don't belong to the 0.001% of the population who enjoy the private jet tax break. or do you really want to argue any of those kids attend public school??

it's not scare tactics. it's the truth.

keep preaching about socialism and keep ignoring the truth and you'll liberate this country into irrelevancy.

the Ivy league college leagues are full of ultra-capitalist, let's find a way to make some bank, the world is mine geniuses. most college kids are there because they want a good job when they graduate.

and your nonesensical tirade ends tragically with you admitting that you are surrounded by sensible, empathetic people who just want a better country, while loons like yourself find themselves complaining themselves into loneliness...
 

redivider

Well-Known Member
do you honestly believe that's what this is about, the war between the ultra-rich and the struggling, impoverished masses? if so, i really feel sorry for you and i can understand your desperation, but this is a battle of an altogether different sort. i couldn't care less about the rich maintaining their wealth, i'm sure they're quite capable of doing that on their own, and i'm all for seeing the underdog come out on top and rise above adversity. what is objectionable is that the majority or the government or whatever has decided that, just because someone has more, the rest of society is entitled to a piece of their pie. what is ludicrous is that a massive, unwieldy, incompetent bureaucracy has been built specifically to arm that underdog and emasculate his foe and that we are all expected to fund that enterprise. this isn't about class warfare, no matter how hard the liberal establishment may try to sell that point. this isn't robin hood flaunting prince john's authority for the good of the serfs. it's prince john pillaging the neighboring realm and using a bit of the proceeds to re-thatch the occasional serf's lowly cottage.

i used to have this little figurine. it depicted a sad eyed little schlub with a huge screw driven through his midsection and inscribed on the base was the motto "work hard, be faithful and you will get your just reward". even though i was very young at the time, i understood perfectly well the message of that little statuette, that it takes more than hard work and honesty to succeed. it takes a determination beyond the everyday and even a little luck to keep from getting screwed. today's interpretation of that motto, the one that we are all indoctrinated into by big brother's none too kindly tutelage is that everyone is out to screw you, so screw them first. this nonsense has led to the creation of a false middle-class, janitors and bus drivers believing their labors entitle them to the white picket fence, 2 cars in the garage and 2.4 children or more. it has created a welfare society that expects to be able to buy big screen televisions and gorge on fast food. it has given us a populace that sees nothing wrong with demanding that someone else foot the bill for all the little niceties we all enjoy. all this is the result of a creed that insists we take what we can, as quickly and as often as possible, and damn the consequences. gone are the concepts of self-reliance, accepting personal responsibility and gracefully enduring the curve-balls that life occasionally throws our way. they have been replaced by a series of government sponsored safety nets, all paid for by, wait for it, someone else's money.

as much as you may want to claim that this is part of our social contract and that it is our responsibility to see to the welfare of our neighbors, we have negated that contract and bypassed that responsibility by eliminating the matter of choice from the equation. the use of governmental force to "even the playing field" has turned the virtues of the few into the vices of the many and created a useless army of insufferable bureaucrats, armed with red tape and fattened on the middleman's cut from trillions of dollars of our stolen earnings.


end soapbox. i think i'll roll another number and see what's on the tube.
this isn't about class warfare??

you make a damn good point proving how it is.... lol....
 

Dan Kone

Well-Known Member
do you honestly believe that's what this is about, the war between the ultra-rich and the struggling, impoverished masses? if so, i really feel sorry for you and i can understand your desperation, but this is a battle of an altogether different sort. i couldn't care less about the rich maintaining their wealth, i'm sure they're quite capable of doing that on their own, and i'm all for seeing the underdog come out on top and rise above adversity. what is objectionable is that the majority or the government or whatever has decided that, just because someone has more, the rest of society is entitled to a piece of their pie. what is ludicrous is that a massive, unwieldy, incompetent bureaucracy has been built specifically to arm that underdog and emasculate his foe and that we are all expected to fund that enterprise. this isn't about class warfare, no matter how hard the liberal establishment may try to sell that point. this isn't robin hood flaunting prince john's authority for the good of the serfs. it's prince john pillaging the neighboring realm and using a bit of the proceeds to re-thatch the occasional serf's lowly cottage.

i used to have this little figurine. it depicted a sad eyed little schlub with a huge screw driven through his midsection and inscribed on the base was the motto "work hard, be faithful and you will get your just reward". even though i was very young at the time, i understood perfectly well the message of that little statuette, that it takes more than hard work and honesty to succeed. it takes a determination beyond the everyday and even a little luck to keep from getting screwed. today's interpretation of that motto, the one that we are all indoctrinated into by big brother's none too kindly tutelage is that everyone is out to screw you, so screw them first. this nonsense has led to the creation of a false middle-class, janitors and bus drivers believing their labors entitle them to the white picket fence, 2 cars in the garage and 2.4 children or more. it has created a welfare society that expects to be able to buy big screen televisions and gorge on fast food. it has given us a populace that sees nothing wrong with demanding that someone else foot the bill for all the little niceties we all enjoy. all this is the result of a creed that insists we take what we can, as quickly and as often as possible, and damn the consequences. gone are the concepts of self-reliance, accepting personal responsibility and gracefully enduring the curve-balls that life occasionally throws our way. they have been replaced by a series of government sponsored safety nets, all paid for by, wait for it, someone else's money.

as much as you may want to claim that this is part of our social contract and that it is our responsibility to see to the welfare of our neighbors, we have negated that contract and bypassed that responsibility by eliminating the matter of choice from the equation. the use of governmental force to "even the playing field" has turned the virtues of the few into the vices of the many and created a useless army of insufferable bureaucrats, armed with red tape and fattened on the middleman's cut from trillions of dollars of our stolen earnings.


end soapbox. i think i'll roll another number and see what's on the tube.
Your talk of big government and the welfare state are false. Most of our welfare spending goes to large corporations. America spends less of it's wealth on government spending than almost any other country in the world. Our government spending as a percentage of GDP ranks 144 out of 160 ranked countries. We spend less of our wealth on government spending than even Mexico. We have lower taxes than the majority of industrialized nations.

The idea that America's government is unusually large is a complete lie. At this point our federal government is basically an insurance company with an army. All other government spending is insignificant compared to the military, social security, and medicare.

In the 1940s-1960's we made those who benefited the most from American society give back more of what they earned so we could reinvest it in keeping our country strong. Since then we've continuously cut their taxes and the result has been huge deficits, crumbling infrastructure, lowered economic mobility, a disappearing middle class, and wide spread poverty.

The idea of cutting our social safety net so we can continue to keep the ultra-wealthy's taxes historically low is cruel and insane. Our country simply does not function well like this.

If anyone is anti-success, it's you, not me. The policies you advocate are ending the American dream. The greatest predictor of wealth in this country is parents income. It is becoming increasing difficult for Americans to get out of the class they were born into. For most people who grow up poor, hard work doesn't lead to success. It leads to barely getting by.

Class warfare is real, it's happening, and the American people are losing the fight. We are being held hostage by the wealthy elites and your repetition of lies about a bloated welfare state and huge government are nothing more than proof that you have Stockholm syndrome.
 
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