Originally posted by rbell:
Daisy,
Exactly how much revenue does a state need?
That depends on the state, doesn't it, and what its citizens decide to finance.
Where do powers of government stop?
Is that a rhetorical question? Sometimes I can't tell.
Why is there a mass exodus (of legal US residents) from states such as Michigan, Ohio, Massachusetts, and California?
Is there one? For what time span? Evidence, please.
Granted, several answers are there, but one common denominator: progressive, confiscatory tax structures.
Really? What are the actual numbers?
Interestingly, according to the US 2000 census, Alabama has a worse poverty rate than any of the states you named. Perhaps a progressive tax structure has a positive correlation with wealth and decent standards of living.
I want my government to have to wear its belt tight. That is the way that cost-saving measures occur. When a government has copious amounts of money coming in, they WILL spend it all, no matter how stupidly.
Or wisely. I've heard that some states actually invest in their infrastructures and attract new and future sources of revenue.
Unfortunately, some governments, like some people, spend far more than they have and descend into debt.
Thanks for the dig at Alabama. We do have roads here, and they are primarily maintained with gasoline taxes.
That wasn't a dig; I know you have roads there. My question was about
state highways as opposed to federal, county and local roadways. In New York, gasoline taxes pay for a lot more than just highway maintenance. Many of our state roads and most the bridges and tunnels are financed by bonds and paid for by tolls and assessments on trucks.
Do you know what your roads are made of? That's just idle interest.
Daisy, you and I have a fundamental disagreement that will put us on the opposite of almost any policy decision: it is the answer to the question, "Who owns me?" (spiritually applied, this has a different answer, so let's look at the political answer)
My belief: "Who owns me?" I do. So the burden of proof should be fairly high before the government limits my freedoms. That's why my "default" setting is to be against taxes, unless a definite, demonstrated need exists. And since government virtually NEVER does a better job than the private sector at ANYTHING (save defense, and maybe a bit of infrastructure), that burden is very, very high. For this reason, I am also against policies that will INDIRECTLY cause a loss of liberty...a chief area being nationalized health care. When you pay my medical bills, then you (read government) get to tell me how to live, when to wear helments, and whether I can eat potato chips.
Hmmm, even without nationalized health care, don't you have helmet laws in Alabama? If you don't wear one and get a head injury, won't you wind up as a ward of the state when your private health insurance runs out? As far as I've ever heard, citizens of countries which do have NHC are indeed permitted to eat potato chips, so I think you're afraid of boogeymen.
Your belief, as I see it from your posts: "Who owns me?" The government.
Oh well, you got that one all wrong - really, instead of making ridiculous assumptions, you could've simply have asked me what my beliefs are.
I own me, but I am also a member of society. I don't mind driving on the right side of the road, stopping at red lights, signalling when changing lanes and refraining from talking on my cellphone when driving. I also happen to like the ameneties my taxes pay for such as really nice public parks, libraries, sidewalks, potable water, sewage treatment, fire department, etc. I even want decent housing and healthcare for my less fortunate neighbors. I understand some people do want only what they can scrounge for on their own and I agree with you that such people will do better in a non-progressive state and community.
The government is our caretaker,...
Or our safety net...
...and it is the source of our liberties.
Not our government, but our laws are the source of our civil liberties.
[aside]Odd how many people who claim to be fond of their liberties demonize the ACLU for ensuring that the government does NOT violate them[/aside]
Frankly, that view scares the mess out of me.
Your dog eat dog ethic scares me.
And yes, I do have concerns about an Oregon tax. Because some nincompoop in our state legislature will use some manufactured stat from Oregon's policy as a proof-text to ask for more of my money.
So if bio-diesel becomes prevalent and gasoline revenues fall drastically, would you vote to have your highways fall apart from lack of maintenance? Is Alabama so different from New York and Oregon that its citizens do not vote on these sorts of tax, revenue and spending referendums?
Government inherently will grow. Without it being checked, it ALWAYS gets bigger, more invasive, and more confiscatory. It ALWAYS impedes more liberty over time. Without folks keeping watch, the camel gets its nose in the tent, and we have a problem.
Some liberties have grown, some have diminished. There are tradeoffs.