The Mamdani Moments

@Tobytone You out here writing fanfiction about my sentence structure because getting fact‑checked bruised your ego so hard you're hallucinating plot twists.

You keep pretending you're above it while obsessively tracking my usernames like a jilted ex refreshing my profile.

you’re just proving I live rent‑free in both your head and Penishfish’s.
 
Bullshit.

Reaganomic is probably the greatest contributor to our problem. The trickle down notion is destroying our nation. And FAR MORE of our national debt has come during Republican administrations than during Democratic ones. FAR MORE.

When are you going to answer the question, TA?
Let's start with "What question?"

Other than that, Reaganomics may or may not have helped the Middle Class, but they certainly didn't hurt them. On the whole, deregulation and lowering taxes did improve the economy overall and did have a positive ROI.

Taxes, as a rule, have either a zero or negative ROI. That means they are a drain on the economy, not a boon to it. Raising taxes drains more money out of the economy, not contributes to it.
 
I'd argue it comes down to incentives. There are certainly people in places like NYC and SF that complain about higher taxes and their effects, but at the end of the day they aren't leaving either City.

But then you do have some (wealthier) individuals and business that do choose to either relocate or at least expand elsewhere. And that can have a very real effect on a City's budget.

There's not going to be some mass exodus from NYC. But if enough of the highest paying tax payers leave, the City is going have challenges in providing the services it desires.

That's what this debate comes down to when making a budget that looks to extract more from the wealthiest people and businesses.
That sounds reasonable. There is clear logic and a sincere attempt at having realistic expectations from Mamdani's 'new' tax idea.

I have read a few of your replies and can tell you likely value being logical, realistic, and open minded, so I will set aside my usual approach. I agree with you that we probably will not see a mass exodus from NYC, but possibly for different reasons, not really sure. I think many who could leave easily have already left. Those with deeper roots, family, businesses, or strong personal ties tend to stay and endure it until they reach a breaking point. That breaking point is approaching but still a ways off.

That said, what about a steady, regular exodus? Even if only a relatively small number of billionaires and high earners leave, is it not reasonable to assume NYC loses far more than just the new second home tax revenue? Many of those leaving will take their businesses, investments, and employees with them. That is when the real revenue loss begins.

This is not just speculation. We have decades of examples from cities, states, and other countries that have tried similar punitive tax policies. It is like science. You form a hypothesis, run the experiment repeatedly, and when you observe consistent results, you come up with a conclusion. The verdict on high punitive taxes is already in. They never produce the projected revenue much beyond the first year or two and always end up collecting less than before. Usually collecting less from the specific increased or created tax buy always when attributed losses are included in the calculus.

Governments then compound the problem with baseline budgeting. Spending programs funded by optimistic projections never go away. Instead, budgets automatically increase every year, creating a snowball effect in the wrong direction.

The fact that Mamdani quickly dropped his threshold from 5 million to 1 million, this tax will very likely follow the same pattern quicker than most. When you factor in the collateral damage, lost income tax, business departures, declining property values, and reduced economic activity, it's hard to imagine how anyone expects it to work. At some point it starts to seem intentional and targeted for other much deeper reasons than balancing a budget. Putting that aside, the reality that it won't pay for the programs depending on the revenue will cause the predictable shortfalls. Then what? The blame game starts and the search for other ways to punish those blamed begins again.

History has proven this time and again. Raising taxes to punitive levels always results in less revenue in the end, not more. The founders knew this very well because they were student of history and just as important, they were students of human nature. The laws of human nature say that people will pay what they see as reasonable without any coercion, threats, or punitive policy. Free people with morals have no problem paying for the things that preserve their way of life and truly benefit the citizens. Again, we can prove this by looking at past examples and studies.

I want to add the results from a simple question I just put to AI to back up what I've said. I simply asked for a few examples of tax revenues increasing as a result of lowering tax rates and provide evidence that non-punitive or fair tax rates increases compliance resulting in more revenue collected.

I know I've said a lot, but I'd like anyone that disagrees to focus on one element of all of this. Find a single example of any wealth tax of any kind that worked as projected for very long.

**Yes, there are solid historical examples and studies supporting both points.**

### 1. When taxes are seen as "fair" and reasonable, Americans voluntarily comply at very high rates

- The U.S. has one of the **highest voluntary tax compliance rates** in the world (around **83-85%** for income taxes), even with a complex code. This is largely because most Americans view the overall system as reasonably fair when rates aren't extreme.
- Studies on **perceived fairness** (e.g., NBER 2024 paper and others) show that when people believe others are paying their fair share and rates aren't punitive, compliance rises significantly. People are far less likely to appeal, evade, or use aggressive loopholes.
- Historical low-tax periods (1950s-1960s under Eisenhower/Kennedy before the big hikes, or post-Reagan) show strong voluntary compliance without heavy IRS enforcement.

### 2. Lowering high/punitive tax rates has repeatedly increased revenue

**Key takeaway from studies:**
- Arthur Laffer and many economists (including Treasury analyses) point to these as textbook cases of the Laffer Curve in action: when marginal rates are very high (70%+), cutting them encourages work, investment, and reporting of income, which grows the tax base enough to offset the lower rate.
- Lower rates also reduce tax avoidance and evasion, so people pay more willingly instead of spending time and money on loopholes.

PeriodTop Marginal Rate ChangeResult on Revenue
1920s (Coolidge/Mellon)73% → 24%Tax revenues rose sharply. Top 1% paid a much larger share of total taxes.
1960s (Kennedy)91% → 70%Real federal tax revenues grew strongly (over 6% per year). Economy boomed.
1980s (Reagan)70% → 28%Individual income tax revenue nearly doubled from $244B (1980) to $446B (1989). Economy expanded dramatically.
 
@Tobytone You out here writing fanfiction about my sentence structure because getting fact‑checked bruised your ego so hard you're hallucinating plot twists.

You keep pretending you're above it while obsessively tracking my usernames like a jilted ex refreshing my profile.

you’re just proving I live rent‑free in both your head and Penishfish’s.
another AI response
 
That sounds reasonable. There is clear logic and a sincere attempt at having realistic expectations from Mamdani's 'new' tax idea.

I have read a few of your replies and can tell you likely value being logical, realistic, and open minded, so I will set aside my usual approach. I agree with you that we probably will not see a mass exodus from NYC, but possibly for different reasons, not really sure. I think many who could leave easily have already left. Those with deeper roots, family, businesses, or strong personal ties tend to stay and endure it until they reach a breaking point. That breaking point is approaching but still a ways off.

That said, what about a steady, regular exodus? Even if only a relatively small number of billionaires and high earners leave, is it not reasonable to assume NYC loses far more than just the new second home tax revenue? Many of those leaving will take their businesses, investments, and employees with them. That is when the real revenue loss begins.

This is not just speculation. We have decades of examples from cities, states, and other countries that have tried similar punitive tax policies. It is like science. You form a hypothesis, run the experiment repeatedly, and when you observe consistent results, you come up with a conclusion. The verdict on high punitive taxes is already in. They never produce the projected revenue much beyond the first year or two and always end up collecting less than before. Usually collecting less from the specific increased or created tax buy always when attributed losses are included in the calculus.

Governments then compound the problem with baseline budgeting. Spending programs funded by optimistic projections never go away. Instead, budgets automatically increase every year, creating a snowball effect in the wrong direction.

The fact that Mamdani quickly dropped his threshold from 5 million to 1 million, this tax will very likely follow the same pattern quicker than most. When you factor in the collateral damage, lost income tax, business departures, declining property values, and reduced economic activity, it's hard to imagine how anyone expects it to work. At some point it starts to seem intentional and targeted for other much deeper reasons than balancing a budget. Putting that aside, the reality that it won't pay for the programs depending on the revenue will cause the predictable shortfalls. Then what? The blame game starts and the search for other ways to punish those blamed begins again.

History has proven this time and again. Raising taxes to punitive levels always results in less revenue in the end, not more. The founders knew this very well because they were student of history and just as important, they were students of human nature. The laws of human nature say that people will pay what they see as reasonable without any coercion, threats, or punitive policy. Free people with morals have no problem paying for the things that preserve their way of life and truly benefit the citizens. Again, we can prove this by looking at past examples and studies.

I want to add the results from a simple question I just put to AI to back up what I've said. I simply asked for a few examples of tax revenues increasing as a result of lowering tax rates and provide evidence that non-punitive or fair tax rates increases compliance resulting in more revenue collected.

I know I've said a lot, but I'd like anyone that disagrees to focus on one element of all of this. Find a single example of any wealth tax of any kind that worked as projected for very long.

**Yes, there are solid historical examples and studies supporting both points.**

### 1. When taxes are seen as "fair" and reasonable, Americans voluntarily comply at very high rates

- The U.S. has one of the **highest voluntary tax compliance rates** in the world (around **83-85%** for income taxes), even with a complex code. This is largely because most Americans view the overall system as reasonably fair when rates aren't extreme.
- Studies on **perceived fairness** (e.g., NBER 2024 paper and others) show that when people believe others are paying their fair share and rates aren't punitive, compliance rises significantly. People are far less likely to appeal, evade, or use aggressive loopholes.
- Historical low-tax periods (1950s-1960s under Eisenhower/Kennedy before the big hikes, or post-Reagan) show strong voluntary compliance without heavy IRS enforcement.

### 2. Lowering high/punitive tax rates has repeatedly increased revenue

**Key takeaway from studies:**
- Arthur Laffer and many economists (including Treasury analyses) point to these as textbook cases of the Laffer Curve in action: when marginal rates are very high (70%+), cutting them encourages work, investment, and reporting of income, which grows the tax base enough to offset the lower rate.
- Lower rates also reduce tax avoidance and evasion, so people pay more willingly instead of spending time and money on loopholes.


PeriodTop Marginal Rate ChangeResult on Revenue
1920s (Coolidge/Mellon)73% → 24%Tax revenues rose sharply. Top 1% paid a much larger share of total taxes.
1960s (Kennedy)91% → 70%Real federal tax revenues grew strongly (over 6% per year). Economy boomed.
1980s (Reagan)70% → 28%Individual income tax revenue nearly doubled from $244B (1980) to $446B (1989). Economy expanded dramatically.
I appreciate the response and agree about the broader point of tax rates and incentives and the effects they have.

I've seen first hand people and business in SF (would be no different in NYC) complain about the business taxes but ultimately stay in the City. It's almost a game of cat and mouse where the cities almost dare businesses to leave by pushing the envelope on taxes and fees.

It doesn't take a large number to leave to have a material effect on a City's budget. That's the game that gets played.
 
That sounds reasonable. There is clear logic and a sincere attempt at having realistic expectations from Mamdani's 'new' tax idea.

I have read a few of your replies and can tell you likely value being logical, realistic, and open minded, so I will set aside my usual approach. I agree with you that we probably will not see a mass exodus from NYC, but possibly for different reasons, not really sure. I think many who could leave easily have already left. Those with deeper roots, family, businesses, or strong personal ties tend to stay and endure it until they reach a breaking point. That breaking point is approaching but still a ways off.

That said, what about a steady, regular exodus? Even if only a relatively small number of billionaires and high earners leave, is it not reasonable to assume NYC loses far more than just the new second home tax revenue? Many of those leaving will take their businesses, investments, and employees with them. That is when the real revenue loss begins.

This is not just speculation. We have decades of examples from cities, states, and other countries that have tried similar punitive tax policies. It is like science. You form a hypothesis, run the experiment repeatedly, and when you observe consistent results, you come up with a conclusion. The verdict on high punitive taxes is already in. They never produce the projected revenue much beyond the first year or two and always end up collecting less than before. Usually collecting less from the specific increased or created tax buy always when attributed losses are included in the calculus.

Governments then compound the problem with baseline budgeting. Spending programs funded by optimistic projections never go away. Instead, budgets automatically increase every year, creating a snowball effect in the wrong direction.

The fact that Mamdani quickly dropped his threshold from 5 million to 1 million, this tax will very likely follow the same pattern quicker than most. When you factor in the collateral damage, lost income tax, business departures, declining property values, and reduced economic activity, it's hard to imagine how anyone expects it to work. At some point it starts to seem intentional and targeted for other much deeper reasons than balancing a budget. Putting that aside, the reality that it won't pay for the programs depending on the revenue will cause the predictable shortfalls. Then what? The blame game starts and the search for other ways to punish those blamed begins again.

History has proven this time and again. Raising taxes to punitive levels always results in less revenue in the end, not more. The founders knew this very well because they were student of history and just as important, they were students of human nature. The laws of human nature say that people will pay what they see as reasonable without any coercion, threats, or punitive policy. Free people with morals have no problem paying for the things that preserve their way of life and truly benefit the citizens. Again, we can prove this by looking at past examples and studies.

I want to add the results from a simple question I just put to AI to back up what I've said. I simply asked for a few examples of tax revenues increasing as a result of lowering tax rates and provide evidence that non-punitive or fair tax rates increases compliance resulting in more revenue collected.

I know I've said a lot, but I'd like anyone that disagrees to focus on one element of all of this. Find a single example of any wealth tax of any kind that worked as projected for very long.

**Yes, there are solid historical examples and studies supporting both points.**

### 1. When taxes are seen as "fair" and reasonable, Americans voluntarily comply at very high rates

- The U.S. has one of the **highest voluntary tax compliance rates** in the world (around **83-85%** for income taxes), even with a complex code. This is largely because most Americans view the overall system as reasonably fair when rates aren't extreme.
- Studies on **perceived fairness** (e.g., NBER 2024 paper and others) show that when people believe others are paying their fair share and rates aren't punitive, compliance rises significantly. People are far less likely to appeal, evade, or use aggressive loopholes.
- Historical low-tax periods (1950s-1960s under Eisenhower/Kennedy before the big hikes, or post-Reagan) show strong voluntary compliance without heavy IRS enforcement.

### 2. Lowering high/punitive tax rates has repeatedly increased revenue

**Key takeaway from studies:**
- Arthur Laffer and many economists (including Treasury analyses) point to these as textbook cases of the Laffer Curve in action: when marginal rates are very high (70%+), cutting them encourages work, investment, and reporting of income, which grows the tax base enough to offset the lower rate.
- Lower rates also reduce tax avoidance and evasion, so people pay more willingly instead of spending time and money on loopholes.


PeriodTop Marginal Rate ChangeResult on Revenue
1920s (Coolidge/Mellon)73% → 24%Tax revenues rose sharply. Top 1% paid a much larger share of total taxes.
1960s (Kennedy)91% → 70%Real federal tax revenues grew strongly (over 6% per year). Economy boomed.
1980s (Reagan)70% → 28%Individual income tax revenue nearly doubled from $244B (1980) to $446B (1989). Economy expanded dramatically.
Show that tax rates were what drove the economic expansion.
 

1. “Steady exodus” of NYC high earners​

Claim: There’s a “steady, regular exodus” of high earners from NYC driven by “punitive” taxes, with big revenue loss.

  • What the data says:
    • Millionaires do move, but at low rates and not primarily for tax reasons. Research on U.S. millionaires finds they move about 2.4% per year, and only about 15% of movers end up with lower taxes—most moves are not tax‑motivated.
    • New York’s share of U.S. millionaires has fallen (from 12.7% to 8.7% between 2010 and 2022), and that does mean lost potential revenue—about $13 billion in 2022 if its share had held steady. But the report itself says taxes are only one factor among many (quality of life, cost of living, amenities, broader economic trends).
Verdict:

  • Partly grounded, but overstated and oversimplified. There is concern about high‑earner outflow and revenue concentration, but the “steady exodus” framed as a simple tax‑reaction law is more narrative than settled fact.

2. “Punitive taxes always fail and always reduce revenue”​

Claim: High “punitive” taxes always underperform projections and “always end up collecting less than before.”

  • Wealth taxes in Europe: several countries (e.g., France, Sweden, Denmark) repealed or scaled back wealth taxes due to administrative complexity, avoidance, and limited yield—but others (e.g., Norway, Switzerland) still operate variants. Outcomes are mixed, not universally catastrophic.
  • On millionaire/wealth taxes and migration, academic work shows small but real behavioral responses, not apocalyptic flight. Some studies find measurable migration or income shifting; others find modest effects that don’t erase the revenue gains.
Verdict:

  • False as a universal rule. There are cases where high or poorly designed taxes underperform, but “always results in less revenue” is ideological, not empirical.

3. Voluntary tax compliance and “fairness”​

Claim: U.S. has 83–85% voluntary compliance because people see taxes as fair when not “punitive.”

  • The voluntary compliance rate is real: IRS and GAO put it around 83–85% in recent estimates.
  • The reason for that rate (“because people see it as fair”) is interpretive. There are studies showing perceived fairness and norms affect compliance, but tying the 85% number directly and solely to “non‑punitive” rates is more story than proof.
Verdict:

  • Data point is correct; causal story is speculative. He’s mixing real stats with a just‑so explanation that flatters his argument.

4. Laffer curve examples (1920s, 1960s, 1980s)​

Claim: Cutting very high top rates (73→24, 91→70, 70→28) “repeatedly increased revenue” and proves the Laffer curve.

  • Economists across the spectrum agree: when marginal rates are extremely high, cutting them can reduce avoidance/evasion and boost reported income. That’s the basic Laffer logic.
  • But whether total revenue rose because of the cuts is heavily debated—growth, inflation, bracket creep, and base changes all matter. Many mainstream analyses argue that the Reagan cuts, for example, did not “pay for themselves”, even if revenues rose in nominal terms as the economy grew.
Verdict:

  • Oversimplified and cherry‑picked. He’s presenting contested, multi‑factor historical episodes as clean “tax cut → more revenue” lab experiments.

5. “History has proven… punitive taxes always result in less revenue”​

This is the core rhetorical move:

“History has proven this time and again… always results in less revenue in the end, not more.”
  • Real literature on tax policy is messy: effects depend on rate level, base, enforcement, mobility, and alternatives. Some high‑rate regimes underperform; others raise substantial revenue for long periods.
  • The absolutist “always” is a tell—that’s ideology, not empirics.
Verdict:

  • Ideological overreach. He’s turning a contested pattern into a universal law of nature.

6. Bias profile​

  • Framing:
    • Uses loaded terms: “punitive,” “punish,” “intentional and targeted,” “laws of human nature.”
    • Treats complex empirical questions (migration, revenue elasticity, wealth taxes) as already settled in one direction.
  • Tactics:
    • Mixes true stats (tax gap, compliance rate, historical rate cuts) with overconfident generalizations.
    • Invokes “AI agreed with me” as a pseudo‑authority—AI will happily produce examples for almost any premise if prompted that way.
Overall bias:

  • Strong anti‑high‑tax / anti‑wealth‑tax ideological tilt.
  • Uses real data points, but stretches them into universal, absolute claims that the evidence does not support.
 
Let's start with "What question?"

Other than that, Reaganomics may or may not have helped the Middle Class, but they certainly didn't hurt them. On the whole, deregulation and lowering taxes did improve the economy overall and did have a positive ROI.

Taxes, as a rule, have either a zero or negative ROI. That means they are a drain on the economy, not a boon to it. Raising taxes drains more money out of the economy, not contributes to it.
The question(s) asked here:
 
Let's start with "What question?"

Other than that, Reaganomics may or may not have helped the Middle Class, but they certainly didn't hurt them. On the whole, deregulation and lowering taxes did improve the economy overall and did have a positive ROI.

Taxes, as a rule, have either a zero or negative ROI. That means they are a drain on the economy, not a boon to it. Raising taxes drains more money out of the economy, not contributes to it.
That is not accurate at all.

Businesses as a whole do not benefit in countries that have no roads, military, healthcare, education, etc.

Once you have the baseline of infrastructure and services then businesses can flourish and the lower middle class and poor can gain access to accessible jobs and begin a process of mutual uplifting as they gain income and spend more, thus making the employers more money, who then hire more, etc.

No private model can provide those things in a way that would compete with a City, State and National gov't collecting taxes and providing them.
 
That is not accurate at all.

Businesses as a whole do not benefit in countries that have no roads, military, healthcare, education, etc.

Roads are mostly initially built by private enterprise. Government just maintains them. The military is a valid government issue. Healthcare and education are things the private sector does far better than government. And, yes, that is true. Government is the main cause of healthcare being ungodly expensive. Public education, on the whole costs more and delivers less than what is available in the private sector.
Once you have the baseline of infrastructure and services then businesses can flourish and the lower middle class and poor can gain access to accessible jobs and begin a process of mutual uplifting as they gain income and spend more, thus making the employers more money, who then hire more, etc.

That "baseline infrastructure" goes in when businesses or homes are built and installed by the builder. Government just operates them afterwards. Government doesn't drive jobs or economic development, they benefit from it.
No private model can provide those things in a way that would compete with a City, State and National gov't collecting taxes and providing them.
Actually, you are wrong. In more rural areas, sewer service doesn't exist. Septic tanks are used. Those aren't particularly expensive to install. Fire and ambulance are often done by subscription with a private company. The county or state provides police as necessary. Trash is usually done by subscription with a private service. Water is often off of private wells.

Government is often more expensive than these privately provided services are. Even with new construction, all of the utilities are installed by the developer, not the government. After the development is complete, the developer turns those services over to the government to operate in return for tax breaks on their project costs.
 
Roads are mostly initially built by private enterprise. Government just maintains them. ...
WHAT THE HOLY FUCK!

you cry about AI but you really need to use it to stop saying things as painfully stupid as the above. It is basement level stupid even for you.

In a discussion of the value of citizens paying taxes and the benefits they get back and YOUR CLAIM there is almost no pay back to citizens on taxes paid ROADS PROVIDE ARGUABLY THE BIGGEST PAY BACK OF ALL.

Your statement highlights a deep stupidity or deep dishonest, if you are trying to point who "builds" the roads as if that counters WHO PAYS FOR THE ROADS, which is almost exclusively tax dollars.

If any country does not have a government funding major road projects interconnecting it, that country will not have the CORE and arguably MOST IMPORTANT aspect of becoming an advanced economy that can uplift and pay back the citizen tax dollars expended many times over.


That forum claim made by a poster is highly misleading and false if taken literally.


The reality in the United States is:


  • Most roads are publicly funded (federal, state, county, or municipal tax dollars)
  • Private companies often do the construction work under contract
  • Government does far more than “just maintain them”

There are some privately developed roads (especially toll roads, roads inside subdivisions, logging/mining roads, and some public-private partnership projects), but they are a small minority of the overall U.S. road system. The vast majority is funding by taxpayer dollars.
 

1. “Steady exodus” of NYC high earners​

Claim: There’s a “steady, regular exodus” of high earners from NYC driven by “punitive” taxes, with big revenue loss.

  • What the data says:
    • Millionaires do move, but at low rates and not primarily for tax reasons. Research on U.S. millionaires finds they move about 2.4% per year, and only about 15% of movers end up with lower taxes—most moves are not tax‑motivated.
    • New York’s share of U.S. millionaires has fallen (from 12.7% to 8.7% between 2010 and 2022), and that does mean lost potential revenue—about $13 billion in 2022 if its share had held steady. But the report itself says taxes are only one factor among many (quality of life, cost of living, amenities, broader economic trends).
Verdict:

  • Partly grounded, but overstated and oversimplified. There is concern about high‑earner outflow and revenue concentration, but the “steady exodus” framed as a simple tax‑reaction law is more narrative than settled fact.

2. “Punitive taxes always fail and always reduce revenue”​

Claim: High “punitive” taxes always underperform projections and “always end up collecting less than before.”

  • Wealth taxes in Europe: several countries (e.g., France, Sweden, Denmark) repealed or scaled back wealth taxes due to administrative complexity, avoidance, and limited yield—but others (e.g., Norway, Switzerland) still operate variants. Outcomes are mixed, not universally catastrophic.
  • On millionaire/wealth taxes and migration, academic work shows small but real behavioral responses, not apocalyptic flight. Some studies find measurable migration or income shifting; others find modest effects that don’t erase the revenue gains.
Verdict:

  • False as a universal rule. There are cases where high or poorly designed taxes underperform, but “always results in less revenue” is ideological, not empirical.

3. Voluntary tax compliance and “fairness”​

Claim: U.S. has 83–85% voluntary compliance because people see taxes as fair when not “punitive.”

  • The voluntary compliance rate is real: IRS and GAO put it around 83–85% in recent estimates.
  • The reason for that rate (“because people see it as fair”) is interpretive. There are studies showing perceived fairness and norms affect compliance, but tying the 85% number directly and solely to “non‑punitive” rates is more story than proof.
Verdict:

  • Data point is correct; causal story is speculative. He’s mixing real stats with a just‑so explanation that flatters his argument.

4. Laffer curve examples (1920s, 1960s, 1980s)​

Claim: Cutting very high top rates (73→24, 91→70, 70→28) “repeatedly increased revenue” and proves the Laffer curve.

  • Economists across the spectrum agree: when marginal rates are extremely high, cutting them can reduce avoidance/evasion and boost reported income. That’s the basic Laffer logic.
  • But whether total revenue rose because of the cuts is heavily debated—growth, inflation, bracket creep, and base changes all matter. Many mainstream analyses argue that the Reagan cuts, for example, did not “pay for themselves”, even if revenues rose in nominal terms as the economy grew.
Verdict:

  • Oversimplified and cherry‑picked. He’s presenting contested, multi‑factor historical episodes as clean “tax cut → more revenue” lab experiments.

5. “History has proven… punitive taxes always result in less revenue”​

This is the core rhetorical move:


  • Real literature on tax policy is messy: effects depend on rate level, base, enforcement, mobility, and alternatives. Some high‑rate regimes underperform; others raise substantial revenue for long periods.
  • The absolutist “always” is a tell—that’s ideology, not empirics.
Verdict:

  • Ideological overreach. He’s turning a contested pattern into a universal law of nature.

6. Bias profile​

  • Framing:
    • Uses loaded terms: “punitive,” “punish,” “intentional and targeted,” “laws of human nature.”
    • Treats complex empirical questions (migration, revenue elasticity, wealth taxes) as already settled in one direction.
  • Tactics:
    • Mixes true stats (tax gap, compliance rate, historical rate cuts) with overconfident generalizations.
    • Invokes “AI agreed with me” as a pseudo‑authority—AI will happily produce examples for almost any premise if prompted that way.
Overall bias:

  • Strong anti‑high‑tax / anti‑wealth‑tax ideological tilt.
  • Uses real data points, but stretches them into universal, absolute claims that the evidence does not support.
AI response. Do better.
 
...The military is a valid government issue. Healthcare and education are things the private sector does far better than government. And, yes, that is true. Government is the main cause of healthcare being ungodly expensive. Public education, on the whole costs more and delivers less than what is available in the private sector.
While we can debate whether government does Health care and Education better once a Country, region, etc, has a level of wealth it has accrued amongst the citizens, that argument falls apart in its formative years.

What you would have in the earliest days of America or any country would look more like India's caste system where only the rare few wealthy got education and health care and the masses did not.

Taking tax dollars and providing it to all, in the formative years is what uplifts everyone and then those people contribute to society, thus paying back that tax dollar investment and more.

That "baseline infrastructure" goes in when businesses or homes are built and installed by the builder. Government just operates them afterwards. Government doesn't drive jobs or economic development, they benefit from it.
That is just a lie.

You DO NOT have most baseline infrastructure" going in as green fields into completely un-serviced areas, with no roads, electricity, etc.

Government is NOT in the vast majority of instances just waiting for home builders or industry to build out an area and then following up behind and putting in sewage, electricity, roads etc. While some of those services have to be extended into newly developed areas, the Developer or Corporation RELIES UPON KNOWING VIA A PERMIT PROCESS that the tax payer dollars will provide all that and without that KNOWLEDGE FIRST developers are not committing their Capital to these build outs.


Actually, you are wrong. In more rural areas, sewer service doesn't exist. Septic tanks are used. Those aren't particularly expensive to install. Fire and ambulance are often done by subscription with a private company. The county or state provides police as necessary. Trash is usually done by subscription with a private service. Water is often off of private wells.

Government is often more expensive than these privately provided services are. Even with new construction, all of the utilities are installed by the developer, not the government. After the development is complete, the developer turns those services over to the government to operate in return for tax breaks on their project costs.

I am not wrong. You are speaking to an exception and not the VAST MAJORITY of the country.

Again, back on topic, on how taxpayer dollars taken PAY BACK CITIZENS, that pay back occurs WHEN MOST of society is not operating like a rural back water (nothing wrong with living in a rural backwater), and instead it is the FULL SERVICED linked communities, paid for, in large part by tax dollars that allow for that country success and citizen PAY BACK.
 
That is not accurate at all.

Businesses as a whole do not benefit in countries that have no roads, military, healthcare, education, etc.
Whole cities were built out of the wilderness, Kewpie. There were no roads, no military, no healthcare, no government, and no formal education that did it.
Just initiative, drive, and some raw materials.
 
Back
Top