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Michał "rysiek" Woźniak · 🇺🇦

@hq1 what *always* dumbfounds me with such responses as yours is this, though:

Okay, let's say you're right. Let's say that this has no way of fixing anything what-so-ever. That it will have no effect at all.

Here's my question: why spend the time discouraging people from doing it, then?

Like, if you truly believe in what you said, there is no point in such discouragement. It's inevitable it won't work. Why the urge to make such a comment? It strikes me as a definition of pointless.

@wikiyu

11 comments
Adam

@rysiek

no but you’re saying that if enough people sign (which I’m happy to, don’t get me wrong, what else can I do?) the parliament will look into it. Then some legislation has to happen. And then the rich will pay taxes that will help fix the climate crisis/debt? Is that what you’re saying?

I’m not discouraging anyone, I truly hope the probability of succeeding is greater than zero my man

@wikiyu

Michał "rysiek" Woźniak · 🇺🇦

@hq1 I am saying that this is as good an attempt as any. Maybe it will work. It only costs a signature.

The point of this initiative is that a new tax is imposed on the super wealthy, and that tax is then earmarked for fighting climate crisis. I like that construction. Obviously it's a long way to an actual legislation, but one has to start somewhere.

@wikiyu

Leszek Karlik

@hq1 @rysiek @wikiyu

A lot of money is spent on convincing people that wealth taxes don't work because the wealthy can escape to another state.

And then when wealth taxes are implemented they prove to work, because moving has a significant cost, and if your wealth is built on local networks of power, which it frequently is, moving also destroys wealth.

Adam

@Leszek_Karlik

Curious to learn about any examples. Can you cite some? Again, not trying to be cynical/sarcastic

@rysiek @wikiyu

Adam

@Leszek_Karlik

> And then when wealth taxes are implemented they prove to work (…)

I meant that specifically, you made it sound like it has happened somewhere in the world? Genuinely no idea. I share the wishful thinking, if that’s what it is.

@rysiek @wikiyu

Michał "rysiek" Woźniak · 🇺🇦

@hq1 90% top tax rate in the USA before 1964 or so. That's one of the things that helped end the Great Depression and create the post-war prosperity.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_

@Leszek_Karlik @wikiyu

mhack

@hq1 @Leszek_Karlik @rysiek @wikiyu

New York decided to increase taxes on the most wealthy, the only people leaving New York are the people that can't afford housing prices.

"The report also found that affluent residents who left New York did not appear to have been driven away by recent tax increases."

nytimes.com/2023/12/05/nyregio

Marko

@rysiek @hq1 @wikiyu It's very popular to promote "taxing the rich", it's been done numerous times throughout the history. It sounds as a no-brainer, but more often than not, such efforts result in spending much time and energy to achieve nothing useful at best. Usually it results in higher taxes for the middle class with not much benefit for those in need. That's what half a century taught me, but I encourage everybody to study similar efforts and their effects before pushing such initiatives.

Paul Schoe

Maybe he is rich himself and he wants to demotivate people to sign for this European 'Tax The Rich' initiative.

@rysiek @hq1 @wikiyu

Adam

@paulschoe

Don’t be silly Paul, there’s no rich people on mastodon

@rysiek @wikiyu

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