Global Warming/Climate Change Discussion Thread

  • Thread starter Thread starter ZAGGIN
  • 3,647 comments
  • 267,184 views

Which of the following statements best reflects your views on Global Warming?


  • Total voters
    497
Great news everybody, we're making excellent progress solving this problem. Mishaps have been reduced and the process is more efficient than ever. Now let's use scare tactics to con government officials into making even stricter laws that do more economic damage than environmental good, because, hell, the economy might fall into shambles and everybody might be broke but at least they can breath easy and feel smug!

I repeat: I really can't see how you've been affected in the slightest by this supposed oppression you're riling against. It's just a bunch of whining from people who have no concerns beyond their own personal bubbles.

They do say ignorance is bliss, I suppose.

Any effect above 0 is wrong and immoral. Forcing anybody to help any cause against their will is immoral, no matter how infinitesimally small the effect.

Who is being forced? Again, how exactly are you being disadvantaged by anything here beyond simple economic politics that affects everyone, everywhere?

I did not claim it, I deduced it through simple mathematics. You are the one claiming that the reduction "won't be anything like" what I deduced.

Fact: Urban centers were dirtier 250 years ago. Fact: The population was 1/7 what it was 250 years ago.

So let me get this straight, you think the effects of 6 billion extra people on the planet are less significant than a bit more poo in the streets 250 years ago? And let's remember here, 250 years ago the industrial revolution was just starting, so the combined effects of coal dust or whatever wouldn't amount to much. Even more so considering the seeds for the country you live in hadn't even been sewn at that point.

You really think 2011 America is less polluted than 1761 America? I think, rather amusingly, that you're correlating pollution with stuff you can actually see, like smog or horse dung. Can't see them? Things must be better!

I'm still asking for a source on this: "Per capita, pollution was at least 7 times worse back then than it is now" because as far as I can make out it's pure conjecture and has no basis in reality.

You can either find me a source, or drop that line of argument, since it's almost certainly false.

Stealing somebody else's money to solve death? Impossible. Stealing somebody else's money to solve disease? Impossible. So why is this immoral act being done? Why are individuals not allowed to donate to their pollution or disease research organization of choice as they see fit?

So how much of your taxes (if you pay them) go towards curing malaria then? Have you had to make any cut-backs?
 
Last edited:
I repeat: I really can't see how you've been affected in the slightest by this supposed oppression you're riling against. It's just a bunch of whining from people who have no concerns beyond their own personal bubbles.
I and all other human beings have three inalienable rights: life, liberty, and property. Involuntary taxes violate two of those; liberty and property.

Who is being forced?
Everybody who pays involuntary taxes which contribute in any amount to any cause for which they may be against. I don't know about yours, but our IRS is prone to raiding houses with M16s and body armor.

Even more so considering the seeds for the country you live in hadn't even been sewn at that point.
Unrelated to your main point, the fact that the seeds had been planted deep for decades. Redwoods take a long time to grow.

You really think 2011 America is less polluted than 1761 America? I think, rather amusingly, that you're correlating pollution with stuff you can actually see, like smog or horse dung. Can't see them? Things must be better!
Okay okay, maybe not 250 years ago, though poo in the streets is plague-status. But it sure as hell is cleaner than it was 50 years ago.

I'm still asking for a source on this: "Per capita, pollution was at least 7 times worse back then than it is now" because as far as I can make out it's pure conjecture and has no basis in reality.
Source = me. MLA handbook provides no instructions on citing myself, so you're out of luck.

So how much of your taxes (if you pay them) go towards curing malaria then? Have you had to make any cut-backs?
My taxes go to all sorts of bullcrap I don't want them to go to. Danoff's taxes go to even more bullcrap than mine, including covering my share when I get all mine back six-fold in Spring. And it doesn't matter whether or not anybody has to make cutbacks. If you don't understand why involuntary taxes are bad then you need to take a trip to the morality thread and brush up on your common sense.
 
Okay okay, maybe not 250 years ago, though poo in the streets is plague-status. But it sure as hell is cleaner than it was 50 years ago.

Source = me. MLA handbook provides no instructions on citing myself, so you're out of luck.

Brilliant.
 
I and all other human beings have three inalienable rights: life, liberty, and property. Involuntary taxes violate two of those; liberty and property.

Much as we all hate taxes - and trust me, I do - they've also played a rather large part in the formation of civilisation as we know it today.

I don't particularly like my taxes going to fund stupid wars we have no place in, so it's ironic that in the UK at least income tax was introduced as a way of paying for weapons and soldiers to fight France in the Napoleonic wars.

Everybody who pays involuntary taxes which contribute in any amount to any cause for which they may be against. I don't know about yours, but our IRS is prone to raiding houses with M16s and body armor.

Life sucks, doesn't it? Once again, the proceeds of some of our taxes no doubt go to abhorrent things, but our countries wouldn't be able to function without it. Not to mention that if you don't like how your tax is being spent, then that's a good reason to exercise your right to vote for someone else.

People conveniently ignore the fact that those rights to liberty and property you have wouldn't exist as they are today were it not for a taxation system. That right to "liberty" is supposedly being upheld by your tax dollars going towards your military, and unless you built the house you live in yourself then every brick of it was laid by a company paying corporation tax that goes towards running your country, just like the water, gas and electricity companies supplying it and anybody else involved in every aspect of your life.

Not that any of that has anything to do with pollution, so I'm not sure why you brought it up. Things like CAFE standards are doing far more good than harm. Were it not for governmental persuasion things like modern cars wouldn't be anywhere near as quick, clean, safe or comfortable as they are today.

Ditto factories and reducing pollution. People dying of respiratory diseases is pretty bad for business.

Okay okay, maybe not 250 years ago, though poo in the streets is plague-status. But it sure as hell is cleaner than it was 50 years ago.

Maybe so, but again we come back to the issue of, if there's still room for improvement, why not improve further?

Your argument seems to be based on the fact that your liberties are becoming more and more eroded, which is tosh. You're almost certainly better off now than your parents were in virtually every measurable way. The only real exception - at least in the UK - is house prices, which have risen well beyond the rate of inflation making it difficult for people my age to get on the property ladder.

And obviously, this has utterly sod all to do with my taxes going towards reducing pollution, so it can be discounted from this argument.

The only UK tax I openly object to is VED, or road tax. I see no reason why I should effectively pay twice for the fuel I'm using, which is what CO2-based VED essentially is.

But then, the more advanced modern cars get (as a result of legislation that's encouraged faster development), the more of them become exempt from that tax, so I see that as a good thing. And classic cars are exempt too, which suits me fine.

Source = me. MLA handbook provides no instructions on citing myself, so you're out of luck.

If you're unable to provide a source for a claim like that, then it becomes irrelevant to the discussion.

My taxes go to all sorts of bullcrap I don't want them to go to. Danoff's taxes go to even more bullcrap than mine, including covering my share when I get all mine back six-fold in Spring. And it doesn't matter whether or not anybody has to make cutbacks. If you don't understand why involuntary taxes are bad then you need to take a trip to the morality thread and brush up on your common sense.

As above. I'm not arguing that taxes are bad, but I'm certainly not arguing that they aren't necessary either.

What I would say is that we're getting further from the actual topic of this thread by discussing taxes.
 
Much as we all hate taxes - and trust me, I do - they've also played a rather large part in the formation of civilisation as we know it today.
If you think legislated violation of innate human rights is civilized, then frankly, you are uncivilized.

I don't particularly like my taxes going to fund stupid wars we have no place in, so it's ironic that in the UK at least income tax was introduced as a way of paying for weapons and soldiers to fight France in the Napoleonic wars.
I don't mean to be an asshole - actually yes I do - but the UK, England in particular, is often an example I use to describe a society where the people are subservient to their government. I realize that attitude exists around the world and even in my own country, but we're still allowed to have guns and if it comes down to it I'm faithful my local Texan will bust out the ol' rooty tooty point 'n shooty.

Life sucks, doesn't it? Once again, the proceeds of some of our taxes no doubt go to abhorrent things, but our countries wouldn't be able to function without it.
Without what, taxes or spending taxes on abhorrent things? History shows that these two things go hand-in-hand.

Not to mention that if you don't like how your tax is being spent, then that's a good reason to exercise your right to vote for someone else.
Right, someone who is against involuntary taxes, like Dr. Paul. He thinks the income tax should be abolished because he understands morality, unlike some people I know.

People conveniently ignore the fact that those rights to liberty and property you have wouldn't exist as they are today were it not for a taxation system.
Pot, meet Kettle. Our rights to life, liberty, and property exist by virtue of our self-awareness and resulting capacity for reason and logic. Rationality comes first, and everything else follows.

Even if we were not capable of rational thought, these three basic rights would still exist. We just wouldn't realize it.

Not that any of that has anything to do with pollution, so I'm not sure why you brought it up. Things like CAFE standards are doing far more good than harm.
You don't seem to understand the idea of "principle". Things like CAFE are doing more harm than good by simply existing - by being paid for with immoral taxes, by limiting people's freedom of choice, by reducing the opportunity for self-resonsibility. If the government disallows people to make their own decisions then we don't have to worry about people being responsible for the consequences of their decisions, right? Great idea! Now you're on your way to a totalitarian society.

Were it not for governmental persuasion things like modern cars wouldn't be anywhere near as quick, clean, safe or comfortable as they are today.
Like I said, it's a matter of principle.

Ditto factories and reducing pollution. People dying of respiratory diseases is pretty bad for business.
Thankfully capitalism is an offshoot of rationality. And you're right, people dying of respiratory diseases if pretty bad for business. And yet, cigarette companies are still doing well. Possibly because people want to smoke? So let them smoke if they want to! If they get lung cancer and die, that's their problem for choosing to smoke.

Same goes for factories pump soot into your back yard. This is an issue of property rights. The three basic rights of life, liberty, and property are infallibly thorough, and all it takes is a little deep thought to figure out the correct answer to any possible situation.

Maybe so, but again we come back to the issue of, if there's still room for improvement, why not improve further?
If your idea of limiting human rights falls under "further improvement", go right ahead, but if you don't mind I'll be keeping a gun in my pocket for when you try to "improve" mine.

Your argument seems to be based on the fact that your liberties are becoming more and more eroded, which is tosh. You're almost certainly better off now than your parents were in virtually every measurable way. The only real exception - at least in the UK - is house prices, which have risen well beyond the rate of inflation making it difficult for people my age to get on the property ladder.
I'm discussing the philosophical roots of all our problems and you're badgering on about housing prices? How the hell many levels am I above you right now?

The only UK tax I openly object to is VED, or road tax. I see no reason why I should effectively pay twice for the fuel I'm using, which is what CO2-based VED essentially is.
You're not digging deep enough.

In the US, the income you make every week is taxed. When you use that income to buy something, it's taxed again, at varying levels depending on what you're buying. You're a clever guy so you move it into a tax-free offshore savings account. When you need to withdraw it back into the US, it is taxed again. And then when you die and your savings are willed to whomever you willed them to, they are taxed one final time. There's probably a few more taxes in there somewhere, but I think taxing the same dollar four times is already four time too many.

But then, the more advanced modern cars get (as a result of legislation that's encouraged faster development), the more of them become exempt from that tax, so I see that as a good thing. And classic cars are exempt too, which suits me fine.
It's a bit naive to think that eventually all these new cars will become exempt from these taxes. Don't you think that the government might, oh, I don't know, remove the exemptions? Something to consider.

And on the logic of taxing dirty cars but exempting clean ones...why the hell are classic cars exempt? They're the dirtiest ones of all. So the really dirty ones are exempt, the kinda clean ones are taxed, and the really clean ones are also exempt. Does that make any sense to you at all?

As above. I'm not arguing that taxes are bad, but I'm certainly not arguing that they aren't necessary either.
I'm not arguing that they aren't necessary either. I'm arguing that involuntary taxes are immoral and in violation of basic human rights that every human is entitled to. By definition, that is the most heinous crime in existence.

What I would say is that we're getting further from the actual topic of this thread by discussing taxes.
Nearly every single problem imaginable is based in a misunderstanding of ethics. That's why I'm burrowing all the way down to the root of this problem, which is the idea that government must take care of the environment for us through limits on our liberty and property, which of course is immoral. Arguing about the environment in any other capacity is a farce and an insult to the collective intelligence of humanity.
 
Last edited:
I don't mean to be an asshole - actually yes I do - but the UK, England in particular, is often an example I use to describe a society where the people are subservient to their government. I realize that attitude exists around the world and even in my own country, but we're still allowed to have guns and if it comes down to it I'm faithful my local Texan will bust out the ol' rooty tooty point 'n shooty.
But similarly you live in a country where the public face of your government, the police, walks around carrying a gun.

When the police and the people are equally armed (as special officers are armed as are criminals and those legally owning rifles, shotguns and revolvers) I don't believe the "subservient" differences of the 2 cultures can really be argued.
 
Without what, taxes or spending taxes on abhorrent things? History shows that these two things go hand-in-hand.

Err... that's exactly the point I'm making. Taxes are necessary to fund the civilization we live in - hateful though they may be - and an inevitable result of being taxed will go to things we don't believe in. The very first taxes were levied to pay for wars. Terrible, but necessary.

Right, someone who is against involuntary taxes, like Dr. Paul. He thinks the income tax should be abolished because he understands morality, unlike some people I know.

Right, so what's the problem then? Keep voting for him, maybe he'll get in.

You don't seem to understand the idea of "principle". Things like CAFE are doing more harm than good by simply existing - by being paid for with immoral taxes, by limiting people's freedom of choice, by reducing the opportunity for self-resonsibility.

How does it limit freedom of choice? You pays your money, you gets your choices. People rolling in cash don't give a toss about a few grand of gas-guzzler tax. I'm certainly not saying the tax is a good thing, but it certainly doesn't limit freedom of choice.

And it's worth remembering that modern regulations have made cars better today than ever before (excluding tedious arguments about older cars having more character, which is probably true, but also irrelevant).

Necessity is the mother of invention, and the necessity of meeting things like emissions regs has ensured that your average engine is massively cleaner - but also massively more powerful, refined and quiet than even those of ten years ago.

If you automatically assume that every policy is an immediate affront to your human rights then you miss the bigger picture by a huge margin.

Thankfully capitalism is an offshoot of rationality. And you're right, people dying of respiratory diseases if pretty bad for business. And yet, cigarette companies are still doing well. Possibly because people want to smoke? So let them smoke if they want to! If they get lung cancer and die, that's their problem for choosing to smoke.

You're right, but you're also forgetting - somehow - that cigarettes are addictive. That's why they sell. People don't smoke for the hell of it, they smoke because they have varying levels of psychological or physiological dependency.

Factories are a completely different story. Soot particles aren't addictive so having fewer of them in your lungs immediately becomes a good thing.

I'm discussing the philosophical roots of all our problems and you're badgering on about housing prices? How the hell many levels am I above you right now?

I'm talking about stuff that actually affects people. House pricing, for example. You are not.

You're not digging deep enough.

I think the problem with this discussion is that you're digging too deep. You're worrying about things on a completely mathematical level rather than standing back and actually looking at how it affects your life as an individual, or affects wider society. Your whole argument is based on theoretical morality rather than rationality.

It's a bit naive to think that eventually all these new cars will become exempt from these taxes. Don't you think that the government might, oh, I don't know, remove the exemptions? Something to consider.

I'm aware of that, but then car companies will keep on improving their products to the benefit of everyone.

And on the logic of taxing dirty cars but exempting clean ones...why the hell are classic cars exempt? They're the dirtiest ones of all. So the really dirty ones are exempt, the kinda clean ones are taxed, and the really clean ones are also exempt. Does that make any sense to you at all?

Because everyone drives around in classic cars, right?

There are 200 1974-1977 Beetles like mine in the UK. Ignoring the fact that mine isn't tax exempt, that's still fewer "dirty classics" in the entire country than an average car dealership in one town sells in a month. Probably fewer than some sell in a week. And most of those Beetles aren't even on the road, like mine. So they're zero-emissions. And the ones that are on the road probably don't do 20,000 miles per year, either.

If you think classic cars are some kind of massive environmental problem, then you're literally a massive idiot.

I'm not arguing that they aren't necessary either. I'm arguing that involuntary taxes are immoral and in violation of basic human rights that every human is entitled to. By definition, that is the most heinous crime in existence.

I don't actually disagree - I'm just saying you're looking at it entirely one-dimensionally, which would be fair enough if you weren't using it to justify something that requires looking at it in two or three more dimensions.

Edit: I think part of our problem here is that there's an irritating air of double-standards about your posts.

This discussion originally started because you appeared to be saying that we'd done enough "cleaning up" of factories, cars or whatever and that they should just let it be from now on. What I find funny is that things are really no different now than they were back in the 90s, or 80s, when clean-air regs started appearing, CFCs were banned, and cities like Los Angeles made big efforts to reduce smog.

The only difference is that those regulations - which undoubtedly changed things for the better - affected someone else, rather than yourself. Now that you've personally got the accountability of adulthood, you don't want to know. Taxes from people before you were born helped go towards clean air initiatives, but now that your own taxes are doing so, you've taken a big moral stance on it.

It's why I think you're missing the point. Only a fool would disagree that L.A. is a better place without a thick blanket of smog (unless you really hate people from L.A.), but like-for-like changes in the modern world are automatically not okay because they affect you.

Don't worry, I'm sure 30 years down the line any kids you have won't give a stuff that you had to pay taxes for their improved lifestyle.

That's why I'm burrowing all the way down to the root of this problem, which is the idea that government must take care of the environment for us through limits on our liberty and property, which of course is immoral. Arguing about the environment in any other capacity is a farce and an insult to the collective intelligence of humanity.

The fundamental misunderstanding you're making is assuming that the world would work if everyone just did their own shizzle the way they wanted. That's not how society works.

In the absence of some improved utopian reality you can't trust Average Joe to not royally cock things up for his fellow man. That includes environmental issues, because the human race naturally looks after number one at the expense of everything else. And I think you're completely overestimating the amount of money you're paying towards environmental stuff. Right or wrong it's probably massively less than you're paying to rehabilitate junkies or something.

I'm not saying taxation is the answer - honestly, I dislike being taxed on stuff as much as anyone else and I guarantee I'm taxed harder here in the UK than you are over there - but it is an answer, in the absence of something better.

Actually getting that "something better" would require a fundamental change in the way human beings think and act. It'd require people not to be selfish, and that's an in-built human characteristic.

Edit:

I think I'm going to sum up my thoughts concisely just so you can see where I stand on this.

I don't like taxes. There are too many of them, and they affect my cost of living. However, taxes also fund our modern society, whether that's education, national defense or building roads. Some money is undoubtedly going to go places we don't want, but the extent of this can be decided by exercising your right to vote.

I also think that the miniscule proportion of taxes that goes towards green initiatives is probably worth the money because it improves the standard of living for everyone, though reduced pollution (in all its forms) and essentially, by saving us money in other areas. Example: Government tightens MPG regulations, carmakers make more economical (while faster, comfier and safer) cars, you save money in fuel. Far more in savings in fact than you're paying proportionally in tax to the EPA.

No regulations, no tax? You've got the 70s and 80s, with kids dropping like flies from asthma, or lead poisoning from leaded petrol. Still, you save a bit of money, right?

It's swings and roundabouts, essentially, but you certainly lose no more than you gain.

The problem with the human race is that the majority acts for their own benefit. The difference could be illustrated by earlier this year. While Japan was cleaning up its coastline following the tsunami and handing millions of dollars of cash in as lost property, some scumbags in the UK were rioting just "because we can". The "because we can" attitude is all-pervasive even if it's not as extreme as rioting for the hell of it, and it's why - however morally wrong it is - we have to be taxed on stuff to ever get anything done. That includes environmental issues, however much you hate it - the taxes your parents paid means that the Ohio air you're breathing is better than the air they were breathing.

Guess which of the Japanese "for the good of the people" or U.K. "because we can" societies I'd prefer to live in?
 
Last edited:
I'm talking about stuff that actually affects people. House pricing, for example. You are not.
I'm talking about something that effects the entire fabric of how our world works and how people interact within it.

I think the problem with this discussion is that you're digging too deep. You're worrying about things on a completely mathematical level rather than standing back and actually looking at how it affects your life as an individual, or affects wider society. Your whole argument is based on theoretical morality rather than rationality.
I'm kind of insulted that you would refer to my process as "mathematical". Utilitarianism is very dangerous, immoral, and certainly not something I would ever promote.

Morality is not theoretical. It is logical fact. Morality is a consequence of humans' reasonable minds. Nothing in the world is rational, given that rationality is not a condition, but simply the usage of reason. Every single decision anybody has ever made can be factored down to those three basic human rights and a decision can easily be made as to whether it was a moral decision or not.

Not enough time for the rest, I'll get to it later.
 
Morality is not theoretical.

Nor is it clear cut. Ending someone on life support's life because they're in pain: Either moral or immoral, depending on your viewpoint.

Taxes: Either moral or immoral, depending on what they're being used for. I don't see improving our surroundings and quality of life as an immoral use of tax. You might, but only if you're prepared to live without the good it's done for you so far, in which case you're a hypocrite. That's why I think you're looking at it mathematically, because you're seeing input-output to the scenario rather than input-(other factors)-output.

You've already agreed with me that taxes are necessary (or at least, that they're not unnecessary, which is essentially the same thing), and I'm saying that taxes which benefit our air quality, or help to reduce pollution in the seas, or other similar things are necessary, because left to our own devices the general population wouldn't make those improvements themselves.
 
There appears to be an air of furious agreement here... Not all tax is equal.

Keef is talking of the unfairness of involuntary taxation (tax on your earnings [income and capital gains] followed by estate tax when you die - taxing the same dollar three or four times for you simply existing); hfs is talking about the benefits of opt-in taxation (tax on things you buy and use - sales tax and varying commodity taxes). Stick them together and you've got a nicely consistent world view :D
 
Famine
There appears to be an air of furious agreement here... Not all tax is equal.

Keef is talking of the unfairness of involuntary taxation (tax on your earnings [income and capital gains] followed by estate tax when you die - taxing the same dollar three or four times for you simply existing)

It's not the same dollar. As for income, it first belonged to the employer, then to the employee. As for the estate tax, it first belonged to the person who passed away and then to the heir. Reasonable enough.
 
It's not the same dollar.

Err... it is?

As for income, it first belonged to the employer, then to the employee. As for the estate tax, it first belonged to the person who passed away and then to the heir.

The employer pays the employee $1. The $1 becomes 70c before it even reaches the employee. The employee puts it under their mattress and their child inherits it - only they have to pay 35c for it and it becomes 35c.

All through simply existing and with no choice in the matter...


Reasonable enough.

In what universe?
 

The employer pays the employee $1. The $1 becomes 70c before it even reaches the employee. The employee puts it under their mattress and their child inherits it - only they have to pay 35c for it and it becomes 35c.

All through simply existing and with no choice in the matter...



If you mean "through simply existing" the existence of income, then you are right.

It's the "same" coin, as long as it stays in ones pocket, under the mattress, buried in hole. As long as you do that, then it's completely tax free. At least in Germany and in many other civilized countries.

Now, when money flows, it becomes income. The original dollar ceases to exist, because it has become income. Either through work, or transfer income, or indeed a heritage. Only this is taxed. And rightfully so, for many reasons. One being in fact the reason this adds more value to money as such and prevents inflation. Neat, isn't it?

Anyway, the same coin is, usually and for the most part, only taxed once.
 
A sales tax seems better than the income tax but it is still involuntary, since you can't buy something without paying it.
 
Famine
My heavens.

That sentence alone tells me it's not even worth the discussion response I'd typed up.

That's both rude and uncalled for.

Anyway, I'm most certainly not writing lengthy paragraphs on that matter because there's not much else to say on that matter. Wealth is not identical with income. And consequently it's treated differently tax wise, wealth being tax free while income being taxed. If it isn't, it should be. Taxing wealth is indeed taking the same money twice.
 
That's both rude and uncalled for.

And yet, as you point out, apt:

Anyway, I'm most certainly not writing lengthy paragraphs on that matter because there's not much else to say on that matter.

It's a position so impossibly far away that it's not possible for me to change your mind and not worth either of our efforts to do the discussion of it.

Wealth is not identical with income. And consequently it's treated differently tax wise, wealth being tax free while income being taxed. If it isn't, it should be. Taxing wealth is indeed taking the same money twice.

Where do you think wealth comes from?

Earning money (or tangible equivalent) = income tax
Saving money (or tangible equivalent) = capital gains tax
Inheriting money (or tangible equivalent) = estate/inheritance tax

However you acquire the wealth, it's taxed on the way in. However you dispose of the wealth (short of burning it), it's taxed on the way out - either through purchase tax or commodity duties (or both) or through an estate tax. In the UK we're even taxed annually for owning a home (after we pay our taxed utility bills, buy our taxed groceries, pay for insurance (tax), VED (tax) and petrol (tax * tax) in our cars out of our taxed income, we then pay about £1,200 tax just for owning a house). Oh, and we paid Stamp Duty (tax) for the privilege of buying it and whomever buys it from us will also pay it. How's that[/]i for a tax on wealth?


Involuntary taxes - taxes you incur just for existing - are fundamentally immoral. This includes income tax (money in) and estate tax (money out). Voluntary taxes - taxes you pay through choosing things (purchases) - are fundamentally moral, but can be grossly skewed to the point of immorality. Like a sales tax on top of fuel duty such that a 1p increase in fuel duty results in 1.2p rise in tax burden.
 
A sales tax seems better than the income tax but it is still involuntary, since you can't buy something without paying it.

Not entirely true. Plenty of things - at least in the UK - are exempt from our sales tax (Value Added Tax - VAT). Generally important things, like most food. Or kids clothing. The idea is to lessen the burden of buying essentials, and charge people for buying luxuries. It doesn't apply to everything you might consider essential, but food is probably one of the more important things and you aren't taxed on it (directly, at least).

I would add that we're getting quite far from the point of this thread, too.
 
Should some of this not go in a tax thread?

However I do support that there are corrective taxes, the issue (as always) is it is unclear what a fair tax is and that the corrective taxes should solve the issue they are created for and not be allocated to some other issues (like finance wars).

Example given I can support a CO2 tax that incites people and industry to limit the exhaust of CO2. And the use of the revenue of this tax in investment in alternatives that will guarantee competitiveness without this CO2 exhaust.
However this will be in conflict with International Free Trade agreements, etc ...

It is not good too have too complex and technical taxes either, so governments need to find a middle way.

Voluntary taxes - taxes you pay through choosing things (purchases) - are fundamentally moral

You can push this in immoral with taxes on essential food products? It seems this was one of the origins of the Arab Spring revolutions (Tunisia).

Finally you can over-complicate it with taxes depending on Luxury levels other foods.
 
Will we get global warming or will global warming get us first?

Global warming, or climate change, is out of our control. We are at the mercy of our own climate system. Human contributions are one of the most insignificant factors when it comes to a change in climate.
 
We are at the mercy of our own climate system.

Where do you get that we own the climate system?

The world climate system shows us our limits of influence and comprehension.

Where did you get from that we have much influence?
 
Are you sure? It really is an absolutely staggering amount humanity is letting out each day.

Very sure. Humans contribute very little (Which I can show you if you wish). The earths been through much worse than us little specs that inhabit it.

Where do you get that we own the climate system?

You've taken that out of context.

The world climate system shows us our limits of influence and comprehension.

So then why did you say this: (Your below quote)
Where did you get from that we have much influence?

To answer that, I would say it's from the article you posted.
 
Very sure. Humans contribute very little (Which I can show you if you wish).
Please do... that the Earth's climate has been radically different in the past does not mean that anything that humanity can possibly do is insignificant in comparison.
 
Just the point that if we own the climate many would choose very little rain and quite some sun, around 21°C in the morning and 28°C in the afternoon.

We would die of famine if skin cancer did not get us first.

@Sam48: I seem to have misread your input, missed the in in insignificant .
but I'm of the opinion that it is difficult to prove the (not) contributions of humans.

==================

On the article, they only talk about CO2, it is a bit a limited view.
My main reason to bring it, no matter what the cause of Global Warming is it is bringing down yields, it is changing our lives.
 
Last edited:

Latest Posts

Back