29-12-2003, 16:41
The Issue
A recent poll has revealed high levels of dissatisfaction among the populace about tax rates.
The Debate
"Do you know how much of my year's work goes to the government?" demanded angry worker Falala Summers. "Too much! Government spending has gotten way out of control. It needs big cuts in welfare, health, and education. But leave those subsidies to business alone. We need them to create jobs."
[Accept]
"It's not the AMOUNT of tax, it's where the burden falls," says student activist Colin Washington. "And at the moment, far too much of the burden is falling on the poor. People on high incomes still have more money than people on low incomes. I don't think I need to say anything more than that."
[Accept]
"I don't object to the amount of tax, I object to where it's being spent," says social reformer Jennifer Li. "I'd like to see everyone have a choice as to where their dollars go every time they fill out a tax return. Everyone would feel a lot better about opening their wallets if they had a say as to where the money went. I think you'd see a lot more public money going to education and a lot less to business."
[Accept]
I'm looking to drive up my economy and civil liberties. Would taking more tax from the wealthy hurt the economy? And would the third item drive up civil liberties?
A recent poll has revealed high levels of dissatisfaction among the populace about tax rates.
The Debate
"Do you know how much of my year's work goes to the government?" demanded angry worker Falala Summers. "Too much! Government spending has gotten way out of control. It needs big cuts in welfare, health, and education. But leave those subsidies to business alone. We need them to create jobs."
[Accept]
"It's not the AMOUNT of tax, it's where the burden falls," says student activist Colin Washington. "And at the moment, far too much of the burden is falling on the poor. People on high incomes still have more money than people on low incomes. I don't think I need to say anything more than that."
[Accept]
"I don't object to the amount of tax, I object to where it's being spent," says social reformer Jennifer Li. "I'd like to see everyone have a choice as to where their dollars go every time they fill out a tax return. Everyone would feel a lot better about opening their wallets if they had a say as to where the money went. I think you'd see a lot more public money going to education and a lot less to business."
[Accept]
I'm looking to drive up my economy and civil liberties. Would taking more tax from the wealthy hurt the economy? And would the third item drive up civil liberties?