Having read all of these posts, I have a few comments:
1. To the folks who believe that increasing the federal income tax on the rich is a solution, I have a simple question. Suppose that the tax rate was increased somewhere between 1% and 5% on all people making above a million dollars. Exactly how do you think that this would help in a real world way any of the current problems of the middle class or lower class?
A. Is it your position that the government should just pass out the extra money to the poor? Well, that's OK I guess, but that is the definition of Communism. From each according to his means, and to each according to his needs. That is what Lenon wrote. It is pure wealth redistribution. Move to China please.
B. Is it your position that the govenment should use the money to order up massive government construction projects and create jobs? Well, that's OK I guess, but that is the definion of Socialism. The government takes all it can from the upper class, and redistributes it with State projects and State programs so that it levels out the society. Move to England please. (But you had better get your teeth fixed here first, as the socialized dentistry system in England gives them the worst dental care in the industrialized nations.)
2. Next, let me tell you something I learned about the rich and super rich. I worked for 30 years as a corporate and business attorney at the law firm of Senator Howard Baker, about as conservative as you can get. It was a 600 person firm, and I represented the rich and super rich, dealing with them every day. And do you know what I found out? The reason that these folks are rich and super rich is that they work their living butts off, 14 hours a day, 6 or 7 days a week. They work FAR more hours than any blue collar worker, tradesman, Union worker or anybody else. And, even more important, when they do transactions, create businesses, invent and develop products, they have to sign personal guarantees to the lenders for every loan, which means that they put their entire personal wealth and fortune on the line for everything they do. Do the workers at GM do that when GM borrows money to create new jobs? No. They don't. So sorry, but this "holyier than thou" attitude of the "working class" is total cp*r. Yes, I know that they work really hard, but they aren't holyier than, and they don't work as hard as, rich people.
The entire goal of rich people is to create new business, and assemble new capital ventures, to make new products, buildings and factories and create more income. This ALWAYS creates new jobs. The vast majority of rich people can't stay rich by just sitting back and doing nothing. A decade of paying taxes and having their money eaten away by inflation, and dividing it up to their kids and grandkids, would totally destroy their wealth.
And by the way, rich people are in a higher tax braket than most folks on this board, and they pay a ton more taxes every year than most of the folks on this board. This "poor man's myth" that "the rich don't pay any taxes" is really pathetic. Yes they do, in spades, and far more than poor people or the middle class.
Now, on a personal note, I would not be opposed (and believe it or not most rich people would not be opposed) to increasing the upper tax brackets by a percentage point or two, BUT ONLY if it wasn't squandered into the great black hole of entitlements and bridges to nowhere by the federal government.
3. And finally, I would point out that the overwhelmingly vast majority of all donations to poor people, churches, and charities come from the top 5% or so of income earners, i.e., the rich people, . . . not the middle class. Increase their taxes, and what do you think will be one of the first things they cut?
Gates gave away BILLIONS to create the Gates Foundation. Buffet gave away almost 50 Billion dollars (98% of his wealth) to the Gates Foundation. This is the upside of the American dream, i.e., allowing people to work hard, and progess, and keep their money, rather than having higher and higher percentages of their money taken by the federal government.
Take a look at the New York public library. One of the most beautiful public libraries on the planet. Anyone can go in. And where did it come from? Around 1900, Carnegy and J.P. Morgan decided that New York should have a great library, and they built it with their own money!!
Mannyrock