I understand this concept: if I don't give money to the government, it can't provide the infrastructure and services I rely upon to conduct my business.
The government doesn't "confiscate" money, it is a voluntary arrangement, and it has worked pretty well for more than 200 years. Particularly after WW2, when the tax rate hit 90% for the most wealthy, and the money was used to provide returning GIs with benefits that strengthened the middle class. Anyone who wanted to work had no trouble finding a job that paid enough to live a basic independent life - nothing fancy, but no need for food stamps, either. College was affordable, if that's what you wanted, but it wasn't needed to earn a middle class income. The average Joe & Jane could marry and save for a down payment on a house, without neglecting their kids, or skipping an annual vacation. Saving money was something nearly everyone could do, if they had even minimal discipline. Investors were people who had money they could afford to lose, and they risked it by backing ideas & people they believed would succeed, which was a win/win scenario. [And they wouldn't dream of telling the owners/management how to run the business, either.]
In today's USA, the truly entitled are the very wealthy - but once the middle class is gone, what will they be entitled to then?
The government doesn't "confiscate" money, it is a voluntary arrangement, and it has worked pretty well for more than 200 years. Particularly after WW2, when the tax rate hit 90% for the most wealthy, and the money was used to provide returning GIs with benefits that strengthened the middle class. Anyone who wanted to work had no trouble finding a job that paid enough to live a basic independent life - nothing fancy, but no need for food stamps, either. College was affordable, if that's what you wanted, but it wasn't needed to earn a middle class income. The average Joe & Jane could marry and save for a down payment on a house, without neglecting their kids, or skipping an annual vacation. Saving money was something nearly everyone could do, if they had even minimal discipline. Investors were people who had money they could afford to lose, and they risked it by backing ideas & people they believed would succeed, which was a win/win scenario. [And they wouldn't dream of telling the owners/management how to run the business, either.]
In today's USA, the truly entitled are the very wealthy - but once the middle class is gone, what will they be entitled to then?