Keane wrote:Long version: bernie has directly denied a 90% tax rate numerous times, in debates and interviews. Second, it's a marginal rate, not a regular rate, so it wouldn't be like sanders would actually come and take 900,000$ from your one million fortune. During WWII the rate was at 94% I believe, and the wealthy weren't suffering as bad you'd think: With a marginal rate, plus deductions (which take off a lot of potential sources of the tax), you could say that it was actually more a 40% rate. Still pretty high back then, but again Sanders isn't aiming to do that exactly, and this is a very different time period economically.
Sanders' proposal makes sense when you keep that in mind, and apply it to the context he uses it in: Let's say he puts a marginal tax rate on the extremely wealthy, then all that means is that all the money they earn on top off the billion they already posses, and even then they can still grow their fortune despite the tax.
Thanks for the explanation, but I know quite well what a marginal tax rate is.

As for the deductions you are talking about, they are where the problem lies: most of them are, along with the various practices of tax optimization, available in practice to the super rich only, who can thanks to them benefit from overall tax rates lower than that of the middle class. Simplify the tax system to make optimization impossible, get rid of those deductions, and you won't have to bother with tax rates. In the end, a rather low flat tax with no ways around it would be fairer than the current system.
Keane wrote:Sanders doesn't mean to tax anyone but the super wealthy elite, and they need to be as to prevent cases of people who are too wealthy to be stopped: The Koch Brothers are investing 800 million dollars in backing republican candidates and signing contracts with them. That literally means that because they are rich, they get to have about 10,000 times the amount of political influence that a middle class person holds, just because they own more money and can afford it (and that's without mentioning that the koch brothers have a fucking horrible agenda).
Of course Sanders vows to make that illegal too, but there still remain too many ways that billionaires have direct advantages by using lobbyists which gives them political and economical influence that they shouldn't even have in the first place, and he can't promise to tackle it all. Comcast wants to push the TPP and kill Net Neutrality? The way it should go is that Comcast goes "we want this" and that's that, but when Comcast is rich as fuck and they afford an army of lobbyists to bribe politicians and sign contracts that push their agenda into political power, then suddenly Comcast is acting like an oligarch in a democratic nation. If you tax the shit out of them and make them loose that money, then you take out a lot of issues like these, and it's not like them only having just 1 billion dollars is going to make them starve or fail to live the luxury they might "deserve." They're still fucking huge, rich people who can play philanthropists and buy 10 mansions, they just can't corrupt politics.
I think here again you are focusing on the wrong aspect of the problem. Taxing the super rich more so that they have less money to influence politics is a far-fetched, inefficient way when the real problem lies in the simple fact that private money can be used to fund political parties, candidates and their campaigns in the US. Just let the state hand out the money, make private funding illegal, tackle the lobby issue and once again, you won't need to worry about tax.
TL;DR: tax is and has been throughout the history of democracy the easy, popular and populist solution to attempt to fix most problems. It's failed almost every single time but why stop, because hey, why are those people rich and not me?
Pirez wrote:There should be an amendment in every nation of the world to redifine the word "lobby" as what it really is : corruption. Every fucking time a politician tries to attack he corporate world, tons of cash pop up out of nowhere to fund counter campaign, and spoiler alert : that's why Bernie can't win unless he gets neutered on his views against corporations. If he does indeed win, they'll threaten to leave the US. That's what happened in France in the 2012 campaign and now our president is the corporate world's bitch.
Do you mean when he realised that his irresponsible, infeasible, economically illiterate promises made no sense whatsoever and that all they would achieve was to ruin the country? As much as I agree with you on lobbies I don't see what they have to do with this.
Pirez wrote:Now, I understand the arguments against doing that and I'm kinda with Apple as they disagree, but what was infuriating is that Facebook standed with Apple behind the principle that it would be an invasion of our privacy. Bitch you sell our personnal informations to every advertiser on the planet ever. STFU.
By using Facebook, you agree to them using and selling your data. I don't think it is the case for iMessages.