Your Culture is Moldy. Kekistani Exclusive!

twostrokenut

Well-Known Member
Poor: Lowest bracket of the financial hierarchy that is growing while the middle class shrinks and the high class get rich through tax breaks and the funneling of overtaxation of the lower class.

I hope you can read that, I realize I used a lot of big words. Sorry about that, my special little bitch.
dollar amount dummy. otherwise youre just another virtue signaling sjw moron.

your words were mirthfully small.
 

Olive Drab Green

Well-Known Member
dollar amount dummy. otherwise youre just another virtue signaling sjw moron.

your words were mirthfully small.
Are you really the only American to not be aware that the rich receive tax breaks so they don't have to pay their equal share? Google Tax Breaks for the Rich and show me what you find. It isn't just that the Lower Class pay more of their income while the rich don't pull their weight.
 

twostrokenut

Well-Known Member
So how do you get paid, anyway? Welfare, I'll bet.
at this point youre not even remotely quip or close to comical and rationale left you long ago.

I'm not a net tax consumer like you are if that's what you mean. you know those net tax consumers....cops, government officials, welfare recipiants, you.
 

Olive Drab Green

Well-Known Member
at this point youre not even remotely quip or close to comical and rationale left you long ago.

I'm not a net tax consumer like you are if that's what you mean. you know those net tax consumers....cops, government officials, welfare recipiants, you.
Skirting the question? I must be right. You're on welfare, consuming tax payer dollars because you advocate getting fucked by the government. It's too back Jack Kevorkian's dead, because no one would object if you opted for assisted suicide. They might even thank you.
 

twostrokenut

Well-Known Member
Inflation is not tax. These two terms are not synonymous or even directly related. They have no semantic similarities and they are not cognates. Hopefully these facts will clarify things a bit for you. This nonsensical and asinine assertion that inflation is tax has absolutely no basis in fact.
fed chairman admitted it was already.

Congress prints up money to go tend Afghan poppies and years later your gallon of milk costs 50 cents more .

that's a tax folks.
 

SneekyNinja

Well-Known Member
They didn't "nationalize" anything that had previously been privately owned. They created military material construction projects under national ownership, where there had previously been no such industry due to the Treaty of Marseilles. The German economy had been nationalized under the Weimar Republic.

Hitler privatized the economy in order to pay for national military projects and industry. Here's a peer reviewed study about it that was authored by a German scholar, funded by Harvard and researched at a university in Spain.

http://www.ub.edu/graap/nazi.pdf
You can't even get the name of the treaty correct...
 

SneekyNinja

Well-Known Member
I like cannabis. The rest of the argument is apparently beyond your ability to retort.
If you can't even get basic facts right then why would I discuss anything with you?

I've given you the facts, even told you what to Google and you're being wilfully ignorant and clinging to your belief like a religious fool.
 

twostrokenut

Well-Known Member
Is not only fallible but dishonest. This explains his apparent tendency to utter falsehoods such as the equivocation of tax and inflation.
Not only is that correct but it even has a wiki entry for the normal folks:

"Seigniorage
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Seigniorage /ˈseɪnjərɪdʒ/, also spelled seignorage or seigneurage (from Old French seigneuriage "right of the lord (seigneur) to mint money"), is the difference between the value of money and the cost to produce and distribute it. The term can be applied in the following ways:

  • Seigniorage derived from specie—metal coins—is a tax, added to the total price of a coin (metal content and production costs), that a customer of the mint had to pay to the mint, and that was sent to the sovereign of the political area.[1]
  • Seigniorage derived from notes is more indirect, being the difference between interest earned on securities acquired in exchange for bank notes and the costs of producing and distributing those notes.[2]
The term also applies to monetary seignorage, where sovereign-issued securities are exchanged for newly minted bank notes by a central bank, thus allowing the sovereign to 'borrow' without needing to repay.[3] However, monetary seignorage refers to the sovereign revenue obtained through routine debt monetization, including expanding the money supply during GDP growth and meeting yearly inflation targets.[3]

Seigniorage is a convenient source of revenue for some governments. By providing the government with increased purchasing power at the expense of the public's purchasing power, it imposes what is metaphorically known as an inflation tax on the public."


@Olive Drab Green your wiki god spoke, might want to listen Mr. Libtardarian.
 

abandonconflict

Well-Known Member
Not only is that correct but it even has a wiki entry for the normal folks:

"Seigniorage
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Seigniorage /ˈseɪnjərɪdʒ/, also spelled seignorage or seigneurage (from Old French seigneuriage "right of the lord (seigneur) to mint money"), is the difference between the value of money and the cost to produce and distribute it. The term can be applied in the following ways:

  • Seigniorage derived from specie—metal coins—is a tax, added to the total price of a coin (metal content and production costs), that a customer of the mint had to pay to the mint, and that was sent to the sovereign of the political area.[1]
  • Seigniorage derived from notes is more indirect, being the difference between interest earned on securities acquired in exchange for bank notes and the costs of producing and distributing those notes.[2]
That's not inflation dumb ass.
 

abandonconflict

Well-Known Member
If you can't even get basic facts
You have literally ignored the entire argument and focused on a misspelled word in a minor premise. You have NOTHING. You should stop trying to defend Hitler.

Just face it, Hitler privatized the german economy, which was previously nationalized. What he nationalized had not previously existed (military, due to treaty) and wasn't even economic infrastructure.
 

Unclebaldrick

Well-Known Member
Not only is that correct but it even has a wiki entry for the normal folks:

"Seigniorage
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Seigniorage /ˈseɪnjərɪdʒ/, also spelled seignorage or seigneurage (from Old French seigneuriage "right of the lord (seigneur) to mint money"), is the difference between the value of money and the cost to produce and distribute it. The term can be applied in the following ways:

  • Seigniorage derived from specie—metal coins—is a tax, added to the total price of a coin (metal content and production costs), that a customer of the mint had to pay to the mint, and that was sent to the sovereign of the political area.[1]
  • Seigniorage derived from notes is more indirect, being the difference between interest earned on securities acquired in exchange for bank notes and the costs of producing and distributing those notes.[2]
The term also applies to monetary seignorage, where sovereign-issued securities are exchanged for newly minted bank notes by a central bank, thus allowing the sovereign to 'borrow' without needing to repay.[3] However, monetary seignorage refers to the sovereign revenue obtained through routine debt monetization, including expanding the money supply during GDP growth and meeting yearly inflation targets.[3]

Seigniorage is a convenient source of revenue for some governments. By providing the government with increased purchasing power at the expense of the public's purchasing power, it imposes what is metaphorically known as an inflation tax on the public."


@Olive Drab Green your wiki god spoke, might want to listen Mr. Libtardarian.
Lol. Wikipedia in the hands of a moron makes a confident moron.
 
Top