BR1986FB;1785277 wrote:You mean the "entitled, privileged haves" who have busted their asses, for years, to get what they have, only to have some Socialist dumbass want to give it to the freeloaders?
BR I can totally see who you believe those of us "on The left" might want to punish people who have earned their success and in turn reward the undeserving poor - much of this is our own fault as people like Bernie simply moan about "the rich" in imprecise terms and not enough to focus on the unfair or unjust things afflicting hard working ordinary folks.
That is on us when the message routinely gets through that we want to take from hardworking people and reward the undeserving.
And in reality I do not really think the average dem voter and the average pub voters are that far apart.
At the end of the day Bernie's main idea is that the private medical industry is where there is massive freeloading e.g. companies rake in unearned rents from IP Rights they lobby Congress to grant them and then take much more out of the working man's wallet than Uncle Sam does.
And then, Big banks will lobby the federal reserve board to raise interest rates and ensure millions of people are unemployed and have to live a life of freeloading or crime in order to live - all while inflation is low.
The big banks cajole Congress and the Fed not to supply sufficient quantities of safe assets to our working people in the form of dollars and bonds and so they have to borrow money from banks at interest to buy Has and Groceries (Chase Freedom and Amex Daily Blue Cards did not use to exist and our government does not supply enough dollars to the economy to maintain economic growth without them).
And on and on.
So I understand where you are coming from and it is our own fault for talking about taxing income, etc. Instead of unearned rents, etc. and many other things and at the end of the day we both so not support freeloading - We have different ideas about where the worst freeloading takes place.
We think eliminating y our health insurance premiums and paying a lot less to Medicare every month to negotiate better prices gets rid of freeloading.
We think a full employment economy with more job openings than jobless workers stops unscrupulous employers from having the threat of mass unemployment as a bargaining chip and using it to to freeload on rents their business model doesn't warrant.
We think we can save the working man a lot of his future earnings if he doesn't have to take out the equivalent of a mortgage just to get a basic piece of paper employers demand in our mass unemployment economy (True Full Employment could fix this too).
Maybe we are wrong on the merits and that is the debate we ought to have IMHO. In any case, the point is that we want a world wherein we can all contribute to our country and earn a decent livelihood for doing so.
I understand why there is a belief that we want to hinder the working man and I assure you that is not what we want. It is our own fault for pandering to interest groups rather than keeping the unifying message of favor for labor.
We can all do better if we can all do better. It doesn't always come out that way - in any event - that is what we are about.