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This article provides more 'fact-checking' for the Dem debates and is for anyone who's not upset yet...
1 posted on 10/18/2015 2:44:22 PM PDT by expat_panama
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To: expat_panama
There is no question that incomes in the top income brackets have risen both absolutely and relative to the bottom income brackets.

The joker is that millions of people move from one income bracket to another.

The even bigger joker is that taxpayers whose incomes were in the bottom 20 percent in 1996 had a 91 percent increase in incomes by 2005.

Meanwhile, taxpayers in the top one-hundredth of one percent -- "the rich" or "superrich" if you believe politicians and the media -- had their incomes drop by 26 percent over those very same years.

Obviously, when millions of people's incomes nearly double in a decade, many of them move up out of the bottom income bracket. Similarly, when other people who were at the top see their income drop by about one-fourth, many of them drop out of that bracket.

When we talk about "the rich" and "the poor" we mean rich and poor human beings, not rich and poor statistical brackets. Yet politicians and the media treat people and statistical categories as if they were the same thing.

Dangerous Demagoguery: Part II (Thomas Sowell)
Townhall.com ^ | January 23, 2008 | Thomas Sowell

This is relevant because it points out that “poverty” is not necessarily a permanent condition or even a truly exceptionably one if “the poor” are (in a very great many cases) simply young people just starting out. If a young grad gets a first job with good prospects but a low starting salary, it actually is arrogant to express contempt for his/her circumstances.

28 posted on 10/18/2015 5:35:31 PM PDT by conservatism_IS_compassion ('Liberalism' is a conspiracy against the public by wire-service journalism.)
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To: expat_panama
It also does not mention all the welfare, state and fed combined.

49.1 percent of the US population that lives in a household where at least one member received some type of government benefit in the first quarter of 2011, up from 30% in the early 1980s and 44.4% as recently as the third quarter of 2008. As of early 2011, 15% of people lived in a household that received food stamps, 26% had someone enrolled in Medicaid and 2% had a member receiving unemployment benefits. The Census data show that 16% of the population lives in a household where at least one member receives Social Security and 15% receive or live with someone who gets Medicare. There is likely a lot of overlap. http://blogs.wsj.com/economics/2012/05/26/number-of-the-week-half-of-u-s-lives-in-household-getting-benefits/


33 posted on 10/18/2015 7:27:08 PM PDT by daniel1212 (Turn to the Lord Jesus as a damned and destitute sinner+ trust Him to save you, then follow Him!)
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To: expat_panama

Honestly, the poor in America are richer than much of the middle class in America.


34 posted on 10/18/2015 8:28:27 PM PDT by Crucial (At the heart all leftists is the fear that the truth is bigger than themselves.)
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