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- Xref: sparky talk.abortion:57115 misc.legal:23010 alt.abortion.inequity:6611 alt.child-support:4622 soc.men:23022 soc.women:22905
- Path: sparky!uunet!digex.com!adric
- From: adric@access.digex.com (William Johnson)
- Newsgroups: talk.abortion,misc.legal,alt.abortion.inequity,alt.child-support,soc.men,soc.women
- Subject: Re: A Modest Proposal: Illegitimate-conception Tax
- Date: 21 Jan 1993 13:18:30 GMT
- Organization: Express Access Online Communications, Greenbelt, MD USA
- Lines: 73
- Message-ID: <1jm7r6INNa19@mirror.digex.com>
- References: <1993Jan17.042429.16551@rotag.mi.org> <1993Jan17.163155.20964@midway.uchicago.edu> <1993Jan18.032012.19296@rotag.mi.org>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: access.digex.com
-
- In article <1993Jan18.032012.19296@rotag.mi.org> kevin@rotag.mi.org (Kevin Darcy) writes:
- >In article <1993Jan17.163155.20964@midway.uchicago.edu> thf2@midway.uchicago.edu writes:
- >>What happens when rich women have secret abortions outside the country,
- >>figuring the cost of a plane ticket to Canada is cheaper than paying
- >>a graduated income tax?
- >>
- >>For that matter, I easily see a black market of doctors in this country
- >>willing to give secret abortions.
- >
- >I.e. yet more forms of "tax cheating". I'm not saying that cheating won't
- >occur, just that the possibility of cheating, in and of itself, is not
- >sufficient reason to defeat a tax-based approach, unless the cheating is
- >absolutely trivial to do, which I don't think is the case here (requires an
- >overseas trip, or the necessity to find and induce an unethical doctor,
- ^^^^^^^^
- >probably at significant additional under-the-table expense, and risk of being
- >caught, to perform the unreported abortion). Given sufficient effort, all
- >taxes can be cheated on, yet most if not all taxes are workable, even
- >indispensible, in our society.
-
- A) Since when is Canada OVERSEAS?
- B) Why would a significant under-the-table expense deter someone? Let's put
- it this way, abortion now costs what, a couple hundred dollars? (I'm guessing).
- This tax of yours, over 18 years would cost thousands (what's the estimate about
- bringing up children? $150,000 over 18 years or something?). So slipping the
- doctor $1000 instead of $200 to save $140,000 makes PLENTY of sense.
- C) If you aren't saying cheating won't occur, how does this tax make things
- more gender fair, as you claimed in your earlier post?
-
- >>Unconstitutionally penalizes women who choose to have abortions.
- >
- >I don't honestly see how. The Tax is levied whether or not the woman chooses
- >to abort.
-
- So again, you want to penalize those who AREN'T causing the problem, which,
- if I understand you, is the high cost of welfare on those of us not on it.
-
- >>Incidentally, note the rise in the number of women who would choose *not*
- >>to have abortions. A poor woman, who is going to be taxed whether or not
- >>she bears the child, will choose to bear the child so that she can receive
- >>offsetting child-support payments from the government to compensate for the
- >>tax loss.
- >
- >Er, I have proposed no changes to the welfare RULES, only its funding. If a
- >poor pregnant woman can improve her personal financial situation by having the
- >child, rather than aborting it, that's a problem right NOW, that needs to be
- >addressed.
-
- No, read what he said again. She would choose not to have an abortion because
- under your scheme, she's going to pay this tax either way. If she's poor, the
- graduated tax will be LESS than she'll get in support payments for the child.
- Now keeping the child MAY still result in a lowering of standard of living,
- but when you tell someone "hey, you are going to pay this tax either way. And
- you are allowed to choose whether you get any of the benefits back from it"
- how many people do you think are going to opt to pay for nothing?
-
- > A valid objective for the state, eh?
-
- And here is the root of your argument: Socialism. The state should mandate
- everything such that the strong and weak, the rich and poor, everyone has the
- same standard of living. No benefits for hard work, no benefits for being
- responsible, just take any group of people which have some reasonables and
- some slackers, and make the reasonables pay the slacker's bills.
-
- Tell you what, it doesn't work. Because when there is no longer any benefit
- to working hard and getting ahead, people lose the will to work.
-
- Will.
- --
- Copyright (C) 1993 by William Johnson All rights wronged, all lefts made
- adric@access.digex.com without benefit of turn signal.
- Will Johnson, 307 S. Reynolds St Box P-216, Alexandria, VA 22304
- "Tis better to have loved and lost than never to have included a quote in your .sig file."
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