Government

Should the wealthy pay more in taxes then they get in government services? 🧐

Should the wealthy pay more in taxes then they get in government services? 🧐

Few things make me cringe more than hearing the term of donor state. It is the idea that the wealthy states and therefore wealthy people should pay no more in taxes than they get back in services.

But that entirely goes against the concept of progressive taxation – those who are able to contribute more should contribute more. New York, with Wallstreet and the most populous and important city in the nation, is incredibly wealthy. Not all New Yorkers are incredibly wealthy but as a collective state, we are one of the richest.

Rather than complaining about how a portion of the super rich’s tax dollars go to help children get dental care in West Virginia or healthy food in Kentucky – we should be happy to help those in need. We have plenty of resources to take care of people in New York State if we tap the existing wealth in the state.

Are taxes are going up next year?

Are taxes are going up next year?

Spend some time on Reddit or Twitter and you might be concerned that taxes are going up next year, thanks to a misunderstood chart from the Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT).

The chart, which was created in ecember 2017 when the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) was passed, periodically makes the rounds on social media because it seems to show that people earning between $10,000 to $30,000 begin paying more in taxes on average starting in 2021 than they would have before the law was passed.

If American Democracy Collapsed, You Almost Certainly Wouldn’t Notice It

If American Democracy Collapsed, You Almost Certainly Wouldn’t Notice It

Working from these two pointsβ€”democracy is a pattern of behavior, and laws only constrain if people behave as if they are constrainedβ€”it follows that we would be correct to say that democracy has collapsed if the explicit or implicit patterns of behavior that govern access to political authority no longer operated. And we would not look to the passage of a law, or necessarily even the outcome of an election, to determine if democracy had collapsed.

emocracy, in fact, makes it particularly challenging to know if democracy has collapsed. That is because when democracy functions, challenges to it are usually hidden, and when they emerge in the open, they are processed through a system that presumes that challenges can be handled democratically. Political actors invoke laws and Constitutions as if they were binding constraints. Stresses that pose questions about the stability of the regime over time, therefore, are fundamentally ambiguous. They may be regime-altering, or not. And the responses to them by those who hold power may be regime-altering. Or not.

And that is why, if American democracy were to collapse, you almost certainly wouldn’t notice it. Not right away, at least.

The Woman Whose Invention Helped Win a War β€” and Still Baffles Weathermen

The Woman Whose Invention Helped Win a War β€” and Still Baffles Weathermen

ut in the post-lunch hours, meteorologists started picking up what seemed to be a rogue thunderstorm on the weather radar. The “blob,ȁ as they referred to it, mushroomed on the radar screen. By 4 PM, it covered the entire city of Huntsville. Strangely, however, the actual view out of peoples’ windows remained a calm azure.

The source of the blob turned out to be not a freak weather front, but rather a cloud of radar chaff, a military technology used by nations all across the globe today. Its source was the nearby Redstone Arsenal, which, it seems, had decided that a warm summer’s day would be perfect for a completely routine military test.

More surprising than the effect that radar chaff has on modern weather systems, though, is the fact that its inventor’s life’s work was obscured by the haze of a male-centric scientific community’s outdated traditions.

The inventor of radar chaff was a woman named Joan Curran.