Thomas Sowell

The Invincible Lie

By Thomas Sowell - Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Anyone who wants to study the tricks of propaganda rhetoric has a rich source of examples in the statements of President Barack Obama. On Monday, July 9th, for example, he said that Republicans “believe that prosperity comes from the top down, so that if we spend trillions more on tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans, that that will somehow unleash jobs and economic growth.”

Let us begin with the word “spend.” Is the government “spending” money on people whenever it does not tax them as much as it can? Such convoluted reasoning would never pass muster if the mainstream media were not so determined to see no evil, hear no evil and speak no evil when it comes to Barack Obama.

Ironically, actual spending by the Obama administration for the benefit of its political allies, such as the teachers’ unions, is not called spending but “investment.” You can say anything if you have your own private language.

But let’s go back to the notion of “spending” money on “the wealthiest Americans.” The people he is talking about are not the wealthiest Americans. Income is not wealth — and the whole tax controversy is about income taxes. Wealth is what you have accumulated, and wealth is not taxed, except when you die and the government collects an inheritance tax from your heirs.

People over 65 years of age have far more wealth than people in their thirties and forties — but lower incomes. If Obama wants to talk about raising income taxes, let him talk about it, but claiming that he wants to tax “the wealthiest Americans” is a lie and an emotional distraction for propaganda purposes.

The really big lie — and one that no amount of hard evidence or logic seems to make a dent in — is that those who oppose raising taxes on higher incomes simply want people with higher incomes to have more money, in hopes that some of their prosperity will “trickle down” to the rest of the people.

Some years ago, a challenge was issued in this column to name any economist, outside of an insane asylum, who had ever said any such thing. Not one example has yet been received, whether among economists or anyone else. Someone is always claiming that somebody else said it, but no one has ever been able to name and quote that somebody else.

Once we have put aside the lies and the convoluted use of words, what are we left with? Not much.

Obama is claiming that the government can get more tax revenue by raising the tax rate on people with higher incomes. It sounds plausible, and that may be enough for some people, but the hard facts make it a very iffy proposition.

This issue has been fought out in the United States in several administrations — both Democratic and Republican. It has also been fought out in other countries.

What is the real argument of those who want to prevent taxes from rising above a certain percentage, even for people with high incomes? It has nothing to do with making them more prosperous so that their prosperity will “trickle down.”

A Democratic president — John F. Kennedy — stated the issue plainly. Under the existing tax rates, he explained, investors’ “efforts to avoid tax liabilities” made them put their money in tax shelters, because existing tax laws made “certain types of less productive activity more profitable than other more valuable undertakings” for the country.

Ironically, the Obama campaign’s attacks on Mitt Romney for putting his money in the Cayman Islands substantiate the point that President Kennedy and others have made, that higher tax rates can drive money into tax shelters, whether tax-exempt municipal bonds or investments in other countries.

In other words, raising tax rates does not automatically raise tax revenues for the government. Higher tax rates have often led to lower tax revenues for states, the federal government and other countries. Conversely, lower tax rates have often led to higher tax revenues. It all depends on the circumstances.

But none of this matters to Barack Obama. If class warfare rhetoric about taxes leads to more votes for him, that is his bottom line, whether the government gets a dime more revenue or not. So long as his lies go unchallenged, a second term will be the end result for him and a lasting calamity for the country.

COPYRIGHT 2013 THOMAS SOWELL/CREATORS.COM


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15 Responses to “The Invincible Lie”

  1. Mary Ann Hunnicutt says:

    Good to read a rational approach to the question that keeps coming up, but answers to which seem often framed to incite anger and envy rather than to inform.

    Thank you!

  2. Erato says:

    Can't help noticing there's no mention of cutting expenses. Guess my trickle-up economics idea just didn't catch on, lol.

    • Gill O’Teen says:

      If he, or any in Congress, dare cut expenses, they risk simultaneous cuts to their vote counts next election. While I do not endorse the throw the baby out with the bathwater approach of unelecting each and every incumbent, there was even one good man in Sodom, I do have no quarrel with those who do.

      • reunion says:

        incumbent…"income" bents will be there, with or without election (severed head) window-dressing (my basket!)……

    • reunion says:

      you want to rob peter less? what happens to the lifestyle paul has become accustomed to then?!

      as i've mentioned before…the link between tax revenues and state "spending" turned to nearly infinitely stretchy rubber once the crooks foisted fiat currency (and later, "digital fiat" – is that like virtual virtual?).

      "Badges (taxes)? we don't need no stinking badges!" "treasure of the sierra madre" > "blazing saddles"

      both evocative titles in this context……

    • reunion says:

      maybe its the name…trickle is like "seep" is like weep, as in suppuration…maybe paint an ancient, pristine aquifer, partner to the sun, & source of all life….

      • reunion says:

        and so, if what i've skimmed about extraction processes is correct, you could say that treasure of the sierra madre frackers are wrecking the aquifer…….

        • BLH557 says:

          reunion: "you could say that treasure of the sierra madre frackers are wrecking the aquifer……."

          And if you did, you'd be "inaquiferate".

          • reunion says:

            tell us about literal fracking, blh…and that you recognize an alternative use for the term……

      • Erato says:

        much better, thank you… I like it a lot!

  3. reunion says:

    "Next, why do the cognitively challenged say that Obama is a socialist? The man is an arch-conservative. (I'm not sure what arches have to do with it, but never mind.) He bailed out Wall Street, the beating heart of predatory capitalism, and then carefully didn’t prosecute those who masterminded the sub-prime scan. Socialists hate Wall Street. Obama breast-feeds it. And he sends the military to bomb every country he has heard of, which is very conservative. He is ideally qualified to be president of Guatemala.

    Whew. Now a final gem of crystalline truth before I turn to things of greater cosmic import, such as listening to Bob Dylan with Vi. Conservatives and capitalists (What’s the difference? All conservatives are capitalists, and all capitalists are conservatives) say they like competition. Bracing stuff, it is, not like lazy old socialism.

    Actually they like competition as long as they are winning, and and when they aren't they want the government to buy their stuff. Why do you think America has such a rocking arms industry? Easy: Because the arms companies can’t make it in a truly competitive world. For example, Lockheed gave up the manufacture of civilian airliners to be a martial kept woman of the Pentagon. Arms manufacturers don’t have to compete with Samsung and Daewoo, which would probably make Pentagonal toys for a third the price. Don’t think so? Make the experiment."

    for a different "invincible lie"… lol! excerpted from fred reed's 7/4 column.

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