Re: 6-guns in the Capital building ?
Quite correct on an absolute scale. However, quite incorrect on the human scale.
Humans gauge their performance by how they do vs. other humans, hence my comment on the 10%. Even the poorest person today is immeasurably better off than the richest person in 1860, but nobody cares about that.
I'd also note that we have directly relevant historical examples: the Founding Fathers were in no way poor people. They were all very prosperous by any one's definition, yet they chose revolution over a miniscule increase in their taxes.
For example - in 1765 the average taxpayer paid 26 shillings a year in taxes in England, but in the colonies it was 1/10th to 1/20th that amount. The Stamp Act didn't affect poor people whatsoever, but it did affect those wealthier because wealthier people were far more likely to be involved in transactions which fell under the Stamp Act. In fact, the most affected by the Stamp Act were lawyers...so it is that surprising that there were so many lawyers among the Founding Fathers?
Originally posted by bart
Humans gauge their performance by how they do vs. other humans, hence my comment on the 10%. Even the poorest person today is immeasurably better off than the richest person in 1860, but nobody cares about that.
I'd also note that we have directly relevant historical examples: the Founding Fathers were in no way poor people. They were all very prosperous by any one's definition, yet they chose revolution over a miniscule increase in their taxes.
For example - in 1765 the average taxpayer paid 26 shillings a year in taxes in England, but in the colonies it was 1/10th to 1/20th that amount. The Stamp Act didn't affect poor people whatsoever, but it did affect those wealthier because wealthier people were far more likely to be involved in transactions which fell under the Stamp Act. In fact, the most affected by the Stamp Act were lawyers...so it is that surprising that there were so many lawyers among the Founding Fathers?
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