https://townhall.com/columnists/john...ieves-n2598372
  
 Source: Franck Robichon/Pool Photo via AP
 
 
    
  
   
       
 
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  The Bible says, “Thou shall not steal.”
Yet  stealing – in the sense of robbing Peter to give to Paul – is what  every government in the world does, on a daily basis.  They have been  doing it for a very long time.
H. L. Mencken once said  that elections are an advance auction on the sale of stolen goods.  Watching the tax-and-spend circus on Capitol Hill right now brings  Mencken to mind.
Have you ever seen a good argument for  stealing? I don’t mean taking property that isn’t yours to save a life  in an emergency. I’m talking about ordinary, garden-variety theft. 
If  you haven’t seen a good argument that’s because government theft is so  fully ingrained in our way of life that no one thinks a justification is  needed.
One consistent advocate for theft on a grand  scale is Paul Krugman, editorial writer for the New York Times. Krugman,  for example,  thinks the government should take as much as 
90 percent of the income of LeBron James.
And  that’s only because he judges the revenue-maximizing tax rate is  somewhere in the neighborhood of 90 percent. If he could be confident  that Lebron would keep on playing basketball regardless, it appears  Krugman would like to see the government take every penny he earns.
   
  
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Slaves on southern plantations in the rural south got  to consume a much greater portion of their product than Krugman would  leave for James. So, what did James do to deserve this fate? He’s good  at what he does. That’s it? That’s it.
Krugman cites  Teddy Roosevelt approvingly for the view that it is good in principle to  tax the wealthy, even if nothing useful is done with the money.
Like  a stereotypical villain in an Ayn Rand novel, Krugman seems to hate  achievement as such. The successful should be punished precisely because  they are successful. The productive should be penalized because they  are productive. The good should be made to suffer precisely because they  are good.
Krugman claims his view of progressive taxation “
is as American as apple pie.” He couldn’t be more wrong.
The  Declaration of Independence declares that we each have an “unalienable  right” to pursue our own happiness. There is no ambiguity in that  statement. Making Peter less happy so that Paul can be more happy is a  violation of fundamental rights per se.
The founding  fathers were not against taxation, even progressive taxation. But as the  Constitution makes clear, the government’s role is to promote the  general welfare. So, taxes to pay for a road, a bridge, or a dam would  be legit if the project benefited people generally. Revenue measures  that took more from the rich than the poor would make sense if the rich  expected more benefits from the project.
   
 
But none of the founders thought it was  permissible to rob Peter for the benefit of Paul for no other reason  than the fact that Paul has more votes.
In his latest  apology for government theft, Krugman says we should “Tax the Rich [to]  Help America’s Children.” Since this line is likely to be repeated often  on the left, let’s pause to focus on two things the catchphrase  overlooks: (1) the tendency for taxes on the rich to trickle down to  others, and (2) the tendency for programs designed for children (who  don’t vote) to morph into job programs for adults (who do vote).
When  the federal income tax was first created, its target was the top 1  percent. Yet in no time at all, ordinary citizens were swept up in its  web. The tax on Social Security benefits initially applied only to  high-income seniors. But since the parameters were not indexed, that tax  is moving down the income ladder – year by year – to reach every  retiree eventually. Joe Biden’s 
proposed payroll tax  would initially apply only to couples earning $400,000 or more.  But  lack of indexing means the tax will eventually apply to everyone,  regardless of income.
   
 
These are not oversights of the tax-writing committees in Congress. The left really believes in trickle-down taxation.
What  it doesn’t believe in is empowering parents with children. Economics  teaches that family utility is maximized when the family controls the  money spent on its behalf; and common sense tells us that parents care  more about their children than strangers who don’t even know them.
   

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 But the congressional Democrats are unmoved by economics or common sense. Concerning their plan for child care, 
John Cochran writes:
“It  stipulates that childcare workers must be paid at least as much as  elementary school teachers ($63,930), rather than the current average  ($25,510). Providers must be licensed. Families pay a fixed and rising  fraction of family income. If families earn more money, benefits are  reduced. If a couple marries, they pay a higher rate, based on combined  income.”
   
 
In other words, the proposal is anti-marriage and  anti-work, in addition to being wasteful. And considering what a poor  job the public schools do with low-income children in Democratic-run  cities, it’s probably anti-child as well.
I might be  inclined to cut Krugman some slack if there was the slightest evidence  that he really cares about children. There isn’t.
In the  news section of the Times, there have been many articles through the  years on the plight of poor children in New York City – trapped in bad  schools with bad teachers and given no hope of escape by politicians who  do the bidding of the teachers’ unions. Yet these facts are routinely  ignored on the editorial page.
You would be hard-pressed to find a single Krugman column that expresses any sympathy at all for these kids.
Krugman is not a lover. He is a hater. And that is true for a great many others on the left.
 
Comment - the entire democraticommunist party are thieves - they steal from others to support their communist ideology - until there is nothing more to steal. 
And teh fools such as lebron, Bezos , etc that support them - will find themselves bereft of all their assets by taxation from the communists they helped elect. 
Fools!