It looks like Biden has finally announced his candidacy.
In response to North:
2. Income inequalityThe fact that the top 0.1%/1% pay such a large portion of the total income taxes is evidence of just how ridiculously rich they are compared to the bottom 50%. And while
in 2016 (the most recent I could find), the top 1% paid $538B in taxes compared to the bottom 50%'s $44B (about 12 times as much), they also earned $480,000-$2.1M each compared to the bottom 50%'s <$40,000 each (so at least 12-50 times as much), which I would hardly call the model for progressive taxation. Also look at the trends over 2001-2016: the top 10% earned about 4.5 points more of the total income while the bottom 50% earned about 3.5 points less, meaning that gap has widened by about 8 percentage points over just 15 years. And all of this is likely going to get much worse with the 2017 Trump tax cuts.
Anyway, less than half of tax revenue comes from income tax -- over a third come from payroll taxes, which disproportionately affect the bottom 90% as it only affects the first $130,000 earned (so those who earn more than that have an effectively lower tax rate). Payroll taxes are also only imposed on earned income, so those who make money from investing (largely the rich as the top 10% own 84% of all stocks) don't pay any of that. So while income tax may be slightly progressive, payroll taxes are very much regressive, so those income tax numbers are misleading.
I have said nothing about calling the rich greedy money-grubbers (and neither has Bernie) -- you can't really blame somebody for trying to pay as little they can in taxes to the government, but you can blame those who make the tax laws (who just so happen to often be those in the top 1%) as well as those who break tax laws.
And no, the welfare programs we currently have are not nearly to the level I'd like. And though the government isn't always the most efficient with money, that isn't a good reason for cutting taxes or making them less progressive as that would disproportionately affect the poor, the old, and the weak. And I'm all for significantly cutting down the military budget.
4. More democratic functions in governmentSix states actually already have nonpartisan redistricting committees (blue: California, Washington, New Jersey, Hawaii; Red: Arizona, Idaho), so it's not impossible.
Referendums are a common sight in state and local politics: that's how marijuana became fully legalized in 10 states (plus DC). I'd actually be ok with federal referendums that required a 60/65% supermajority to be passed to prevent such division -- if a supermajority of citizens want a law passed, the federal government should not be standing in the way.
I don't understand how publicly-financed elections could be seen as bad if all candidates were held to the same standard. Here's what I mean, by the way: overturn Citizens United to ban PACs, give federal tax credits to those who donate (up to a certain amount) to political candidates during federal elections, and lower the cap on individual contributions to candidates -- using a voucher program could be a way to do this, but I figure tax credits are simpler.
5.
More democratic functions in businessI don't know what you mean as co-ops
are a thing in the US -- there are about 400 worker co-ops, and that doesn't include community co-ops that are partly owned by the workers. And I understand that huge multinational corporations won't be very democratic, but for small businesses (under 1500 employees) it's definitely possible to encourage more. And I'm not saying enforcing all companies to do this but rather implement tax credits for co-ops/collectives/etc. to make them more viable. I don't think that would be the death blow to the American business and industrial markets forever.
6.
Strong labor unionsLabor unions are definitely not dead -- they've declined since the 80s (when they made up 20% of the workforce), but there are still
14.7 million union workers (about 10.5% of workers), and union members make up over 1/3 of public-sector workers. Unions have an
approval rating of over 60%, and more people would rather they have more influence than less, so they're not unpopular but rather kept from thriving by deregulation, union busting, right-to-work laws, and the repression of new unions by employers.
I think your view of unions is as if it's 50-100 years ago. Unions work to protect its workers -- how is that sacrificing the many for the few? And large unions aren't mafias and cartels any more than large corporations are. Corruption needs to be rooted out wherever it is, but that doesn't mean we should throw the baby out with the bathwater -- more good comes out of unions than bad. I wish unions were not necessary, but sadly with how the working class is exploited by those in power, they need to work together to get fair wages. And the fact that
union membership is tied to income inequality, of course I endorse unions to support workers. (P.S. I'd be in favor of banning union PACs if corporate PACs were also banned.)