and among the major reasons I oppose his candidacy. Look at the Banana-Republicanication of the US:
from The Nation
http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20040105&s=krugmanAccording to estimates by the economists Thomas Piketty and Emmanuel Saez--confirmed by data from the Congressional Budget Office--between 1973 and 2000 the average real income of the bottom 90 percent of American taxpayers actually fell by 7 percent. Meanwhile, the income of the top 1 percent rose by 148 percent, the income of the top 0.1 percent rose by 343 percent and the income of the top 0.01 percent rose 599 percent. (Those numbers exclude capital gains, so they're not an artifact of the stock-market bubble.) The distribution of income in the United States has gone right back to Gilded Age levels of inequality.
Look at wealth concentration and stock ownership:
http://www.inequality.org/factsfr.html
Since the mid-1970s, the most fortunate one percent of households have doubled their share of the national wealth. They now hold more wealth than the bottom 90 percent of the population. (NYU Economist Edward N. Wolf, Top Heavy)
In 1998, the top 1 percent of Americans owned 47.7 percent of all stock, while the bottom 80 percent owned 4.1 percent. Between 1989 and 1998, nearly 35 percent of all stock market gains went to the top 1 percent of shareholders. 64 percent of American households have stock holdings worth $5,000 or less, or own no stock at all. (NYU Economist Edward N. Wolff, cited by Economic Policy Institute, The State of Working America 2002-03, pp. 286-289)
To posit, as Dean's plan does, that there is any parity of benefit/burden in tax policy is simply unethical. It is unconscionable to talk of rescinding the paltry benefits low and average income workers recieved under the last cuts - especially for hypothetical benefits.
Economic ineqality is being discussed in a thread in GD:
"The death of the American Dream and the re-emergence of the caste system"
edit for spelling