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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices

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To: TimF who wrote (322575)1/24/2007 7:35:28 AM
From: Lane3  Read Replies (2) of 1574318
 
Defining it your way makes it useless, and leaves a need for a word to define specific policy to take from A and give to B.

Indeed.

Any change in tax policy is a "redistribution" in the common English sense of the word in that the change from the status quo "redistributes" some previous redistribution or some previous redistribution.

But "redistributionist" as a government policy term of art doesn't use the status quo as its baseline. It uses what that taxpayer earns/accumulates as a baseline. Taxing one's earnings/accumulation and doling it out to others is redistributionist in the term-of-art sense of the word. If one substitutes the common usage of the word for the term-of-art usage, it obviates the whole notion of redistributionist policies, which is an important concept that shouldn't be lost. If you corrupt/water down the current term of art, you'd need to come up with another term of art, as you suggest. Much simpler to just respect the term-of-art in the first place. I would suggest "rejiggering" the redistribution as an alternative for changes to the status quo.
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