Book a Demo!
CoCalc Logo Icon
StoreFeaturesDocsShareSupportNewsAboutPoliciesSign UpSign In
Download
29547 views
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Dear Readers,
10
11
12
13
Prudence is greatly
14
pleased at the confidence so many of you have shown in her by asking her
15
advice. Sadly she must, however, return to her needlework now.
16
17
18
19
In leaving, Prudence would
20
like to offer this last piece of advice:
21
22
23
24
Except
25
in a very few instances, Prudence is neither better informed nor wiser than the
26
persons who write to her. She is able to offer helpful advice only because the
27
problems described are not hers; she is not emotionally involved in them and
28
can consider them objectively. So her advice has two parts: First, when you are
29
greatly troubled with a problem you should write it down in the form of a
30
letter--which you may, if you wish, address to Prudence. The act of translating
31
the problem into written words, rather than brooding over it endlessly and
32
incoherently, will itself be helpful. It will enable you to see the problem in
33
its true dimensions. Second, you should not mail the letter but should read it
34
over to yourself and imagine what Prudence would say. You will find--not
35
always, but often--that you know the answer. As Prudence read the letters she
36
received, she often felt that the writer knew the answer but only wanted some
37
confirmation. Try it seriously for yourself.
38
39
40
41
--Prudence, fondly
42
bidding you farewell
43
44
45
46
47
Dear
48
Prudence,
49
50
51
52
53
How should I respond to a
54
(relatively) good friend who ridicules my Libertarian attitudes? Or to other
55
people who are misinformed about the Libertarian Party?
56
57
58
59
I don't bring it up, my
60
friend does. I try to change the subject, as I am tired of defending my
61
political views to him and to other people. Many people don't understand
62
Libertarian philosophies, nor do they seem to want to. And, when people do want
63
to talk about it, they erroneously link Lyndon LaRouche with the Libertarian
64
Party (he's a registered Democrat, for God's sake!) or just reject out of hand
65
the Libertarian Party's principles.
66
67
68
69
Any
70
suggestions?
71
72
73
74
--Dan the Man
75
76
77
Dear Dan
78
the Man,
79
80
This is a common problem.
81
You have no obligation to participate in a discussion that you find fruitless
82
and irritating. Your friend cannot be a very good friend if he persists on this
83
subject despite your obviously unhappy reaction. Also, you have no obligation
84
to the Libertarian Party to fight on every street corner in its defense.
85
86
You
87
should tell your friend candidly that you do not want to discuss this subject.
88
If he persists, or takes offense, you should find a more congenial friend.
89
There are people who are not members of the Libertarian Party but who are
90
open-minded about it and willing to listen, even though you may not be able to
91
convert them. If you are receptive to the ideas of other people about politics
92
and policy, you will find some people receptive to yours.
93
94
--Prudence,
95
open-mindedly
96
97
98
99
Dear
100
Prudence,
101
102
103
104
105
Is a gratuity appropriate
106
when dining at a restaurant buffet? On the one hand, since the server is not
107
taking and filling meal orders, a tip seems unnecessary. Yet on the other hand,
108
the server is not less likely to be underpaid merely because the restaurant
109
offers a buffet, and so a tip may still be expected. And if the restaurant
110
offers menus in addition to its buffet, then the diners are occupying a table
111
that might otherwise be filled by customers who order from the menu, who would
112
presumably tip normally.
113
114
115
116
If the
117
server brings drinks, should one tip based on the cost of the drinks? What if
118
the server brings only water?
119
120
121
122
--Gratuitously
123
Challenged
124
125
126
Dear
127
Gratuitously Challenged,
128
129
The pay a
130
waiter gets is adjusted by the market to the probability of getting tips. If a
131
waiter works in conditions where tips are unlikely, he will get a higher wage
132
than if he works where tips are customary, other things being equal. If you go
133
through a buffet line and there is no personal service offered to you except
134
handing dishes over a counter, you are not expected to tip. If you go through a
135
buffet line and the waiter seats you; gives you a drink, even if water; and one
136
waiter is assigned to you, you should give a tip. But the tip need not be as
137
large as it would be if you got full table service.
138
139
--Prudence, tipsily
140
141
142
143
Dear
144
Prudence,
145
146
147
148
149
Are
150
you my alter ego?
151
152
153
154
--Prudence (my real
155
name)
156
157
158
Dear
159
Prudence,
160
161
Since I
162
don't know your ego, I don't know whether I am your alter ego. Anyway, the
163
world has more Prudences than it has prudence.
164
165
--Prudence, gladly
166
167
168
169
Dear
170
Prudence,
171
172
173
174
175
You
176
probably will think this is from a Democratic nut, but it is a serious
177
question. Why does a responsible political party have a goal of reducing taxes
178
on the rich? It seems only logical that those with high incomes should pay more
179
than those with lower incomes! A concern that most rational people should have
180
is how to equitably distribute the great wealth of this country. Taxation of
181
the wealthy and assistance to the less fortunate is one simple way. Also money
182
is needed for many, many good purposes! What is the Republican Party's rebuttal
183
to this?
184
185
186
187
--Jon Parkinson
188
189
190
Dear
191
Jon,
192
193
Prudence cannot speak for the
194
Republican Party (who can?), but she can give you some thoughts on the
195
matter.
196
197
There are probably some
198
exceptions, but in general rich people do pay more taxes than poor people.
199
Generally Republicans agree that rich people should pay more taxes than poor
200
people. The issue that divides people and parties is how much more the
201
rich should pay.
202
203
If A has twice as much income
204
as B, should A pay twice as much tax, or three times as much, or four times as
205
much? That is partly a question of fairness, to which simply saying that the
206
rich should pay more provides no answer. It is also a question of economic
207
efficiency. Beyond some point, taxation of the rich probably reduces incentives
208
to save, invest, innovate, and work, to a degree that is harmful to people who
209
are not rich. But just where that point is no one seems to know.
210
211
Why do Republicans generally
212
answer these questions in the direction of lower taxes on the rich more than
213
Democrats generally do? That is one of the main reasons they are
214
Republicans.
215
216
Your
217
question also raises the issue of attitudes toward taxation in general. Since
218
Reagan's victory in 1980, many Republicans have come to believe that offering a
219
tax cut for everyone is the sure road to electoral success. That idea now seems
220
to be shared by many Democrats, although it did not seem to work in 1996.
221
222
--Prudence,
223
taxonomically
224
225
226
227
Dear
228
Prudence,
229
230
231
232
233
A few
234
years ago I dated a guy, but he moved and it was hard to keep together, so we
235
broke up. About four months later, he died in a fire. Problem is, his younger
236
brother also liked me. A few days ago I saw him for the first time since his
237
brother died, and he still likes me. I kind of like him now, too; he's grown up
238
a lot since the last time I saw him. I just don't know if it would be rude to
239
his brother's memory to date him. I'd appreciate any input.
240
241
242
243
--Needs Help in
244
Missouri
245
246
247
Dear Needs
248
Help,
249
250
You have
251
no problem. Four months would be long enough to mourn this man even if you had
252
been married to him, which you weren't. Preserving and honoring the memory of a
253
deceased loved one does not require you to give up ordinary activities. There
254
is room in the human heart for remembering the dead and living with the living.
255
If you were deeply attached to the older brother, or now think you were, you
256
will not forget him. Your present attraction to the younger brother may be a
257
sign of your appreciation of the characteristics of the older brother, many of
258
which the younger one may share.
259
260
--Prudence,
261
consolingly
262
263
264
265
266
267