http://visualizingeconomics.com/2010/02/12/how-much-taxes-are-paid-by-the-poor-middle-class-and-rich/
Did you even read the paragraph above the chart from your link?
"Here is a graph showing how the rich make more income and pay even more in taxes. While the upper middle class pay about the same percentage in taxes as the make. Finally the lower 60% pay less in taxes then their % of the nation income."
"The same percentage" does not equate to the same amount of taxes paid. That link shows that the upper 1% income bracket pays 27% of the taxes collected while the remaining 99% pay 70% of the taxes collected. Of the total taxes collected, the lower 99% of tax-payers pay 43% more
of the collected taxes than the upper 1% do. Percentage of income is a misleading factor since 10% of $1 million is a much different number than 10% of $30,000, ($100,000 vs. $3,000 ... still 10% but, wide variance in bottonline dollar amounts).
Your link doesn't even support your own argument. Classifying anyone outside the 1% as middle or lower class is just flawed logic. I don't care where you want to draw the line, but there is nothing "middle" about the top 10%.
Since I didn't classify the remaining 99% of tax-payers as "middle" but, as 'middle and lower income tax-payers', there is no flawed logic involved.
The link divides tax-payers into eight catagories; 1% at $1,558,500, 4% at $277,200, 5% at $161,100, 10% at $120,700, 20% at $85,200, 20% at $58,500, 20% at $37,400 and 20% at $15,900. A "middle income" is nominally defined as a midrange average between the lowest and hightest extremes. While exact numbers are open to debate, the link's numbers suggest that at least 59% of the tax-payers fell into the middle income range of $37,401 and $277,199. These tax-payers paid 66% of the total taxes collected. The upper 1% paid 27% of the total taxes paid, therefore, the link does support my argument despite the fact that, because they made more than 99% of other tax-payers, they got taxed more, (as a graduated percentage), than lower income people.
Let me ask you this; would you rather make $1 million and get taxed, say 33%, (or $330,000), and retain $670,000 or, make $30,000 and get taxed at 10%, ($3,000), and retain $27,000?