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Wikileaks To Name Swiss Bank Tax Evaders

eldavojohn writes "The old cliche that the rich and corrupt hold all their money in Swiss bank accounts (to avoid taxation) may finally have a bit of transparency, as the news today is that Wikileaks has been handed a list of account holders tendered by Rudolf Elmer, former banker of Julius Baer. Julian Assange promises a 'full revelation' while Elmer cited his motivation as being: 'I want to let society know how this system works. It's damaging society.' This appears to be real, as Mr. Elmer is soon to appear before a Zurich regional court on charges of coercion as well as violations of Switzerland's strict banking secrecy laws. The public may soon find out that their favorite celebrity, politician or employer doesn't feel responsible to contribute financially to the commonwealth at the expense of privacy."

783 comments

  1. Hit them back by devxo · · Score: 5, Funny

    I guess Assange didn't like that the swiss bank PostFinance closed his account.

    1. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Indeed, I question the motivations of both Assange and this Elmer guy.
      It's probably just another FUDD tactic.

    2. Re:Hit them back by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I think this is going to backfire on him. I think he believes that if he does something to help governments (allowing them to track down tax dodgers) that they may leave him alone.. I doubt it, usually national security trumps internal revenue.. but not always.

      It's also going to backfire because many of his supporters believe strongly in personal privacy (while oddly, wanting full transparency for everything else), and they will view this as WikiLeaks invading personal privacy. (it's not just the filthy rich that have "hidden" bank accounts).

    3. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      Aha. Its a scam.

      1. Have a Swiss bank confiscate your money
      2. Publish name of other customers at bank ...
      3 Profit!!

    4. Re:Hit them back by nomadic · · Score: 1, Insightful

      It's also going to backfire because many of his supporters believe strongly in personal privacy (while oddly, wanting full transparency for everything else), and they will view this as WikiLeaks invading personal privacy. (it's not just the filthy rich that have "hidden" bank accounts).

      A lot of his supporters, especially on slashdot, also probably think it's a sign of virtue to evade paying your taxes.

    5. Re:Hit them back by Pojut · · Score: 4, Insightful

      FUD tactic or now, if the information is valid and real, this still carries numerous implications with it. For example, were certain wealthy politicians who rail against taxes found to be holding considerable sums of money in non-taxed accounts...

    6. Re:Hit them back by 91degrees · · Score: 5, Insightful

      A lot of his supporters, especially on slashdot, also probably think it's a sign of virtue to evade paying your taxes.

      It's a sign of virtue for me to not pay taxes. It's disgraceful that anyone richer than me should avoid them. Other people hold similar views.

    7. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      I guess Assange didn't like that the swiss bank PostFinance closed his account.

      Actually, wikileaks has long disclosed a lot of information about Julius Baer bank, starting a few years back.

      Assange opened the PostFinance account under false pretenses, they were entitled to close it. PostFinance isn't a "normal" Swiss bank, it's owned & run by the post office.

      PostFinance isn't what you use when you're trying to evade taxation by hiding cash, you would use one of the privately owned Swiss banks.

    8. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Actually it would work better the other way. People who are voting to raise taxes hiding money in no-taxed accounts is where the story is.

      Of course people who don't like taxes are trying to avoid them...

    9. Re:Hit them back by tehcyder · · Score: 5, Insightful

      FUD tactic or now, if the information is valid and real, this still carries numerous implications with it. For example, were certain wealthy politicians who rail against taxes found to be holding considerable sums of money in non-taxed accounts...

      Wouldn't it be more damaging for politicians who supported high taxes to be holding considerable sums of money in non-taxed accounts?

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    10. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Hmm. I think it would be more hypocritical and damaging for wealthy politicians who SUPPORT taxes who have considerable sums of money in non-taxed accounts.

    11. Re:Hit them back by MrDoh! · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Either way, it's going to be hilarious.

      --
      Waiting for an amusing sig.
    12. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I see what you did there...

    13. Re:Hit them back by Monkeedude1212 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The problem is that the system is set up that only the rich can evade taxes. Factory line worker Joe Blow doesn't make enough to go put it all away in a secret swiss bank account, nor does he have enough to hire an accountant to manage some holding companies abroad, etc etc.

      Most people on Slashdot think evading taxes is immoral based on the fact that it's an exploit in the tax laws that only the rich can afford to do. If it were possible for anyone and everyone to avoid paying taxes, I don't think anyone would mind. We're all just pissed off that the rich get richer and the poor get poorer, and taxation is supposed to help balance that out.

    14. Re:Hit them back by icebraining · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Who cares about the motivations? We don't have to like Assange or Elmer to appreciate the disclosure of the info.

    15. Re:Hit them back by Pojut · · Score: 2

      Sorry, yes...I have a case of typing stupidity this morning -_-;;

    16. Re:Hit them back by mark72005 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What's the upside here?

      Some people get caught not paying taxes. The government just flushes money 5 million different ways every day.

      If you ask me, this is as close to a victimless crime as it gets.

    17. Re:Hit them back by krou · · Score: 4, Informative
      Actually, it's more interesting than that. Julius Baer, the bank Elmer worked at, is the same bank that, in 2008, tried to take down the Wikileaks domain. From here:

      Assange is now talking: he is explaining how Julius Baer, Elmer's former bank, tried to use a US court in 2008 to take down the WikiLeaks.org domain. He said it was then WikiLeaks realised that the techniques it had developed to deal with Chinese censorship would be needed for operating in western countries too.

      The bank lost their injunction on first ammendment (freedom of speech) grounds with WikiLeaks supported in the case by US campaigners and media organisations, Assange tells the conference. He compares this to what he calls the "McCarthyist" state of play today.

      Karma's a bitch ...

      --
      'If Christ had tweeted the sermon on the mount, it might have lasted until nightfall.' - John Perry Barlow
    18. Re:Hit them back by xaxa · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Other people have to pay more than their fair share in taxes to compensate.

    19. Re:Hit them back by icebraining · · Score: 1

      It's also going to backfire because many of his supporters believe strongly in personal privacy (while oddly, wanting full transparency for everything else)

      How is that odd? Seems obvious to me.

    20. Re:Hit them back by TheRaven64 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Not sure why you're a troll, this is a very common view. People poorer than me are lazy and should work harder, people richer than me should pay more taxes, and people exactly like me should pay no tax at all. You'll find people expressing more or less this view any time the public is polled about tax.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    21. Re:Hit them back by Ice+Tiger · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Turning a blind eye sure worked out for Greece didn't it.

      --
      "Because we are not employing at entry level, offshoring will kill our industry stone dead."
    22. Re:Hit them back by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      Should he also be releasing dirt from people he actually does like. There is dirt on both sides of the fence. He has his own dirt too.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    23. Re:Hit them back by cfalcon · · Score: 1

      ...then they'd be philosophically consistent with their stated beliefs?

    24. Re:Hit them back by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 4, Insightful

      someone here has a recognizable sig, to the effect of "I like paying taxes; with it I buy civilization" - or to that effect.

      or, is common roads, infrastructure and stuff like that too 'commie' for people like you?

      the fact that the gov mismanages our funds has nothing to do with the fact that the funds are NEEDED to 'run society'.

      you think roads and stuff come from nothing but sunshine and the love of jesus? we BUY those with our taxes, at least that was the initial idea.

      when you deny paying at least a reasonable amount of your fair share, you cheat us all. quite disgusting, really. yes, it should be punishable - at least in the court of public opinion.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    25. Re:Hit them back by Monkeedude1212 · · Score: 1

      Think of how much money we could flush on NASA if rich people weren't evading their taxes.

      Wait... That didn't sound right...

    26. Re:Hit them back by AvitarX · · Score: 2

      Perhaps.

      I don't see any credible evidence that an attempt will be made to balance the budget in my lifetime, so it's either unborn paying more than their fair share, or bankruptcy, in which no one pays their fair share..

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    27. Re:Hit them back by Bert64 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      A reasonable amount is one thing...

      A disproportionate amount while the filthy rich pay virtually nothing?
      Or paying for the government to simply WASTE that money instead of building roads or other useful things?
      Or even worse, paying so that certain people within the government can embezzle the money...

      How much of what you pay in tax actually goes on things that benefit the taxpayers like roads, and how much gets wasted or used on things which are detrimental to the tax payers?

      Or more importantly, how much lower could the taxes be if waste/inefficiency was eliminated, and those who avoid taxes were made to pay?

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    28. Re:Hit them back by Unordained · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If you ask me, this is as close to a victimless crime as it gets.

      No. Tax-payers are supposed to pay taxes to the collective pool of money called the government, to fund the services that we collectively receive. These people don't contribute, but do receive. We are all victims, which is why the government goes after tax-evaders on our collective behalf. No only do we lose the money these people should have paid, and the rest of us (nominally) have to make up, but they add to the overall system waste by forcing us to pay investigators, prosecutors, judges, etc. to hunt down and collect on tax-evaders.

      There are plenty of real victimless crimes out there, and they need rectifying. I'll thank you not to make that fight harder by applying the same label to clearly victimful crimes.

    29. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most people on Slashdot think evading taxes is immoral based on the fact that it's an exploit in the tax laws that only the rich can afford to do. If it were possible for anyone and everyone to avoid paying taxes, I don't think anyone would mind. We're all just pissed off that the rich get richer and the poor get poorer, and taxation is supposed to help balance that out.

      I say that everyone should pay taxes. If I could cheat my way out of paying them, I wouldn't. In fact, I would gladly pay more than I do now, PROVIDED they went towards the common good, rather than to benefit some buddies of (pick your favorite politician). Examples include: college education for all who are able and willing and universal health-care.

    30. Re:Hit them back by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      Only if they believed it was right to ignore laws you don't agree with.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    31. Re:Hit them back by somersault · · Score: 1

      Oh "really"?

      "Why" do you "cower"? What are "you" "afraid" of?

      --
      which is totally what she said
    32. Re:Hit them back by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      I'd pay more taxes if they would cap spending and start paying the debt.

      We under pay by about 30% as it is, I want to see the budget balanced, then we can talk about more services.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    33. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      While I agree with you, you know these people probably still pay far more taxes than I do and are certainly covering their services. These people have to subsidize the 50% of the population that legally doesn't pay taxes. Heck, I doubt my taxes cover all the services I receive and I am in the top 20% of income earners. Of course this depends on how I factor defense spending as a service.

      We have way too much of our tax burden assigned to the wealthy.

    34. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It is actually a misconception that it costs tons of money to open these accounts. Sure it affects the "rich" less to open these accounts, however an anonymous offshore account maybe opened with as little as $10,000 USD - that includes the fees and initial deposit. Sure, one of the "poorer" types could find a better use for the $10k, but that isn't the point. The point is that it isn't as expensive as you might imagine.

      Now, if you want to set up a laundering scheme, that's a little more pricey :)

    35. Re:Hit them back by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

      I agree with the sentiment but in the implementation, if one considers Elmer to be suceptible to lying and Assange to be a poor facts-checker, one could doubt of the released informations.

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    36. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You seem to be using evasion and avoidance interchangeably, those words have specific meanings when it comes to taxes; basically Evasion is doing illegal things to pay less, and Avoidance is doing legal things to pay less.

    37. Re:Hit them back by SomeKDEUser · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Surprisingly, not much lower. You hear a lot about waste/inefficiency, but although you can find any number of egregious examples of misapropriation, they amount to a small fraction of the total.

      You could even argue that asking for low salaries for civil servants/contracting to the lowest bidder does a lot more to make the process inefficient than actual waste. For example, if working for the agencies controlling the markets paid much better than working in those markets, do you think we would have the problems we have now? Would it not be better to have the greedy bastards working for us rather than against us?

      Also, what is "waste"? is funding fundamental science waste? is funding liberal arts waste? are the likes of the FDA waste? is paying for some dubious piece of art in your own town waste? is paying people to check for fraud waste, or is the fraud the largest cause of waste?

    38. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BUt progressive taxation means the rich have higher tax bills, proportional to their income. A fair tax system would have everyone paying the same proportion, regardless of total.

      As it is, low income workers don't pay much tax anyway, so there is no reason for them to evade taxes.

    39. Re:Hit them back by Dunbal · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There's a big difference between tax evasion and tax avoidance. Tax evasion is "I am not going to pay the taxes I owe". Tax avoidance is "I'm not going to pay a penny more than I have to".

      If a government, which has its fingers in every single revenue stream from sales and value added taxes, to income, to taxes for the business that make the products we buy, to death taxes, to estate taxes, to poperty taxes - is BANKRUPT, well fuck em. Put your own house in order before you come writing laws trying to steal my money.

      But as it is, it doesn't have to make new laws. All it has to do is keep printing money. Inflation will 1) destroy everyone's savings and 2) force everyone into higher tax brackets. It's magic. But we'll call it "quantitative easing".

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    40. Re:Hit them back by Monkeedude1212 · · Score: 0

      I can only assume you are talking about Dilios from 300. But yes, you are right. Turning the blind one away to tell the rest of Greece about the battle of thermopylae sure did work out great for them. Was that a great documentary or what?

    41. Re:Hit them back by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      Unless of course you have banks accounts in Switzerland and are waiting to find out WHICH bank has had its database compromised... especially when you've done nothing illegal :(

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    42. Re:Hit them back by xaxa · · Score: 2

      Here's a recent example. For some dodgy reason Vodafone had their tax bill reduced by £6billion, which happens to be the amount local government spending was cut by.

      (Obviously the two aren't directly related, but it made a good headline.)

    43. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Wouldn't it be more damaging for politicians who supported high taxes to be holding considerable sums of money in non-taxed accounts?

      What, like when U2 moved out of Ireland to the Netherlands to avoid paying tax?

      Bonus hypocrisy points to Bono for saying that we all need to pay more in tax to help the developing world...

    44. Re:Hit them back by mark72005 · · Score: 2

      THIS IS BERN!!!!

    45. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      We're all just pissed off that the rich get richer and the poor get poorer, and taxation is supposed to help balance that out.

      Wrong. Dead wrong. Taxation is supposed to provide money for the government to fulfill its role in society. That role is the protection of the fundamental rights of the citizens. Those rights are the right to life, liberty, and property. If the government is involved in anything other than the protection of those rights they are simply stealing tax money for their own ends. Taxation is _NOT_ supposed to balance out the wealth.

    46. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was thinking the same when I heard the news. Thanks to have written it, that's a good one .

    47. Re:Hit them back by imunfair · · Score: 2

      Supporting personal privacy, yet wanting government to be transparent is not a dichotomy - especially when government officials end up taking away personal privacy to protect or increase their power.

      A minimal government that doesn't play puppet master with world politics, try to protect citizens against themselves, and doesn't spend on pork projects is a government without need for much privacy. The reason governments hide most things isn't to protect the country - it's to protect the duplicitous government officials from the watchful eye of the citizens.

    48. Re:Hit them back by Whiternoise · · Score: 1

      In some countries, like my own sunny Britain, those taxes pay for your healthcare. They also, largely, keep the streets free of crime, citizens educated and generally stops the nation from grinding to a halt. Although people often complain about rich people, it's those rich people who prop up the poor. Anyone who doesn't pay tax should take a long hard think about what that means. And I mean tax evaders, rather than tax avoiders which is perfectly reasonable.

      The world over, you get what you pay for. Some countries have higher taxes, but you pay for less public services (cf. Scandinavia) and some have lower taxes, but you pay for a lot more (cf. America). It evens out and in both cases, you actually pay the same - the difference is who you pay.

      Public services in Western countries are usually the biggest items on a nation's budget, often much higher than the usually lauded defence budgets.

      Essentially, if you don't pay tax, don't expect the police to come when someone decides to burgle your home, don't expect the fire brigade to come when your poolhouse burns down and don't expect to drive on a single smooth road, the list goes on.

    49. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      usually national security trumps internal revenue.

      That's a laugh! Are you kidding? Do you have any idea how governments work and how people in government think? Taxes and tax collection are THE MOST IMPORTANT THING!

    50. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We're all just pissed off that the rich get richer and the poor get poorer, and taxation is supposed to help balance that out.

      Taxation is a form of theft. If you want money then earn it. The world does not owe you a living.

    51. Re:Hit them back by Unordained · · Score: 0

      I think the standard reply is that we in the lower classes (lower than max()) don't realize the services the upper classes get. Would we need such a large military if we were all poor? Who would care about invading? Do those with large investments, having more to lose, therefore benefit more from increased protection? Do those who hold patents (which I'll assume correlates with having the higher income to justify/allow purchasing the patents) benefit more than the rest of us from having a patent office, diplomatic/secretive efforts to extend the patent system worldwide, and then enforce those patents? Do the upper classes benefit more than the rest of us from free-trade deals, etc.?

      Now we can move on to at least the following usual replies:
      a) we're a land of opportunity, and we all get the same (legal) access, so we should be flat-taxed (dollar amount, even, not percentage)
      b) our government spends tons on a few large issues -- military and social security; the rich don't get significantly enhanced social security benefits.

      (Honestly, I don't know that it's fair to tax the rich more. But they can afford it. It hasn't discouraged people from trying to get rich yet, no matter what the conservatives claim.)

    52. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We're all just pissed off that the rich get richer and the poor get poorer, and taxation is supposed to help balance that out.

      I complete disagree that that's what taxation is supposed to do. I believe in taxes to pay for stuff for the common good, not for the sake of robbing the rich to give to the poor.

    53. Re:Hit them back by Beezlebub33 · · Score: 2, Informative

      While I agree with you, you know these people probably still pay far more taxes than I do and are certainly covering their services. These people have to subsidize the 50% of the population that legally doesn't pay taxes.

      Your numbers are off, for two reasons: 1. Not paying income tax is not the same as not paying taxes, SS, Medicare, Medicade still apply. 2. Your number is too high even for income taxes Here are some real numbers: http://www.factcheck.org/askfactcheck/do_40_percent_of_americans_pay_no.html I welcome your updated numbers if you can find them.

      Heck, I doubt my taxes cover all the services I receive and I am in the top 20% of income earners. Of course this depends on how I factor defense spending as a service.

      We have way too much of our tax burden assigned to the wealthy.

      We have way too little of our tax burden assigned to the wealthy. As a percentage of income, they are paying historically low rates. See the wikipedia page on income tax, look for the tax rates section: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Income_tax_in_the_United_States. I'd be all for returning us to the rates of Reagan year of 1986. How does that sound? Combine the low rates with the huge shift of income to the highest percentage earners, and we have a tax code that is systematically letting the rich steal from the middle class.

      --
      The more people I meet, the better I like my dog.
    54. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      when you deny paying at least a reasonable amount of your fair share

      Pray, tell, what's a fair share?

      Please answer that with a straight face. I'd love to see the numbers, and more importantly, the math behind them.

      This nonsense of, "LOL ROADZ" is complete and utter crap while my government is blowing through billions fucking about and playing toy soldier in third world countries for absolutely no valid reason.

    55. Re:Hit them back by tokul · · Score: 1

      Who cares about the motivations? We don't have to like Assange or Elmer to appreciate the disclosure of the info.

      RICO act was registered in US for some good reasons. The fact that wikileaks guy has some classified info should not make him untouchable.

    56. Re:Hit them back by MoonBuggy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The one thing I haven't seen questioned about Wikileaks is the validity of the information. Sure, the accusations fly about bias, whether their goals are morally defensible, whether Assange's alleged sexual proclivities will damage their reputation, and so forth, but even the organisations affected seem to begrudgingly accept that the information is accurate - I'm expecting this release to be similar.

      Interestingly, it might even help to quell complaints about an anti-US bias. I've heard a lot of criticism about how they don't dare to say a word against powerful Russian billionaires - it seems that releasing Swiss bank data may well change that.

    57. Re:Hit them back by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 2

      It's also not worth it for factory worker Joe Blow to spend $3,000 a year setting up a and maintaining a trust that provides tax free income which Joe and his children would have to pay.

      In some cases, they are even a total sham. I set up a trust and give it to Jill to run for me. Jill sets up a trust and gives it to Sam to run for her. Sam sets up a trust and gives it to me to run for him.

      No way to prove collusion but we basically all get $3000 a year to run each other's trusts... plus tax free status as investment advisers.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    58. Re:Hit them back by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 1

      If it were possible for anyone and everyone to avoid paying taxes, I don't think anyone would mind.

      Actually, if it were possible for everyone, the powers-that-be would close or change the tax loopholes. The rich and powerful cannot be so without poorer/weaker people to support them.

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    59. Re:Hit them back by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      It's also going to backfire because many of his supporters believe strongly in personal privacy (while oddly, wanting full transparency for everything else), and they will view this as WikiLeaks invading personal privacy. (it's not just the filthy rich that have "hidden" bank accounts).

      Personal privacy can never be justified as a shield for illegal acts.
      You may want to rethink the argument you're trying to make.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    60. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Waste would be doing things like buying a bunch of equipment due to one mandate, then making it unusable due to security concerns coming from another mandate so it now just sits there not being used ever. People are talking about bureaucratic inefficiency, moreso than where the government has chosen to send the money. I have no idea how pervasive this type of thing is but I can tell you that at the facility I work at its pretty bad.

    61. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From Time Keeps Slipping

      Boy: Stupid senior citizens. Why should we have to pay for their Social Security benefits?
      [Time skip; boy becomes senior citizen]
      Senior Citizen: I deserve free money!

    62. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And think about the people that will DIE because of this!

      It should be kept secret, now we are going to be attacked by terrorists!

      Using the same bullshit statements used by uneducated idiots used on the last round of WikiLeaks releases...

    63. Re:Hit them back by paulzeye · · Score: 2

      Roads are a really poor example for the point you are trying to make. Roads should be paid for by gas taxes, tolls and maybe property taxes for local town roads. I'm not sure how hiding your money in a swiss accounts gets you out of paying for roads.

    64. Re:Hit them back by dave420 · · Score: 2

      Taxation is a form of theft in exactly the same way as paying for goods is.

    65. Re:Hit them back by countertrolling · · Score: 2

      Yeah, and prices are high because of shoplifting. Skimming is a time honored tradition. If the pipe is that leaky, we just put in a bigger pump. No, it doesn't add up. I don't believe that collection shortfalls even compare to the outright theft inside the system. They're stealing money that won't be printed for ten years.

      --
      For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
    66. Re:Hit them back by anegg · · Score: 1

      If NASA wasn't so administratively inept, spending more money on NASA might make sense. As it is, there is a significant amount of outright stupidity going on outside of the science organizations (in NASA) that makes giving the organization more money rather a waste.

    67. Re:Hit them back by brainboyz · · Score: 1

      Underpay by 30%?! I don't know about you, but I don't like the idea of giving the government 2/3rds of my paycheck.

    68. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dont hide your damn money overseas then. The only reason people send money to a bank in Switzerland is to hide it. Why are you hiding it, and who are you hiding it from?

      Im sick and tired of hearing rich people bitch about taxes, when they are hiding their damn money to begin with.
      I hope these revelations lead to arrests and prosecutions for tax evasion.
      This is something I will enjoy watching.

    69. Re:Hit them back by adonoman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And I'm of above average intellegence, I'm in the top 20% of drivers, my parenting technique is clearly the best (and any issues my kids have is due to the schools screwing them up), and my religion is the correct one. If I had been given the same opportunities as Joe CEO, I'd be at least as wealthy, and do a better job running his company. If I had been subjected to the same difficulties as Sam HomeLessGuy, I would have "pulled myself up by the bootstraps" and got myself a real job. Given the opportunity my pet economic policy would simultaneously eliminate inflation, and guarantee ever-increasing profits for everyone (as well a unicorn and a fairy for every household).

      Polls basically just say that we all just selfish ego-centric bastards.

    70. Re:Hit them back by Luckyo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Assange isn't a fact-checker. He's a middle man that passes facts from ones disclosing to ones fact-checking.

      Fact checkers include big name newspapers like NYT. Assange's merits lie in setting up the system and agreeing to take the heat.

    71. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WE care about the motivations. That's half of the story, for christ's sake.

    72. Re:Hit them back by Stradivarius · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      A disproportionate amount while the filthy rich pay virtually nothing?

      In some countries that may be true.

      But in the US, the "rich" - to be specific, let's say the top 1% - earned 25% of the wealth and paid 38% of the income taxes. That doesn't sound like "virtually nothing".

      Or more importantly, how much lower could the taxes be if waste/inefficiency was eliminated,

      Probably a lot. The problem is that government bureaucracies have no competition. No accountability for poor performance means most governments (like other monopolies) perform poorly.

    73. Re:Hit them back by Boronx · · Score: 1

      If the government can't tax the fiat currency it creates, it'll probably become worthless and the government therefore powerless.

    74. Re:Hit them back by NoSig · · Score: 1

      Yep, like the Wikileaks donors list that was leaked to Wikileaks even though it was supposed to be secret. Wikileaks published it.

    75. Re:Hit them back by Monkeedude1212 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      How many of these people do you think have $10,000 USD sitting around?

      There are lots of people who live paycheck to paycheck, perhaps more than you realize. And it's not that they don't know how to save money, its that they are stuck working dead end jobs like Gas Station attendants or WalMart greeters, and about 80% of their income goes towards living expenses like rent, food, utilities, phone bills, etc. The rest is spent on the 1 dinner and a movie a month to keep their sanity, and then birthday and Christmas presents when they come around.

      For some people, saving up 10 thousand dollars would quite literally mean giving up everything you enjoy in life for over 2 years.

    76. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are missing the entire point of taxes. Taxes are supposed to (help) balance the economic equation. Taxes are supposed to (help) keep the relative distribution of wealth stable across the long term. Of course, it is not working (source.) The problem is that we tax income, not wealth. Look at Warren Buffet. He personally earns relatively little traditional income, but his general assets grow at a significant rate. His assets are not taxed very much (unless he sells them, then he will pay 15% as capitol gains). So the longer he keeps his assets, the wealthier he becomes relative to anyone whose wealth is primarily determined by their income (the lower 80% of Americans). Even if he sells his assets, he will pay a lower tax rate than most middle class Americans pay.

      Currently, the top 5% of Americans own 58.9% of the wealth (versus ~55% in 1983). And the top 20% own 84.7% (versus ~81% in 1983). If we follow these trends into the future, eventually the top 1% or so will own 99% of the wealth. It is not a sustainable system, we either deal with it now, or sometime in the future when the entire system collapses.

    77. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      With a name like Elmer, how could it not be FUDd?

    78. Re:Hit them back by CRCulver · · Score: 1

      Hey, the late 18th century called. They want their outdated Lockean political ideas back.

    79. Re:Hit them back by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      You seem to think that merely having a swiss bank account is illegal. It's not.

      If you're using the account to hide from the paying taxes, then I agree. But some people have them for other reasons. For instance, some people want their money in a place that, if the us banking system collapses (again) they can still get at it. Others might want to hide money from their spouse who might otherwise try and spend it.

      Any way you slice it, releasing peoples account information is invasion of privacy. And you can't know someones reasons for having an account to justify it as "exposing criminals".

    80. Re:Hit them back by judoguy · · Score: 1

      The problem is the definition of ..."common roads, infrastructure and stuff like that..." When that includes every thing possible, yeah that's too commie for me. Morons frame the argument as "If we don't have a totalitarian state, we'll all die in some Mad Max nightmare". How about a limited amount of government that doesn't attempt to control all aspects of your life? Some government is good, too much is very, very bad.

      --
      Peace is easy to achieve, just surrender. Liberty is much harder get/keep.
    81. Re:Hit them back by raddan · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I sort of wonder if this is an olive branch from Wikileaks to the US government. After all, the United States has been pressuring Switzerland to allow investigators to peek inside Swiss accounts for awhile now. You may recall that the US offered amnesty to tax evaders using Swiss accounts who 'fessed-up a couple years ago. This provides some incentive to the US government to ease up a bit on Wikileaks.

    82. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the rich get richer and the poor get poorer, and taxation is supposed to help balance that out.

      No it isn't. It supposed to be a fair way to raise the funds to provide the things required for a civilised society. Taxation has never been about redistribution of wealth. You want to redistribute the wealth you have to seize land and property and have collectives. And we've seen how well that works out.

    83. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Trust me, this is not going to backfire to anyone. Perhaps it would in the US, but in Europe filthy rich tax evaders are just considered assholes by everyone but a very small clique of filthy rich tax evaders.

    84. Re:Hit them back by AchilleTalon · · Score: 1

      Most people on Slashdot think evading taxes is immoral based on the fact that it's an exploit in the tax laws that only the rich can afford to do. If it were possible for anyone and everyone to avoid paying taxes, I don't think anyone would mind. We're all just pissed off that the rich get richer and the poor get poorer, and taxation is supposed to help balance that out.

      If everyone could avoid paying taxes, everyone would mind since there will be no money available for the common wealth. That is the downside about not living alone on an island.

      --
      Achille Talon
      Hop!
    85. Re:Hit them back by countertrolling · · Score: 1

      ...while oddly, wanting full transparency for everything else...

      What should be said, in case it's not, is that authority and transparency must come as a complete set. The more authority you desire, the more transparent and open about your intentions and cations you must be. If you want to make the rules, we need to assure that you abide by them. Duh!

      --
      For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
    86. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not a victimless crime. When my street gets the snow plowed off, it happens in part because of my taxes. If Joe Rich down the street doesn't pay his taxes, the snow still falls, the road still needs to be plowed, and that costs money. Who pays? I do, and everyone else, while Joe gets a free ride every time he pulls out of his driveway on a snowy day. In other words, the victim is everybody else who does pay taxes. I'll be 10x as angry at Joe for not paying his taxes as I would be at the government for not spending that money efficiently.

      Show me a better deal -- another way to pay for obvious shared services without having an ample percentage wasted on a nickel-and-dime collection user-pay process and on profits -- and I'd consider moving to such a jurisdiction and redirecting my money there. I know of no example that I'd want to move to.

      The solution to a government that squanders tax money is to replace the government with one that doesn't. And that's *our* responsibility as citizens in a democracy. Illegally withholding taxes is a surefire way to eventually get to the point that I'd have to shovel the street myself, and badger all my neighbors to do their individual part too -- i.e. sooner or later we'd realize the cheapest and easiest way to get the job done consistently would be to (duh) pool our money collectively and hire someone to do it.

      Apply to things other than snow clearing and you have a system that might benefit from coordination of all sorts of services. Not everything is suitable, of course, but there's a balance somewhere.

    87. Re:Hit them back by BlackHorse · · Score: 1

      If I had mod points, this would be a +5 Insightful. Actually, I'd hack the system and make it a +10.

    88. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder how many JEWS will be named...

      Watch 'Money as Debt' and 'Money as De

    89. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you know for a fact that he has dirt on people he likes? Because, you know, he doesn't come up with the information he publishes, he waits for people to give it to him. So unless he has info he's not publishing, your comment is of no relevance.

    90. Re:Hit them back by Monkeedude1212 · · Score: 1

      Taxation is _NOT_ supposed to balance out the wealth.

      It has been ever since you were taxed on percentage of income instead of a flat rate. If you don't like it like that, why not write a letter to your representative.

      Don't shoot me, I'm just the messenger.

    91. Re:Hit them back by judoguy · · Score: 1

      someone here has a recognizable sig, to the effect of "I like paying taxes; with it I buy corrupt government."

      There, fixed it for you.

      --
      Peace is easy to achieve, just surrender. Liberty is much harder get/keep.
    92. Re:Hit them back by fredjh · · Score: 2

      Well, I don't agree entirely with your post, but I think there is some merit.

      It's a good case in favor of consumption taxes instead of income taxes, and legislation requiring taxes collected in one area can ONLY be used in that area.

      Yes, I like roads - roads should be paid for solely through gasoline and vehicle registration taxes, and those tax revenues should not be allowed to be used on anything but transportation infrastructure. After all, the more you use the road (and the larger the vehicle), the more you pay in taxes. How would that not be "fair?" I realize this may need adjustment for the advent of electric vehicles, but the premise is still sound.

      Yes, I like having police and fire protection... property taxes should entirely pay for both; after all, the more you have to protect, and the more valuable it is, the more you pay for the protection - much like homeowners insurance.

      And again "yes," everybody would pay these taxes, no exemptions (because that where you get people braking the rules). If mail and package delivery costs more, so be it - it costs what it costs. By utilizing delivery services you are indirectly using the roads and therefore indirectly paying for it. That's how it should be.

      --
      Stupid, sexy Flanders.
    93. Re:Hit them back by Schadrach · · Score: 1, Insightful

      ...oddly enough, diminishing our military presence somewhat would dramatically reduce our deficit, and probably improve relations with more than a few foreign powers.

      As someone pointed out in a previous story, the GoP was pushing a "you suggest the cuts" to basic science research from the federal government, but ignoring that having one fewer aircraft carrier would save enough money to completely fund it and have some extra left over.

      Note: There is a difference between "scaling back our military somewhat" and "disbanding the military."

    94. Re:Hit them back by Knightmare+1 · · Score: 1

      Please explain. When I pay for a good, I do it voluntarily because that good is worth more to me than the money I give in exchange. The only reason I pay taxes is that I don't want to go to jail. How is it the same, or even similar?

    95. Re:Hit them back by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      The problem is that the system is set up that only the rich can evade taxes. Factory line worker Joe Blow doesn't make enough to go put it all away in a secret swiss bank account, nor does he have enough to hire an accountant to manage some holding companies abroad, etc etc.

      Most people on Slashdot think evading taxes is immoral based on the fact that it's an exploit in the tax laws that only the rich can afford to do. If it were possible for anyone and everyone to avoid paying taxes, I don't think anyone would mind. We're all just pissed off that the rich get richer and the poor get poorer, and taxation is supposed to help balance that out.

      Most people, slashdot or otherwise, think that evading taxes is immoral based on you are not paying something you actually owe -- that is why tax evasion is a crime. Avoiding taxes, it alright by most people, because nobody is morally or ethically required to pay more taxes than they legally owe.

      While it is true that the wealthy have more opportunity to avoid paying taxes, than the poor due, the actual avoidance is not the issue. In those cases, the discussion usually turns to what is a fair policy on taxes (rich vs poor). When it comes to actual tax evasion, then there tends to be no sympathy by the rich or the poor.

      Most people, at least in the United States, are not really upset about paying taxes. They understand that taxes to pay for government is a necessary evil. Most people, again, in the United States, get upset by either a) how the tax money is spent or b) the perceived fairness or lack of fairness in the tax code. The spending issue is not really a taxation issue, as the government has demonstrated that it can borrow all it wants to spend (of course that creates other consequences that must be dealt with).

      The fairness issue, really revolves around the notion that people should just have to pay their fair share. And that's were the problem arises. Almost everybody agrees with that statement. However, when it comes to determining what exactly one's fair share is and how do we measure it, then we get into problems. Why, because one's fair share is not an objective thing, but is subjective as it involves one's values.

      But, back to the original point. Tax evasion is morally and legally wrong. Tax avoidance on the other hand is quite alright.

    96. Re:Hit them back by Unordained · · Score: 1

      Isn't that just cyclical? We've always had kings and aristocrats. And then we've had uprisings where the king's land gets redistributed by force. And then everyone wants a chance at being individually wealthy, and it starts over. We're probably just nearing the end of a cycle, as the problem gets magnified (again.)

      This does bring in the question of the 'death tax' -- whether your children should be able to so fully enjoy the money you earned during your lifetime, and that was (ostensibly) designed by society as a reward for useful work. Should those who haven't directly earned be able to enjoy? Should the individual be able to get infinitely wealthy, with the caveat that at death, the money's redistributed rather than passed on?

    97. Re:Hit them back by tophermeyer · · Score: 3, Informative

      Do you realize how retarded it makes you look to use multiple accounts to rail against people for hiding behind pseudonymity?

      You understand that nobody takes you seriously, right?

    98. Re:Hit them back by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      I don't know what country you are in, but in the United States, there is no combination of state and federal taxes along with FICA/Medicare that would get you anywhere close to 2/3rds of your paycheck.

    99. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "is common roads, infrastructure and stuff like that too 'commie' for people like you?"

      I think that reality is a little different from your perception. Go to Japan some time and notice that (Oh my GOD!), there is such a thing as a private road on which people pay to drive. The idea that infrastructure capital wouldn't exist without government is part of a perverse indoctrination of our youth.

      Whether or not government involvement in infrastructure capitalization is good is another point entirely; but please, don't pretend that we would all be sitting around campfires comparing the size of our catch for the day if government wasn't around to force us to be civilized. We are a little better than that.

    100. Re:Hit them back by Knightmare+1 · · Score: 2

      Also, what is "waste"? is funding fundamental science waste? is funding liberal arts waste? are the likes of the FDA waste? is paying for some dubious piece of art in your own town waste? is paying people to check for fraud waste, or is the fraud the largest cause of waste?

      In the marketplace, we can all decide individually what we consider waste and what we don't. Nobody can decide for us. That is called freedom (also capitalism).

    101. Re:Hit them back by Schadrach · · Score: 1

      It won't lead to arrrests and prosecutions, because this is a crime predominately for wealthy and connected people.

    102. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thought I was reading Ayn Rand for a second there.

    103. Re:Hit them back by Farmer+Tim · · Score: 1

      Would it not be better to have the greedy bastards working for us rather than against us?

      As fertilizer, definitely.

      --
      Blank until /. makes another boneheaded UI decision.
    104. Re:Hit them back by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      And I'm sick and tired of hearing about poor people bitching about taxes, since they don't pay any.

      Why are you hiding it, and who are you hiding it from?

      Because it's none of your damned business. I don't give a shit how much money you have, why should you give a shit about me?

      If you dangle large amounts of money in front of people eventually someone somewhere will figure out a way to take it. Even if it means changing, or sometimes breaking, the law to do it. "Hiding" your money when you haven't done anything wrong makes as much sense as not walking down the street downtown with a roll of 100 dollar bills in your hand. No one needs to know how much I have, and that includes governments.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    105. Re:Hit them back by khallow · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Surprisingly, not much lower.

      Right. It's not just how government spends money.

      Let's start with the on topic portion first. I've seen it claimed that the convolutions and writhing that the rich go through to minimize or even illegally evade taxes saps about 1% in absolute value from the US GDP. My impression is that a raw 2% increase in growth separates current levels of growth from the best decade to decade growth, the US has ever had. So a considerable portion of that, perhaps as much as half, can be obtained merely by vastly simplifying the tax codes.

      A lot of mileage can be gained by targeting spending that changes peoples' behavior in adverse ways, such as subsidized educational loans and financial assistance, and mandated employer health insurance. Sure, it's nice to have better educated people and the security of health insurance, but these expenses increase faster than GDP (much less inflation) and are unsustainable in the long run. In the meantime, people are encouraged to go to college right after high school graduation even when they shouldn't (too immature, unready, and/or would be better off getting a job right now) and to the detriment of jobs that don't require college degrees, but still require significant training.

      The main problem with health care is that it is open-ended. You can always consume vastly more tests, longer hospital stays, ever more expensive equipment, etc. And this health care is funded mostly by open-ended health insurance (which is practically only limited by co-payments paid by the insuree) and government based health care (Medicare/Medicaid, veteran health care, government health benefits, etc). It's not helpful that government at the federal and state levels also limits supply of health care (professional licensing, regulation on who can do what, and the opening of new health care facilities) and opens health care providers to remarkable malpractice liability. End result is that patients consume too much and too expensive health care directly and indirectly (through malpractice and employer/government paid health benefits).

      Then there are subsidies which actively harm US interests. A couple of key examples are farm subsidies and "cost plus" contracts (a popular feature of defense R&D and related spending, where the contractor is paid a base amount plus an additional amount based on "costs" to a fixed cap).

      There's an emphasis on infrastructure building at the expense of infrastructure maintenance. For example, high speed train projects can obtain considerable funds in order to build the rail and buy the trains. But there's no money to support projects which notoriously aren't covered by ridership revenue. These projects are also a great vehicle for corruption. Those in the know can buy land near the rail projects ahead of time and reap the profits. The best part is that this sort of corruption doesn't show in the bottom line for government spending.

      Speaking of wealth redistribution projects, a really big and nonsensical one is the movement of wealth via Social Security from the young to the elderly. So why does a retiree need wealth more than a young person trying to get educated, raise a family, and enter the workforce? It doesn't make sense from a societal point of view. If you want to take care of the elderly, there are cheaper and more effective ways to do it (such as welfare for poor or sick elderly, for example). As it stands, the US makes all workers about 15% more expensive. That's a big jump and about 10% logarithmically of the difference between a US worker and a Chinese worker, for example. Social Security also results in vast liabilities that can't be honored (it's yet another program where the current promised costs increase faster than GDP does).

      For example, if working for the agencies controlling the markets paid much better than working in those markets, do you think we would have the problems we have now? Would it not be better to have

    106. Re:Hit them back by peragrin · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Nope the list only contains European and US names. It was in another article. Remember Julian has a file on riveter Murdoch but he won't release it as he is using it as a poison pill. Julian is withholding information for personal gain. How do we know Julian isn't lying and Murdoch paid him off? Where is Juliana bank statements.

      Also how would you like it if tour bank teller released your bank statements to the public? Forget the tax evasion as nothing will be done about that, as you can't prove where/when that money became income. But your personal bank statements.

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    107. Re:Hit them back by SimplyGeek · · Score: 2

      The concept of asset protection is lost on 99% of people I talk to. They always think if you're hiding something, you've clearly done something wrong. The /. crowd should be above that, but sadly, many forget that principle.

    108. Re:Hit them back by TimSSG · · Score: 0

      Funding the arts is the worst waste. I really do NOT want the government deciding what is good art. Tim S.

    109. Re:Hit them back by echucker · · Score: 1

      Am not!

    110. Re:Hit them back by Monkeedude1212 · · Score: 2

      The only difference between the two is that one is considered illegal!

      In most cases with the upper class, "Tax avoision" is basing your company in another country so that you don't have to pay the taxes associated with operating in the country you do your business in. Doesn't that seem a bit sleezy to you? That the only difference between paying a few thousand dollars and no money at all is by having putting a receptionist in Jamaica?

      It's basically using the services the government provides you without actually paying into it.

    111. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's because you never lived in a place where tax money is repaid to you in droves. Places with wonderful infrastructure, free health care for *all* your ails, free education for *everyone*, unemployment and underemployment benefits that make sure everyone can make a decent living, and the ability for your government to take a good chunk of its profit and help those outside your country and still stay out of debt.

    112. Re:Hit them back by causality · · Score: 1

      Do you realize how retarded it makes you look to use multiple accounts to rail against people for hiding behind pseudonymity?

      You understand that nobody takes you seriously, right?

      What he fails to recognize is the hypocrisy of a) claiming to give out your true name and address because you're "not cowering" and b) creating many accounts to (unsuccessfully) hide from bad karma and a starting post score of -1.

      As the saying goes, there are none so blind as those who refuse to see. I guess now that the user "twitter" with all his sockpuppet accounts is no longer active, someone else thought they needed to fill the void. At least "twitter" made some attempt to pretend that they were not sockpuppet accounts.

      --
      It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
    113. Re:Hit them back by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      "I like paying taxes; with it I buy civilization"

      I'd rather use that money to buy Civilization V.

    114. Re:Hit them back by SomeKDEUser · · Score: 1

      Yes. But that would not be considered humane -- would you eat the resulting crops?

    115. Re:Hit them back by SomeKDEUser · · Score: 1

      Why? what is wrong with voting? we all use/need the collective services in the same way. We should vote for them/the guys responsible for their setup.

      Unless you think that some of us are worth more than you, on the grounds that we are richer?

      If it makes you happy, think of voting as a market operation. But remember: it is not freedom to individually decide on a globally suboptimal solution that we then all need to collectively live with. It is stupidity.

      And BTW, yes, people can decide for you. They do, all the time: doctors decide what you have, engineers decide on your car's design, coders on how your programs are made, cell phones companies on their pricing schemes, the shop owner on the products that are on his shelves, the traffic authority the circulation plan of your neighbourhood, other countries the rules for access to their territories, the central banks decide on the value of your bank account, designers decide on the look of your garments.

      Market freedom is an illusion. Markets are just a distribution mechanism, which works well in many cases, and terribly in others.

    116. Re:Hit them back by Stradivarius · · Score: 1

      Surprisingly, not much lower. You hear a lot about waste/inefficiency, but although you can find any number of egregious examples of misapropriation, they amount to a small fraction of the total.

      Outright fraudlent spending is pretty small. But what's harder to quantify is how much we're spending because the government "business practices" are still archaic. Normal businesses expect that each year, they need to find ways to trim their expenses to do the same work. Government bureaucracies expect to get a percentage increase each year to do the same work.

      I've spent time working for a federal contractor. Initially I was naive enough to think that providing government a service for less money would be rewarded. It turns out that spending less money than your customer planned to spend is frowned upon by the government. Why? Because if the agency doesn't spend every penny, next year their budget will be cut - the powers that be reason that if you didn't spend it, you don't need it. What bureaucrat wants his budget cut? He may need the funds next year, so he's not going to risk losing every future year's funding by spending less this year.

      It's logical at a local level, but crazy at the macro level.

      Also, what is "waste"?

      I would say it's waste if government is providing something that, however desirable to me, is either:

      A) not absolutely essential for people to have, or
      B) more effectively provided by organizations other than government.

      Stuff that broad majorities would agree we absolutely cannot do without as a society - some degree of national defense, police protection, and basic social insurance. There will be debates over how much of these things we need, but large majorities agree that some level of these things are vital and cannot be effectively provided other than through government.

      Things that we don't need the government to produce or subsidize: our entertainment (the arts). I love going to concerts, for example. But if folks like the entertainment, they'll gladly pay admission. We don't need to use taxes to force everyone to subsidize the entertainment of a few.

      Examples of government doing things that would be better managed elsewhere: Central Park in New York. It used to be government-run, and was poorly maintained and crime-ridden. The city handed management over to a private company, which has to do well or lose the business, and now the park is beautifully maintained and safe.

    117. Re:Hit them back by hierofalcon · · Score: 1

      The point of taxes is to fund required goverment services in the most efficient manner possible.

      Social engineering should not have anything to do with taxes.

      Before you blow a gasket, my charitable giving is historically higher than the taxes I am required to pay. Freewill charitable giving is where social engineering belongs and not the tax code.

      Although wealthy people like Mr. Buffett and Mr. Gates are choosing to enjoy most of the fruits of their labor while they are alive, they have pledged to give away obscene amounts of money to charity when they die (and have already given away very large amounts of their own volition). Mr. Buffett is a particularly poor choice to hold up as a bad guy. These men are not exceptions. Many of the business magnates through history donated much money to charity.

    118. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Taxation is supposed to help balance that out.

      No. Taxation is supposed to fund the government.

    119. Re:Hit them back by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      None of us really pay for all the services we use. That's why we have trillions of dollars of debt and how we actually afford a large budget deficit. Our taxes don't actually pay for everything, and we use much of the taxes revenue to simply pay on the loans and their interest (ie. bonds, notes, etc.)

      Having said that, like consumer credit, having *some* debt is good for everyone, including the government and all citizens. It's just when that debt starts to spiral out of control and you can no longer make payments on the interest and principal that you start really running into trouble.

      The government's ability to do this depends a lot on the economy and the state of their currency. As someone pointed out elsewhere, the government can always print money to pay the debt, but that would destroy everyone's savings and probably send us straight into a real Great Depression.

    120. Re:Hit them back by SomeKDEUser · · Score: 1

      Sure. But usually, the funds go to art colleges/foundations.

      But frankly, are we better off when good art is decided upon by cultureless self-made-men? We all think art is great, and we all have a wholly different definition of what applies...

      But that was my point, waste is in the eye of the beholder: tracking it is hard, and itself wasteful. Happiness is about accepting a measure of imperfection:)

    121. Re:Hit them back by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      Yes but besides roads, infrastructure and public order, what has the government ever done for us?

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    122. Re:Hit them back by scot4875 · · Score: 1, Informative

      I don't see any credible evidence that an attempt will be made to balance the budget in my lifetime

      We had a balanced budget a little over a decade ago. It was only after the "party of fiscal responsibility" took over that spending really spiraled out of control.

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    123. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because if the agency doesn't spend every penny, next year their budget will be cut - the powers that be reason that if you didn't spend it, you don't need it.

      This isn't unique to the government; spend some time in just about any medium to large size business, and you'll see a lot of the same.

    124. Re:Hit them back by sznupi · · Score: 1

      You voluntarily choose to live in a place which requires you to pay taxes / voluntarily contemplate only places which require you to pay taxes, if wanting to move.

      There are places not requiring it. But generally speaking, you'd prefer to avoid them. Voluntarily.

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    125. Re:Hit them back by Knightmare+1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Why? what is wrong with voting?

      What is wrong with voting is that you can't make your own choices, you have to go with the majority.

      we all use/need the collective services in the same way.

      No we don't all need the same services in the same way.

      If it makes you happy, think of voting as a market operation. But remember: it is not freedom to individually decide on a globally suboptimal solution that we then all need to collectively live with. It is stupidity.

      You might argue that it is stupid or not optimal (I would disagree with that), but it certainly is freedom to individually decide.

      And BTW, yes, people can decide for you. They do, all the time: doctors decide what you have, engineers decide on your car's design, coders on how your programs are made, cell phones companies on their pricing schemes, the shop owner on the products that are on his shelves, the traffic authority the circulation plan of your neighbourhood, other countries the rules for access to their territories, the central banks decide on the value of your bank account, designers decide on the look of your garments.

      But they don't decide which car I buy, which programs I use, what cell phone scheme I buy or if I even buy one of those. Imagine if we had to vote on what cell phone plans we wanted and then everyone would get what the majority decided. What if I didn't want a cellphone, or I wanted a cheaper plan or a more expensive one? I would have no choice but to accept what the majority decided for me. Even worse, we rarely vote on direct issues like that. We only vote for who is going to decide for us, leaving us with even less choice on how to run our own lives.

    126. Re:Hit them back by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      Morons frame the argument as "If we don't have a totalitarian state, we'll all die in some Mad Max nightmare"

      No, the morons are the ones who equate this stupid argument with "paying taxes gets us useful stuff."

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    127. Re:Hit them back by LetterRip · · Score: 5, Insightful

      But in the US, the "rich" - to be specific, let's say the top 1% - earned 25% of the wealth and paid 38% of the income taxes. That doesn't sound like "virtually nothing".

      You, like many others, have confused wealth with income. The wealthy 1% have over 50% of wealth (top 20% have over 84% of wealth).

      http://www.people.hbs.edu/mnorton/norton%20ariely%20in%20press.pdf

      Also income taxes are not total taxes paid (they are 1/3 of the total US tax base) and the proper measure is total taxes (after transfers) as a percentage of total wealth.

      http://www.usgovernmentrevenue.com/

      On that basis the poor and middle class are massively overtaxed, and the wealthy are drastically undertaxed. Essentially the middle class and lower class are drastically subsidizing the wealthy.

    128. Re:Hit them back by causality · · Score: 1

      ...oddly enough, diminishing our military presence somewhat would dramatically reduce our deficit, and probably improve relations with more than a few foreign powers.

      Not using the flimsiest of intelligence to justify fighting aggressive, offensive foreign wars against nations which are not a threat to us would be a drastic improvement, yes. It'd also make us look a lot less like the thugs of the world.

      Note: There is a difference between "scaling back our military somewhat" and "disbanding the military."

      The people who need to have that pointed out to them because they immediately knee-jerk and reach for an extreme interpretation of what you said ... well, they weren't worth reaching anyway in my opinion. They are not exactly lovers of reason and tend to lower the quality of any discussion in which they participate.

      They assume you're stupid and they're not stupid -- that's why they will never experience the following thought: "what he wrote seems completely absurd and extreme in a really obvious way that I can point out with a one-liner ... hey, maybe that means I have not correctly understood what he was saying."

      --
      It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
    129. Re:Hit them back by slysithesuperspy · · Score: 1

      Taxation is theft, it is uncivilised by definition. Why is it wrong for one person to rob another but its called "good government" if a million people say it's okay to steal? You're propagating pure nonsense.

      Just because taxes pay for roads that doesn't mean that taxes are needed for civilisation, I mean the government doesn't need to provide shoe shops. Although if it did have a shoe monopoly I know you would be on here saying how no one would have shoes if it weren't for taxes.

      And anyway, if these people got their money legitimately (e.g. not through government contracts, subsidies, theft (I repeat my self.)) they've already done more for society buy making products and services that people want to buy. And they've done it voluntarily.

      If the government was so fucking great and everyone wanted it taxation wouldn't be needed.

      And another thing, how is paying hundreds of billions of dollars to go and kill brown people in foreign countries anything near civilised? It's preposterous that people believe this stuff, though in a dark way it is pretty hilarious.

    130. Re:Hit them back by Knightmare+1 · · Score: 1

      There are places not requiring it. But generally speaking, you'd prefer to avoid them. Voluntarily.

      Which ones? Would they let me move there if I wanted to or would they consider me as a trespasser?

    131. Re:Hit them back by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      when you deny paying at least a reasonable amount of your fair share, you cheat us all. quite disgusting, really. yes, it should be punishable - at least in the court of public opinion.

      I don't think anyone would disagree with that assessment. The real problem is with the definition of "fair share". If you make $10,000 per year and I make $1,000,000 per year, why should I pay 100 times as much when I only maybe use the road 2 or 3 times more often than you? Shuold I also be forced to pay 100 times as much for my food? Clothing? House and car? Can't have any unfairness now, can we?

      Of course, the reality is even less balanced - not only would you not be paying any taxes for that road, but you'd be taking money OUT of the system in the form of welfare, medicare, education for your 15 children, food stamps, etc, etc. Which, of course, answers the question of why I have to pay 100 times as much - so that others can get a free ride. I think that situation is also "quite disgusting, really". If we're going to worry about "fair shares", let's have one standard here.

    132. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In some countries that may be true.

      But in the US, the "rich" - to be specific, let's say the top 1% - earned 25% of the wealth and paid 38% of the income taxes. That doesn't sound like "virtually nothing".

      I notice the use of a number of percentages there.

      Except you aren't noting the ACTUAL numbers, but instead repeating a mantra.

      You've managed to present some numbers, and they may be accurate, but they're also statistics, and that's why they're misleading.

      That 38% of taxes being paid is what percentage of their actual wealth, do tell.

      Probably a lot. The problem is that government bureaucracies have no competition. No accountability for poor performance means most governments (like other monopolies) perform poorly.

      Wrong, the problem is that we end up spending dimes to save nickels. More government waste is in the form of compliance with the public's desire for the government to be efficient than you might think.

    133. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What does karma (literally translated: ACTION) have to do with people trying to get revenge?

    134. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous+Bullard · · Score: 0

      Wouldn't it also be interesting if the neo-McCartyists who're screaming for Wikileaks personnel to be hunted down and thrown in the "offshore" Guantanamo camp or even assassinated were found to be hiding their loot in secret offshore accounts?

      --

      Should invading one's peaceful neighbours be opposed, or rewarded with trade deals?

    135. Re:Hit them back by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Comparing income taxes is misleading. For low-income people in the US, the biggest tax burden is the combination of Social Security, Medicare, and whatever else is in there. This amounts to 15%, last I filed a Schedule D, with half of the amount being deductible on the Federal income taxes (which is negligible for low-income people). For full-time employees, the employer/employee contribution language makes that less obvious, but the same thing is going on: there is money my employer has to allocate to my payroll which goes to the Feds by law.

      These taxes do not apply to investment income, and only apply to earned income under a certain amount. Somebody living off investments simply won't pay any such tax, and somebody making millions a year pays only a small percentage, since most of his or her income is above the cap. The clerk at the grocery store pays the full amount.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    136. Re:Hit them back by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Civilization costs 2% of GDP, legalized theft costs 40%. Somehow we managed to go from a colonial backwater to an industrial superpower in 150 years without an income tax. It's only when we got a central bank and the government started spending more money than it had on things we don't need (like a worldwide military empire) that we decided we needed an income tax. Not only an income tax, but a progressive one. Combined with inflation and a little class warfare, and you get a situation where everyone is screaming for higher taxes on those wealthier than they are, and a decade later, those same tax rates would be applied to them.

      Someone stop the world, I want to get off.

    137. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Turning a blind eye sure worked out for Greece didn't it.

      Because we all know that the government of Greece would have been able to avoid insolvency if they had gotten access to just a little bit more money.

      In a related story, scientists have discovered that if you give a crack addict just one more hit off the crack pipe, they'll recover and lead a normal life.

    138. Re:Hit them back by sznupi · · Score: 4, Informative

      US has (together with the UK) the lowest social mobility between generations among developed countries (how far children can progress from the socioeconomic status of their parents, basically) - so much for "self motivation, personal responsibility, hard work, American Dream" (just that, a dream, another product to sell)

      The highest is in so-called "nanny states" BTW.

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    139. Re:Hit them back by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      You are missing the entire point of taxes. Taxes are supposed to (help) balance the economic equation. Taxes are supposed to (help) keep the relative distribution of wealth stable across the long term.

      Huh? Are you smoking crack? Taxes are a gentrified extortion scheme. A knight builds a castle, declares himself a lord, and starts collecting protection money from the local peasants. A lord builds a bigger castle, declares himself a baron, and starts collecting protection money from local lords. Skip a bit and the King collects protection money from local Dukes and Grand Dukes. And they use this money to build more and bigger castles and fight other kings who are muscling in on their serfs and turf.

      Skip a bit again, and the taxes are a portion of any government, used to pay for things commonly used (roads, emergency services), or to allow for government bureaucracy, and potentially government growth. Taxes are only used to "balance the economic equation" in pure communist societies like Smurf Village. Everywhere else, taxes are a polite and orderly way to pay a bully with a sword and a horse.

    140. Re:Hit them back by specialguy92 · · Score: 1

      someone here has a recognizable sig, to the effect of "I like paying taxes; with it I subsidize corrupt government."

      There, fixed it for you.

      FTFY

      --
      I can never spell "recursion" correctly on Google
    141. Re:Hit them back by kidcharles · · Score: 1

      But in the US, the "rich" - to be specific, let's say the top 1% - earned 25% of the wealth and paid 38% of the income taxes. That doesn't sound like "virtually nothing".

      Please provide a source for this statistic. Additionally, income tax is one thing, but the really rich don't get their money from working, they get it from returns on investments in the form of capital gains, which are taxed at a flat 15% (for long-term gains).

      --
      Ceci n'est pas une sig.
    142. Re:Hit them back by MattRC · · Score: 1

      "Taxation is theft, it is uncivilised by definition. Why is it wrong for one person to rob another but its called "good government" if a million people say it's okay to steal? You're propagating pure nonsense." I pay my taxes willingly, even though I know some portion of the funds go to causes I do not support. It's part of the whole social contract... and I console myself to the fact that I don't support all of the things we fund by reminding myself that other people do not support my right to not be a christian ... yet the same government that funds things I do not approve of protects my right in that regard. Are you really making the argument that if the government didn't provide basic services, someone else would, in some magical capitalistic way? IE toll road would be everywhere, private police would keep people safe (Yes police can be corrupt and make mistakes, but the vast majority of police actions are reasonable, even if those actions don't make the headlines as much as sh** like the Rodney King episode). Yes, if taxes and the government were so great, it would be voluntarily funded ... right ... because surely there are no greedy people who want these things but realize that if they just let others fund them, they can still reap the rewards ...without the cost. Yes, we live in utopia, welcome. As for the military budget, why I happen to agree with you, it's hardly civilized! Let's work on that ... I suggest we scrap the whole 'war' machine in favor of a 'defense' machine, but keep taxes around to pay for it ... and the roads I use to get work.

    143. Re:Hit them back by tmosley · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Is funding a worldwide entifada against brown people a waste? Is stationing military personnel in nearly every country on the face of the Earth a waste? Is the creation of perverse incentives that "require" big government solutions a waste?

      For more than half of the history of this country, government spending was limited to around 2% of GDP, where today it is 40%. What is different between then and now? Only that our government is now a repression machine that dominates most of the planet, whereas back then it was "quaint". Hell, we didn't even have a standing army until WWI. Now the president can't even walk down the street without a hoard of secret service members clearing it a week in advance. This is the behavior of an unpopular dictator. Of course, our military empire has stomped on a lot more toes than the US did back when we were free.

    144. Re:Hit them back by SomeKDEUser · · Score: 1

      Choice between a set of solutions, whether provided by the gov or by corps is not freedom. Freedom is about making up your own solutions, which very rarely happens.

      Freedom is what the cell phone providers exerted. When you picked your plan/phone you were not free, just a consumer. And if you were in the US (or worse, Canada), _all_ your options were overpriced and crappy. Because the right of individual corporations trumped the collective good which would have required oversight and forced competition.

      And yes, we all need the services within a narrow band of usage patterns.

    145. Re:Hit them back by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      I don't know if most /. people believe what you think they believe. I am against all income taxes, all payroll taxes, all taxes that involve money making and money movement as opposed to money spending.

      I see it as a virtue when anybody gets away with not paying any of the above mentioned taxes and I see the state as a thief, trying to steal money.

      Also I truly believe that it is best for economy when money that is not spent but invested must not be taxed and people and businesses must not be regulated in any way, but also never subsidized in any way.

    146. Re:Hit them back by lgw · · Score: 1

      In the US, government jobs pay significantly better than private sector jobs on average. It' been that way for a while now - the idea of a government job as a low paying, but strictly 40 hour, job is quite outdated. Also, the agencies controling the markets are the same people as the people working in those markets - they just go back and forth, ususally to Goldman Sachs.

      As far as waste, the federal budget is roughly as follows (where 100% is total revenue).

      • 100% to money given to the old and poor, including SS, Medi*, federal pensions, welfare, etc.
      • 30% to defense and wars.
      • 10% to interest on the debt.
      • 20% to everything else: infrastructure, functing of arts and sciences, NASA's token budget, etc.

      Waste in that last 20% isn't really all that interesting in the current fiscal crisis, and that 30% that the left hates can't be squeezed enough to fix our problems. It's that first 100% that is the only useful topic of discussion.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    147. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      actually that top 1 percent ends up paying a lot less than the 38 percent that they are supposed to. No one reads the article, but did you at least read the headline?

    148. Re:Hit them back by cez · · Score: 1
      Heathen! I have it on good authority* that he does not cower what so ever.


      Kristopshit is actually his middle name and when he is not trolling on slashdot he is continuously legally changing his last name to numerical form.

      *mum face authority.

      --
      Walk with Music;
    149. Re:Hit them back by Mongoose+Disciple · · Score: 3, Insightful

      For more than half of the history of this country, government spending was limited to around 2% of GDP, where today it is 40%.

      That doesn't jive with any set of credible numbers I've seen, so I'd appreciate if you could cite a source on that.

    150. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Until you actually look at the numbers the real numbers it doesn't make sense. These top 1% have a much higher expendable income which is a ridiculous amount of money. lets say your family makes 100K and cost of median living in your area for your family size per year is 65K you pay 20K in takes making your left over expendable income 15K right now say your family makes 200K minus the 65K and paying taxes lets say of 40K that leaves you with 95K expendable income. Which you can use for bigger houses better cars or what not. The problem that people don't seem to realize is it is all about expendable income. And that is one thing that top 1% have a lot of. That is the same reason it cracks me up to hear about how a celebrity who makes 10,000,000 + a year gave 10,000 to a charity and you should feel paltry because you gave $100 when the percentage of your expendable income you gave away is much higher then the celebrity. Taxes should be based on a percentage of expendable income. Then you would really understand the kind of numbers we are talking about here. that top 1% would be paying upwards of 50-60% of taxes.

      Now to your other point the fact the government doesn't run things properly is not the point here. If everyone pays less great but everyone should pay their fair share regardless of how efficient or properly things run.

    151. Re:Hit them back by wikdwarlock · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Ok, I stopped reading when you wrote this:

      It's not helpful that government at the federal and state levels also limits supply of health care (professional licensing, regulation on who can do what, and the opening of new health care facilities)

      I shudder to think what kind of horrors would be inflicted on people, sick and healthy, if it were not for licensing and regulation. Even hundreds of years ago, people went to professional leeching practitioners because they knew the value of experience and some level of "the community has agreed this person probably won't kill me". Do you propose no licenses or regulations, but 50 free Rx pads printable at prescribenow.com and shiny new surgery kit deals on amazon?

      Seriously.

      --

      "I must not fear. Fear is the mind killer." -Bene Gesserit Litany Against Fear
    152. Re:Hit them back by lgw · · Score: 1

      let's say the top 1% - earned 25% of the wealth and paid 38% of the income taxes

      Wealth is property that generates income (or grows in market value). It's no wonder people have a hard time becoming wealthy, when they don't even understand the definitiono of the word. You should say: the top 1% of income earners earned 25% of total income and paid 38% of income taxes. Wealth and income are only loosley correlated.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    153. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't worry. After the need to compensate is gone, everyone else will still be paying as much in taxes anyway.

    154. Re:Hit them back by Knightmare+1 · · Score: 1

      When you picked your plan/phone you were not free, just a consumer.

      How was I not free? Did someone force me to buy the plan I have (or even to buy one at all)?

      And if you were in the US (or worse, Canada), _all_ your options were overpriced and crappy.

      I am in Canada, and I think the plan I got fits my needs perfectly so I don't think it's overpriced or crappy, otherwise I wouldn't have bought it. You might think differently, but that's because we don't have the same needs.

    155. Re:Hit them back by Bemopolis · · Score: 1

      Not using the flimsiest of intelligence to justify fighting aggressive, offensive foreign wars against nations which are not a threat to us would be a drastic improvement

      The intelligence that pushed us into the Iraq War was not flimsy. It was of the finest construction, lovingly spun by the talented hands of Dick Cheney and Company.

      --
      "I guess the moral of the story is, don't paint your airship with rocket fuel." -- Addison Bain
    156. Re:Hit them back by izomiac · · Score: 1

      In America, the "filthy rich" pay most of the income taxes (and presumably sales tax as well). The top 1% pay 38%, the top 5% pay 59%, the top 10% pay 70%.

      As for wasting money, I have little doubt that governments are inherently wasteful. That said, some are much better than others. Ranking the "very highly developed nations" by percent of GDP collected in taxes divided by the human development index squared reveals striking differences. Hong Kong and Singapore have very low tax rates, so they easily come out on top (outliers?), but the rest are clustered together starting with the US (HDI .902, Tax 28.2%), Australia (.937, 30.5%), Japan (.884, 27.4%), Switzerland (.874, 30.1%), Canada (.888, 33.4%), and Ireland (.895, 34%). Here's a graph for those who would rather see a raw scatterplot rather than my data manipulations.

    157. Re:Hit them back by SomeKDEUser · · Score: 1

      About not having a cell phone: clearly, you haven't tried. So you don't really have a choice.

      And I won't debate the state of mobile telephony in Canada. If you think it is ok, and/or rightly priced, you clearly never looked beyond your borders.

    158. Re:Hit them back by agw · · Score: 2

      The problem is that the system is set up that only the rich can evade taxes. Factory line worker Joe Blow doesn't make enough to go put it all away in a secret swiss bank account, nor does he have enough to hire an accountant to manage some holding companies abroad, etc etc.

      Absolutely untrue. Many lower paid professions can easily work off the books and avoid taxes, social security taxes and insurances. May it be painters, hair cutters, bar keepers, plumbers, bricklayers, gardeners or what not. Depending on what numbers you believe the damage caused by working off the books is almost 380 billion Euros (500 billion Dollars) per year in Germany alone. A lot of millionaires need to evade tax to achieve that.

    159. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And I'm of above average intellegence, I'm in the top 20% of drivers, my parenting technique is clearly the best (and any issues my kids have is due to the schools screwing them up), and my religion is the correct one. If I had been given the same opportunities as Joe CEO, I'd be at least as wealthy, and do a better job running his company. If I had been subjected to the same difficulties as Sam HomeLessGuy, I would have "pulled myself up by the bootstraps" and got myself a real job. Given the opportunity my pet economic policy would simultaneously eliminate inflation, and guarantee ever-increasing profits for everyone (as well a unicorn and a fairy for every household).

      Polls basically just say that we all just selfish ego-centric bastards.

      ^^^^
      Win. :)

    160. Re:Hit them back by khallow · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Ok, I stopped reading when you wrote this

      Well, when you get past the unthinking response, maybe we'll have something to talk about.

      I shudder to think what kind of horrors would be inflicted on people, sick and healthy, if it were not for licensing and regulation.

      It's always been illegal to kill or injure people by negligence or on purpose. The courts provide an avenue for correction of and restitution for such behavior. Licensing and regulation are but limited improvement on that. They're much more effective for restricting markets and creating rent-seeking opportunities, for which they've been very effective in the medical world.

    161. Re:Hit them back by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

      PostFinance isn't what you use when you're trying to evade taxation by hiding cash, you would use one of the privately owned Swiss banks.

      Assuming the gov't isn't in on money laundering, you mean?

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    162. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First google result

      http://www.usgovernmentspending.com/us_20th_century_chart.html

      Next time fucking google it yourself

    163. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As one of the named account holders on Julian's list, I would like to clarify that I am not againt paying taxes. I just prefer to pay my "taxes" directly to the senator, governor, mayor, sheriff, Customs official, or judge that I am directly interacting with.

      When you put a face with the revenue you get much better service than an SSN on a tax return.

      Democracy. The best government money can buy.

    164. Re:Hit them back by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      If your government is corrupt, then you should work on fixing it, rather than leaving it as it is and trying to dodge whatever it throws your way.

      In any case... these days I pay my taxes in US because that's where I reside. Now I was certainly getting more bang for the buck in that department in Canada, but overall I very much prefer the way things are here compared to, say, Somalia.

    165. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forget, politicians and the rich are above the law.

    166. Re:Hit them back by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      That would be shutdown -p now

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    167. Re:Hit them back by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Although if it did have a shoe monopoly I know you would be on here saying how no one would have shoes if it weren't for taxes.

      If there's no taxes, there's no police.

      If there's no police, people... would have shoes. In amount directly proportional to the number of guns that they have, and their ability to use it to kill other people and take shoes off them.

      See: Afghanistan, Somalia, and other examples of the wonders that anarcho-capitalism can do for our society.

    168. Re:Hit them back by Dr_Barnowl · · Score: 1

      It evens out and in both cases, you actually pay the same

      I'm not sure about that - take healthcare. The USA spends more than any nation in the world, per capita, more than double the UK, yet is rated 42nd in terms of it's actual healthcare outcomes (worst of the G5 nations and worse than Chile and Cuba, nations with an economic model that you mock and oppose).

      Private companies figure that 15% is a low profit margin for a healthcare operation in the States. If it truly was a model of efficient private competition, you'd see much lower profits, perhaps more in line with the Wal-Mart profit margin of 4%. Who knows what you'd get for your money if you transplanted the UK National Health Service to your shores.

      It's a shame that the UK government has been trying their best to subvert our socialized healthcare system and convert it to a corporate milchcow for the last couple of decades. Not least because they are succeeding. The provision of patient care is already suffering where private corporations have been gifted with sweetheart contracts to run hospitals for the next 30 years (regardless of whether those services are actually needed, they'll get paid).

    169. Re:Hit them back by Mongoose+Disciple · · Score: 1

      Still waiting for a set of credible numbers.

      Or do you believe everything you read on the internet?

    170. Re:Hit them back by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      someone here has a recognizable sig, to the effect of "I like paying taxes; with it I buy civilization" - or to that effect.

      Oliver Wendell Holmes said it, I merely borrowed it for my sig.

      the fact that the gov mismanages our funds has nothing to do with the fact that the funds are NEEDED to 'run society'.

      Arguably, it does have everything to do if you look at it the other way around. The more taxes you pay, the more serious crime such mismanagement becomes, and the more vigilant you, as a citizen, should be towards your government to use that money properly.

      But, yes, it is an issue orthogonal to other citizens not paying their fair share.

    171. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, when most people think of avoiding taxes, it is because the rich person does not take an "income" from the company but instead takes deferred compensation (stocks, interest, etc..) that are taxed at lower rates. OR They funnel it into a foundation that they can live off of but get taxed at a lower rate. Billionaires don't get paychecks. THAT is the problem... So how do you fix it? How about a standardized tax without all the loopholes. Surely someone living in an apartment gets ticked that they cannot deduct interest on a mortgage, and numerous other loops. Also, who can afford to find the loops? Not I... Instead switch to a standard flat tax or national sales tax.

      The national sales tax would be best because poor folks who don't buy a lot of extra good would not feel the pinch, yet the average drug dealer or wall st. tycoon (Or timothy geithner and Rep Charles Rangle and Patrice & John Tierney) would be equally and properly taxed on purchase they make with any ill gotten funds.

      AND the sales tax would happen at the POS, so the individual would not have to deal with tax time, tax software, mistakes, cheating, etc... THINK of how much time and money would be saved if you did not have to deal with taxes or very little to deal with. TIME = MONEY!!

      folks will say if you increase sales tax it will limit spending... Well, that is not a really bad thing, we could all use to save a bit and get out of debt, but the RICH/RICH (WAY more than 250K!!!) will not care. The simple fact is that $1000 tax on something when you make a million is not something to miss, but when I make 20K, I'll struggle to justify the tax on a new new big screen tv that I cannot afford to begin with, and may even save my butt from going into bankruptcy.

      But, alas, even John Kerry bought a boat out of state and docked it elsewhere to avoid the taxes, but if it was an across the board action, he would not be able to do that.

      Yes, some things would have to be exempt. Food, Medication, health care, Netflix, sex acts... But everything else could be sales taxed.

      Hmm... Ok, I'll get off the box, sorry to take up so much screen real estate, I think I should post this AC...

    172. Re:Hit them back by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      You've jumped from rich individuals to corporations. So now, besides personal ethics - tax evasion vs tax avoidance the issue has expanded to business ethics.

      Currently, businesses, whether in the US or abroad, pay income tax either here or abroad. If you have been following the news lately, you will have seen that many countries, particularly poorer ones have a tax rate much higher than in the US. Companies don't move overseas to save on taxes. They move there to save on labor and to have reduced regulations. Contrary to popular belief, businesses don't really care about taxes -- why? Because they pass that cost on to you the consumer. Taxes are just another cost of doing business. It's easy to figure the amount per unit produced and it gets figured into the markup. The only time that it becomes a real issue is when the tax rate is changing, as the new rate will affect the cost of goods sold, but not for the items already in the chain and will therefore cut into profits.

      Case in point, although not really tax related, Ford could have spent $1 per Pinto to put a shield between the gas tank and exhaust that would have eliminated or at least greatly reduced the risk of explosion. They didn't do that, for one, that extra $1 would have equated tens of dollars, if not $100+ dollars by the time the final markups were made and that would have made the Pinto non-competitive price wise with the Vega (that is from the perspective of the Ford executives at the time). Another reason, is that there were already millions of Pinto's out there, the cost to retrofit them would have been millions just for the shield, let alone the labor to install. Ford using their business ethics decided the cost was too great. The courts decided otherwise for them.

      Taxes work in a similar fashion. When taxes are stable, regardless of the rate, business price their products accordingly. To increase profits, to keep shareholders happy, that's when they move offshore to reap the benefits of cheap labor and little to no regulation.

      That decision has nothing to do with tax evasion or avoidance.

      The wealthy individuals on the otherhand, make decisions to shelter their personal wealth offshore, strictly because of taxes. Yes, it is illegal to evade taxes, but the reasons it is illegal come back to that same sense of fairness, which is a subjective value statement.

    173. Re:Hit them back by DarthVain · · Score: 1

      I used to work regulating aggregates used in building roads and infrastructure. Pits and Quarries are not the most prettiest things in the world but necessary for civilization.

      I heard once it said: Where do you think these things come from? Fairy dust and Unicorn horn? By unnecessarily making it more difficult to obtain you are simply raising your own taxes... Do you like driving on roads and living in buildings?

    174. Re:Hit them back by ultranova · · Score: 1

      you think roads and stuff come from nothing but sunshine and the love of jesus?

      Which remains me: why should sunshine and thelove of Jesus be free? True, people had nothing to do with creating either, but they had nothing to do with the birth of Earth or its resources either yet can still own parts of those. Various churches and televangelists have the divine love thoroughly commercialized, but sunshine is still regarded as a public good, even in our capitalist society.

      To combat this problems, we could privatize the Sun, selling its energy output in an auction piecemeal. The consumers who need sunlight can then ask for offers from various Sun Providers, thus letting the Free Market do its magic of balancing supply and demand. This system would also be fairer than the current one: after all, if I spend my life in my basement, why should I have to compensate my neighbour's habit of being up and out during the day? Why should he receive free sunlight when this only helps fuel his sense of entitlement and creates a moral hazard of not acquiring flashlight batteries in time?

      There is, however, one unresolved question in my model: should the FCC sell or merely lease the frequencies needed to deliver the product to the Earth?

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    175. Re:Hit them back by russryan · · Score: 1

      Corollary: The reason government is corrupt is the same reason we need it in the first place.

    176. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We're not all selfish ego-centric bastards. I always vote for CowboyNeal.

    177. Re:Hit them back by stumblingblock · · Score: 1

      Always question everyones motivation.

    178. Re:Hit them back by einar2 · · Score: 2

      Well, considering that the "informant" of Wikileaks worked years for the Swiss private bank Julius Baer until he was fired because customer information in the filial on the cayman islands disappeared...

    179. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a bit out of date, but let's just say, for example, that, in the absence of any taxation the poverty line is about $25,000. (which is almost certainly pretty high if you didn't have to pay ANY taxes).

      If you're making two-to-9 times the poverty limit, one would assume you're probably able to live a fairly comfortable though not always luxurious lifestyle.

      On the other hand, if you're making 10x the poverty limit (or more), I think it would be safe to say you have things pretty well sewn up, and can live pretty damn well.

      So a fair share? Virtually nothing for the first amount, a middling amount for the second (say 35%) and a whopping huge portion on the last part (say, 95%).

      So if you make:
      -> $25k, you pay no income taxes. Leaving $25,000 in your pocket.
      -> $25,001 you pay $0.35 Leaving $25,000.65 in your pocket.
      -> $150,000 you pay $43,750 (35% of $125,000) Leaving $106,250 in your pocket.
      -> $249,999 you pay $78749.65 (35% of $224,999) Leaving $171,249.35 in your pocket.
      -> $250,000 you pay $78750.60 (35% of $224,999 + 95% of $1.00) Leaving $171,249.4 in your pocket.
      -> $1,000,000 you pay $791,249.65 (35% of $224,999 + 95% of $750,000) Leaving $208,750.35 in your pocket.

      Everyone can still go about their lives living from marginal to luxurious lifestyles, and society (and not some hedonistic, selfish, mongering minority upper-class) will reap the overall benefits.

      The real irony of this comment is the MASSIVE number of people who, though they will NEVER, EVER, EVER make $250,000 in any fiscal year of their lifetime, will nevertheless decry the 95% upper tax bracket.. THOSE are the idiots^B^B^B^B^B^B people that the wealthy have manipulated/programmed into sustaining their hedgemony over the majority of the population.

      -AC

    180. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please move to Somalia and see how that Libertarian Government is working. Me, I'll see you on the high seas when I shoot you trying to board my ship, matey. Ship, fuel, and goods partially subsidized by a working government.

    181. Re:Hit them back by einar2 · · Score: 1

      They were entitled to close it. However, it was totally illegal according to Swiss law to reveal the customer relation with Assange!

    182. Re:Hit them back by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      and taxation is supposed to help balance that out.

      No, taxation is supposed to enable the government to pay for its lawful activity, the will of the people, nothing more or less.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    183. Re:Hit them back by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      what do you mean by that? A simple example: Connecticut.

      Fed tax + State tax + SS + FICA for a self employed individual making over a million a year. The final income tax bill? 49%.

      That's before all other taxes - property and purchase etc.

    184. Re:Hit them back by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Did you not look at the post by Anonymous above?

      Here, from the beginning. Sorry, I remembered it incorrectly. I should have said 5%, not 2%, although ti was under 2% for a good portion of that time.

    185. Re:Hit them back by khallow · · Score: 1

      I think he believes that if he does something to help governments (allowing them to track down tax dodgers) that they may leave him alone..

      Maybe you should spend less time talking and more time thinking about your thinking. I would be very surprised if anyone connected with Wikileaks has that belief. It sure wouldn't be evident from a release of Swiss banking records.

    186. Re:Hit them back by ultranova · · Score: 1

      A lot of mileage can be gained by targeting spending that changes peoples' behavior in adverse ways, such as subsidized educational loans and financial assistance, and mandated employer health insurance. Sure, it's nice to have better educated people and the security of health insurance, but these expenses increase faster than GDP (much less inflation) and are unsustainable in the long run.

      Which, of course, is an outright lie. The cost to produce education isn't increasing; how could it, when new tools make it less - not more - labour-intensive? And if its cost isn't increasing, how can it increase faster than the GDP? Unless the GDP is expected to fall in the long range - in which case you'll go bankrupt no matter what you do - it's impossible for a fixed cost to overtake it. Unless, of course, you run education as a private business, where the owners will of course keep rising the price to extract more and more profit.

      The same goes to medical care. Yes, there are some potentially very expensive treatments, but only a few people will ever need them. For almost everyone, publicly funded medical care will actually more than pay itself back from increased productivity; also, pre-emptive medical care lessens the need for those expensive procedures by acting as maintenance.

      Finally, having lots of people without education or healthcare creates a very unstable situation. People with nothing to lose but their chains are dangerous. When they finally realize that they have the entire world to win, they aren't going to play by your rules anymore. Better make sure they have stakes in your game while you still can.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    187. Re:Hit them back by SnarfQuest · · Score: 1

      someone here has a recognizable sig, to the effect of "I like paying taxes; with it I buy civilization" - or to that effect.

      or, is common roads, infrastructure and stuff like that too 'commie' for people like you?

      So, if I have to pay more taxes than you do, shouldn't I get preferentail treatment by the government? I mean, if I go into a diner and pay twice as much as you do for a meal, I'd expect something extra for the money. Shouldn't rich people get better roads than you do, fewer limits on their businesses, etc.

      the fact that the gov mismanages our funds has nothing to do with the fact that the funds are NEEDED to 'run society'.

      If they didn't waste money on useless crap like fraud, and photos of plastic Jesus statues in bottles of urine, then they wouldn't need anywhere near as much as they take. They shouldn't mishandle my money as badly as they do. I've heard reliable reports that Food Stamps are more than 50% fraud. Welfare probably isn't too far behind that.

      And why should the government have to "RUN" society? 1984 all over again. Let us run our own lives, and keep your opinions on how I should live my life to yourself. Do we really need so much government control of our lives? Ms. Obama is making plans for government control of our weight now. It's none of her damn business!

      --
      Who would win this election: Andrew Weiner vs Andrew Weiner's weiner.
    188. Re:Hit them back by knight24k · · Score: 4, Informative

      I don't see any credible evidence that an attempt will be made to balance the budget in my lifetime

      We had a balanced budget a little over a decade ago. It was only after the "party of fiscal responsibility" took over that spending really spiraled out of control.

      --Jeremy

      Really? that's strange because the debt history shows that the US debt has risen every single year since 1977 and probably going back to 1870 although wiki doesn't break out individual years past 1977. Regardless of which party is in office, or which party controls congress and thereby the purse, the debt keeps going up and accelerating.

      You should place less faith in what the talking heads of either party say they are doing and what the actual records shows they did. At the current rate of increase Obama's administration will outstrip both Bush and Clinton in debt accumulation....combined.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_U.S._public_debt

      The problem is when they claim a balanced budget, they neglect to mention the various programs they have decided to exclude from the formula. Both sides of the aisle are a bunch of Elitist millionaires who make a habit of exempting themselves from the very laws they impose on the rest of us. I distrust all of them until such time there is both a balanced budget law/amendment and term limits on the lot of them.

    189. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      The only USA organizations that can certify doctors are the AMA (LCME) or AOA (COCA). They have a federally mandated monopoly on your access to medicine. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_MD_and_DO_in_the_United_States

      This is why a Nurse with 25 years of experience can not remove a mole - technically the removal of mole is considered a limited surgical procedure and requires a medical license.

      The current system is a exclusive club organized and controlled by doctors. Listen to any general practitioner talk about the future of their profession and they will complain that they are being taken over by cheaper Nurse Practitioners and Physician Assistants. Most of them will defend the absurd notion that you need a medical degree to do basic care.

      Let me give you a scenario. I have 6 years experience as a Trama Life Support EMT. If I have a personal Epi-Pen in my backpack hiking on a mountain trail out of my jurisdiction and I see someone get stung by a bee and start having an allergic reaction - I can not give someone an Epi-Pen to aid a bee sting reaction without a physicians approval (standing order). Since I am out of my jurisdiction I am not covered by any standing order my LEGAL obligation is to call 911 (if I can get service) and watch the person hit the ground. Once they start to pass out from lack of air I might be able to give them CPR but I can not give an Epi-Pen since it requires an DEA license to distribute.

      So...I have the skills, equipment and first hand knowledge to save someone's life but I can not becasue I can go to jail for practicing without a license. In this situation I would of course try to to save the life if I could but in doing so I would risk my career, home, savings, and freedom.

    190. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LetterRip:

      I am very interested in the over taxation of the middle class you mention. I went to the 2nd link you gave but I was not sure where to go next. Can you give a more detailed link about how the non-income-tax portion of taxation is large enough and regressive enough to counteract the US's highly progressive income tax? Is this property tax and sales tax, or some other tax I am not thinking of? I have always thought the US tax regime was pretty regressive, and I am very interested in hearing a differing view point.

      Thank you for your assistance,

      Best Regards,

      AC

    191. Re:Hit them back by Mongoose+Disciple · · Score: 1

      I did. I just don't consider Christopher Chantrill credible. He's starting from a conclusion and then looking for numbers to support what he's already decided is true, rather than the other way around.

      YMMV.

    192. Re:Hit them back by SnarfQuest · · Score: 1

      Also, what is "waste"? is funding fundamental science waste? is funding liberal arts waste? are the likes of the FDA waste? is paying for some dubious piece of art in your own town waste? is paying people to check for fraud waste, or is the fraud the largest cause of waste?

      Waste is buying a useless picture of a plastic Jesus status in a bottle of urine, followed by advertisement to laud your wonderful purchase, followed by money trying to hide the fact you bought such a thing, followed by even more money trying to gain public acceptance of said picture.

      Once you start wasting money on such crap, you might as well start buying pictures of Madona smeared with elephant dung. Oh yea, they did that too!

      If you allow waste like this, it just grows and grows.

      --
      Who would win this election: Andrew Weiner vs Andrew Weiner's weiner.
    193. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Someone stop the world, I want to get off.

      Why wait?

    194. Re:Hit them back by piquadratCH · · Score: 1

      I guess Assange didn't like that the swiss bank PostFinance closed his account.

      PostFinance isn't a bank, it's a subsidiary of the Swiss Post.

    195. Re:Hit them back by SnarfQuest · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You realize that the government pays medical schools to NOT teach medical students. Just like they pay farmers to not grow food, they also want to limit trained medical professionals.

      Also, such "medical" professions as chiropractic, herbal remedies, homeopathy, etc are not under government controls. So "real" medicine is under strict government limits, while "alternative" medicine is unlimited, as long as they don't kill too many people.

      --
      Who would win this election: Andrew Weiner vs Andrew Weiner's weiner.
    196. Re:Hit them back by LordNacho · · Score: 1

      US has (together with the UK) the lowest social mobility between generations among developed countries (how far children can progress from the socioeconomic status of their parents, basically) - so much for "self motivation, personal responsibility, hard work, American Dream" (just that, a dream, another product to sell)

      The highest is in so-called "nanny states" BTW.

      Is tax meant to create more social mobility? It sounds like a nice idea, but I grew up in one of those nanny states, and studies have shown that there's a high degree of predictability in who gets academic degrees. You guessed it, the children of people who have those degrees.

    197. Re:Hit them back by SomeKDEUser · · Score: 1

      Yes, this is waste. But you miss the point: although this is waste, preventing it would likely cost much more.

      The occasional excess should not be considered a valid reason to setup new, almost-pointless rules/administrations [1]. If you are trying to prevent a 3-sigma event with a low cost to society with a systemic protection, your are doing something wrong [2].

      And if you then complain about government waste, this makes you a retard [3].

      [1] case in point, the TSA.
      [2] that would be fighting the "welfare queens". So some individual benefit excessively (for quite moderate values of excess). And what? Unless you can _prove_ this makes the system insolvent or that at least preventing the excesses will neither downgrade the service for the rest of the beneficiaries nor cost more than the "waste" you pretend to waste, don't do it. Just don't.
      [3] the whole of the Tea Party who are not downright evil.

    198. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...roads should be paid for solely through gasoline and vehicle registration taxes, and those tax revenues should not be allowed to be used on anything but transportation infrastructure. After all, the more you use the road (and the larger the vehicle), the more you pay in taxes. How would that not be "fair?"

      Because roads like most significant infrastructure benefit EVERYONE.

      Just because YOU don't (or anyone who doesn't) drive, it doesn't mean you don't realise substantial benefits from the existence of roads. In the extreme, under your premise, you would be unable to take an ambulance to the hospital because, you don't use the roads and therefore don't pay for them.

      More realistically, you would have to pay the ambulance service more money because they had to pay to use the road and you used their service. So, since in your model, costs would be passed along the chain, and since virtually nothing you do in a modern environment doesn't utilise roads in some way, in the end you'd end up paying the road taxes, but you'd be doing it through hundreds of different channels instead of just one.

      -AC

    199. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know about you, but personally I'm in the highest percentile of people who aren't selfish ego-centric bastards.

    200. Re:Hit them back by MindlessAutomata · · Score: 3, Informative

      Even if someone opens up a shop, it doesn't mean you trust their credentials unless they act with deliberate subterfuge, and if they're willing to go that far they might ignore licensing laws anyway.

      Your leech example is a very, very bad argument, because medical science in those times was non-existent and if you had regulatory bodies then they'd still be happily accepting common "knowledge" over mumbo-jumbo much in the same way the British Health system (used to until recently?) accept homeopathy. Your implicit belief is that regulatory bodies operate objectively and on sound science, which is neither true nor really possible (since "accepted science" is based on convention and the absolute truth is unknown to us). You have a very poor understanding of the history of medicine if you think that stuff like bloodletting and leeches was due to no regulation--it was based on theory at the time, rooted in the thought of Galen, Hippocraties, and other Greeks. Unscientific, yes, but these were hardly scientific times.

      But a much stronger point is that simply a lot of the regulations are too strict and act to restrict people that DO have enough training and expertise.

      As an additional musing, if you belief that the government should regulate things out of truth, then should the government regulate religious belief and only allow "scientifically true" beliefs, i.e., only those that can be demonstrated factually? Should advice be regulated in exactly the same manner that psychology is, since bad advice on human behavior is in essence malpractice in psychology?

    201. Re:Hit them back by lennier · · Score: 1

      customer information in the filial on the cayman islands disappeared...

      Why, that son of a...

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    202. Re:Hit them back by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      Yes, like that laugh you do when you're crying.

      --
      ~X~
    203. Re:Hit them back by MindlessAutomata · · Score: 2

      BTW, citation on the homeopathy thing:

      http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1712197/

    204. Re:Hit them back by Somewhat+Delirious · · Score: 1

      If I had modpoints I'd give you a "Funny" for that.

      --
      The surest sign that intelligent life exists elsewhere in the universe is that none of it has tried to contact us.
    205. Re:Hit them back by khallow · · Score: 1

      A lot of mileage can be gained by targeting spending that changes peoples' behavior in adverse ways, such as subsidized educational loans and financial assistance, and mandated employer health insurance. Sure, it's nice to have better educated people and the security of health insurance, but these expenses increase faster than GDP (much less inflation) and are unsustainable in the long run.

      Which, of course, is an outright lie.

      Who is deliberately saying a falsehood here? What is the falsehood? The growing cost of education is a established fact.

      For almost everyone, publicly funded medical care will actually more than pay itself back from increased productivity; also, pre-emptive medical care lessens the need for those expensive procedures by acting as maintenance.

      Why would you think that would be true? The US isn't implementing one of the relatively cheap health care systems that other countries use. It is massively subsidizing health insurance and continuing the Medicare program. In other words, greatly increasing demand for health care without changing the supply side any. That's a recipe for increasing the rate at which health care costs increase.

      Finally, having lots of people without education or healthcare creates a very unstable situation. People with nothing to lose but their chains are dangerous. When they finally realize that they have the entire world to win, they aren't going to play by your rules anymore. Better make sure they have stakes in your game while you still can.

      Yea yea yea. I've heard that before. So when are the solutions going to address the problem? I notice a lot of people coming out of college with massive debt and useless degrees (assuming they managed to graduate!) that no one respects. Looks like student loans have unintended consequences. I see poor people making job choices solely on the basis of health insurance benefits. That's after a couple of generations of health care "improvements" by the US government.

      The same goes for a lot of other attempts to improve the well-being of the poor. Minimum wage threw a lot of people out of work in the US in this last recession. Where will the teenagers or the ex-convicts work when they aren't worth $7.25 per hour? Public housing has been shown responsible for a great increase in intercity crime and the crippling of an entire inner city generation.

      Here's my take. These laws and spending don't break chains, they forge them.

    206. Re:Hit them back by Motard · · Score: 1

      But in the US, the "rich" - to be specific, let's say the top 1% - earned 25% of the wealth and paid 38% of the income taxes. That doesn't sound like "virtually nothing".

      You, like many others, have confused wealth with income.

      Actually, the text you chose to quote indicates that he is confusing nothing. He was specifically talking about income taxes.

      http://www.usgovernmentrevenue.com/

      On that basis the poor and middle class are massively overtaxed, and the wealthy are drastically undertaxed. Essentially the middle class and lower class are drastically subsidizing the wealthy.

      Your link allows the exploration of your claim and it doesn't hold up. For federal taxes, with the exception of the alcohol and tobacco taxes, and social insurance payments, you can see that most revenue sources such as customs, estate taxes, airport/airway excise, highway excise taxes primarily concern upper or middle class folks.

    207. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On that basis the poor and middle class are massively overtaxed, and the wealthy are drastically undertaxed. Essentially the middle class and lower class are drastically subsidizing the wealthy.

      The lower class is not subsidizing anyone. The lower class actually makes money come income tax time. As far as being overtaxed, that is specifically the upper-middle class.

    208. Re:Hit them back by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      Privacy does not trump moral or legal obligations. If you are breaking the law, no matter how much you may disagree with it, you're privacy will be invaded. If they don't like the law, then work to get it changed.

      Regardless, rich assholes evading taxes while simultaneously whining about their taxes being too high should be given a nice long trip to Federal PYITA Prison. And instead of tax payers, they should use the assholes' own money to pay for their imprisonment.

      --
      ~X~
    209. Re:Hit them back by russotto · · Score: 1

      someone here has a recognizable sig, to the effect of "I like paying taxes; with it I buy civilization" - or to that effect.

      or, is common roads, infrastructure and stuff like that too 'commie' for people like you?

      the fact that the gov mismanages our funds has nothing to do with the fact that the funds are NEEDED to 'run society'.

      You can only milk that one for so far. The dialogue might go something like this

      Gov: "We need another $1000 in taxes from you, to build roads, sewers, and the like."
      Evil anti-civilization nutcase: "WHAT? I'm already paying you $10,000, what are you doing with that?"

      Gov: "Well, $4000 went for social security. $2000 for defense. $1500 for welfare for the poor. Another $1500 for welfare for the rich. $2000 for interest on the debt. $1000 for infrastructure. And another $1000 for failed infrastructure project that we ended up canceling."

      EACN: Um, that doesn't add up

      Gov: Hence the debt. And as you can see, we're a bit short in the infrastructure department, so if you object you're clearly a wild-eyed anarchist fruitcake and we'll burn your house down with you in it. Pay on time and have a nice day.

    210. Re:Hit them back by equex · · Score: 1

      Does anyone know where the old leaks went ? The hundreds and thousands of leaks that was before the whole Collateral Murder and War Diaries are still interesting and relevant but they only exist on archive.org AFAIK. (And that is too slow to actually be worth browsing, I've extracted a few documents that I really needed though)

      --
      Can I light a sig ?
    211. Re:Hit them back by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      I simply meant that before spending any more we need to cut the deficit.

      The 3.5 trillion spend does not get covered but the 2.1 trillion collected. A tax raise to increase spending is irrispionsible.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    212. Re:Hit them back by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      Well, since Mr. Asange has not given his reasons for publishing private banking information of normal everyday citizens, all we can do is speculate.

      However, since you seem so "surprised"... perhaps you can speculate as to the reasons why he would violate the privacy of private citizens in such a way? What purpose could it serve in Wikileaks mission? I can't think of any, as such one must have to think about other, non-mission related reasons to publish said information.

    213. Re:Hit them back by russotto · · Score: 1

      If your government is corrupt, then you should work on fixing it, rather than leaving it as it is and trying to dodge whatever it throws your way.

      Why would anyone abandon a feasible approach for an unfeasible one?

    214. Re:Hit them back by Somewhat+Delirious · · Score: 1

      Tell that to the majority of the world population who's lives and resources we have been exploiting for hundreds of years to get to where we are. People with no redress to any form of legal protection, political representation, education or any means of getting out of the situation they are in. F*ck you buddy. You are a prime example of what is wrong with this planet: selfish, ignorant, misinformed, intellectually lazy and morally corrupt.

      --
      The surest sign that intelligent life exists elsewhere in the universe is that none of it has tried to contact us.
    215. Re:Hit them back by nikomen · · Score: 1

      The highest is in so-called "nanny states" BTW.

      Could you cite your source? I'm not saying you're right or wrong, I would just like to see a source if there is one. Maybe I need to move to a new state if it's true. Would this only apply to those who came from a lower-class family, or would it also apply to those from middle-class families working to move to the upper-middle class?

    216. Re:Hit them back by MadUndergrad · · Score: 1

      In that situation, you probably would be paying 100 times more for your car, food and house. Because they're nicer. You see, if you have more money, you're going to get more benefit from it.

      The guy who is earning 10000 a year might get a welfare check and foodstamps for his taxes, as well as some environmental and health protection. At 1000000 a year you'd be getting police protection of your stuff, military protection of your assets and investments, political power (that comes nearly free by virtue of just having the money), subsidies for your investments or business, the kind of stability that allows your business to even function, etc.

      The other guy is likely to be hassled by the cops as much as protected by them. He has no foreign investments that require a powerful military and diplomatic structure for protection. A much smaller military would be sufficient to prevent invasion. Most of all any benefits that keep him alive and not starving are keeping your workers alive and well and not rioting outside your door. Like someone else around here said, taxes buy civilisation.

    217. Re:Hit them back by Somewhat+Delirious · · Score: 1

      Stupid question.
      You don't steal bread because you don't want to be arrested.
      You steal services you use because you don't want to be arrested.

      It's like saying "I want to use the train but forcing me to pay for a train ticket is theft".

      --
      The surest sign that intelligent life exists elsewhere in the universe is that none of it has tried to contact us.
    218. Re:Hit them back by paulpach · · Score: 1

      or, is common roads, infrastructure and stuff like that too 'commie' for people like you?

      the fact that the gov mismanages our funds has nothing to do with the fact that the funds are NEEDED to 'run society'.

      I know I will be modded down, I don't care

      Not only is it unnecessary for government to build roads, but they would actually work much better if it was the private sector doing them. For example, there would not be any traffic at all, and there would not be roads built that are never used. You would not pay for roads you don't use like you do today through taxes.

      The same applies for many programs such as fire fighting, police, courts, education, national defense, charity and others

      Murry Rothbard even wrote a whole book describing not only how the private sector would handle each one of these services but very logically explains why it would do a better job at it. The book is free for you to read or even listen to, you can get it in html, pdf or mp3 for free. Your specific example of roads is addressed in chapter 11

    219. Re:Hit them back by jav1231 · · Score: 1

      Uhuh. And profiting if possible. You know it's funny. Assange and Wikileaks are hailed as "whistle-blowers" but how much is done to expose government waste that goes ignored. It's covered in the media, 60 minutes does an expose', meh.

    220. Re:Hit them back by Somewhat+Delirious · · Score: 1

      If it were possible for anyone and everyone to avoid paying taxes, I don't think anyone would mind.

      Actually, if it were possible for everyone, the powers-that-be would close or change the tax loopholes. The rich and powerful cannot be so without poorer/weaker people to support them.

      Central governments and taxation are the only things that make our modern society viable at all. Drop that and we're back in the stone ages.

      --
      The surest sign that intelligent life exists elsewhere in the universe is that none of it has tried to contact us.
    221. Re:Hit them back by Somewhat+Delirious · · Score: 1

      It supposed to be a fair way to raise the funds to provide the things required for a cvilised society.

      And there I was, thinking that a fair distribution of wealth was part of the idea of a civilised society. Oh well.

      --
      The surest sign that intelligent life exists elsewhere in the universe is that none of it has tried to contact us.
    222. Re:Hit them back by slick7 · · Score: 1

      Other people have to pay more than their fair share in taxes to compensate.

      Taxes have no meaning when paid by worthless paper.

      --
      The mind conceives, the body achieves, the spirit manifests.
    223. Re:Hit them back by khallow · · Score: 1

      However, since you seem so "surprised"... perhaps you can speculate as to the reasons why he would violate the privacy of private citizens in such a way?

      For example, the private citizens could be illegally transferring public resources out of some country or laundering money in a state-sanctioned way. They could show criminal activity and would be especially noteworthy, if they come from public figures like politicians who have significant conflicts of interest. In other words, if the matter is of legitimate public interest (and not just celebrity X has Y euros in an account). Even if my prior rationalization (and I don't make a claim to anything more than that) is bogus, why should I think the Wikileaks crowd is trying to boy off a few irate governments? If I chop your arm off and then offer you a lollipop, ok, a really big, colorful lollipop are you appeased? Wikileaks has harmed certain governments a great deal, they won't be satisfied with a few tax evaders or crooks, no matter how large.

    224. Re:Hit them back by Stradivarius · · Score: 1

      The source I got it from was Chad Hermann's the Radical Middle blog, which itself was quoting other sources and had the mixed use of "wealth" and "income" terms.

      I've seen similar numbers earlier, such as the NY Times (top 1 percent had 21.8 percent of income in 2005) and NY Times Economics Blog (top 1 percent had slightly over 20% of income and paid 40% of income taxes in 2007). The latter source links to the IRS data and also has some good charts.

    225. Re:Hit them back by SETIGuy · · Score: 5, Informative

      In the US, government jobs pay significantly better than private sector jobs on average.

      One of the famous "lie while telling the truth" games that the right loves to play. The average US government job does pay more than the average private sector job. But US government jobs are NOT average jobs. Most require higher levels of education and experience than the average private sector job.

      When compared to others of equal education and experience, US government workers are paid about 20% less than private sector workers. The discrepancy is worse for workers in medical fields and legal fields where the discrepancy approaches 45% (i.e. VA hospitals don't pay well) The only government workers that are paid better than their private sector workers are the ones at the bottom of the salary scale, janitors and menial laborers, and those, only by about 4%.

      But apparently the right thinks a government lawyer should be paid like a grocery store clerk.

    226. Re:Hit them back by Stradivarius · · Score: 1

      100% agreed. I was quoting a particular source and had been too lazy to find an alternative source with phrasing to distinguish wealth and income.

      However, since then I got over my laziness, and posted stats from the NY Times here:
      http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1953940&cid=34909250

    227. Re:Hit them back by nahdude812 · · Score: 1

      get you anywhere close to 2/3rds of your paycheck

      The final income tax bill? 49%

      49% is close to 2/3's? Seems like there ought to be a closer reasonable approximation we could make there, if we look hard enough.

    228. Re:Hit them back by adminma232 · · Score: 1
      I think you missed the point Monkeedude was trying to make. He is not talking about when businesses actually relocate their office & plant but when they set up a one person office in a tax haven to avoid paying tax. See Microsoft for an example: http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/blog/2009/sep/23/microsoft-tax-avoidance-questions

      The clear point the article above is trying to make is that Microsoft have basically nothing at all to do with Nevada, but have set up some shell office there simply to avoid paying tax to Washington State (which is where most of there software development is actually done). Seems wrong doesn't it? They get to use all the public infrastructure paid for by Washington State taxpayers but they themselves feel like they shouldn't have to contribute...

    229. Re:Hit them back by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      Oh good... Julius Baer are so stuck up it's unbelievable. They won't even look at you unless you have $10m and they certainly give the impression they are doing you a HUGE favor by letting you bank with them. Heh this is almost poetic. I hope it costs them all their business.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    230. Re:Hit them back by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      I'm amazed. This guy is systematically pissing off every thin veneered ego that I can imagine. It would be nice if this guy got information of companies like Goldman Sacks; (heavy sigh).

    231. Re:Hit them back by martin-boundary · · Score: 1

      Taxation is _NOT_ supposed to balance out the wealth.

      OF COURSE it is. The whole point of taxation is to have another tool for controlling the economy.

      Modern national governments don't NEED the tax money, as they can easily print as much of it as they like. But whenever new money is injected into circulation, there's devaluation. What governments therefore need is a way to REMOVE excess money from circulation when necessary, and that's what taxation allows to do.

      The best way to use this capability is to have a structured system which allows some form of targeted or localized removal. A flat tax rate is much too crude, as it affects everybody (the effect is global) and can't control the rich whose economic activities have much more impact. A progressive system is better, as the different taxation rates can be adjusted independently, eg to temper the behaviour of bankers, while at the same time leaving waiters and cleaners unaffected (or the other way around in certain countries).

    232. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd rather they work for a private business that can be ignored when it fails rather than a government bureaucracy that can't be touched when it fails.

      You mean like the various banks, savings and loans, and auto manufacturers, right?

      Nice rant, by the way.

    233. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, it's Mikey! Let's let Mikey eat it! Mikey hates everything!

      Please explain to us why a pseudonym that everyone within that user's social circle recognizes that user as is less "worthy" and more "cowering" than an equally arbitrary name assigned to him/her by his/her parents, Mikey.

    234. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      reverse the equation - how much will your tax be lower if all the sinners had been revealed and had to pay the fines, serve the sentences etc. Well I can tell you this without consulting tax office - null, nada, zero. There is no way any such input into the state's coffers is going to decrease burden on a little man. Unless the tax system does not work at all the amounts collected are so massive that no amount of evasion can be compared with them. Not that I pity people that hide their monies in these accounts. Not the big ones. I recall however that there were times in the country I come from when the only chance for some to get money out of the hands of a communist system was either to put the money into the box, dig a deep whole and put the box there or alternatively to put the money into swiss bank account. So it served many purposes and not only the evil evadors. In fact it may be argued that if the tax system were made simple with only few exceptions then not only it would costs tax office less to levy taxes (i.e. how much of tax dollar is left after deducing costs of apparatus that calculated, controlled and counted the money etc) but also the evading taxes would be quite unprofitable. Another truth that does not have much to do with tax sinners but much to do with the modern state budget problems that cause increase of common taxation is that companies pay rather little - Germany of all the countries is called tax heaven for big internationals because of its funny law - Vodaphone could for instance deduce the whole price they paid for German mobile company Mannesman - so they bought a company a Germans paid for it - as this goes on year after year the tax for common man must stay high. This game is played over and over again whenever you look in the tax code of any western country possibly with exception of small ones like Luxemburg or Swiss. In any case living in a society and using advantages associated with it obliges to pay taxes. The question is why so much of it gets wasted and how much of this waste ends up in the coffers of friends of friends of people that make rules that cause the waste? The system is still better than the one in some African countries but corruption stays corruption even if done legally.

      It is maybe interesting to thing about all this when one reads about tax sinners revealed by Mr. Elmer. Honestly I would hope that such (wiki)leak should make states rethink and redo their tax policies but I know better than to hope.

    235. Re:Hit them back by Whiternoise · · Score: 1

      I never mocked or opposed Chile or Cuba? When did I ever say that? To my shores? I live in Britain, thank-you very much and whenever I've needed it, the healthcare system was responsive and gave the desired results. The NHS has a lot of problems, largely due to managers rather than doctors running a healthcare operation and doing a pretty poor job of it. It didn't help that Labour poured money at it for years with minimal effect. Hopefully the recent Con-Lib plans to shake things up a bit will help, but I haven't got high hopes. This is beside the point, you totally missed the point of my post (by the sound of your response you didn't actually bother to read it) which was: if you don't pay tax in an economy where public services rely on it, you don't deserve to receive those services.

    236. Re:Hit them back by Fjandr · · Score: 1

      I did some fairly in-depth research about this topic a couple years back, and yes, in actual salary dollars public sector workers make less than their equally-educated counterparts in the private sector.

      However, that discrepancy is made up for in the non-cash perks and benefits received by public sector employees, both long- and short-term. There are many public workers who will complain that they don't fit into that category, but on closer examination such protestations usually turns out to be far more perception than reality.

      I'm not arguing for an across-the-board pay cut, just saying that the situation is anything but crystal clear from either side.

      I don't feel like spending the next couple hours putting together examples and sources though, so feel free to claim lack of citation.

    237. Re:Hit them back by Knightmare+1 · · Score: 0

      You wrongly assume that I want those government services at those prices in the first place. I don't. I would gladly not pay taxes and in return not get any services from the government.

    238. Re:Hit them back by khallow · · Score: 1

      You mean like the various banks, savings and loans, and auto manufacturers, right?

      That's right. I don't know just how much money the federal government has put into these businesses. But it's probably at least three trillion dollars. You have the ARRA and TARP funds (much which has been returned for an alleged "profit" which ignores the source for paying off the ARRA/TARP loans), that's somewhere around $1.5 trillion. But the whale is the Fed which has put in at least $2.5 trillion into bonds since 2008 (they were scheduled to have sunk in almost $3 trillion by June or so of this years). Who knows how much liability is hidden in this amount from bad debt?

    239. Re:Hit them back by Somewhat+Delirious · · Score: 1

      Sure. Talk to you later when you have arrived back in reality.

      --
      The surest sign that intelligent life exists elsewhere in the universe is that none of it has tried to contact us.
    240. Re:Hit them back by Fjandr · · Score: 1

      Interesting. So a $20,000/year raise is only a net increase of $83.33/month once you hit the 3rd tax bracket. Cool.

    241. Re:Hit them back by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      One of the arguments in favor of the estate tax is that it helps prevent the formation of family financial empires - vast collections of wealth passed down from parent to child to grandchild. Such things arn't good for society. Plus it raises the issue of fairness, if some people are born into certain wealth without any need to earn it.

      It's correctly called the estate tax. It's critics often call it a death tax. Supporters sometimes refer to it as the Paris Hilton tax.

    242. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you might have misunderstood this...
       

      It's not helpful that government at the federal and state levels also limits supply of health care (professional licensing, regulation on who can do what, and the opening of new health care facilities)

      Medical oxygen, for example, is regulated. They only give out a few licenses for the area I'm in. So say, for example, I want to start my own business, I can't because all those licenses are tied up! It isn't until someone closes down and gives up that license that I could maybe open, but of course, there's probably a waiting list for that. So I would have to BUY that license from the business.

      At least thats what I understood

    243. Re:Hit them back by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      The bully with a sword can still serve a purpose. He'll pay the law enforcement, for a start - and without that, anyone could just smash a window to your house while you are out and walk off with all your posessions.

    244. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A couple of points:

      1) There are PLENTY of doctors and dentists who are incompetent.

      2) Licensure is not there to protect the sick masses from quackery, but to protect the incomes of physicians.

    245. Re:Hit them back by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      "Companies don't move overseas to save on taxes. They move there to save on labor and to have reduced regulations."

      You assume a country exists in only one place. That isn't really true any more. It's quite easy for a company to have it's manufacturing facilities in China where labor costs are lowest while being officially incorporated in Guernsey.

      Guernsey is a good tax haven. That's why Specsavers is incorporated there.

    246. Re:Hit them back by icebraining · · Score: 1

      But the fact that he isn't from the US or one the US at the time of such actions does make him untouchable by US laws. Or at least, it should.

      If we (the western world) allow him to be trialled by countries where he didn't commit any crimes, we might as well extradite people to China, North Korea or Iran for criticizing their government.

    247. Re:Hit them back by Max+Littlemore · · Score: 1

      What has he done that has compromised any nation's security?

      Sure, he embarrassed a fascist republic, but the Fascist Republic of America embarrasses itself all the fucking time.

      --
      I don't therefore I'm not.
    248. Re:Hit them back by winwar · · Score: 1

      "But a much stronger point is that simply a lot of the regulations are too strict and act to restrict people that DO have enough training and expertise."

      What is the evidence for this? The actual barrier to entry for medical services is pretty low. Especially for basic care. In my state chiropractors and naturopaths can do general care.

    249. Re:Hit them back by winwar · · Score: 1

      "It's not helpful that government at the federal and state levels also limits supply of health care (professional licensing, regulation on who can do what, and the opening of new health care facilities) and opens health care providers to remarkable malpractice liability. End result is that patients consume too much and too expensive health care directly and indirectly (through malpractice and employer/government paid health benefits)."

      And this is why libertarian arguments are bullshit in practice. You complain about government interference (regulation) but rely on it to protect the individual (limited liability). It's dishonest and hypocritical.

    250. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not true. Almost anyone can (and probably does) evade taxes. Take a deduction that you don't really deserve, or don't report your income that doesn't show up from your employer's W-2. Using offshore accounts is certainly not the only way to avoid taxes.

    251. Re:Hit them back by sznupi · · Score: 1

      It simply was in the news, after OECD reports. Very quick Google search (I'm sure you can easily find more; and Wiki article "Social mobility" doesn't look bad either) gives:

      http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8162616.stm
      http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2010/mar/10/oecd-uk-worst-social-mobility

      (now we can start guessing the reasons why it apparently(?) went unnoticed in the US)

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    252. Re:Hit them back by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      "What is different between then and now?"

      People no longer have to dump their raw sewerage into the street.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    253. Re:Hit them back by winwar · · Score: 1

      "None of us really pay for all the services we use. That's why we have trillions of dollars of debt and how we actually afford a large budget deficit. Our taxes don't actually pay for everything, and we use much of the taxes revenue to simply pay on the loans and their interest (ie. bonds, notes, etc.)"

      That's the problem. We decided to use the credit card for services starting circa 1980. The problem is that eventually the debt service eventually overwhelms our ability to pay. And the longer we are not willing to pay upfront for it, the worse it gets.

      One party is using it as a way to dismantle the social safety net. I don't have an issue with them trying but they are not willing to be honest about it. Because they know people would be happy to raise taxes on the wealthy to fund it.

    254. Re:Hit them back by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      For more analysis than you can shake a stick at :

      http://blog.wolfram.com/2008/10/16/stock-market-returns-by-presidential-party/

      (strictly speaking it's not about public debt ... but it's definitely related)

      (it includes a lot of details. E.g. how do democrats get such very good returns ? Well searching for "inflation" in that page will tell you how)

    255. Re:Hit them back by winwar · · Score: 1

      "I don't know about you, but I don't like the idea of giving the government 2/3rds of my paycheck."

      It depends what I get for it. People are fixated on the amount of money that goes to the government rather than the value of the services they get in return. Of course when one of the parties that run the government is dedicated to destroying government, that value will be low by design. But apparently the people complaining the most are the ones creating the problem. I don't know why.

    256. Re:Hit them back by khallow · · Score: 1

      "It's not helpful that government at the federal and state levels also limits supply of health care (professional licensing, regulation on who can do what, and the opening of new health care facilities) and opens health care providers to remarkable malpractice liability. End result is that patients consume too much and too expensive health care directly and indirectly (through malpractice and employer/government paid health benefits)."

      And this is why libertarian arguments are bullshit in practice. You complain about government interference (regulation) but rely on it to protect the individual (limited liability). It's dishonest and hypocritical.

      So what makes that "dishonest and hypocritical". For it to be dishonest, there has to be some sort of falsehood or deception. I think I'm pretty open about what I want, namely, a minimal government strong enough to enforce basic government functions such as national defense or insurer of last resort, but no stronger than that. So no deception there.

      Second, what makes my stance hypocritical? There's no contradiction between minimal regulation and protecting the individual. Instead, the two goals are quite harmonious. Government remains the greatest threat to freedom. Sure, businesses and religions can themselves be a threat to freedom, but they are much less powerful than a government like the US. It's merely prudent to consider the greatest danger and how to mitigate it, especially when, as in my example of health insurance and care in the US, there is a demonstrated need to do so.

    257. Re:Hit them back by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      His is probably the worst paid job in the world when you factor in the risks. And it would still remain such even if he netted millions from it. Which he apparently doesn't, seeing how he has to sell book rights to pay for his legal defense.

    258. Re:Hit them back by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

      Ideally, taxes should be based upon wealth, rather than income, because wealth is the stake you have in a stable state that can guarantee public order. Suppose you have a net worth of $10M and I, on the other hand have nothing but $30k in credit card debt. If the state collapses, you stand to lose $10M and will probably have your throat slit by the people who take it from you. I, on the other hand, will lose $30k in debt and will probably have joined the roving band that is breaking down the door where the rest of your family have barricaded themselves.

      An extreme example, yes, but people who have less than nothing tend to make extreme choices. It does point out how the rich benefit more from public order than the poor do. It also points out a reason the rich shouldn't be bitching about taxes, when their tax rates are based upon income, which puts them at a lower percentage of their wealth going to taxes than the poor pay.

    259. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and the love of jesus?

      Muhammad you insensitive clod!

      ...actually wait, i don't think i can paint a picture of religious insensitivity with Muhammad...damn!

    260. Re:Hit them back by C0R1D4N · · Score: 1

      You clearly don't live in New Jersey.

    261. Re:Hit them back by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

      And I'm sick and tired of hearing about poor people bitching about taxes, since they don't pay any.

      And I sick and tired of rich people bitching about taxes for the same reason.

    262. Re:Hit them back by C0R1D4N · · Score: 1

      Russia is no longer in Europe? I know it has a whole lot of Asia, but was still under the impression that the important bits were Europe.

    263. Re:Hit them back by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

      Julian is withholding information for personal gain.

      I'm not sure trying not to be killed or otherwise disappeared would qualify as personal gain.

    264. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The progressive income tax also balances out the regressive nature of sales tax.

      Can I shoot you because you are a lying messenger?

    265. Re:Hit them back by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

      Please describe some of these perks. I've never heard of a public employee getting a year end bonus. Only Sarah Palin is able to claim per diem while staying at home. The last Park Ranger I met looked like he could barely afford to feed himself, and unlike a private tour guide, he is forbidden by law for accepting gifts. But that's what you get for having a graduate degree. At lease he seemed to enjoy his job.

      Maybe the (government run) health care is better than what the private sector gets?

    266. Re:Hit them back by Galestar · · Score: 1

      Sales tax is a regressive tax. Higher-income earners have a higher "propensity to save" - that is they put a higher percentage of their income into savings rather than spend it. This means they would pay LESS sales tax as a percentage of their incomes.

      You have it completely ass-backwards.

      --
      AccountKiller
    267. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you are NOTHING.

      patently false...feeb

    268. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      End result is that patients consume too much and too expensive health care directly and indirectly (through malpractice and employer/government paid health benefits).

      But lots of Western nations have universal healthcare, have had it for decades, and have not collapsed or anything like that. In fact, not just lots: it's pretty much ALL of them, with the exception of the USA.

      So I'm not sure what you're trying to say. That the USA is somehow fundamentally different from every other nation? I don't see how. That you're incapable of making it work, unlike everyone else? Come on, you can't be serious. What else, then?

      I think it's pretty obvious that the whole thing CAN work, and in fact WILL work - in the USA just like everywhere else.

    269. Re:Hit them back by tragedy · · Score: 1

      You do understand that it's not just about the services that the particular taxpayer directly uses, right? It seems that you're saying that if your neighbor is 10X richer than you, and personally uses 2X as much in government services (a very difficult number to actually measure since, for example, it's really hard to say how much road someone uses up in a year), then they should only be paying 2X the taxes you are, and not 10X. All very well and good, but where does their money come from? Let's oversimplify and make this all about roads and say that this neighbor owns a trucking company. Let's also say that the trucking company pays no tax itself because all profit goes to operating expenses and salaries, particularly that large salary your neighbor makes (generally doesn't go that way in the real world, but this is just for illustration, the principle isn't changed by it). So, your neighbors large income means that there's a fleet of his trucks out there using the roads, and you have to tack that on to his personal use of tax-backed, government supplied infrastructure.

    270. Re:Hit them back by poity · · Score: 1

      Would it not be sweeter irony if certain wealthy politicians who are FOR greater taxes were found to be holding considerable sums of money in non-taxed accounts? I mean, someone who is against taxes who then acts upon that to minimize his tax burden is a dodgy politician but his actions are congruent with his public position, however someone who rails against those who are for less taxes but secretly hides his money from the government would not only be dodgy but also a hypocrite.

      --
      your thin skin doesn't make me a troll
    271. Re:Hit them back by MichaelKristopeit402 · · Score: 0
      [citation needed]

      why do you cower? what are you afraid of?

      you're completely pathetic.

    272. Re:Hit them back by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      Suppose you have a net worth of $10M and I, on the other hand have nothing but $30k in credit card debt. If the state collapses, you stand to lose $10M and will probably have your throat slit by the people who take it from you. I, on the other hand, will lose $30k in debt and will probably have joined the roving band that is breaking down the door where the rest of your family have barricaded themselves.

      So the moral of the story is ... kill all the poor people?

      Are you really telling me that I need to pay taxes so that the lazy bastards and the criminals won't get together and kill me? Well fuck that. I'm not a big fan of blackmail. Maybe we should just hire blackwater to do some cleanup. Or go back to the old laws, where pretty much everything was a capital offense.

      It does point out how the rich benefit more from public order than the poor do.

      Not really, no. You look at medieval England and then look at modern society. The rich did just fine back then, too - it was mainly everyone else that suffered. "The Rich" can always organize, and hire enough of "the poor" to oppress the remainder. If you think that "the poor" in modern nations have nothing (or very little) to lose, you obviously haven't traveled much.

    273. Re:Hit them back by Fjandr · · Score: 1

      It's pretty clear where you stand. If that's truly the case, it's unlikely anything I post here will satisfy you. If you actually care, the information is pretty easily available from authoritative sources.

      Short list:
      FEHB
      Education loan repayment
      Continuing education
      Unrivaled job security (20 firings per 100,000 workers non-defense)
      Short hours
      Flexible scheduling
      Capless leave accrual
      Top retirement benefits (unless you're a corporate exec)

      There are exceptions, none of which are the norm. At upper levels, salaries exceed almost any private sector counterpart in addition to the benefits you will find in almost no other non-executive compensation package.

    274. Re:Hit them back by enaso1970 · · Score: 1

      Mod to 50. And you'd have a birth ci

    275. Re:Hit them back by Stormy+Dragon · · Score: 1

      He didn't say to eliminate all licensing, he just said that their should be more. Right now, the licensing process in most states is controlled by the state medical association, that is a group composed of all the existing doctors. Not suprisingly, they have a big incentive to limit the number of new doctors that are licensed every year so they can charge more.

      It also extends to things beyond doctors. Why, for example, does all prescription medicine need to be bought from a licensed pharmacist? This made sense back when the pharmacist had to make all the medicine themselves, but now adays, the vast majority of cases, they're just reading a slip of paper, going to the appropriate shelf, and bringing back one container. That's not something that should require six years of post secondary education.

    276. Re:Hit them back by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      In that situation, you probably would be paying 100 times more for your car, food and house. Because they're nicer.

      Sure. And if the government gave me nicer roads, my own private fire and police department, a personal doctor and dentist, and private tutors for my kids, then the higher taxes might be justified. Since they don't, your analogy is worthless.

      The guy who is earning 10000 a year might get a welfare check and foodstamps for his taxes, as well as some environmental and health protection.

      And roads. And a postal system. And fire protection. And police protection. And education. And access to thousands of public facilities, like libraries, museums, pools, ice rinks, gymnasiums, etc. And subsidized housing. And free access to news media. And all the various other things which allow "poor people" today to live lives which the nobility of times past would have been envious of.

      At 1000000 a year you'd be getting police protection of your stuff

      Right. Which is why anyone with a decent sized house has a home alarm system which is probably linked to a private security force. Because we count on the police to protect our stuff.

      military protection of your assets and investments

      The military protects society as a whole, not "assets and investments". Yes, I know that the really crazy idealogues like to claim otherwise, but I'm just going to assume you're not one of them.

      political power (that comes nearly free by virtue of just having the money)

      It also has little to do with taxes. Political power is bought with campaign contributions and by being having influence in the community - no politician is going to give a damn how much taxes you pay.

      subsidies for your investments or business

      Heh. Maybe if you're a farmer.

      Unless by "subsidies" you mean "the government takes less money than they normally would".

      the kind of stability that allows your business to even function

      The kind of stability that allows poor people to have 2 cars and a plasma TV?

      The other guy is likely to be hassled by the cops as much as protected by them.

      [citation needed]

      He has no foreign investments that require a powerful military and diplomatic structure for protection.

      Yeah, when did diplomacy ever help anyone?

      A much smaller military would be sufficient to prevent invasion.

      His $0 or less contribution wouldn't pay for a smaller military, either.

      It's a bullshit argument, anyway. In a society where nearly everyone was dirt poor, your hypothetical $10,000-per-year guy would be far worse off than he is in our society. He'd probably be dying of malaria in a ditch, while his children spent 18 hours a day making shoes or working as prostitutes.

      Also, the Canadian military really isn't that big. I don't think we could get it much smaller, really. Take away another 1,000 soldiers and we'd get our asses kicked by the Boy Scouts.

      Most of all any benefits that keep him alive and not starving are keeping your workers alive and well and not rioting outside your door.

      Hey here's an idea - stop taxing me to death and just let me pay the workers what their labor is worth! I won't give the guy who cleans toilets enough money to buy that second car, but I guarantee he'll get enough to live comfortably.

      Like someone else around here said, taxes buy civilisation.

      Two words: North Korea.

    277. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Karma? Who says they didn't see this coming and wanted to nip it in the bud?

    278. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They both earn more per hour than I do. Unfortunately, in my nanny state, if you're offered a job you have to take it or else. I was offered a minimum wage job that has several unpaid hours that must be completed if you want to keep the job. If I don't want to do those hours, I'm legally turning down the job, even if it's for illegal work conditions.

      Yeah, we presently have a right wing government.

    279. Re:Hit them back by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

      But they don't decide which car I buy, which programs I use, what cell phone scheme I buy or if I even buy one of those. Imagine if we had to vote on what cell phone plans we wanted and then everyone would get what the majority decided. What if I didn't want a cellphone, or I wanted a cheaper plan or a more expensive one? I would have no choice but to accept what the majority decided for me. Even worse, we rarely vote on direct issues like that. We only vote for who is going to decide for us, leaving us with even less choice on how to run our own lives.

      Oh yes we do! The inevitable result of "free market" is total monopolization, that can be broken only if monopolist makes some truly suicidal move.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    280. Re:Hit them back by buybuydandavis · · Score: 1

      Surprisingly, not much lower. You hear a lot about waste/inefficiency, but although you can find any number of egregious examples of misapropriation, they amount to a small fraction of the total.

      Misappropriation isn't the main source of waste. The problem is that central planning spends money inefficiently. Worse, laws and regulations limit possibilities and destroy wealth in ways you rarely ever see.

      If I went into Walgreens and said, here is my credit card, I'd like to buy my pills, I'd pay $200. With insurance company price negotiation, the price is $80. Mail order from and out of state pharmacy, $25. Mail order on the internet, $10 plus shipping. Walk into a pharmacy in Malaysia, $2.

      That's the scale of the cost differentials government regulations impose.

    281. Re:Hit them back by Nothing2Chere · · Score: 1

      I recall that there was an article a few weeks ago about Bank of America buying up defamatory domain names.

      Makes me wonder which exec's are at the top of the soon to be released list.

      N2CH

    282. Re:Hit them back by Thing+1 · · Score: 1

      For some, it's worth it.

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
    283. Re:Hit them back by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

      Oh, don't bet on it! USA is unique when it comes to the amount of people in government and business who would sabotage the lives of hundreds of millions to get some trivial amount of benefit for themselves.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    284. Re:Hit them back by fredjh · · Score: 1

      I already said that... if you indirectly use the roads, you indirectly pay for them - shipping/mail would be the most obvious case. The more you use them (directly or indirectly), ultimately the more you'd pay.

      Again, how is that not fair?

      As far as your complaint (it seems from your context) that you'd be paying through hundreds of channels instead of one, this is no different than the current state of taxation anyway. Where do you think businesses get the money to pay for payroll taxes? Corporate income taxes? They get it from you - the customer, directly or indirectly. You already pay (in the U.S.) an average embedded tax of around 21% on every good and service you buy already.

      --
      Stupid, sexy Flanders.
    285. Re:Hit them back by Thing+1 · · Score: 1

      Polls basically just say that we all just selfish ego-centric bastards.

      I think we should tax the people who run these types of surveys. Then, we could truly return to a system that everyone would enjoy: a poll tax!

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
    286. Re:Hit them back by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      anyone could just smash a window to your house while you are out and walk off with all your posessions.

      You just described wealth redistribution.

    287. Re:Hit them back by Thing+1 · · Score: 1

      Personal privacy can never be justified as a shield for illegal acts.

      Did you just gut the 4th and 5th?

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
    288. Re:Hit them back by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

      Public can not benefit from increasing supply of medical oxygen, so there is no point of having more suppliers. No one cares about your desire to start a business.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    289. Re:Hit them back by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

      Enjoy 4chan posters combining their funds to commission goatse on the moon.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    290. Re:Hit them back by wierd_w · · Score: 1

      Considering that it is almost garanteed that by now some portion of the circulated carbon contained inside that ear of corn grown in Iowa that I am about to eat was also once contained in a dinosaur turd, and at least one other human at some point in the carbon cycle, the issue of what source the nitrogen based fertilizer came from is rather moot when it comes to the "terrible" concept of eating something that is made of raw materials that were once inside another human being.

      Take for instance, the number of breaths you take in a day. Each exhalation releases carbon atoms that were previously a part of your own body, due to the process of respiration. In addition to this, there are the CO2 and NH4 emissions from your fecal waste products at various waste processing centers. Plants absorb these to make sugars and protiens. Often, due to issues with people going "Eww, the dookie STINKIES! I don't want it in my back yard!" such treatment centers are placed on the far outskirts of civil centers... Within close proximity to... you guessed it-- farmland.

      About the only real issue I would see would be the improper/incomplete denaturation of the greedy basards prior to their corporeal remains being used to make cheap nitrogen fertilizer and animal feed, and the resulting public health issues that this would induce. (Much like the sheep scrapie+Cattle feed debacle that caused the BSE epidemic in the UK.)

      Otherwise, it just amounts to "Oh dear, I think that's ICKY!" and has no real or substantial merit to it at all. You are already eating what used to be human corpse or human feces pretty much every time you sit down to dinner anyway, regardless of shuch foibles.

      Now, if you want to talk about the slippery slope aspect of killing and grinding up "Greedy" people, (Take for instance, the starvation of thousands of people in the Ukraine under Stalinist soviet russia for being "Greedy" farmers, who in reality were not "Greedy" in any stretch of the term, but were instead simply "undesirable") I am more than happy to talk turkey there. The question then, is if the proponent of such "repurposing" of the corporeal materials of said "Greedy people" can give a sufficiently exclusive definition of the word 'Greedy' that is at once accurate, concise, and immune to being exploited by the very people it is meant to recycle. Considering the difficulty inherent in that task, I doubt that they would be able to do so if asked. I know I sure as hell can't.

      In closing, I fail to see how the source of raw materials impacts the edibility of the resulting product, assuming proper processing has been employed of course, but instead question if the selection process for such "creative biological recycling" is sufficiently stringent to prevent inappropriate designations and abuse.

      Since I have no problems eating food right now with that knowledge, I do not believe I would have much more difficulty eating food that was actively fertilized with denatured human corpses, so long as those corpses are properly processed and sourced.

      EG, I wouldnt see a problem with instuting say-- government mandated denaturation of human corpses into useful raw materials, instead of ceremonially sequestering them in iron boxes-- but do see a problem with doing the same with already living people, given the propensity of powerful people to find ways to exploit such systems for short-sighted, if not outright genocidal purposes.

    291. Re:Hit them back by Kumiorava · · Score: 1

      Saving 10 thousand is a lot easier than giving up things for that long time. Once comfortable cushion is established (say 500 dollars) and credit card debts are under control spending starts to decrease significantly. No overage charges, no high interest rates, no late fees, no leases, no monthly payments, no extra fees for low credit, etc.

      Going from living paycheck to paycheck to accumulating wealth is surprisingly fast if there is some sort of steady income available.

    292. Re:Hit them back by SomeKDEUser · · Score: 1

      woooosh.

    293. Re:Hit them back by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

      Most people who benefit from roads are ones who do not drive on them. This is why roads are treated as infrastructure.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    294. Re:Hit them back by buybuydandavis · · Score: 1

      The main problem with health care are distortions caused by government intervention, mainly through regulations and tax policy.

      Because of tax policy, the market has been distorted to where people are buying health buffet plans, instead of health insurance. Insurance makes sense for high cost. low probability events, not every medical purchase. We also insure end of life care, which really isn't a low probability event either.

      Stop distorting the market. Subsidize care for those who can't afford it, but otherwise make people pay for their own health care.Leave them free to buy a much broader range of prescription medications w/o getting the permission of a government licensed provider. Let people order minimally invasive tests without similar permission. Let companies import medications from the lowest cost suppliers, trusting in the regulators of some finite list of countries for quality control. Let consumers order directly from the same countries.

      Deduct costs for all subsidized care out of any estate. Subsidize care, don't subsidize inheritance.

      Change liability law so that Google can provide online Google Diagnostics. So that offshore companies can provide medical consultations.

      Add this to regulations and liability law, and we could be paying a third as much with better outcomes, satisfaction, and freedom.

    295. Re:Hit them back by iammani · · Score: 1

      https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/File:US_Federal_Debt_as_Percent_of_GDP_by_President.jpg As you can see, it was lower a decade ago. But I agree with you point, both parties have contributed equally to the debt situation.

    296. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well I got the joke, even though no one else seems to have caught it.

    297. Re:Hit them back by buybuydandavis · · Score: 1

      This was insightful? Nothing in the world will ever work unless a government regulator is there making it work?

      Wouldn't freedom be a horrible thing?

      I wanted to start taking simvastatin for high cholesterol. To start taking a medication that costs $4 a month, I had to schedule a $200 dollar appointment with a doctor (and that's the insurance companies negotiated price). The doctor feels my cholesterol is 5 points too low to warrant using simvastatin. He acknowledges that most doctors would be perfectly fine prescribing in my case, but he isn't comfortable with it. So I should pay another $200 for an appt with another doc? No thanks. I brow beat the guy into giving me a prescription, because he had no good arguments against it besides his feelings anyway.

      You shudder to think about the bad care given if patients were free to trust who they trust. I shudder to think of the millions killed each year by the arbitrary restrictions to health freedom and the associated increased cost of care.

    298. Re:Hit them back by paulzeye · · Score: 1

      Can you give me some more details? The only people I can think of who do not drive on roads are maybe people who live in cities and just use public transit? If roads are paid for with gas taxes, tolls, and property taxes people in cities will pay higher prices for the cost of goods they buy shipped in on roads (to cover the cost of gas taxes and tolls that are incurred shipping the goods into the city) or pay for roads with their local property taxes. I think roads are a pretty clear example of where people who benefit from them can pay for them with use taxes (gas taxes & tolls) & property taxes.

    299. Re:Hit them back by buybuydandavis · · Score: 1

        The average US government job does pay more than the average private sector job. But US government jobs are NOT average jobs. Most require higher levels of education and experience than the average private sector job.

      Like teachers degrees from teaching colleges, which unions can use to wall themselves off for competition for their tenured for life jobs?

      You mean those degrees are the ones that justify their higher than market salaries?

    300. Re:Hit them back by buybuydandavis · · Score: 1

      Great post.

      My pet peeve with tax talk is how people use income tax rates as evidence that "the rich" are paying their fair share.

    301. Re:Hit them back by khallow · · Score: 1

      So I'm not sure what you're trying to say. That the USA is somehow fundamentally different from every other nation? I don't see how. That you're incapable of making it work, unlike everyone else? Come on, you can't be serious. What else, then?

      I'm trying to figure out what your concerns are. Yes, the US does have fundamentally different and more expensive health care. Yes, that probably means it is unable to make one of the other approaches work (look what happened to Obamacare). Finally, eliminating the private US health care market through nationalization may well be a disaster for human health everywhere. Who will buy new treatments and medical machines if the plump US market isn't there any more? There's got to be a way to preserve the US's unique private enterprise structure without costing double the arms and legs of nationalized health care systems.

    302. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seriously, think about what you just said. "Even hundreds of years ago" .. as in .. before there were licensed medical professionals. Obviously there are social mechanisms that do not involve government regulation.

      In order to be a MD, you need to go through high school, undergrad, then med school. If you're going to actually practice, there are additional terms of instruction in interns and residency. Minting out new doctors is a long slow process. Even when you could be treated by a nurse, you still make an appointment at a doc's office. So the limitation on new docs also serves to limit health care provided by nurses.

      Even if you think thats a good thing, why would you imagine that prescription medications are? You must visit one of these MDs to get a prescription. I suppose so that you don't do things like abuse painkillers or take unnecessary drugs. Except that prescription drugs are already ridiculously available through illegal means. Requiring me to go to an MD for a condition that I'm already aware I have, in order to get the drug I already know I need wastes the doc's time and my money. The other choice risks legal consequences.

      Having a searing pain wake you up, then being charged a ridiculous fee for daring to show up at the ER (because.. you need a doc but even docs like 9-5 days so there isn't anywhere else with a doc but the ER for half the day..) then the ridiculous cost for a scan. All to be given a prescription for $10 of painkiller and that I'd be fine.

      I could've gone across the street and dropped $10 on painkiller. Would've cost less than the ER's co-pay, and the health insurance company wouldn't have had any reimbursements to do.

      Seriously. Shit like that is why health insurance is fucking expensive. Extortion nearly always is.

    303. Re:Hit them back by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      If you think that "the poor" in modern nations have nothing (or very little) to lose, you obviously haven't traveled much.

      Now, now, don't be too hasty. One needn't go any great distance to be a fellow traveler.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    304. Re:Hit them back by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      If you will give 66 cents for every 49 cents I give you, then I will agree, until then 49% is not near 66%.

      Besides, that 49% is not on every dollar earned. the SS/FICA stop just after $100,000. The Fed and State Taxes are incremental, so it may be true that Connecticut has a maximum tax rate of 14% which would be added to the maximum federal tax rate of 35% to get to 49%. However, even if that is true, it is still not on gross income, but instead on adjusted gross income, which is always lower, which means the effective tax rate compared to gross income is less, too.

      As for property and sales/use tax, they don't apply as the original poster was referring to 2/3 of every dollar earned being paid in taxes. That would be an income tax.

    305. Re:Hit them back by toddestan · · Score: 1

      Here's some numbers straight from the Fed themselves:
      http://www.gpoaccess.gov/usbudget/fy05/hist.html

      Table 15.3 seems pretty relevant (warning: Excel file). As of 2005 they have government spending as percentage of GDP at 31.4%. Granted, the table is a bit out of date, but the numbers hang around 30% until you get back into the early 1960's. The earliest date they have is 1948 at 17.2%. Too bad this table doesn't have any pre-WW2 data. Table 1.2 goes back to 1930, and it only includes Federal spending (no state and local), and has federal spending at 3.4% of GDP in 1930. So I'll say that the 40% number for total spending seems high, but not implausible given the huge stimuluses (stimuli?) in the pass couple of years. However, I'm going to guess that the 2% number is federal spending only and therefore not comparable to the 40% number.

    306. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Generally.. I find your comments pretty insightful.. but really, questioning how the cost to produce education could increase? Really?

      First, there are more children to educate.

      Second.. there may be more tools making it less labor intensive (although, I'm not sure I'd necessarily agree) that doesn't make the tools more efficient or productive. So it is entirely possible to require less labor and be less efficient, meaning less knowledge is passed on per child per year. Some stuff being taught in 3rd grade, I didn't learn until 4th or 5th grade. On the other hand, some stuff being taught in 8th grade, I learned waaaaay earlier. I can't say for certain that this second bit is in play, but its definitely possible. Labor saving devices tend to turn out blueprinted products. Not everybody acquires information equally well. Instructors with small classes can adapt to the needs of the individual. In other words, it is precisely the extra labor that makes it effective. Sort of a you get what you pay for situation.

      Third, education durations are increasing. How long ago was it that having a few years of formal schooling was considered sufficient? One to two centuries? How long since a high school education was considered sufficient? How long do we have until anything less than a master's degree is considered woefully uneducated? More time spent educating means more money spent paying educators.

    307. Re:Hit them back by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      I sort of wonder if this is an olive branch from Wikileaks to the US government. After all, the United States has been pressuring Switzerland to allow investigators to peek inside Swiss accounts for awhile now.

      This isn't an olive branch at all. The US Government already achieved much of what it wanted in 2009.

      A Swiss Bank Is Set to Open Its Secret Files
      By LYNNLEY BROWNING - Published: February 18, 2009
      UBS, the largest bank in Switzerland, agreed on Wednesday to divulge the names of well-heeled Americans whom the authorities suspect of using offshore accounts at the bank to evade taxes. The bank admitted conspiring to defraud the Internal Revenue Service and agreed to pay $780 million to settle a sweeping federal investigation into its activities.

      It is unclear how many of its clients’ names UBS will divulge. Federal prosecutors have been examining about 19,000 accounts at the bank, but UBS ultimately may disclose the identities of only a few hundred customers. ...

      As part of the settlement, UBS agreed to cooperate with a broad summons issued by the Justice Department to turn over the names. Under the terms of a so-called deferred prosecution agreement, the bank and its executives could be indicted if UBS didn’t identify the customers.

      UBS has said it is closing the offshore accounts of its American clients. But under the deal with the United States authorities, the bank must provide periodic written evidence of that to prosecutors. UBS earned $200 million annually from the business.

      Prosecutors suspect that from late 2002 to 2007, UBS helped American clients illegally hide $20 billion, letting them evade $300 million a year in taxes.

      So no, this isn't Assange helping the US, it is Assange doing what he can to screw people with secrets (legal or otherwise).

      I'm sure there is a word to describe the overall situation.... i.. something...

      Under mansion arrest: Country bolthole lined up for WikiLeaks chief Julian Assange... as he begs judges not to reveal his address

      Now Wikileaks suffers its own leaks - 12 Dec 2010

      ... a senior WikiLeaks activist told The Sunday Telegraph that she and others had resigned from the organisation because of their deep concern about its treatment of sources and "lack of transparency with relation to large sums of money".

      This newspaper has learned that one of WikiLeaks's main funding channels, the Germany-based Wau Holland Foundation, has been issued with two official warnings by charity regulators after failing to file financial records....

      WikiLeaks, which says its operating costs are about $200,000 (£125,000) a year, claims to have raised more than $1 million (£625,000) in donations in the first eight months of this year alone, before most of its highest- profile leaks were published.

      Since then, according to one person connected with the group, further "serious amounts of money" have come in, mostly in small sums through the WikiLeaks website. However, in its four-year existence, the group and its associated organisations have never produced any accounts.

      WikiLeaks promised to publish accounts in August, but did not do so. It now says it will provide them by the end of the year.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    308. Re:Hit them back by 4phun · · Score: 1

      Not to worry.

      The Catholic Church has their very own International Vatican Bank to launder money.

      That is the only way to go. You don't have to worry about the Swiss Banks, other greedy governments, or Wikileaks with your international funds hidden in the Vatican Bank.

      Julian Assange and his Internet cronies would have already been found hanging by the neck from various Italian Bridges as obvious despondent suicides if they threatened the Vatican Bank with WikiLeaks.

    309. Re:Hit them back by mjwx · · Score: 1

      Not sure why you're a troll, this is a very common view. People poorer than me are lazy and should work harder

      Common where you may live, quite glad that's nowhere near where I live.

      GP is marked troll because he is dead wrong. The majority of poor in Western society are minimum wage earners who work the same 38 hour week as me (sometimes more, just like me) that earn less than half of what I do.

      You may call them lazy because they didn't get a trade or education like I did but then again they were working from job age until now earning the same crappy minimum wage. I don't know about you, but moving bags of concrete, tending bar or stacking shelves for 38 hours a week for a measly A$570 isn't what I'd call lazy (that might seem like a lot to you but Australia is a very expensive country to live in).

      But why not stop there, The hard drive in your PC, chances are that was made in...

      Thailand.

      The average monthly wage for a factory worker in Thailand is 3000 Baht a month for an 8 hour job, six days a week (just shy of US$100 these days). Because the labour laws in Thailand are easily skirted, they can be offered an additional 3000 Baht a month to work an additional six hours a day. Thailand is also one of the richer SE Asian nations, a Philipino or Indo worker gets nothing like that.

      Point in short, Thai's are poor.

      Now do you think working in Western Digitals assembly plant is easy work for the lazy individual?

      So the parent is correctly marked as Troll.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    310. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you seriously stop reading something just because the author says one thing you disagree with? How small of a mind do you have? I am not the author. I am simply too lazy to sign in.

    311. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They also do their own fact checking. They confirm the authenticity of everything they release. An example is interviewing Iraqi witnesses to the Collateral Murder video.

    312. Re:Hit them back by electrosoccertux · · Score: 1

      tax structure is surprising unimportant when it comes to an economy. Any macroeconomist worth his salt knows this. What IS important is where those taxes go: are they spent disproportionately on programs that do nothing to improve the efficiency of the workers of the country? Then the country's economy fails. Every time.

    313. Re:Hit them back by electrosoccertux · · Score: 1

      How many of these people do you think have $10,000 USD sitting around?

      There are lots of people who live paycheck to paycheck, perhaps more than you realize. And it's not that they don't know how to save money, its that they are stuck working dead end jobs like Gas Station attendants or WalMart greeters, and about 80% of their income goes towards living expenses like rent, food, utilities, phone bills, etc. The rest is spent on the 1 dinner and a movie a month to keep their sanity, and then birthday and Christmas presents when they come around.

      For some people, saving up 10 thousand dollars would quite literally mean giving up everything you enjoy in life for over 2 years.

      I don't disagree with you, but I had to ride public transit 1.5hrs each way for my coop job while I was in school because I couldn't afford a car.

      My reward? Graduating with $50k in debt as opposed to $100k in debt.
      Now, do I expect everyone to do this? Lady I worked with in HS had a kid, worked as a manager at mcD. Was going to take her 8 years to get through community college.
      That said, if everyone lived below their means, companies would have to lower prices more, and being poor would be less of a burden.

      aside: there is something to be said for the fact that I'm more in debt than many people will ever be allowed to be.

    314. Re:Hit them back by electrosoccertux · · Score: 1

      Good for them. Social Security and Medicare are dead ends anyway and were to begin with.

    315. Re:Hit them back by electrosoccertux · · Score: 1

      Oprah tried to start a school in NY here for those children, but they wanted Ipods for Christmas. So she built it in the country of Africa where they wanted clothes to go to school.
      .
      .
      .
      .
      .
      .
      .
      sorry guys, Africa's not a country, I'm not stupid.

    316. Re:Hit them back by budgenator · · Score: 1

      "Because of tax policy, the market has been distorted to where people are buying health buffet plans, instead of health insurance. "
      That's what people don;t understand, they buy "Insurance" from what would have or could have been their wages, their employer pay $1.00 on their behalf and convinces the worker that's worth $2.00, the Insurance takes a healthy cut as profits and pays the rest to the employees health care provider, well except that there is a deducible. If the deductible is $500.00 and the "insurance" pays 80/20, on 80% fee, that means that the employee has to spend $625.00 to satisfy a $500.00 deductible so the "insurance will start paying 80% of 80% or 64% of the health-care providers bill!

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    317. Re:Hit them back by tokul · · Score: 1

      But the fact that he isn't from the US or one the US at the time of such actions does make him untouchable by US laws. Or at least, it should.

      If you learn what Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act is, you will know that other countries have similar laws too. US laws don't apply to him, but Australian laws do.

    318. Re:Hit them back by empiricistrob · · Score: 2

      Nice reference. Unfortunately it proves the GP's point. Between 1992 and 2000 the public debt increased by 1.6 trillion, or about 200 billion per year. If you look at the above link you'll see that the interest payments were far greater than this increase. Or, to put it another way, during the Clinton administration the only increase in the public debt was interest on the public debt. Granted that has been spun like crazy, but compare that to the Bush years: Between 2000 and 2008 the public debt increased by 4.3 trillion, or about 540 billion per year. The interest on the debt was approximately 350 billion of that 540 billion per year. So in the case of clinton the "programs that they have decided to exclude from the formula" is the interest on the national debt. In the case of Bush there just isn't any case -- the debt rose way faster than the interest.

    319. Re:Hit them back by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      Troll seems odd. I was aiming for satire. The key difference being I assume people realised I wasn't representing my own opinions but a parody of someone else's.

      Have you never met anyone who doesn't think that their success is entirely down to their own skill?

      Do you know nobody who thinks they pay too much in taxes, yet thinks that the rich should pay more, even though by the standards of many people they are very wealthy?

      My point and the GP's point is simply that people consider themselves fairly average, and can't conceive that some people would categorise them as rich.

    320. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am sure Sonia/Rahul Gandhi's name would be on top of list to have money in Swiss Bank. See SONIA/RAHUL GANDHI Exposed on YOUTUBE. COM by Dr Swamy. Every Indian who's names comes out stacking Looted money in Swiss Bank must be arrested under NSA and Officially named " TRAITOR ". Julian Assanje should be Honored as " BHARAT RATNA " for his Great Patroitic work to India which no Security Agency or Politician had done till today.

    321. Re:Hit them back by xenobyte · · Score: 1

      HA!! - It's the perfect payback!

      I'm certain that a lot of the people hiding money will move them now in order to claim "false or fabricated information!" - and that will hurt the banks, including PostFinance.

      --
      "For every complex problem, there is a solution that is simple, neat, and wrong." -- H.L. Mencken (1880-1956) --
    322. Re:Hit them back by Dr_Terminus · · Score: 1

      Why do you pay 100 times more? Because you're dependent on all the services and roads provided by the government to make that kind of money. And because you have so much more to lose if the protections, stability and infrastructure provided by the government weren't there.

      Lets assume you make $1,000,000 in the US. With that salary, you would have a pretty good standard of living. Now, imagine moving to Sudan with that same salary. Looks good at first, since you won't have to pay any of those pesky taxes to the government. But it gets more complicated if you want to keep your standard of living. You're going to have to hire a security force to keep your property safe, bribe some local officials to make sure you have electricity (or buy a generator + fuel), provide your own water and sewage system, etc. Pretty much everything you take for granted will have to be paid for separately... and I'm guessing it wont be cheap.

      So the rich *should* pay more taxes because their use of the infrastructure, protection and stability provided by the govt has enabled them to make more. And providing for the poor with taxes is actually beneficial in the long run! Give the poor enough money to live, and enough stability in their lives (medicare, education, etc), will help prevent them for looking for money elsewhere (i.e. breaking into your mansion and stealing crap). Less crime = smaller need for police funding.

    323. Re:Hit them back by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      The pharmacist thing isn't pointless.
      They have to learn a great deal about drug interactions: in some cases more than the doctors so while you're doctor might prescribe 2 pills your pharmacist is supposed to be able to realise that the 2 of them sometimes interact badly.

      Doctors can't be experts in everything in the universe.

    324. Re:Hit them back by hairyfish · · Score: 1

      What about this?

    325. Re:Hit them back by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      Right... so you saw some lovely ads which told you that some med was the best thing since sliced bread and decided you simply MUST have it because the TV told you so.

      Meanwhile the trained professional who was more familiar with the side effects, risks and effectiveness of the medication was a bit iffy about giving it to you since your cholesterol wasn't really high enough to make it worth it.... so you shouted at him until he gave it to you to make you go away.

      great example there.

    326. Re:Hit them back by hairyfish · · Score: 1

      Fighting stupid wars are a waste. I'm all for invading foreign countries to exercise our muscle, but let's choose wars we can win for once. FFS how many times can we fuck these things up?

    327. Re:Hit them back by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      You didn't actually read my post before replying, did you? You just scanned a couple of words and then applied your own prejudices to what I said.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    328. Re:Hit them back by jonaskoelker · · Score: 1

      Also, what is "waste"? is funding fundamental science waste?

      No, I don't think so. Some things that are worth the forgone consumption this year are not done by private initiative. Ever.

      is funding liberal arts waste?

      Arguably, yes. Around my parts, we make jokes about the humanities students educating themselves into unemployment, and a few years back we made jokes about them and a certain fast food McFranchise.

      If no one wants to purchase their expertise, who benefits from it except themselves? If they are the sole beneficiaries, why should all of us pay for it? Shouldn't they (to be fair) pay each one of all of us the same amount we're paying them (resulting in a net transfer of 0)?

      Are the likes of the FDA waste?

      By requiring drugs to go through lengthy trials, you delay them coming onto the market. Whether the higher safety compensates for the delay in effective treatment is, I think, an empirical question.

      Is paying for some dubious piece of art in your own town waste?

      Let the free market handle this. If it "dies" in the free market, why is that the wrong result? What's the market failure here?

      Is paying people to check for fraud waste

      That depends on how much fraud it discovers and fines, and how much wasteful fraud it deters, versus how much it costs. Got the numbers?

      Or is the fraud the largest cause of waste?

      I don't know. That's an empirical question.

    329. Re:Hit them back by buybuydandavis · · Score: 1

      I can see why you want an authority to run your life, because you're clearly unable to read simple sentences.

      You seemed to have missed the part where the doctor admitted that most doctors would be fine prescribing it in my case. I had plenty of my experts on my side too.

      There is always a doctor somewhere who will go along with the program. And there are always doctors who won't. We shouldn't have to doctor shop to get what we want. Because in the end, it's always our decision, the only question is how much time, money, and effort the government will force us to waste to get what we want.

      And I didn't shout at him, I merely countered all his weak excuses. He was merely asserting one of his own intellectual whims. He wasn't asserting expertise anymore than the doctors who would have said yes.

      Honest and intelligent doctors know that they generally don't know if a medicine will help or hurt a particular patient, and have enough humility to admit their ignorance. In the face of their ignorance, they'll give their best advice, but let people make their own decisions. The central planners would do well to emulate them.

    330. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you adjust for inflation (google for debt in 1950 dollars for the data) there actually was a dip during the Clinton years.

    331. Re:Hit them back by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      So because he pointed out that a lot of his peers would be lazy and just give in to the pushy guy who has been convinced by the ad campaign that this magic pill will fix his problems he's bad.
      And because he's not going to automatically hand it over and migh *GASP* consider the risks and the benefits as an expert and *GASP* might disagree with the moron who WANTS HIS MAGIC PILLS RIGHT NOW DAMNIT then he's a bad doctor?

      "In the face of their ignorance, they'll give their best advice"

      But of course if he disagrees with you poorly educated ideas about what magic pill will fix your problems then he's just "asserting one of his own intellectual whims" of course.

    332. Re:Hit them back by mjwx · · Score: 1

      You didn't actually read my post before replying, did you?

      Actually I did,

      You're attempt at sarcasm is terrible, I can only guess that your post was an attempt at being sarcastic because it's not indicated in any way that you were being less then earnest, in which case I was dead on with my post.

      Dont get me wrong, I love sarcasm but it needs to work for it to be effective. It's hard to do over the internet, but keep trying anyway.

      We now return you to your regularly scheduled trolling.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    333. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is just spinning the numbers. Every single year the debt gets higher. Not one single Congress or President has done a damn thing about it for over 30 years. As a % of GDP is just spin to claim that we can afford the higher debt, it is not debt reduction nor is it a balanced budget.

    334. Re:Hit them back by SomeKDEUser · · Score: 1

      I agree with you. But if you read the responses to my post, you can see that for many people, the idea that some idea might in fact be testable, and that we should just go for what works does not enter the question.

      They believe that the very act of funding certain categories of services is a waste, independently of the outcome (you might want to rethink you position on liberal arts: they might be useless for 99% of their students, but by no means for society, and to be sure, the private sector won't fund them).

      BTW, I am shocked that on slashdot, you find people who seriously think fundamental science should not be funded.

    335. Re:Hit them back by knight24k · · Score: 1

      Nice reference. Unfortunately it proves the GP's point. Between 1992 and 2000 the public debt increased by 1.6 trillion, or about 200 billion per year. If you look at the above link you'll see that the interest payments were far greater than this increase. Or, to put it another way, during the Clinton administration the only increase in the public debt was interest on the public debt. Granted that has been spun like crazy, but compare that to the Bush years: Between 2000 and 2008 the public debt increased by 4.3 trillion, or about 540 billion per year. The interest on the debt was approximately 350 billion of that 540 billion per year. So in the case of clinton the "programs that they have decided to exclude from the formula" is the interest on the national debt. In the case of Bush there just isn't any case -- the debt rose way faster than the interest.

      Sorry, I disagree. Interest on the debt is part of the overall debt and cannot be ignored or left out of the equation. The interest payment is part of your annual expenses. The debt went up every single year, so there was no balanced budget. A balanced budget means you add no additional debt and you pay the interest down. Anything else is just spin. There has not been a single year since 1977 that we have not added to the debt so the OP I was replying to was in error and the GP was correct. There is no effort by any administration to actually reduce the debt or have a balanced budget where that is possible. I don't really give a a shit which party does it, but someone needs to. This bullshit % of GDP does not impress me as being anything more than spin to claim we can afford it. Continued debt will eventually bankrupt us regardless of how well we can afford it right now. It eventually catches up with you and something needs to be done.

      Did Clinton and his Repub Congress do better than other administrations? Sure, but they didn't finish the job nor did they achieve a balanced budget as they claimed. Now matters are even worse with Obama and a Dem controlled Congress having increased it 3 Trillion in 2 years and on target to surpass both Clinton and Bush's debt combined in 4 years. I doubt the new Repub Congress will do any better but I can be hopeful based Clinton's Repub Congress. As I said, I feel they are all cut from the same cloth and really do not care about anything other than staying in office. Until we have a true balanced budget amendment and term limits on all members of Congress nothing will ever change.

    336. Re:Hit them back by icebraining · · Score: 1

      Then you should reference those Australian laws.

    337. Re:Hit them back by Hasai · · Score: 1

      ....For example, were certain wealthy politicians who rail against taxes found to be holding considerable sums of money in non-taxed accounts...

      Or, far more common in my experience, the ones who usually rail for MORE taxes will be found to be holding considerable sums of money in such accounts.

      --

      Regards;

      Hasai

    338. Re:Hit them back by TheoMurpse · · Score: 1

      Inflation will 1) destroy everyone's savings and 2) force everyone into higher tax brackets. It's magic. But we'll call it "quantitative easing".

      On the other hand, inflation will greatly help millions of my generation pay off these dern student loans.

    339. Re:Hit them back by tmosley · · Score: 1

      What the hell are you talking about? This is raw data, straight from the US government, with no interpretation applied. How could you possibly say that with a straight face?

    340. Re:Hit them back by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      If you had read my post, then you would not have quoted that line out of context. I was referring to the fact that the original poster was satirising a very common view, not trolling. Watch any US news show when they're talking about tax breaks, or even many European ones and you'll see exactly the view in the fragment of my post that you quoted. A great many people believe that people who have achieved less than them did so because they didn't try hard enough and people who achieved more than them did so because they were lucky (richer parents, more opportunities at school, whatever).

      It's exactly the same attitude as the view that comedians often parody that is summed up by the phrase 'people shorter than me are dwarves, people taller than me are giants.' Humans like to assume that they are normal and average and that everyone who isn't like them is some kind of statistical outlier. This is very basic psychology - you'll find a very detailed explanation of it in the first chapter or two of any psychology textbook. Someone does not deserve the troll mods that (when I posted) the person I replied to had received for pointing this out.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    341. Re:Hit them back by tmosley · · Score: 1

      The 2010 GDP is expected to be below 15 trillion, so lets call it that to be generous. 2010 spending was 6.5 trillion. That gives a spending rate of 43.3%. That number will likely be low, as GDP estimates have been revised lower at practically every opportunity over the last couple of years.

    342. Re:Hit them back by T.E.D. · · Score: 1

      That doesn't mean a whole lot, since a 1977 dollar was worth a whole lot more than a 2011 dollar.

      To make the numbers actually mean something, you have to compare the debt to something else, like inflation-adjusted dollars or the GDP at the time.

      In fact, one click away was a wiki page that does just that. It has all kinds of much more useful graphs, charts and tables. Looking over that, you find the general pattern has been that debt spiked during WWII, then slowly declined until President Ford took office. Then something changed and it started going up every year a Republican was in office and going down nearly every year a Democrat was in office.

      Its not perfect, but it is clear which is the better party for you if you care about the debt.

    343. Re:Hit them back by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      No we don't all need the same services in the same way.

      You are being short-sighted. Are you saying that people should only pay for the services they need? Are you sure you will never need them?

      What about people who can't afford those services? Maybe they should save money by dumping their rubbish outside your house instead of paying to have it disposed of. If they get ill and can't afford treatment they could always steal some of your stuff to raise the cash. It's better than dying, right?

      If you want to live in a society were people get on well, crime is low and you are not living in fear of one day not being able to afford to live (be it through the loss of your job, illness or otherwise) then you need taxes that are distributed according to need rather than you much each individual personally contributes or uses. Yeah, those lucky enough to be well off pay more than their "fair" share but get to live in a better society for it. Not being rich isn't some kind of personal failing, it is just the way the world works. Most people spend their lives working for other people and earning a salary, and there is nothing wrong with that.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    344. Re:Hit them back by currently_awake · · Score: 1

      I think he believes in shining a light into the dark nooks of the world to illuminate crime and corruption. I don't think he screens anything as part of some sort of political crusade. I believe wikileaks released the banking info now because they -received- it now.

    345. Re:Hit them back by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Simplifying tax codes won't help, it will just make it easier for people to find ways of not paying. The reason tax is so complicated is that it tried to account for so many different circumstances, with the goal of helping those genuinely needy people and preventing tax evasion. People keep finding holes or the government identifies some group who need extra support (read: exemptions) and you get another amendment.

      I'm not saying that tax doesn't need simplifying if possible, just don't think that the mere act of simplification will solve anything. All it will do is allow more people to either fall through the cracks or to avoid paying it.

      You should also consider that every government for about the past 40-50 years in the UK has promised to simplify tax, tie off loopholes and reduce government waste. They have all failed, and sometimes even give rich people tax cuts and more loopholes to exploit. Maybe they are all incompetent or maybe it is just not as easy as you seem to think.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    346. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      actually if anything Assange's opinion's don't matter here. I think what actually happened is that this banker didn't like that the swiss caved and closed Assange's account. Clearly he was looking at all of these other accounts within the system and saw both scenarios as being potentially illegal.

      Do I agree with this logic personally....No.
      Do I understand why someone might approach this situation in the manner...Yes.

    347. Re:Hit them back by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Your ideas are wide open to exploitation and are unfair.

      Let's start with a basic one: rich people should pay more tax than middle class or poor people. I firmly believe that. They will still be rich and still live a luxurious lifestyle. In exchange for being allowed to hoard all that wealth (e.g. by having a large house reducing the available land to pushing up land value which drives developers to build smaller houses and sell them at higher prices) they can subsidise the rest of us a bit. It won't have a massive impact on their quality of life but it certainly will on ours.

      Now, on to specific points:

      After all, the more you use the road (and the larger the vehicle), the more you pay in taxes. How would that not be "fair?"

      Companies used to own vehicles and pay commercial rates on them. Now they give the employee the car and let them pay individual rates of tax on it. As a bonus they can sell off their car parks and have the employee part it outside his house at night. That pushes up tax rates for us and clutters roads to the point where people who live in them can't find a parking space (I realise too many cars on the road is also responsible).

      Yes, I like having police and fire protection... property taxes should entirely pay for both; after all, the more you have to protect, and the more valuable it is, the more you pay for the protection - much like homeowners insurance.

      Rich people often get around that by having a family member own property and "renting" it back (which is tax deductible or in the case of a second home a business expense). Also rich people can have a weekend home in a little town somewhere which they contribute little to. The house is empty most of the time and there are fewer people living in the town which brings its own economic problems.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    348. Re:Hit them back by greap · · Score: 1

      The use of "fair share" is half the problem. In anything else other than tax charging a single group of people one amount and a different group of people another amount for the same services would be discrimination and in many parts of the world would be illegal. The word fair means without favoring one party, given the wealthy are charged both higher in value and percentage the word fair is wrong. If everyone was charged 40% then it would be fair, when one set of people are charged 10% and another set 40% it is not even remotely fair.

      The “tax dodgers” are in almost all cases already contributing a vast sum in taxes anyway and the offshore accounts only hold proceeds from offshore earnings which government (under the guise of society) can’t legitimately claim to have helped to produce (even though they do using worldwide earnings rules). If I live in country a but for whatever reason earn some money in country b then the government of country a should have absolutely no claim to any of it, the society of country a had no hand in creating that wealth.

    349. Re:Hit them back by vegiVamp · · Score: 1

      You're touching on why this may well have a lot less effect than desired: I have found, over the years, that a lot of people fail to make the connection between "the government steals my monies" and "my, how convenient that there's a hardened road between my house and the shops".

      I have no idea why this is, though - perhaps the fact that it's always been there, like the sun and the trees ? Maybe the perception that politicians fill their pockets with that money plays, too, true or false as it may be.

      --
      What a depressingly stupid machine.
    350. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since half of all US workers get all their income tax back, Joe Blow Factory Worker doesn't need to hide his income.

    351. Re:Hit them back by nahdude812 · · Score: 1

      I don't disagree with you, but I had to ride public transit 1.5hrs each way for my coop job while I was in school because I couldn't afford a car.

      My reward? Graduating with $50k in debt as opposed to $100k in debt.

      Owning & using a car doesn't cost $25,000 per year unless you are driving something expensive or an extremely long distance. You can buy and operate a brand new car for 2 years, fuel and maintenance included, for less than that.

      His point though, was that some people would engage in the same level of frugality as you, and over that time might still have a hard time saving up $10k. Some people live near to or even below the poverty line. For some people, $10k is two year's salary, before expenses.

    352. Re:Hit them back by markhb · · Score: 1

      Yes, Clinton may have presided over something that looked like an operating surplus. However, as we here on /. should be well aware, he also happened to be in office during one of the great economically expansive events of the 20th Century: the build-out of the Internet industry. While the stock bubble got all the press, under the covers there was tremendous investment as new fiber was laid, companies everywhere had to develop an Internet presence, etc., which translated into all kinds of taxable income. What were Cisco's earnings in FY 1991? Bush, OTOH, had to deal with 9/11 and its aftermath, a massively negative societal change that is at least partly responsible for the delta in government revenues.

      --
      Save Maine's economy: write stuff down. All comments are exclusively my own, not my employer.
    353. Re:Hit them back by nahdude812 · · Score: 1

      You wrongly assume that I want those government services at those prices in the first place. I don't. I would gladly not pay taxes and in return not get any services from the government.

      There are plenty of places in the world you can move to to take advantage of such a situation, I suggest you do so.

    354. Re:Hit them back by toadlife · · Score: 1

      1)*His* Repub conress? Clinton had to veto that Republican congress' budget to keep them from gutting social services and environmental protections, resulting in a government shutdown - and then they impeached him.

      2) The legislation that ultimately resulted in the balanced budget was not passed by the Republican congress; it was passed in 1993 by a Democratic majority. Of course, every Republican voted against it.

      3) The Obama administration inherited a 1.5T budget deficit from Bush. The vast majority of our budget is made up of non-discretionary spending and the military. The deficit cannot be eliminated overnight. To attempt to do so would cause major disruption in our economy.

      Until we have a true balanced budget amendment and term limits on all members of Congress nothing will ever change.

      No. Only when dimwits like you stop believing that Republicans care about the debt will anything ever change.

      --
      I don't always use unix-like operating systems; but when I do, I prefer FreeBSD.
    355. Re:Hit them back by Coryoth · · Score: 1

      Seriously, think about what you just said. "Even hundreds of years ago" .. as in .. before there were licensed medical professionals. Obviously there are social mechanisms that do not involve government regulation.

      Yes, and those social mechanisms worked well for a small populace where such information as to who you could trust was readily transmitted throughout the populace. The problem is those social mechanisms don't scale well to large populaces such as we have now. Of course as populations grew we came up with better mechanisms that scaled better. They're not perfect, but they work better than poorly scaling social mechanisms. Those mechanisms are licensing and regulation.

    356. Re:Hit them back by knight24k · · Score: 1

      No. Only when dimwits like you stop believing that Republicans care about the debt will anything ever change.

      What part of both sides of the isle are responsible do you not understand. It's asshats like yourself with tunnel vision for their party of choice that are the problem. Oh, Obama inherited all his problems yet Bush is responsible for everything from day one in office. Hypocrite much?

      Civics 101. Congress spends the money not the president and neither side cares one bit about balancing the budget OR reducing the debt. Period.

      Here's a clue dimwit, I'm Libertarian. I distrust both parties and don't take what either say as gospel, unlike your regurgitation of dem talking points. Your are immediately against a balanced budget because it would cut into *your* favored programs, whatever they are, or you perceive I am some Repub supporter which I am not.

      Where did I claim the Repub were any better than the Dems. They are both criminally liable IMO. What I will object to is anyone claiming one party is better than the other at this. Neither is doing a damn thing about it. I have posted repeatedly in this thread how I feel about both parties yet apparently you are illiterate and just can't read what is posted and instead believe what you *think* I posted. Hell, you even quoted me where I plainly state I want term limits on everyone, yet for some reason only known to your twisted little mind that means I want limits on Dems only?

      Let's try this one last time and I will use small words so you can understand. Both parties are doing nothing about the debt. The debt has been increasing every year since at least 1977 and possibly going back to 1870. The only difference between a Dem controlled congress and a Repub controlled congress is which one spends money faster. NEITHER really reduces the debt EVER. Percent of gdp is just spin used by those that just want to claim "But out debt isn't as bad as their debt". Until the debt is reduced in real numbers you haven't made things better. You have made them worse.

      If we don't reduce the debt we eventually won't even be able to pay the interest and then it's game over. We CAN NOT continue to increase the debt forever, but apparently both parties in government think they can do exactly that. BTW the balanced budget legislation still resulted in a debt increase so how exactly is that a balanced budget again?

    357. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_debt_by_U.S._presidential_terms#Public_debt

      - Increases larger during republican administrations
      - Clinton administration the only presidency in last 60+ years to dial back debt growth, in between unprecedented increases under Reagan, Bush, Bush Jr
      - agreed on politicians being entitled millionaires. e.g. socialized health care is fine by them, unless it's for everyone else

    358. Re:Hit them back by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

      So the moral of the story is ... kill all the poor people?

      No. You'd never be able to get them all. A better moral is "When times are bad is when you should probably be most concerned about the welfare of the poor." But given you think the poor are lazy bastards and criminals, it's probably not worth my effort to save you.

      "The Rich" can always organize, and hire enough of "the poor" to oppress the remainder.

      I'll be sure to tell that to the next Romanov I see. Marie Antoinette was a big fan of that idea, too. Abuse the poor at your own risk.

    359. Re:Hit them back by tokul · · Score: 1

      Then you should reference those Australian laws.

      I am not lawyer or Aussie. Normal civilized countries should have laws against racketeering. Either Australia has one or they harbor criminals :)

      Even if wikileaks are doing good thing, they are balancing really close to extortion and racketeering.

    360. Re:Hit them back by fredjh · · Score: 1

      Let's start with a basic one: rich people should pay more tax than middle class or poor people.

      They do and they still will, nothing I said changes that - I included car registrations, for example, and wealthy people (again, electric vehicles notwithstanding) by more expensive vehicles = higher registration prices (in my state, for example, we pay an ad valorem tax based on vehicle value). And as far as homes go, you've got the tax structure completely wrong.

      It doesn't matter who owns the property, the property has a value and taxes are paid on the value by whomever owns it, there are no "deductions," (there may deduction on income taxes, but that's why we should have a consumption tax instead). And again, if someone owns multiple homes they pay multiple property taxes.... you don't get deductions on property taxes (you may get some exemptions for a primary residence, but you're still paying MORE for your primary residence if you live in a more expensive home than someone else).

      The house is empty most of the time and there are fewer people living in the town which brings its own economic problems.

      But the owner is still paying property taxes even though he's not using the services they're paying for - a BONUS for the town.

      Frankly, your counterargument makes little sense. You seem to me to be conflating property taxes and income taxes. While I think what's "fair" is that people pay for what they use, if you insisted you could have tiered property taxes, too. We're not talking about existing tax law, we're talking about something new.

      The way I see it, your problem is you think some rich guy will hoard his money, live in a hovel and buy 10 year junker cars to avoid paying taxes... I think you're sadly mistaken. In fact, I advocated a consumption tax, and while I gave examples of gasoline and property taxes, I didn't say it ended there. If someone hoards their money, they've wasted their lives earning it. At some point, when they die, it goes to someone else... and at some point, it's used to consume something.

      If you honestly think rich guy will not buy a boat for 25% more in exchange for paying no income taxes on 100% of his income, I want some of what you're smoking.

      --
      Stupid, sexy Flanders.
    361. Re:Hit them back by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

      FEHB

      As I said, government run health care is a great reason to be a public employee. It's not worth significantly more than a private health plan, though.

      Education loan repayment

      Applies to only about 0.1% of federal employees.

      Continuing education

      Federal CE benefits are pretty well restricted to the same titles that would get CE benefits if privately employed. (i.e. health care, legal, scientific)

      Unrivaled job security

      Until you add in the uncertainly of federal funding. Layoffs are not uncommon.

      Short hours

      Yep, most federal employees are prevented by law from working more than 40 hours a week. But few work less unless they are part time.

      Flexible scheduling

      Depends upon the title. Janitors and receptionists don't get flexible scheduling, nor do nurses and doctors. Scientists and engineers, maybe.

      Capless leave accrual

      Whether this benefit is valuable depends upon whether private employees lose their leave rather than use it.

      Top retirement benefits.

      Yes, many public employees still have defined benefit plans. I doubt that will continue much longer.

      At upper levels, salaries exceed almost any private sector counterpart in addition to the benefits you will find in almost no other non-executive compensation package.

      That is most certainly not true. Are you comparing executive level public jobs (i.e. NASA Administrator) with non-executive level private jobs?

    362. Re:Hit them back by nametaken · · Score: 1

      Also, what is "waste"? is funding fundamental science waste? is funding liberal arts waste? are the likes of the FDA waste? is paying for some dubious piece of art in your own town waste? is paying people to check for fraud waste, or is the fraud the largest cause of waste?

      You make a good point. People used to be able to have common sense discussions about this kind of thing. Today it's so polarized that you can't even have the conversation without it turning into a screaming match.

      We used to be able to say that 6 workers and 4 trucks filling one pothole over 8 hours is wasteful. Now we see it all the time and nobody does anything. I live in Chicagoland, and we recently found out that numerous gov employees that are now in prison (there are lots here) still get their salaries paid out. Or Maria Pappas, our treasurer, who pays her driver $97,000/yr and her cleaning lady $57,000/yr, at our expense. Or $18 million to redesign Recovery.gov. You're right about many of these being small things... but this kind of waste seems to permeate nearly everything our state and federal governments do if you choose to look for it.

      I don't want to get rid of road work projects, or Recovery.gov. I just don't want there to be a 7,000% mark-up on every government project, by way of both profit and waste, just because they can. I'd think many of us could agree on this... but sadly, nobody does anything.

      I really don't want to take music class away from kids and I don't want to repeal any environmental legislation. I think both art and science are important. I just want someone with some common sense to do something about the obvious problems.

    363. Re:Hit them back by icebraining · · Score: 1

      What exactly is Wikileaks obtaining through coercion?

      And racketeering is just an illegal business. Even in the RICO act, which doesn't apply to them, it's defined as two or more violations. You have to prove such violations first to prove racketeering.

    364. Re:Hit them back by Fjandr · · Score: 1

      This has now been confirmed:
      It's pretty clear where you stand. If that's truly the case, it's unlikely anything I post here will satisfy you.

      I now point you back to this:
      If you actually care, the information is pretty easily available from authoritative sources.

    365. Re:Hit them back by SomeKDEUser · · Score: 1

      Oh, I agree. The problem is that what you describe is not waste, just (very) inefficient process. But to fix that, you need to start having benchmarks, and reviews (which also cause administrative costs).

      Then you can say "this or that program does nothing good", or on the contrary, that it does. But that means that you accept that some technocrat/expert somewhere decides that this or that political choice was objectively good or bad.

      Personally, I would love it if politicians got to decide on programmes and their stated objective, and some administration independently benchmarked them and had the power to axe them if it was found out that they did not go in the direction of their objective.

      At least, it would force politicians to spell out their objectives. If you want to gut the middle class, go ahead, but you have to be frank about it.

    366. Re:Hit them back by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

      If you actually care, the information is pretty easily available from authoritative sources.

      Authoritative... Such as?

      It's also pretty plain where you're coming from, and that any information not coming from Glen Beck's mouth can be ignored.

    367. Re:Hit them back by Fjandr · · Score: 1

      Such as various US Federal government websites. I'm not going to hold your hand through an issue that is incredibly complex so that you can just say "Nuh uh." There's more than one side to the issue, and it takes more time and space than a couple Slashdot posts to even come to an agreement on the groundwork for framing the discussion.

      It's funny that you believe I worship at the altar of that poo-flinging monkey. Both sides do almost exactly the same thing though. They're right, anyone who is not in lockstep is wrong (even if only by pointing out that neither extreme has a lock on The One True Path).

      Me, I happen to piss off both sides because I usually take the time to do my own research. Most people have to be lead by their little hand through it because they can't be bothered, and then get all pissy because a handful of barrels have holes in them or are painted the wrong color, and they immediately pick those out of the entire warehouse of barrels as evidence that the entire run is a screwed-up mess. I'm too tired for that right now. Have a nice day.

    368. Re:Hit them back by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      I think you missed the point. Okay, there are higher taxes on more expensive cars so rich people who buy them pay more. The key is how much more. If it is a flat percentage of the vehicle price then they are only paying the same amount as a proportion of their spending power. Actually rich people already have a higher percentage of their income to spend on discretionary items because basics like food and petrol don't scale linearly with income.

      What I am saying is that they should pay not just proportionately more but an actual higher percentage of their income. The current situation is that they pay far, far less. There are actually laws that help them do that such as the rules on council tax paid on second homes. Taxes on second homes are lower, when in fact they should be higher IMHO.

      I don't know what you are on about with your last sentence, it makes absolutely no sense. The point about hoarding money is wrong though. Ever notice how the children of rich people tend to also be rich? Their parents don't blow all their money before they die. Also having money makes it easier to acquire more by having capital to invest. Investment can be in things like education for your kids too, and just being in the right circles opens doors for you and them. It is no accident that the rich tend to stay rich, generation after generation.

      You also seem to be confused by the difference between monetary value and the practical value of resources. You don't need a big house to live a reasonably comfortable life but people want one anyway. Ignoring the monetary value having a big house takes up space that could otherwise be of benefit to other people. We accept that there are differences between individuals and that some have more than others, which is fine up to a point. At the extreme you have the French royalty and somewhere in the middle there is a grey area where excessive behaviour is acceptable but must be balanced with a greater return than the purely monetary value.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    369. Re:Hit them back by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Actually it's not just the rich; small business owners frequently evade taxes (both legally and illegally) by keeping their personal assets in their company's name.

    370. Re:Hit them back by fredjh · · Score: 1

      I see... despite the fact that under the current scheme (and my suggested scheme) that wealthy people would pay a lot more in taxes, and the more ostentatiously they live the more they'd pay, that's still not good enough.

      I have a question... this has nothing to do with taxes. Where I work we are fortunate enough to have a selection of health insurance plans. However, both the premium and deductibles are scaled with pay level.

      Do you think it's "fair" that someone pays twice as much as someone else for less (because of the higher deductible) because they make twice as much money?

      Do you think someone who makes twice as someone else should pay twice as much for gasoline?

      --
      Stupid, sexy Flanders.
    371. Re:Hit them back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hah! Imagine the book titles;

      Brain Surgery for Dummies
      Heart Transplantation 101
      1001 Ways to Amputate

    372. Re:Hit them back by VJ42 · · Score: 1

      There are places not requiring it. But generally speaking, you'd prefer to avoid them. Voluntarily.

      Which ones? Would they let me move there if I wanted to or would they consider me as a trespasser?

      I hear Somalia is nice this time of year...

      --
      If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
    373. Re:Hit them back by Stormy+Dragon · · Score: 1

      1) That could far more easily and more reliably done by a computer.
      2) That's not what pharmacists actually do. The pharmacy I go to has never asked if I'm on other medication or why I'm taking whatever it is I just ordered.

    374. Re:Hit them back by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      lots of things could be done by a computer, vast quantities of secritarial work, train driving etc etc yet isn't.
      Some things are kept human either because of expense, liability or just because people prefer to interact with humans.

    375. Re:Hit them back by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      I never said twice as much. It depends on the particular tax, sometimes it would be proportionate and sometimes it would be a lot more.

      I wouldn't say 80% income tax on the top tier is unreasonable. Say starting at £1,000,000. Some people seem to think that would put people off making over £1m but that is clearly ridiculous. No-one would say "nah, pay me £999,999.99 because I'm not paying 80% on that last penny.

      For general goods flat rate VAT (sales tax) is fine, although I also agree with higher road taxes for cars that pollute more. I have to breath that shit in so the owner should contribute to my healthcare costs, as well as my desire to live in a clean environment.

      To pick up your healthcare example, well we have a national insurance scheme but private ones are of course available. Bottom line is that people who earn more need to contribute more than a proportionate amount more in tax/healthcare payments in order for the rest of us to receive a good level of care. No getting away from that. Personally if I did earn that much I wouldn't mind paying more. I'd still be rich and I'd get to live in a better society than I otherwise would.

      Anyway, back to the original point, rich people don't even pay proportionately more. They pay less by avoiding tax, so no matter your opinion of how much more they should pay the bottom line is that it is more than they do now.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    376. Re:Hit them back by fredjh · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't say 80% income tax on the top tier is unreasonable.

      And that's why I'll never agree with you.

      Personally if I did earn that much I wouldn't mind paying more.

      Something oft recited by people who don't "earn that much."

      Anyway, back to the original point, rich people don't even pay proportionately more.

      Actually, yes they do. 47% of the income earners in the U.S. pay NO federal income taxes. If the wealthy aren't taking up the slack, who is?

      The top 1% make 20% of the money and pay nearly 40% of the taxes. Your assertion that they simply "avoid" taxes is crazy - completely narrow minded focusing in on some tiny fraction that avoid taxes but get the most press because of it.

      Your position seems to me to not just be "fairness" in taxation, but punitive.

      --
      Stupid, sexy Flanders.
    377. Re:Hit them back by einar2 · · Score: 1

      Interesting, thank you!
      German is a much more precise language. The German word "Filiale" hints by its Latin root towards an office which is not the main seat of the company.

    378. Re:Hit them back by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Well maybe the US is different, I don't know. In the UK everyone pays taxes. Income tax starts at about 10K IIRC but of course we all have to pay VAT (sales tax), council tax and so on.

      There was a BBC Panorama programme recently titled "Tax me if you can". You can probably watch it online somewhere. Basically tax avoidance is rampant in the UK.

      Lewis Hamilton, our star F1 driver, is a good example of a tax dodger. When he won the F1 title they had to interview him over the phone because he had to spend six months a year outside the UK to avoid paying over £1m in tax. He had the cheek to say he wished he could come to the UK to celebrate.

      Most accountants offer "tax optimisation". It is basically a battle of wits against the government, finding new ways to avoid tax as the rules are changed to close off old ones.

      And yes, I really wouldn't mind paying more tax if I was rich. I wasn't born with a silver spoon up my arse.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    379. Re:Hit them back by toadlife · · Score: 1

      Here's a clue dimwit, I'm Libertarian.

      So you're not a dimwit. You're just naive.

      The debt has been increasing every year since at least 1977 and possibly going back to 1870.

      Where are you getting your information? Since the end of world war II, the debt has increased nominally every year. I bet it's no coincidence that you picked 1977 as the mythical turning point - the year Cater took office. Never mind the fact that growth of the debt slowed under Carter after spiking slightly a little bit under Ford.

      Percent of gdp is just spin used by those that just want to claim

      It is not spin. Percentage of GDP is the equivalent of a debt to income ratio that creditors use to evaluate individuals and businesses credit worthiness. The people use it is that it's the number that really matters.

      --
      I don't always use unix-like operating systems; but when I do, I prefer FreeBSD.
    380. Re:Hit them back by toadlife · · Score: 1

      Ugg!

      Please excuse my molestation of the English language in the above post. :\

      --
      I don't always use unix-like operating systems; but when I do, I prefer FreeBSD.
    381. Re:Hit them back by knight24k · · Score: 1
      I pulled the information from Wiki, which of course goes to prove that you didn't bother reading the whole thread in the first place as I thought. It only lists individual years going back to 1977 prior to that it goes in 10 year increments which I also mentioned, not that you bothered to read it. Nice that you feel you can determine my reasons for using those years, must be some faulty clairvoyance you have there. Might want to get that checked. Of course you could have read the entire thread, but then that would have taken some intelligence on your part.

      It is not spin. Percentage of GDP is the equivalent of a debt to income ratio that creditors use to evaluate individuals and businesses credit worthiness. The people use it is that it's the number that really matters.

      No, it's bullshit and spin. Right, debt to income, but it doesn't matter a bit as far as debt reduction, which there is none. It is just spin so that one side can claim that our debt isn't as bad as your debt because we can afford it better. You *still* haven't done a fucking thing about the debt continuing to increase which is where this particular part of the thread started. Then the unthinkable happens and you find yourself in a depression. Exactly what good was your debt to income ratio or gdp ratio then?

      I'll tell you, it's fucking worthless because you didn't do a damn thing about reducing your debt in the first place and acted like you can increase your debt continuously forever. This is what both sides of the aisle in congress are doing. They are whistling in the dark continuously raising the debt ceiling and not addressing the deficit or EVEN talking about it.

      The so called balanced budget under Clinton was not in fact balanced. They reduced the deficit but they never balanced it or had a surplus as the debt continued unabated. They got it down to 20B and then just plowed ahead. Both parties do this and until we can get these career, elitist millionaires out of office it will never change. They will never pass term limits on themselves and will never pass a true balanced budget that results in actually paying the debt down. The special interests are in control of both parties and they are going to spend us into bankruptcy. Eventually the bill will come due. The interest on the debt will be more than we can pay and when that day comes, we all lose.

    382. Re:Hit them back by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

      Food.
      Consumer products.
      Agricultural supplies.
      Construction.
      Waste removal.
      Emergency services.
      Mail.

      Everyone depends on those things -- even people who never drive.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    383. Re:Hit them back by northstarlarry · · Score: 1

      Really? that's strange because the debt history shows that the US debt has risen every single year since 1977 and probably going back to 1870. . .

      Going all the way back to the Revolutionary War, actually. You're talking about the debt, though. The person you're replying to was talking about the deficit. They're connected, but they're different. The budget was balanced (no deficit) under Clinton. This was partly due to him and partly due to Congress (who is, after all, supposedly responsible for telling the president how much money he can spend). The debt increased in absolute terms, but much slower than it had for a long time (i.e., it didn't accelerate), and it actually decreased relative to GDP (for the first time since Carter). Under Bush, IIRC, there was so much deficit that the debt increased in absolute terms about three times as fast as under Clinton, and became a much larger share of GDP (though I don't remember how much).

      Your chart shows the debt increase under Obama (2008 through 2010) as about $3.6 trillion, and about $46 trillion under Bush (2000 through 2008). Obama's rate so far is therefore approximately $1.7T increase per year, and Bush's was $7T. The biggest jumps under Bush were the last two years, of course, when Washington decided that the people who almost destroyed the economy needed to be rewarded by the rest of us. But even if we subtract that $3T and those two years, the increase is still over $6T per year.

      (Of course neither of them had any actual effect in the year he was elected, but the data from the chart aren't fine-grained enough to allow us to remove the three-month gap.)

      Both sides of the aisle are a bunch of Elitist millionaires who make a habit of exempting themselves from the very laws they impose on the rest of us.

      I can certainly agree with the sentiment behind this.

      I distrust all of them until such time. . .

      I'd say we should never stop distrusting people who desire, and get, that much power.

    384. Re:Hit them back by northstarlarry · · Score: 1

      Actually, this chart on WP shows the debt being paid down slightly (decreasing in absolute terms) for the last few years of Clinton's second term -- the first, and last, time since 1950.

    385. Re:Hit them back by sznupi · · Score: 1

      There are different degrees of "high predictability" (plus OECD report didn't talk only about education, also economic status)

      Apparently in nanny states only around 20% of status is determined by family (vs. around 50% ... and certainly even more in developing places)

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    386. Re:Hit them back by dave420 · · Score: 1

      It's not that simple, and you know it. You receive so many indirect benefits from the government, most of which you probably don't even realise. God damn your dumb.

  2. Better article by AaxelB · · Score: 5, Informative

    There are more details here.

    Personally, I'm just gonna sit back and watch this unfold *grabs popcorn*

  3. Can you say by Kid+Zero · · Score: 0

    Can you say "Identity Theft".

    1. Re:Can you say by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd bet just about anything he only exposes one political/national side's leaders in this

      Because Joe Habbib in bumfuckistan is so rich he keeps his money in swiss bank accounts?

      I'd bet just about anything that he can expose a list of every account holder ever and it'd boil down to two groups: rich americans and nazi germans.

    2. Re:Can you say by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Seriously, Identity theft?
      WTF happened to Terrorism and Espionage????

      This piece of dog-shit with legs needs to be gunned down with his head mounted at the very top of a nice sharp pike - perhaps while still alive and screaming from the gunshot wound as it enters his rectum.

      I'd bet just about anything he only exposes one political/national side's leaders in this - and not because theres only one corrupt side either.

      guess someone has a hidden bank account...

    3. Re:Can you say by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

      Oh Sarah, you're such a silly goose.

    4. Re:Can you say by hihihihi · · Score: 1

      Call it whatever you wish to, but on behalf of all indians (and as a matter of rather my opinion, on behalf of everyone around the world tired of corrupt politicians)...
      Thanks Julian :)

      --
      everyone downmodding this post will be prosecuted for reading my post without first buying a license!!!
    5. Re:Can you say by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Mod Parent Up

      What, on the basis that ignorance is knowledge and hysteria is wisdom?

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    6. Re:Can you say by BangaIorean · · Score: 1

      I agree man. I'm praying that some big Indian names come up on this list. We will hound the motherfuckers out of office.

  4. Re:Media whore by FooAtWFU · · Score: 0

    I dunno. I'm pretty sure that he genuinely hates both rich people and the United States as well.

    --
    The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
  5. Re:Media whore by zero.kalvin · · Score: 2

    You do know that it's been a while since we heard anything about him. Beside he is sorta the spokesman of wikileaks, so...

  6. He should post the real name of tank guy but if he by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He should post the real name of tank guy but if he does then he may wish he went to Guantanamo Bay.

  7. Why are they announcing this stuff ? by matt007 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I do not understand why wikileaks is telling everyone what they will reveal later.
    Can't they just post it immediately ?

    1. Re:Why are they announcing this stuff ? by rojomojobojo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, of course they need the media hype. What would the purpose of a media whore be, if they can't get all the hype?

    2. Re:Why are they announcing this stuff ? by Monkeedude1212 · · Score: 5, Informative

      I don't recall hearing Wikileaks making this announcement at all though - it sounds like someone handed over some big leaks than immediately turned the corner to the local news outlet and said "GUESS WHAT I JUST HANDED TO WIKILEAKS".

      This news report is by some other news agency, not Wikileaks.

    3. Re:Why are they announcing this stuff ? by ColdWetDog · · Score: 4, Informative

      I do not understand why wikileaks is telling everyone what they will reveal later. Can't they just post it immediately ?

      Better media management. It's easy for something even as large as the US diplomatic cable leak to get swept under the rug of the incessant 24 hour news cycle. By letting it out in bits and pieces he keeps the media interested and talking about Assange and Wikileaks. He is also going for brownie points by establishing relationships with more mainline media outlets. Those take time. TFA also mentions that Wikipedia is trying to evaluate the provenance of the disks, although it's not clear how they plan on doing that.

      Rather a dangerous game he's playing. He seems to enjoy it - likely feeds his apparently large ego. I would wonder, though, just how long he can keep this sort of thing up. I don't see an heir apparent in Wikileaks, but there are other sites that are trying to duplicate their efforts.

      As long as there are people with source material who are willing to give it to essentially total strangers we may see this as the new big thing. Information wants to be freed....

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    4. Re:Why are they announcing this stuff ? by surgen · · Score: 5, Insightful

      During the Iraq war log leak someone at wikileaks, probably Assange, was interviewed on NPR where he said that just publishing something once they got it didn't garner the media attention on the documents that they wanted. It was only because of the fact they pussyfoot around with the media that they're interested in the information.

      When their goal is to get people to see the information they're publishing rather than just let it sit somewhere on a web server, it may be worth it for them to play the games they do. Yes its stupid that to get the attention they want they are forced to play "the game", but they've played it damn well.

    5. Re:Why are they announcing this stuff ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Coincidence that Steve Jobs is announcing a leave of absence on the same day?

    6. Re:Why are they announcing this stuff ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      From the BBC:

      The data - which is not yet available on the Wikileaks website - was held on two discs handed over by Rudolf Elmer at a press conference in London.

      Mr Assange promised full disclosure once the information had been vetted.

      http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-12205690

    7. Re:Why are they announcing this stuff ? by Arancaytar · · Score: 1

      Which is a bit like going to the local news outlet and saying "Guess who I was before entering witness protection."

      Their elaborate network of communication and secure submissions is there for a reason...

    8. Re:Why are they announcing this stuff ? by HungryHobo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What would the use of releasing information nobody reads?

    9. Re:Why are they announcing this stuff ? by tokul · · Score: 1

      I do not understand why wikileaks is telling everyone what they will reveal later.

      That's a nice car you have outside. It would be a shame if something happened to it.

    10. Re:Why are they announcing this stuff ? by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      The strange thing is how vociferous the US intelligence agencies are in condemning wikileaks and apparently convincing foreign law enforcement to hype up charges to go after the founder.

      It's strange, because a compromised wikileaks would be an incredible intelligence/counterintelligence asset, and all they'd have to do is establish credibility for a few people in verifying the authenticity of various leaks, and they'd have access to everything well before it becomes public, possibly even things that wikileaks never makes public (like the identity of the leakers, for instance)

      Or.. that is the goal, and they're just playing hardball to establish wikileaks' integrity and popularity...

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    11. Re:Why are they announcing this stuff ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What would the use of releasing information nobody reads?

      The fear that somebody might read it keeps potential evil doers from doing evil things. I'm Swedish and live in a very open society (it used to be even more open before we joined the information black hole that is called EU). Here anybody have the right to get just about any information about government and other organisations with much influence in Sweden (they have to follow special rules about openness, similar to how monopolists and oligopolists have to follow special rules in USA). Most of that available information is never read by anybody outside the government brands/organisations it is about, but occasionally someone get curios (or pissed off) and start digging, that is enough to keep a lot of people from doing things they shouldn't. I also think it make the government/organisations more effective, I've read a lot of those leaked diplomatic cables from USA, those people seem to be very thick and ineffective, they seem to spend more time making up witty remarks then doing the research they are supposed to do, and sometime they seem to report very unimportant things just because it gives them a laugh and ignore other facts that would interfere with the jokes. Some of the information from the leaked diplomatic cables are a kind that, in Sweden, wouldn't be open to anybody without a security clearance (meaning you can't get your hands on it immediately or anonymously, like you can with most other government documents in Sweden), but non the less they would be read by some journalists, politicians and some "ordinary", just curios, Swedes (that kind of infromation only require the lowest level of clearance, basically you have to be a Swedish citizen and not involved in any criminal activity to get a clearance) and that kind of fooling around that US diplomats seem to spend a lot of work time to do, would never be tolerated and immediately exposed. As it is classified, people reading it wouldn't be allowed to report all the details, but they would be allowed to expose enough in the media so that people got interested in knowing more about it, soon other Swedes would demand to read the documents by themselves and enough people would know about it to make a difference.

    12. Re:Why are they announcing this stuff ? by FragHARD · · Score: 1

      Because he wants to keep all the members of congress and a bunch of other politicians shivering in the boots for a while...

      --
      FragHARD or don't frag at all
    13. Re:Why are they announcing this stuff ? by opposabledumbs · · Score: 1

      Very likely. You do realize that more than one thing can happen on the same day, right?

    14. Re:Why are they announcing this stuff ? by cheros · · Score: 1

      That would not serve Assange's ego - why would any sane individual bother with him if they had the data already?

      --
      Insert .sig here. Send no money now. Owner may sue, contents will settle. Batteries not included.
  8. poor title by larry+bagina · · Score: 1

    Having a swiss bank account doesn't mean you're a tax evader. They don't report information to the (US) IRS, but neither do many other foreign banks. If you run a business, your revenue isn't automatically reported to the IRS either.

    --
    Do you even lift?

    These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    1. Re:poor title by MrDoh! · · Score: 4, Informative

      They don't report amounts, but they DO now report that you DO have an account with them now.
      If you hold money abroad, and file a US tax return, you have to submit your holdings. You could get away with it (probably) before as the banks wouldn't say a word.
      Now the government knows you've got /something/ elsewhere...

      --
      Waiting for an amusing sig.
    2. Re:poor title by upside · · Score: 1

      Haha, true. There's a high probability that having a Swiss bank account correlates to being Swiss yourself.

      However, It looks like this isn't just a list of bank accounts: the documents "detail attempts by wealthy business leaders and lawmakers to evade tax payments."

      --
      I'm sorry if I haven't offended anyone
    3. Re:poor title by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Keep in mind, the U.S. taxes *income*, not *wealth*. Having a lot of money sitting around isn't criminal. Only not paying tax *when you acquire it* could be criminal.

    4. Re:poor title by khallow · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Keep in mind, the U.S. taxes *income*, not *wealth*.

      Most wealth generates income on its own. And shoveling income into a hidden pot of wealth is a way to evade taxes.

    5. Re:poor title by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      The US has an estate tax, which is a tax on wealth - though sure it's not a yearly occurance...

    6. Re:poor title by that_xmas · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure how this magical wealth creation is happening. You're assuming the Swiss banks are either investing the money for you, or are offering an interest rate that is much higher than inflation.

      Since the purpose of a Swiss Bank Account is to hold money safely and secretly, it's unlikely that the bank is using your money to investing in anything risky enough to make offering a high interest rate a viable option. And, if they invest the money for you, there is a whole bunch of paperwork and tracking going on there, because Banking secrecy laws are not likely to apply to Investments.

    7. Re:poor title by khallow · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure how this magical wealth creation is happening. You're assuming the Swiss banks are either investing the money for you, or are offering an interest rate that is much higher than inflation.

      Yes, I am making that assumption.

    8. Re:poor title by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not sure how this magical wealth creation is happening. You're assuming the Swiss banks are either investing the money for you, or are offering an interest rate that is much higher than inflation.

      The claim is that wealth creates income, not more wealth. ie: it's not necessary for the interest rate to be higher than inflation, let alone much higher. A half million dollars in my checking account would earn an income of $5k/year and a tax burden of $1750. An account of that size, in a private bank, is going to offer a much better interest rate, and is almost certain to offer brokerage services, but it doesn't really matter. A large enough pot of wealth will provide livable income, even at poor rates of return.

      Half the point of a Swiss account, or any offshore account, is to avoid the automatic IRS reporting that US financial institutions have to do. I could neglect to report to the IRS my checking account interest, or the capital gains on stock trading, but US banks will do their own reporting, and the IRS will match the bank reports with my own report. An offshore bank doesn't file that paperwork, so the IRS depends entirely on my own good conscience in reporting. Swiss banks, as opposed to all other offshore options, have the added advantage of strict privacy laws that make it more difficult for the US to account information when they suspect fraud.

    9. Re:poor title by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It isn't the 18th century. These days, most wealth is paper and much of it magically disappears as fast as it is created.

      Bill Gates has never been taxed for a vast majority of his wealth. His income from it is pathetic. Even when he gives it away, it will remain an apparition. Then one day, Microsoft will do something stupid enough to destroy their stock value, at which point it will all go *poof*.

      You can live in your fantasy where you milk the rich to pay for shit you want, but it'll never happen. If you need a wake up call, check out how much money we shoved into backs to make the banks whole again. Check out the liabilities assumed by the taxpayers. Check out the mountains of paper printed by the Fed. Check out the tidal wave of T-bills sold outside of the normal budget. We aren't going to milk them, but they sure as hell figured out how to milk us.

    10. Re:poor title by blair1q · · Score: 1

      And evading taxes is....(wait for it)...the generation of income relative to the rest of the population.

      If we both make $100k and you pay 33% in tax then my income is effectively 50% higher than yours, just as if I'd sold more and earned $150k.

      Makes "beating inflation" look like swatting a gnat.

    11. Re:poor title by bhiestand · · Score: 1

      Keep in mind, the U.S. taxes *income*, not *wealth*. Having a lot of money sitting around isn't criminal. Only not paying tax *when you acquire it* could be criminal.

      While true, I imagine someone who reported $200k/year income for the last 20 years would have to explain a $50m bank account. Even "wise investing" or "gambling" gains would have to have been reported at some point.

      --
      SWM seeks new sig for a brief fling
    12. Re:poor title by larry+bagina · · Score: 1

      If you can go through the trouble of setting up a swiss bank account, you can go through the trouble of setting up trusts to avoid estate taxes.

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

  9. Not just "the rich and powerful" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I used to work for a Swiss Bank in compliance IT, so naturally would trawl through the most restricted "beneficial owner" papers when bored.

    Despite their exotic reputation, the vast majority of accounts were held by fairly ordinary folk (there seemed to be an inordinate number of german dentists). So while this may sound like a blow at the rich and powerful, there's going to be a lot of very unextraordinary middle class folk whose financial details are laid bare by this. Having a Swiss bank account is not illegal in itself.

    You might want consider whether you'd like your finances laid bare before you acclaim this as another win for david over goliath.

    1. Re:Not just "the rich and powerful" by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      I used to work for a Swiss Bank in compliance IT, so naturally would trawl through the most restricted "beneficial owner" papers when bored.

      Yeah, yeah, and I used to work in a nuclear power station and take uranium home with me at night, just for the lulz.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    2. Re:Not just "the rich and powerful" by icebraining · · Score: 1

      That depends on what exactly gets released. It's perfectly possible for Wikileaks to only publish accounts above a certain limit.

    3. Re:Not just "the rich and powerful" by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 4, Funny

      How many times have we told you not to post Slashdot from work, Homer?

      - Mr. Burns.

    4. Re:Not just "the rich and powerful" by shermo · · Score: 1

      This is clearly not the real Mr Burns since you remembered Homer's name.

      --
      Insanity: voting in the same two parties over and over again and expecting different results
    5. Re:Not just "the rich and powerful" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You need an account JUST for these posts.

    6. Re:Not just "the rich and powerful" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha! You're not really Mr. Burns. He would have said something about wasting company time, called him "Simpson" rather than Homer, and would have signed C. M. Burns, not Mr. Burns.

  10. This will be interesting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    On the one hand, the public will be screaming about all the billionaires' money that goes untaxed, and demanding that politicians close tax loopholes and inpose windfall taxes on the people named by wikileaks.

    On the other hand, the billionaires so named will be applying pressure to somehow make it all go away. I wonder which way our elected representatives will go on this one.

    I fully expect the media to be conveniently and entirely distracted by some complete non-news story the second the leak appears, for the exact amount of time it takes for it all to blow over.

    1. Re:This will be interesting by Duradin · · Score: 1

      Rich people will do what ever it takes to stay rich. Film at 11.

      Ya, this isn't news at all. News would be a billionaire that isn't using tax dodges or shelters or havens.

    2. Re:This will be interesting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On very rare occasions, when the media wind is blowing in the right direction, public outrage can actually bring political sleaze to justice: Google "UK expenses scandal" if you don't believe me.

      I just wonder if this will turn into a similar story, or whether it will be successfully buried / downplayed.

  11. The Swiss dirty public secert. by LWATCDR · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Just how long has world known that the Swiss are the bankers of choice for criminals, dictators, and the idle rich that do not want to pay their taxes?
    I mean really this is no shock to the world. I do have to wonder just how much blood money is in Swiss banks and how much of the wonderful Swiss lifestyle is paid for with the misery of the world.

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    1. Re:The Swiss dirty public secert. by Noughmad · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I do have to wonder just how much blood money is in Swiss banks and how much of the wonderful Swiss lifestyle is paid for with the misery of the world.

      That's the point - now you won't have to wonder anymore.

      --
      PlusFive Slashdot reader for Android. Can post comments.
    2. Re:The Swiss dirty public secert. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Swiss people don't really have an easy lifestyle. It's not bad, but it's not that great either. Everything is expensive in Switzerland, people don't have much money after paying their taxes, rent, insurances, gas, bills, food and all the other stuff everyone in the modern world pays for.
      You're either thinking of the stereotypical lifestyle of owning a house and a chalet in the mountains and skiing all winter, which really isn't true at all, or you looked at the gross national product and failed to realize that bankers have most of the money. The average Swiss person is not rich and many are actually struggling financially. Homelessness also exists over there.

      Your misconceptions aside, the banking secrecy thing is bad for the average Swiss citizen, it only is good for the CEOs of these banks. Many people in Switzerland want to get rid of that secrecy and are trying hard to succeed.

    3. Re:The Swiss dirty public secert. by SimplyGeek · · Score: 1

      And just how much truth is there to it? The majority of people who think about Swiss banks in that regard do so because of popular culture. Not from some sort of independent, personal evaluation of the world banking system.

    4. Re:The Swiss dirty public secert. by rahvin112 · · Score: 1

      There have been numerous historic incidents. The least of which was upper level people in the Nazi party storing money and valuables stolen from people sent to the death camps in Swiss banks. The Swiss apologized after the war and it became public what they did, but the true extent of the evil in the swiss banking industry is very vigorously guarded using national security and some very nasty (as far as penalties for violation) privacy laws. Most of the nations around the world have been actively trying to get the Swiss to reveal the tax cheats using their system for decades now.

      Frankly, IMO the Swiss have a LOT of blood on their hands being the bankers for war lords, dictators and tax cheats. It's what they do and it's basis of most of their economy.

    5. Re:The Swiss dirty public secert. by omb · · Score: 1

      How much of the US lifestyle is paid on borrowed money,

      and BTW wars and failed foreign policies eveywhere,

      If you don't want to allow your citizens to have external bank accounts, make it illegal in YOUR country to have one.

      leave the rest of the world, and the law abiding Swiss the FUCK alone.

    6. Re:The Swiss dirty public secert. by einar2 · · Score: 1

      Swiss banks contribute 11.6% to the GDP of Switzerland.

      Having an inside view of Swiss financial institutions (worked for several insurances and a bank), I got the impression that these institutions take a lot of care to avoid black money. Continuing with my personal opinion, I do think that our "wonderful Swiss lifestyle" has to do with hard work and a dedication to quality. If somebody is better off than you are, he is not necessarily a thief or an evil person...

    7. Re:The Swiss dirty public secert. by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Hey don't blame me blame wikileaks.
      After all if there is nothing to be ashamed of then what is the problem?

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    8. Re:The Swiss dirty public secert. by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      I have no doubt that the average person is a fine person but the banking laws are set up to help people hid money. Why do you want to hid money except for some not so squeaky clean reasons.
      Of course Wikileaks may not show any of that.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    9. Re:The Swiss dirty public secert. by blahplusplus · · Score: 1

      "I mean really this is no shock to the world"

      The world constantly has new people born into it that do not know these things and/or never had the wherewithal or interest to find these things out on their own.

      Most people just know they are rumors that are most likely true, they don't actually have evidence.

    10. Re:The Swiss dirty public secert. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Wonderful Swiss lifestyle"...Obviously you've never been to Switzerland.

      I was in Switzerland for two days, I was so bored I did laundry. Also Geneva is a dirty city full of addicts and drunks.

    11. Re:The Swiss dirty public secert. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree with you that the stereotype of the "Wonderful Swiss lifestyle" is actually an oxymoron. However, if you have been to Geneva only, then you have visited the most untypical place of Switzerland. It's a very international city, and more comparable to France than to the rest of Switzerland actually.

    12. Re:The Swiss dirty public secert. by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      That's the point - now you won't have to wonder anymore.

      I think there is still plenty to wonder about...

      Now Wikileaks suffers its own leaks - 12 Dec 2010

      ... a senior WikiLeaks activist told The Sunday Telegraph that she and others had resigned from the organisation because of their deep concern about its treatment of sources and "lack of transparency with relation to large sums of money".

      This newspaper has learned that one of WikiLeaks's main funding channels, the Germany-based Wau Holland Foundation, has been issued with two official warnings by charity regulators after failing to file financial records. ...

      WikiLeaks, which says its operating costs are about $200,000 (£125,000) a year, claims to have raised more than $1 million (£625,000) in donations in the first eight months of this year alone, before most of its highest- profile leaks were published.

      Since then, according to one person connected with the group, further "serious amounts of money" have come in, mostly in small sums through the WikiLeaks website. However, in its four-year existence, the group and its associated organisations have never produced any accounts.

      WikiLeaks promised to publish accounts in August, but did not do so. It now says it will provide them by the end of the year.

      I doubt Assange opened the Swiss account to stash the Wikileaks cash so that it could be revealed as part of this next round of leaks. So... that sounds like a lot of cash.... with no transparency...

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    13. Re:The Swiss dirty public secert. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're an idiot.

      The Swiss have at least rules for it and have criminal processes in place to access proceeds of a crime where reasonable suspicion exists, and their laws have really been democratically agreed without the backdoors as seen in the US.

      Ask yourself why practically no large corporation in the US (MS, Oracle, you name them) contributes to US taxes, and then try to blame others. If you want non-transparency, go to Malta, Cyprus, Panama et al - it is possible to avoid paying taxes legally, and *none* of it involves Switzerland.

      Don't believe the marketing of a competing financial center - because that's what it is. The Swiss didn't destroy the finance market through greed and "creative" lack of law enforcement - what you see if desperate attempts to divert the political attention from that rather annoying fact.

      The Swiss have simply been made into the new communists, and the result is interesting. First of all, capital held in Switzerland is no longer accessible to the US anymore (the banks have all gone), another possible motive for the fanatism - if the world panics, the money goes to Switzerland because it's politically stable and trustworthy. Secondly, over the last few years, trust in the US as a law abiding society and a trustworthy business partner has sunk to an all new low - to a point where China of all nations is in a position to elevate itself as a lender exceeding the World Bank. They own our asses - here too, Switzerland was not involved. Thirdly, US passport holders living in Switzerland now actually have a problem finding a Swiss bank that will deal with them even for a normal checking account - through no fault of their own, just because of what Washington is doing.

      Yeah, sure, those bad bad tax evaders - they will give you about 0.001% of what was wasted through the finance system and a total of 6 ongoing wars. Dream on. Keep drinking that Kool Aid..

    14. Re:The Swiss dirty public secert. by golden+age+villain · · Score: 1

      Frankly, IMO the Swiss have a LOT of blood on their hands being the bankers for war lords, dictators and tax cheats. It's what they do and it's basis of most of their economy.

      Facts please! If you think that the Swiss economy is mostly based on its banking system, think again. According to Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economy_of_Switzerland

      In 2003, the financial sector comprised an estimated 11.6% of Switzerland's GDP and employed approximately 196,000 people (136,000 of whom work in the banking sector); this represents about 5.6% of the total Swiss workforce.

      I think it is not too unrealistic to assume that most of these 11.6% come from trading and other perfectly "moral" banking activites. The largest and richest Swiss companies are Glencore (raw materials), Nestlé (food), Novartis (pharma), Hoffmann-La Roche (pharma), ABB (power and automation) and Adecco (HR). But I guess that is too complicated to fit in your average Hollywood movie.

    15. Re:The Swiss dirty public secert. by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Thank you for the correction. I was wrong to say the basis for most. A large segment yes but not most.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    16. Re:The Swiss dirty public secert. by golden+age+villain · · Score: 1

      If you call a few percents a large basis yes.

    17. Re:The Swiss dirty public secert. by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      I would call greater than ten percent a large segment. More than one franc out of every ten made in the Swiss economy is from banking and more than on person out of every twenty people work for the banks.
      That is a much higher percentage than say the US auto industry or the the US civil aviation industry.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    18. Re:The Swiss dirty public secert. by Sedated2000 · · Score: 1

      The Swiss did apologize but most of the jews were unable to reclaim their belongings from the banks. If I remember correctly, one of the vaults even contained gold from the gold teeth from death camps.

    19. Re:The Swiss dirty public secert. by golden+age+villain · · Score: 1

      Right, but banking in Switzerland is not only tax evasion and blood money. The two largest banks, UBS and Credit Suisse, are also business banks and UBS lost tons of money during the recent financial turmoil. I guess it is reasonable to assume that most $ earned in that industry come from trading, investments, etc... Plus most of deposits are probably pensions from average Joes.

    20. Re:The Swiss dirty public secert. by einar2 · · Score: 1

      I do not know your cultural background. However, you seem to extend your ideas of right and wrong on other cultures. Often, this is neither fair nor wise.
      Why do you believe that your government (or any government) should look into the wallet of its citizen? The Swiss do not consider this a good idea. And yes, this might be abused to break other countries' laws. On the other hand, it also helps people to protect their property. Which is in most cultures (not in all) a basic right.

      I am always amazed how even in a forum like slashdot, where privacy is typically highly valued, people just repeat the dogma they are fed by their governments

  12. Let's see how he filters the release by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd be surprised if he didn't leave out those evaders who support his cause.

  13. I realize this will harm my "Karma". by UncHellMatt · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Considering the love-fest for Google around these parts, but they've been effectively dodging taxes for a few years. Why would it be a shock if politicians, celebrities and sundry millionaires / billionaires do the same?

    http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/10_44/b4201043146825.htm

    While I am all for businesses making a profit, I am NOT all for a multi-billion dollar company paying effectively 2.4% while I continue to pay nearly 30% of my income. The argument "Well, that gets turned into research and good pay for employees" still doesn't float IMO, when you have the higher executives of Google being paid millions. Reduce the salaries of those PHBs down to something reasonable, pay the rank and file programmers and researchers that money, and pay taxes like everyone else.

    1. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by Draek · · Score: 2

      Sure, as long as you adjust the laws to account for crap like Steve Jobs' "one dollar sallary and make the company pay for everything I do", or Bill Gates' "allow charities to use Office for free, then claim a donation equal to the number of copies used times Office's MSRP" schemes.

      Though, as another poster once said, as long as the potential savings of tax evasion are higher than the rates of lawyers and accountants, stuff like this will inevitably continue to happen.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    2. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by BeanThere · · Score: 1

      A multi-billion dollar company is a bunch of buildings and infrastructure, a building can't enjoy a car or yacht. In order for the human owners of the company to be able to do so much as buy a car with the profits they have to pay themselves out of the company first, and at that point they get taxed far more "2.4%", in fact they get taxed much higher than your 30%. Business owners pay massive amounts of taxes, disproportionately, so this lie that business owners are all somehow evading taxes at the expense of everyone is just blind anti-rich bullshit and propaganda.

      Also why is the implication that merely having money in a Swiss bank account automatically makes you a tax evader?

      Finally the only reason anybody pays taxes is that they're forced to. NOBODY on slashdot complaining about how evil the rich people are for trying to minimize their taxes, would pay their taxes either if they could get away with not doing so. Nobody. Not one person here would voluntarily pay taxes if they didn't have to. So let's all cut the hypocrisy.

    3. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by FooAtWFU · · Score: 1

      The Supreme Court has even ruled that you have neither a legal obligation nor even a patriotic duty to do anything but minimize your tax burden.

      --
      The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
    4. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by cacba · · Score: 1

      There are two distinctions.

      One: Google is working within the laws though abusing their intent. Hiding money and ignoring local laws (ie declaring any amount above $100k that is outside the country) is illegal. One is a problem with the system, the other is ignoring the system.

      Two: Elected officials have more trust placed in them then a private corporation and need to be judged to a higher standard.

    5. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by hierofalcon · · Score: 1

      In general, no corporation actually pays taxes unless it is not making a profit.

      As long as it is making a profit, the expense line item called taxes (regardless of their destination - federal, state, county, city, or foreign country) merely indicates how much of the money they took in selling their products or services or knowledge to another company or individual that they sent on to the indicated taxing authority. If they are actually paying taxes (not making a profit) they're not going to be in business very long.

      In the end, the consumer pays all corporate taxes of a profitable company, marked up by every company's desired profit margin at each step between the consumer and the companies who dig up the raw materials that went into the product.

      I know there are funky tax law quirks that don't make this a hard and fast rule, but it's mostly correct. They can situate their headquarters and development and manpower to try to reduce the amount of taxes they have to pay, but end result doesn't change. Any dollar that goes out as taxes is covered by sales or the company isn't going to be in business for very long.

      And yes, I would agree that most upper management is very much overpaid and I would personally like to see all stock options and perks removed and converted to a straight salary figure for everybody so people could really see just how bad it is and everyone would be on the same tax footing. On the other hand, I also support flat taxation for everyone - and flat in terms of dollars and not percent. There is no reason that Mr. Gates or Mr. Buffett should have to pay more to support the government than a single mom in dire straits does. They probably use less government services at every level than she does. Their companies benefit from the protections of the government, but everyone from the janitors and lawn care people to the C?Os who work for their companies benefit from that and not just them.

    6. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by otopico · · Score: 1

      The Court has also said that corporations are entitled to the same 'rights' as actual people. They interpret the laws; doesn't mean they are right.

    7. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Er, just an FYI this was the tax rate on Google's overseas profit. What that article fails to mention is that Google's overall effective tax rate is 22.2%: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/10/30/AR2010103004613.html.

    8. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by Solandri · · Score: 5, Informative

      While I am all for businesses making a profit, I am NOT all for a multi-billion dollar company paying effectively 2.4% while I continue to pay nearly 30% of my income.

      The inequitable taxation also unfairly hits small businesses. They're unable to offshore their finances, and they end up bearing the brunt of the public's anger at multi-billion dollar companies evading taxes. Consequently in the U.S., small businesses pay some of the highest tax rates among OECD nations. The business taxes passed to assuage people upset at big corporations evading taxes, are instead helping big corporations by crippling the small businesses who could otherwise challenge their domination.

      After a lot of thought, I actually reached the opposite conclusion as you. One of the core objections leading to the U.S. Revolutionary war was "No taxation without representation." That's a principle I think most people would still agree makes sense. And since I believe corporations should have no influence on government, I can't simultaneously justify to myself wanting to tax them.

      The argument "Well, that gets turned into research and good pay for employees" still doesn't float IMO, when you have the higher executives of Google being paid millions. Reduce the salaries of those PHBs down to something reasonable, pay the rank and file programmers and researchers that money, and pay taxes like everyone else.

      Sure it floats. All you have to do is raise the tax rate on the folks paid millions. I don't think this problem is as large as most people think it is though. If you pour over the IRS tax statistics, you'll find that the vast bulk of the income base (in the U.S. at least) is the upper-middle class and lower-upper class, roughly $75k-$250k/yr. What they lack in income, they make up for in population.

      The area where it gets tricky is perks paid for by the business but which the individual doesn't report as an income-equivalent benefit. e.g. a CEO flies around in a corporate jet, but doesn't report the added expense of operating the private plane over a coach ticket as a taxable benefit.

    9. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by WillDraven · · Score: 1

      So we should tax lawyers and accountants?

      --
      This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is mine.
    10. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      \

      Finally the only reason anybody pays taxes is that they're forced to. NOBODY on slashdot complaining about how evil the rich people are for trying to minimize their taxes, would pay their taxes either if they could get away with not doing so. Nobody. Not one person here would voluntarily pay taxes if they didn't have to. So let's all cut the hypocrisy.

      Maybe so. However, none of us are willing to break the law to avoid paying our fair share. Those who do intentionally break the law deserve whatever punishment they get. They do not deserve any sympathy at all, and it's not hypocritical to think that they should have to face the consequences of their actions.

    11. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's as nuts as claiming that my employer pays all my taxes.

    12. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      Your second example is not valid (assuming you mean MS is donating the money).

      Unlike individuals, corporations don't get a deduction for something like that. What corporations do get a deduction for is every single expense they have. They only pay taxes on their profit, not their income.

      So, a corporation pays somebody to clean the office, that's a tax deduction. I pay somebody to clean my office at home (that is used mostly for pleasure, and a hypothetical, as I don't actually pay people for cleaning, or have an office) it is not a tax deduction.

      If I give something away that has value, I get a deduction. If a corporation does, they can deduct the cost to produce it, but they get that anyway, even if it was sold at a profit.

      This is actually why your first example works. Paying for everything Steve Jobs does costs the company money, and therefore is not taxed (even though it is not charity). Technically if this money is paying for Steve to do personal stuff he should report it as income (non cash compensation for his job) and pay taxes on it. These things get very ambiguous though.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    13. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      What google does is in compliance with the law.

      Having a swiss bank account (with over $10,000 in it) and not reporting it to the IRS is against the law. Well assuming you are a US citizen or resident.

      And note that it's google's overseas earning that they've managed to pay just 2.4% on, so it's foreign governments who are missing out on most of that tax revenue not the IRS.

    14. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Imbecile. I would voluntarily pay taxes. If I didn't, then police and military wouldn't be paid. I prefer not to live in anarchy, thank you.

    15. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by BergZ · · Score: 1

      I bet middle class families could get a tax cut if the rich tax dodgers would pay their fair share.

      --
      Warning: This sig is not thread safe. For more information see Slashdot's sig policy.
    16. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      Fundamentally, governments and taxes are a way to keep those who do not have resources from rising up and killing those who do.

      The wealthy benefit mightily from their taxes which go to reduce the pain of the masses below the boiling point.

      When they forget that, they die and lose everything.

      They seem to forget that every two or three centuries and just wallow in greed until they get their heads cut off.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    17. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by calzones · · Score: 3, Interesting

      That's true at face value, however:

      The more profit the company keeps, the better valued and compensated the executives are. Also, this increases the value of the stock, which increases the net worth and credit worthiness of the executives.

      The richer the company, the more lavish the perks the employees, and particularly the executives enjoy. For example, a country club membership so they can make sales.... a yacht to entertain business partners with... first class travel around the world, including paying for the spouse to accompany... all considered as a business expenses. Industry parties... the list goes on.

      Look, I think it's a good idea not to tax businesses at all, because they provide employment. However, I do think it's wrong wrong wrong, to allow businesses to write off expenses and assets that only (and disproportionately) favor the executives while rank and file employees get shafted.

      I think a company's executive leadership should be forced to make a choice: either disburse funds throughout all employees in such a way as to avoid taxation penalties, or... get taxed exponentially up the ass relative to the discrepancy in executive NET WORTH (not pay) vs lowest rank pay factoring in things like cash balance and stock worth of the company. This would make it less attractive to throw parties and more attractive to spend money on the employees so as to avoid paying more taxes yourself, as an executive. Alternatively, if you don't want to compensate your employees more, because you feel the company needs to save money for future projects, then you would either have to reduce your salary, or pay substantially more taxes (which would benefit society if not your employees).

      --
      Asking people to think is like asking them to buy you a new car
    18. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by AchilleTalon · · Score: 1
      There is no problem having different taxation rates for individuals and companies, this is not tax evasion. Tax evasion is when an individual or a company manage to conceal income, profit in order to not pay a dime of taxes on it.

      Your argument about the higher executives salaries doesn't hold since they are paying their share of taxes on their own income exactly as you do. What is wrong is when they manage to evade taxation and conceal partly their incomes.

      --
      Achille Talon
      Hop!
    19. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      After a lot of thought, I actually reached the opposite conclusion as you. One of the core objections leading to the U.S. Revolutionary war was "No taxation without representation." That's a principle I think most people would still agree makes sense. And since I believe corporations should have no influence on government, I can't simultaneously justify to myself wanting to tax them.

      No, corporations are made of people, and they will lobby to change the political climate whether you tax them or not. "Perks" could become a *huge* issue. "Oh, that's not mine, it's the company's" would be more prevalent if there were huge incentives for it.

    20. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      How the fuck am I, the average minimum wage earner, supposed to pay an "equal share" of taxes when I cant even afford to feed myself. FUCK YOU!

      Ill tell you what, I will be willing to pay half, an entire half of my wages if everyone else also does so. In exchange, I want healthcare, infrastructure, and the banishment from government all special interest groups, to include but not limited to businesses, corporations, unions, PACs, and lobbyists. Lawmakers should answer to me and my fellow individual citizen, and NO ONE ELSE.

    21. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A multi-billion dollar company is a bunch of buildings and infrastructure, a building can't enjoy a car or yacht. In order for the human owners of the company to be able to do so much as buy a car with the profits they have to pay themselves out of the company first, and at that point they get taxed far more "2.4%", in fact they get taxed much higher than your 30%.

      Wrong. They get paid an income, which is of course taxed at a high rate, but the majority of the wealth generated to business owners comes from the issuance and sale of stock and stock options... which (if held for an appropriate length of time) are taxed as capitol gains at a flat 15%.

      Business owners pay massive amounts of taxes, disproportionately, so this lie that business owners are all somehow evading taxes at the expense of everyone is just blind anti-rich bullshit and propaganda.

      Wrong again. Businesses pay massive amounts of taxes. This tax burden is generally passed along to the consumer in the form of higher costs for goods and services. Business owners generally pay a lower overall percentage of tax than the middle class. Why? Because they have the business pay for all their day-to-day expenses, some even have the business pay their home mortgage with the flimsy home office excuse.

      Finally the only reason anybody pays taxes is that they're forced to. NOBODY on slashdot complaining about how evil the rich people are for trying to minimize their taxes, would pay their taxes either if they could get away with not doing so. Nobody. Not one person here would voluntarily pay taxes if they didn't have to. So let's all cut the hypocrisy.

      Yes, let's cut the the hypocrisy. I want everyone to pay the same amount of taxes. Based entirely upon your aggregate wealth, not your annual income.

    22. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by not-my-real-name · · Score: 1

      After a lot of thought, I actually reached the opposite conclusion as you. One of the core objections leading to the U.S. Revolutionary war was "No taxation without representation." That's a principle I think most people would still agree makes sense. And since I believe corporations should have no influence on government, I can't simultaneously justify to myself wanting to tax them.

      I just had a thought. How about turning the "no taxation without representation" thing around and having "no representation without taxation"?

      --
      un-ALTERED reproduction and dissimination of this IMPORTANT information is ENCOURAGED
    23. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by m50d · · Score: 1
      In order for the human owners of the company to be able to do so much as buy a car with the profits they have to pay themselves out of the company first, and at that point they get taxed far more "2.4%", in fact they get taxed much higher than your 30%.

      Really? Don't they take their profits in stock, and thereby avoid paying on that too?

      --
      I am trolling
    24. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by vgerclover · · Score: 1

      After a lot of thought, I actually reached the opposite conclusion as you. One of the core objections leading to the U.S. Revolutionary war was "No taxation without representation." That's a principle I think most people would still agree makes sense. And since I believe corporations should have no influence on government, I can't simultaneously justify to myself wanting to tax them.

      I just had a thought. How about turning the "no taxation without representation" thing around and having "no representation without taxation"?

      Wouldn't that turn into "no representation without money"?

      Wait, what would be the difference with what we have now?

    25. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by hierofalcon · · Score: 1

      I realize that posting to an anonymous coward isn't usually fruitful, but the point he is making has to be answered.

      Until everyone in the country starts paying an equal share, there is no incentive to change the amount of money being spent. If everyone was paying an exactly equal share, you'd very, very, very quickly find that government expenditures would decrease until that equal share was a bearable amount for everyone or everyone would go to Washington D.C. in revolt.

      Some of the people in government would be out of a job (working for government at least). If the service they were providing was truly important to the people, the private sector would take it on and those interested in it would support it. The previous federal employees could find jobs there if they were qualified. If it wasn't worth any private entity taking over, then it isn't worth the government doing either. There are a large number of functions of government that most would choose to fund (and would hope might even get more funding). I doubt that the CDC would have to worry or the food inspectors (although this at least could be done privately as well). The various intelligence services might have to shape up, but would still exist. The military might have a reduced role but would still exist. NASA might have to shape up a lot or go private. The Education dept? Poof. Back to the states where it belongs. Same with several other departments. But government would still exist at some federal level.

      People would decide that entitlements really could be reduced and their legislators would follow through quickly. Families might start caring for their own elderly again or let charitable organizations do it as they did in the past. People would decide they really didn't care if terrorists were ever found or not and that most of the world could just degenerate into anarchy if it wanted to instead of having our military presence foot the bill for being a police keeper. You'd be amazed at how fast the equal share would become bearable.

      As it is, you can't even get 1/2 the people to vote in an election (give or take and depending on the election) because it doesn't matter who wins to them - they'll still get their government handouts.

    26. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by hibiki_r · · Score: 1

      As someone with US residency but no US citizenship, who therefore can't vote, would you be all for removing all taxes that I pay?

    27. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by Philomage · · Score: 1

      You know; I'm one of the most left-leaning people you'll find when it comes to taxes and socialism, but recently I've been thinking: "why should it be taxed twice?" If the money's being paid out in the millions to the big executives, shouldn't it just be taxed as income for them? Why should corporations be taxed at all? (Assuming you can stop the income tax from being evaded.) Shouldn't it only be taxed when it actually benefits a person (and not the legal entity of a corporation... those aren't persons no matter what the courts have said)?

    28. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by locallyunscene · · Score: 1

      After a lot of thought, I actually reached the opposite conclusion as you. One of the core objections leading to the U.S. Revolutionary war was "No taxation without representation." That's a principle I think most people would still agree makes sense. And since I believe corporations should have no influence on government, I can't simultaneously justify to myself wanting to tax them.

      I don't find it difficult to justify, and think your position a bit absurd. First, each of the individual persons within the corporation has representation and that would not change. Second, corporation are the heaviest users of public infrastructure like roads and post system, subsidized infrastructure like the electrical grid, and the internet, and subsidized materials like corn and petroleum. TANSTAAFL! applies to private enterprise too :-)

    29. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, I also support flat taxation for everyone - and flat in terms of dollars and not percent. There is no reason that Mr. Gates or Mr. Buffett should have to pay more to support the government than a single mom in dire straits does.

      Jesus H. Tapdancing Christ 8-(

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    30. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nice idea, but that'd just make them split the company in three: One ultra-cheap labor company for all odd jobs, one normal-pay work-actually-done-here company and one management-only show-me-the-monies company.

      Yeah, you could prevent that specific scenario, but really: As long as there's any small hole in the rules, they will do their best to push themselves through it on top of a camel.

    31. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by outsider007 · · Score: 1

      You report income to the IRS, not bank accounts.

      --
      If you mod me down the terrorists will have won
    32. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't base it on net worth... I could be a degenerate gambler and waste any "worth" you throw my way. Now see how you can't force a result.

    33. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by blair1q · · Score: 1

      One of the core objections leading to the U.S. Revolutionary war was "No taxation without representation." That's a principle I think most people would still agree makes sense.

      Most people think it means "no taxation."

    34. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One of the core objections leading to the U.S. Revolutionary war was "No taxation without representation." That's a principle I think most people would still agree makes sense. And since I believe corporations should have no influence on government, I can't simultaneously justify to myself wanting to tax them.

      Corporations are just a liability shield for their owners, and the owners already get to vote. The instinctual rejection of corporations also being given the vote is that we all know that, in reality, it'd be a human making that extra vote. No one thinks it'd be fair to get one vote while some other guy gets two or ten or a thousand votes - well, except for maybe the actual guy who'd be casting or receiving the extra votes.

    35. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The story on Google paying an effective tax rate of 2.4% is false. If you "fact checked" and looked for the original source you would find that they reduced their effective tax rate by 2.4% by using the "double irish" and "dutch sandwich" styles of tax evasion.

    36. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by winwar · · Score: 1

      If you are hit with income taxes in your home country, I think you shouldn't be double taxed. But otherwise, I would suggest you move to a locale where you can vote. Unfortunately that may not be the US.

    37. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by Kernel+Krumpit · · Score: 1

      Oddly enough, being paddle-less & up the same creek as you, i never get a response either when i ask that question - especially from the "if you don't like it here ....." flock.

      --
      May the lies we live by make us strong, healthy, happy and wise - Kurt Vonnegut.
    38. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by wierd_w · · Score: 1

      Ahhh, but you DO report your capitol investments, AND any interest that was generated on those investments as part of income on the W-2 form.

      It's the same place where you are SUPPOSED to report any gambling winnings, etc that you "earned" that year.

      Anything over a few hundred dollars is considered important enough to get you a nasty IRS audit if you don't report, BTW.
      Somehow I doubt a multi-million dollar investment in a foriegn bank would net less than a few hundred dollars in interest.

    39. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by hierofalcon · · Score: 1

      Sorry I caused you to take the Lord's name in vain.

      I added another post currently above yours that attempts to explain my view of the problem we have now and why I offered equal burden as a possible solution. Please post your ideas of how to reign in government spending, start reducing the debt, and still keep essential services running. I can't figure out a way to do it until people actually start caring about what their elected officials are doing. Until it starts costing everybody something, there's no incentive to even vote, much less try to influence what is going on. Equal would be awful for me as I have a large family and fit in the middle class demographic. I would be paying much more in taxes than I am now due to child tax credits. But what we have now isn't working at all and shows no signs of changing.

      If nothing changed and there was an equal burden, then yes - it would be very hard or impossible for most of the population to pay the cost. My feelings would be that an equal share would never be passed without a massive reduction in the cost of government. At that point, the bill might not be horribly unreasonable for each person.

      I don't expect to ever be rich (although most Americans are rich by much of the world's standards). Yet I still can't begin to feel there is any justice or rightness in making those better off than I am pay a greater share of my government's expense than I do. They get no benefits that I don't get. The companies they work for might, but those same benefits help everyone who works in them. Should those who are rich be more charitable. I'm sure they should. But it should be done voluntarily and not taken by force.

    40. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by TheoMurpse · · Score: 1

      since I believe corporations should have no influence on government, I can't simultaneously justify to myself wanting to tax them.

      This is why the beautiful symmetry of theory fails and cold, ugly pragmatism is necessary.

      Under a system of "can't tax corporations since they can't vote/whatever," I would just create a corporation with myself as the sole shareholder and also employee, have the corporation buy office space in the form of a very nice building with sleeping and dining facilities (just like Google), provide food to its employees (just like Google), and have the corporation act as the employee of whomever I formerly worked for. Pay sole employee a "fair salary," issue a bunch of dividends to the sole shareholder, and reinvest the rest as "infrastructure improvements," meaning the corporate income is severely reduced by these new liabilities. Oh, and the infrastructure improvements could be upgrades to the corporate car fleet, upgrades to the corporate offices, corporate-sponsored retreats to Saint Barthélemy, etc.

      Many private doctors already do something similar to this:

      1. create an S corporation with a sole shareholder and employee (the doctor)
      2. S corporation pays no income taxes itself because it is taxed on a pass-through, not double-taxation, basis
      3. pay self 50% of corporation's earnings as salary
      4. pay self the rest of the S corporation's earnings as stock dividends so self pays capital gains tax at a lower rate than if it were taxed as income
      5. Profit! (no missing step here)

      Also, I presume you have a big problem with non-citizen immigrants to the US paying taxes (since they haven't the right to vote)?

    41. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by Tacvek · · Score: 1

      Well, the Court has not yet ruled that corporations have ALL the rights of people. I'm thankful that corporations don't have a right to a trial by their peers!

      --
      Stylish sheet to fix many problems in Slashdot's D3: https://gist.github.com/801524
    42. Re:I realize this will harm my "Karma". by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      Hopefully you don't have any foreign bank accounts then, since the penalties for not doing so are quite harsh.

      here you go: http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f1040sb.pdf

      """
      You must complete this part if you (a) had over $1,500 of taxable interest or ordinary dividends; (b) had a
      foreign account; or (c) received a distribution from, or were a grantor of, or a transferor to, a foreign trust.
      """

      Please note item (b) and the lack of income being relevant.

  14. NY Times Links Broken Via Submission Process by eldavojohn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There are more details here.

    It is indeed a better link and was one I found in my Google Reader this morning. However, I also have noticed continuously that New York Times links provide me headaches and disappointment when used in Slashdot's submission process. Here's a recent example, earlier this morning I submitted a story about video games and mental health problems. Now in that submission I referred to a well written New York Times article an used this URL:

    http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/17/us/17gaming.html

    Every time I previewed it or edited it, it came out like that. But when I hit submit, it magically changed to this URL:

    http://www.nytimes.com/glogin?URI=http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/17/us/17gaming.html&OQ=_rQ3D4&OP=70b1f348Q2FQ5D-2yQ5DgoksPooZQ27Q5DQ27W33Q5DW3Q5D3VQ5DisQ5D3VdQ241Q26rdQ25OZ14

    What is going on? I've written to CmdrTaco about this and I thought he said they'd look at it ... like their system prefetches URLs or something? Makes adjustments to avoid TinyURL in the submission? Avoids redirects that might go to goatse? I don't know. What I do know is that if you go to the firehose and type in 'nytimes' as your search term you will find submission after submission with login/paywalled URLs exactly like the one above. Here's one and another and another ad infinitum.

    So when you do this, people get upset they can't read the article and I heavily sympathize with them and generally consider my submission a failed attempt when that happens. So the solution? Don't link to the New York Times in submissions! I'll find some other site to send a billion Slashdot eyes at if they don't want their page views. It really is a shame because I love the New York Times and think they have some great writers but from the above it's evident the affection is asymmetrical.

    --
    My work here is dung.
    1. Re:NY Times Links Broken Via Submission Process by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Same thing happens with links from other sites to nytimes.

    2. Re:NY Times Links Broken Via Submission Process by ortholattice · · Score: 2

      Until it is fixed, perhaps the workaround is to include the URL as the hyperlink text in submissions referencing the NY Times. Like this: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/17/us/17gaming.html (non-subscribers should text-copy/paste the link).

    3. Re:NY Times Links Broken Via Submission Process by Posting=!Working · · Score: 1

      New York Times requires you to register to read some of their articles, the second link is to a logged in account version of the article. If they didn't change the URL, those without accounts would see login screens on some articles. This article is NOT one of the ones you need to be logged in to view, however, it's probably a script that changes every link to a NY Times article when it's submitted.

      Check the new URL, it starts "http://www.nytimes.com/glogin?..."

      --
      This sentence no verb.
    4. Re:NY Times Links Broken Via Submission Process by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Every time I previewed it or edited it, it came out like that. But when I hit submit, it magically changed to this URL:

      http://www.nytimes.com/glogin?URI=http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/17/us/17gaming.html&OQ=_rQ3D4&OP=70b1f348Q2FQ5D-2yQ5DgoksPooZQ27Q5DQ27W33Q5DW3Q5D3VQ5DisQ5D3VdQ241Q26rdQ25OZ14

      What is going on?

      I'm not 100% sure, but it might be a temporary URL for your ISP's web caching server. Try switching yourself to a public DNS and see if it keeps happening.

    5. Re:NY Times Links Broken Via Submission Process by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The New York Times automatically allows browsers referred by Google News (and presumably at least some other news redirectors) to see articles, even if they're not registered. Presumably, it detects browsers that were not referred by one of the allowed sources and redirects them to a login page.

  15. Re:Media whore by upside · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I don't care if he's a monkey and likes to play a recorder with his butt.

    It's a Good Thing (tm) this information is being made public.

    These negative responses are almost as juicy as the leaks themselves. You've left us wondering whether you're a tax evader, a Freedom Fry? Or maybe it's just jealousy or a secret crush... not trying hard enough to be an astroturfer.

    --
    I'm sorry if I haven't offended anyone
  16. Well i think this is great and hilarious. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Assange may be a bit dubious himself, but i doubt this is 'revenge'. I think people are very keen to see this list - because it is wrong what the super rich are up to here, avoiding taxes and hiding money they may not rightfully have. This is great. And it supports the view that the tables are turning a bit faster now - the people (the shafted) v the rich and powerful (the would-be Bloefelts).

  17. sick of wiki gonna-leak by mrjatsun · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I'm getting sick of Assange's promises of all this great information they are "going to leak". He has all of this info on corruption in the US banking system, on rich people evading taxes, and a bunch of other info which will be released if he disappears.

    If he has information on illegal dealings, corruption, etc., release it.. Why the threats, why the talk? His current behavior is more like someone
    trying to shake down folks, not someone trying to uncover the truth.

    1. Re:sick of wiki gonna-leak by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps by pre-announcing it, he hope more insiders will hear about and send him additional info, so he can 1) have more info to release, and 2) cross reference similar info from multiple source to better corroborate the info from the first source.

    2. Re:sick of wiki gonna-leak by BudAaron · · Score: 1

      An elephant backed a keeper against his stall this morning crushing her to death. I think the man is messing with a million ton elephant and doesn't want to be a chair.

    3. Re:sick of wiki gonna-leak by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with divulging millions of records is that most are trivial. It takes great effort to find anything of interest. With earlier releases they had trouble attracting people interested in exerting the required effort. By releasing teasers, journalists can get a first scoop.

    4. Re:sick of wiki gonna-leak by coolmadsi · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If he has information on illegal dealings, corruption, etc., release it.. Why the threats, why the talk? His current behavior is more like someone trying to shake down folks, not someone trying to uncover the truth.

      A while ago (last year I think) when some wikileak documents were released, they were criticized for not redacting sufficiently (I recall that some analysis into found that they were, and the criticism was mostly unfounded, of the informant names that were actually available, one was dead and one was a double agent or something like that). I suspect now the time between getting a leak and releasing it has increased a lot, due to an increase in checking and double checking, to avoid those sort of criticisms again.

      I guess its kind of like a double edged sword; they'll either be criticised for not allowing sufficient time for redaction, or criticised for taking some time to release something.

    5. Re:sick of wiki gonna-leak by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Why the threats, why the talk?

      Why the impatience? Assange is either a tool or he has real good information. Either way, time will tell, no need to condemn someone prematurely. When the time comes, we will know.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    6. Re:sick of wiki gonna-leak by Sedated2000 · · Score: 1

      I think they were referring more to the "why talk about it until you're ready to release it" method rather than "talk about it, then talk about it, then tease, then wait, then release".

  18. Re:Media whore by tehcyder · · Score: 1

    I dunno. I'm pretty sure that he genuinely hates both rich people and the United States as well.

    You say that almost as though it were a bad thing.

    --
    To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  19. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by hedwards · · Score: 3, Insightful

    They don't have to pay, they could move to another country. It's hardly theft for the government to make you pay for services you use. Why should I have to pay all my taxes when these jack asses are sending their money overseas to avoid having to pay taxes?

    But then again, I bet you're one of those people who wants your taxes cut, but wants somebody elses services to be cut or diminished to finance it. I think the term for that is "fiscal conservative."

  20. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by whiteboy86 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I like paying taxes. With them I buy civilization.

  21. Re:Media whore by choko · · Score: 2

    I don't think he hates the US. I think he is releasing this information so the citizens can be aware of some of the nefarious actions US leaders have been up to. Look at some of those leaks. Everything from child prostitution to killing the bees is in there.

  22. Well now by jav1231 · · Score: 0, Troll

    This could be interesting. It's one thing to piss off governments and having made yourself so public you are afforded some protection by your celebrity. Pissing off some private citizens with deep pockets could mean you're found floating in a river.

    Either way, Wikileaks is out of control. I just hoped they're caught and stopped. There are ways of whistle-blowing but this sure isn't the most most ethical by any means. They're wielding their information not just as an offense weapon (as most whistle-blowing would be) but also as a defense and sometimes as a preempt simply because they can. Just because you know something doesn't mean you should say it. Obviously, few on the board are married.

    1. Re:Well now by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 4, Insightful

      you have it somewhat backwards.

      we are now seeing how out of control THE WORLD is.

      people running things knew this. 'we' didn't.

      this is what all the rukkus is about. exposure of the raw, uncut reality of how the world really world. no sugar coated disney movie view of things.

      peoples' view of reality are being challenged and those who lived on the lie are being caught.

      information revolution, to be sure. this is why its such a big deal. this IS a revolution; we're seeing it happen and unfold right now.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    2. Re:Well now by jav1231 · · Score: 1

      Then what? There will always be a seedy underbelly. But it's part of the infrastructure. Whistle-blowing is a way of picking at it and keeping people aware and occasionally bringing those to justice. But if you rip it apart, there is collateral damage. In the case of Wikileaks, it was the diplomatic cables, many of which had little to do with the dark evils of government. Then there are informants and other logistical people who did nothing wrong. All for what? "I told you so?" We're going to bring down world governments for what? What's in the vacuum? Anarchy? It's nice to think about the utopia to come but here's the bitter truth, there is no utopia. Assange can do this because he has no kids, no family, no one to worry about but himself. And now we're hearing reports of those with Wikileaks wanting money for their information!? That they STOLE!? Wikileaks deserves whatever they get and they haven't gotten nearly enough bag of hurt. Whistle-blowers? Hardly. Turns out they're just as prone to the dark side of human nature as those they look down their noses upon.

    3. Re:Well now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have a different view though: the regular people already know the system is unfair and they don't fucking care. They even aspire to be in the inner circle. Deep in the average Joe's heart, they even want this tax evasion scheme to continue because they all think they can one day become a C Suite executive.

      So, no information revolution my friend. Proles and animals are free, for we are no longer a threat.

    4. Re:Well now by okooolo · · Score: 1

      truth is its own reward

    5. Re:Well now by jav1231 · · Score: 1

      Of course I'm a troll for not condoning Wikileaks behavior.

    6. Re:Well now by blair1q · · Score: 1

      We all knew this was happening.

      We just didn't have any way to link it to particular individuals to charge them with a crime.

    7. Re:Well now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Brilliantly put. Kudos.

    8. Re:Well now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      > Either way, Wikileaks is out of control. I just hoped they're caught and stopped.
      > There are ways of whistle-blowing but this sure isn't the most most ethical by any means.

      Maybe, maybe not...

      > They're wielding their information not just as an offense weapon (as most whistle-blowing
      > would be) but also as a defense and sometimes as a preempt simply because they can.
      > Just because you know something doesn't mean you should say it.
      > Obviously, few on the board are married.

      As a single person, you reveal way too much right here.
      Thank you for confirming my paranoia.

      I was on the fence, but you convinced me: 3 cheers to Wikileaks!

      Scary thing is if this gets modded, it will be "funny."

    9. Re:Well now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then what? There will always be a seedy underbelly. But it's part of the infrastructure.

      Your self-defeating stance doesn't exactly inspire.

      Whistle-blowing is a way of picking at it and keeping people aware and occasionally bringing
      those to justice. But if you rip it apart, there is collateral damage. In the case of
      Wikileaks, it was the diplomatic cables, many of which had little to do with the dark evils
      of government. Then there are informants and other logistical people who did nothing wrong.
      All for what? "I told you so?" We're going to bring down world governments for what? What's
      in the vacuum? Anarchy? It's nice to think about the utopia to come but here's the bitter
      truth, there is no utopia.

      Then what are you complaining about?

      Some might say that the various world governments are a result from an inherent anarchy.
      And you hint that others have illusions.

      Assange can do this because he has no kids, no family, no one to
      worry about but himself.

      Perhaps he looks out for the individual fuckers like me that you assholes clearly don't give
      a shit about.
      No kids and no family = no one to worry about? How shallow your thinking is.

      I see. Truth and justice for those with kids and family.
      Anyone who doesn't want to play that game doesn't matter. Gotcha.

      And now we're hearing reports of those with Wikileaks wanting money
      for their information!? That they STOLE!?

      Source?

      Wikileaks deserves whatever they get and they
      haven't gotten nearly enough bag of hurt.

      You can't have it both ways.
      "They deserve whatever they get, but I think they deserve more."
      Can't make up your mind?

      I think the Swiss Bank Tank Evaders deserve whatever they get, no more and no less.

      Whistle-blowers? Hardly. Turns out they're just
      as prone to the dark side of human nature as those they look down their noses upon.

      As you said, there is no utopia.

    10. Re:Well now by Changa_MC · · Score: 1

      Interesting that in your view knowing what the government is doing, and complete anarchy are one and the same. This of course is only true if everything the government is doing is utterly evil and without any redemptive value -- an assumption I have to reject in order to go on sleeping at night.

      --
      Changa hates change.
    11. Re:Well now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We all knew this was happening.

      No.

      We all did most certainly not know this was happening. You knew. I knew. Others knew. But not all. Far, far from all. The more who know the better.

      We just didn't have any way to link it to particular individuals to charge them with a crime.

      Correct. Let's hope this leads somewhere tangible, for once.

  23. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by mekkab · · Score: 1

    I can't help but think this is an olive branch of sorts to the very nations embarrassed by wikileaks. "Here are your white collar criminals. Here is your money. Let's go easy on Julian, shall we?"

    And as to your assertion that these aren't criminals: I don't know if this is flamebait (probably!) or heart-felt opinion but this is a clear-cut case of people getting around a law, be it "Right" (in the categorical imperative, universally just sense) or wrong. Get caught? Get punished.

    --
    In the future, I would want to not be isolated from my friends in the Space Station.
  24. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by Ice+Tiger · · Score: 2

    If they don't like paying for things like Police, Fire departments, Military etc then they can always move to a tax haven where they don't have to.

    --
    "Because we are not employing at entry level, offshoring will kill our industry stone dead."
  25. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because tax evaders are also "heroic and brave enough" to keep their money for themselves and not fund non-evil government projects like fixing the road, bridges, aquaducts, etc.

  26. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by iserlohn · · Score: 1

    Have you ever considered that most states (including the US) is effectively run by the rich and powerful? If you have, then you would be a lot more measured in your reply, rather than babbling off absolute nonsense.

  27. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by tehcyder · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Outing honest people whose only so-called "crime" is wanting to avoid the theft of their hard and presumably legitimately-earned dollars is completely and totally wrong

    Tax is not theft. Someone evading tax is not honest.

    Black is not white, whatever you libertarians might like to believe.

    --
    To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  28. Scam for profit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its a scam of course!

    1. Have a Swiss bank confiscate your money
    2. Publish name of other customers at bank ...
    4 Profit!!

    I don't understand the trolls above here. Do people really believe that it is good that the richest people dont have to pay their taxes? Do you guys really want to support these Swiss-Caribbean loopholes?

  29. Only Tax Evaders and Criminals to Be Named by eldavojohn · · Score: 4, Informative

    Despite their exotic reputation, the vast majority of accounts were held by fairly ordinary folk (there seemed to be an inordinate number of german dentists). So while this may sound like a blow at the rich and powerful, there's going to be a lot of very unextraordinary middle class folk whose financial details are laid bare by this. Having a Swiss bank account is not illegal in itself.

    From the New York Times coverage:

    A former Swiss bank executive said on Monday that he had given the WikiLeaks founder, Julian Assange, details of more than 2,000 prominent individuals and companies that he contends engaged in tax evasion and other possible criminal activity.

    Emphasis mine. Elmer is doing this because he feels the list he has compiled is a list of unjust individuals and right now Wikileaks is doing all in their power to verify that these individuals are, in fact, tax dodgers. He says the list has 40 politicians and “pillars of society” worldwide among those two thousand.

    You might want consider whether you'd like your finances laid bare before you acclaim this as another win for david over goliath.

    Precisely why I ended the summary with "at the expense of privacy." And it's not just tax evasion. You do realize that if Julius Baer is associated with heinous criminals worldwide that it could get ugly on an international level, right?

    --
    My work here is dung.
    1. Re:Only Tax Evaders and Criminals to Be Named by krou · · Score: 5, Informative
      Indeed. The UK Observer had more info direct from Elmer:

      'What I am objecting to is not one particular bank, but a system of structures. I have worked for major banks other than Julius Baer, and the one thing on which I am absolutely clear is that the banks know, and the big boys know, that money is being secreted away for tax-evasion purposes, and other things such as money-laundering – although these cases involve tax evasion. I agree with privacy in banking for the person in the street, and legitimate activity, but in these instances privacy is being abused so that big people can get big banking organisations to service them. The normal, hard-working taxpayer is being abused also. Once you become part of senior management, and gain international experience, as I did, then you are part of the inner circle – and things become much clearer. You are part of the plot. You know what the real products and service are, and why they are so expensive. It should be no surprise that the main product is secrecy ... Crimes are committed and lies spread in order to protect this secrecy.'

      --
      'If Christ had tweeted the sermon on the mount, it might have lasted until nightfall.' - John Perry Barlow
    2. Re:Only Tax Evaders and Criminals to Be Named by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      Mod UP, informative (unless it's redundant).

      I'm so glad wikileaks exists. I hope the spinoff, Openleak, makes it too.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    3. Re:Only Tax Evaders and Criminals to Be Named by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Elmer is doing this because he feels the list he has compiled is a list of unjust individuals and right now Wikileaks is doing all in their power to verify that these individuals are, in fact, tax dodgers.

      ISPs are doing this because they feel the list they have compiled is a list of high bandwidth individuals and right now the RIAA is doing all in their power to verify that these individuals are, in fact, copyright violators.

      Banks are doing this because they feel the list they have compiled is a list of Arab-sounding individuals and right now the ABA is doing all in their power to verify that these individuals are, in fact, terrorists.

    4. Re:Only Tax Evaders and Criminals to Be Named by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In all liklihood, the names Elmer provided have some unusual tax practices at a minimum. Keep in mind, however, that Elmer was complicate in tax evasion for a few people. When the US was investigating a particular man, they considered giving Elmer immunity on the condition he had no relationship with that man and elmer agreed. It turned out that Elmer did have a relationship with the target of that investigation, however. The net result being that he is now viewed by the US justice system as both a criminal and valuable informant. The Swiss banks of course hate the breach of secrecy that they have held as a tradition.

    5. Re:Only Tax Evaders and Criminals to Be Named by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have worked for major banks other than Julius Baer, and the one thing on which I am absolutely clear is that the banks know, and the big boys know, that money is being secreted away for tax-evasion purposes, and other things such as money-laundering - although these cases involve tax evasion.

      Ummm, duh. It is well known that people use Swiss banks for tax evasion.

      The main reason is that in Switzerland, tax evasion is not a serious crime, it rates a little higher than a traffic ticket. And since the Swiss don't regard tax evasion as a serious crime, Swiss banks will often assist you to evade tax.

      On the other hand, with tax fraud, money laundering or other serious crimes Swiss banks will fully cooperate with foreign authorities.

  30. What is more damaging to society? by WCMI92 · · Score: 2, Troll

    An individual who seeks to minimize his tax obligations or a government that feels that it is ENTITLED to tax everything that moves?

    --
    Corporatism != Free Market
    1. Re:What is more damaging to society? by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 1
      Often times the people who bitch about taxes are the first one to demand lots of government services. Tea partiers moving around scooters paid for by medicare, railing against government take over of healthcare, people who live on welfare urging people to throw bricks through the windows of congresscritters to protest against taxes, people who demand government clean up the beaches when their free market capitalistic company makes a boo-boo, and demand compensation for profits lost on top of that...

      First mention one thing that you benefit that is funded by the government, then offer to give it up, else you are just another selfish fellow shifting costs and burdens to others. There is nothing wrong with that, nor is it illegal, but just stop pretending to be a patriot or a freedom lover.

      --
      sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
    2. Re:What is more damaging to society? by saleenS281 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      An individual that seeks to minimize his tax obligations, without question. I've never seen a poor person trying to lower his taxes, and I've never seen a healthy nation without a high tax rate. Little to no taxation for the rich is the recipe for a third world country, and nothing else. We don't need to become the next Mexico, thank you very much.

    3. Re:What is more damaging to society? by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      2 wrongs make a right?

      can't you separate the 2 and deal with them on their own?

      mismanagement by the gov != a 'get off free' card for not paying your share.

      this isn't the RIAA you are stiffing. in fact, you stiff us all when you 'work the system' and avoid contributing to the common good (ie, what taxes are supposed to be about).

      yes, the gov needs fixing. denying the common infra the funds they need is not the way to fix it, though.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    4. Re:What is more damaging to society? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe, it's people who seriously think that any properly elected government should not have the basic right of making policy? Or people who think that they do not have to give anything back to society in the form of mandatory taxes?

    5. Re:What is more damaging to society? by TheL0ser · · Score: 1

      An individual who seeks to minimize his tax obligations or a government that feels that it is ENTITLED to tax everything that moves?

      First one. Second one can be seen to come along as a result of the first. I'd like to think if people didn't dodge taxes we wouldn't see so many of them.

    6. Re:What is more damaging to society? by LordNacho · · Score: 1

      An individual that seeks to minimize his tax obligations, without question. I've never seen a poor person trying to lower his taxes, and I've never seen a healthy nation without a high tax rate. Little to no taxation for the rich is the recipe for a third world country, and nothing else. We don't need to become the next Mexico, thank you very much.

      Do you think Switzerland is "unhealthy"? Many people who visit the place like to praise it.

    7. Re:What is more damaging to society? by saleenS281 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Switzerland's top tax bracket is 40%+, so I'm not really sure what it is you're trying to get at. That we need higher taxes on the wealthy in America? I agree.

    8. Re:What is more damaging to society? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The former.

      Let's say, hypothetically, that tomorrow the government cuts tax rates by 75%*. Do you really believe that these rich people will go "phew, now I can move my money back in country?" They'll continue to use tax loopholes for as long as the cost of doing so is less than the cost of paying those taxes. It's not about fair or unfair or the money being wasted or used appropriately, it's about keeping more of it in their pockets. That's not evil, by the way, but it is what it is.

      This hypothetical government, having just cut taxes 75%, is presumably cut back to what it considers bare-bones essential services, yet still isn't bringing in the revenue they predict they should because the people who don't want to pay continue not wanting to pay -- and they have the resources to make that happen. There being nothing left that they feel they can cut, this government will have no choice but to use targets that are easier to hit and harder to avoid like, say, sales taxes. Taxes which disproportionately affect the people least able to pay them. In other words, even a government that doesn't "[feel] that it is ENTITLED to tax everything that moves" ultimately will behave that way even in near-ideal circumstances if the societal participants effectively game the system, and those participants will do so without not only any moral qualms, but without any legal qualms. Subject, in effect, only to themselves.

      An entitled government, by contrast, will burden people as much as it feels it can get away with -- but there is a limit, because ultimately those governments are subject to their electorate. More directly subject, of course, in governments where their people participate in the process but subject still in governments of dictatorship. Money will move many a man to rebellion, and a dictator's fear of being executed in the streets will keep even them in line. With effective participation and informed electorate, the government approaches the level of spending, and thus taxing, that that electorate wants. Bear in mind that what they want and what they say they want are often not the same; even Ronald Regan, hero of the (US) conservative movement, walked into office talking about all the entitlement programs he was going to cut and walked out funding the biggest of them -- because he understood that for all the peoples' clammoring for more money left in their pockets, most of them wanted the services and not to pay for them, an obviously untenable situation.

      I'm not ignorant, by the way, to how ridiculously loaded your "question" was, but I'm content to ignore it with one exception: To point out that, despite what these leaks may ultimately be about, the vast majority of the users of such tax avoidance schemes are not individuals at all.

      * I may screw myself slightly by pulling a number out of my ass. It may be that 75% is a big enough reduction that bringing the money back in country is suddenly the more economicaly feasible approach. My point isn't a specific percentage, but rather that they essentially run a cost-benefit on paying the taxes versus avoiding paying the taxes.

    9. Re:What is more damaging to society? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >I've never seen a poor person trying to lower his taxes, and I've never seen a healthy nation without a high tax rate.

      They must not exist, then!

    10. Re:What is more damaging to society? by GodfatherofSoul · · Score: 1

      What's more damaging? Someone who makes hyperbolic straw man arguments, or a virgin-eating dragon pillaging the country side and incinerating our crops?

      --
      I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
    11. Re:What is more damaging to society? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      An individual who thinks he should get all of the services that a liberal society provides without contributing his own resources to help support it. In other words, a fscking "libertarian."

    12. Re:What is more damaging to society? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And another despotic wannabe vents on Slashdot. There's a reason you're being kept on a short leash.

    13. Re:What is more damaging to society? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hong Kong and Singapore seem to be doing ok with very low tax rates...

    14. Re:What is more damaging to society? by Vaphell · · Score: 1

      and what about people who can afford the food yet they game the system so they can get foodstamps at the taxpayer's expense? Don't they 'stiff us all'? This is the other side of the same coin.
      Always, when there is some form of handout, there are leeches eager to suck the host dry. Greater tax base allows politicians to be more generous with taxpayer's money so the incentive to become a parasite is greater.

    15. Re:What is more damaging to society? by Toze · · Score: 1

      I've never seen a poor person trying to lower his taxes.

      I have. Frequently. Garage sales, bartering services, businesses on the side among friends and neighbors, the poor participate in a widespread cash-only or cashless black market that the government cannot reach to tax on sales, increased income, etc. You've maybe never seen them try to dodge taxes with paperwork, but you'll constantly see them do it in other ways.

      --
      No OS on the planet can protect itself from a user with the admin password. - Yvan256
    16. Re:What is more damaging to society? by saleenS281 · · Score: 1

      That's ridiculous. Items purchased at a garage sale are exempt from taxes unless the seller MAKES money, for the buyer there's no tax either way. If the poor person was the one making money, they'd get the money they still wouldn't be paying anything due to their tax bracket. As for services provided, that's on the person providing the service, not the purchaser. If the poor person is the one providing the service, they would get the money back. A "cashless" black market is also exempt from taxation. Nice try though!

    17. Re:What is more damaging to society? by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 1

      I've never seen a poor person trying to lower his taxes...

      That's probably because "poor people" don't pay net taxes in the first place. You can't lower your taxes much beyond zero, and it's probably not worth the cost to hire a tax accountant to look for the odd refundable rebate which may apply.

      ...and I've never seen a healthy nation without a high tax rate.

      I think you've got that backwards. High taxes are a disease which tends to afflict formerly-healthy nations—the rate goes up as more citizens can afford the taxes, and therefore have less personal interest in fighting it. They developed their "healthy" status before the high taxes set in.

      Plenty of third-world countries have cripplingly high taxes; it doesn't seem to have helped them much.

      --
      "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
    18. Re:What is more damaging to society? by Dan667 · · Score: 1

      This is more damaging to society - a system that allows rich individuals to create huge tax loopholes that they use to shelter their income so they pay less taxes as a percentage of income than minimum wage workers.

    19. Re:What is more damaging to society? by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      The fact that items purchased at a garage sale are exempt from taxes is an example of avoiding taxes. That it is a legal way to avoid taxes does not mean it isn't a way to avoid taxes.

      The IRS does not agree that a cashless black market is (legally) exempt from taxation.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    20. Re:What is more damaging to society? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      I've never seen a poor person trying to lower his taxes

      Wow, dude, you must not know very many poor people. Here's the main way they do it: make all transactions in cash. When you work, do contract jobs and get paid in cash. This won't work if you have lots of money, but for poor folks it works great. Another trick is putting your assets in someone else's name.

      I'll tell you what I have seen a lot of: people like you who advocate high taxes on other people. Or a special trend: raise taxes on themselves as long as other people get raised more.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    21. Re:What is more damaging to society? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've never seen a poor person trying to lower his taxes

      Maybe that's why they're poor?

    22. Re:What is more damaging to society? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, I'm sure the poor got this brilliant tax evading advice from their accountant. He probably told them to stay poor, live in squalor, go hungry, go cold, and make your money via garage sale. What a winning plan. At least you don't pay taxes, I guess.

    23. Re:What is more damaging to society? by LordNacho · · Score: 1

      That 40% is at a pretty high income level. And it's only in certain cantons. You can have a look online for the government's official tax calculator.

      And their capital gains tax treatment: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_gains_tax#Switzerland

      You're saying taxing the rich makes society better, and I think the government is needed for some things, but there's got to be a limit. Especially as they're so mobile, they can decamp if they don't like it.

    24. Re:What is more damaging to society? by einar2 · · Score: 1

      Actually, according to OECD reports, the tax burden in Switzerland is lower than in most EU countries (but a bit higher than in the US if I remember correctly),

    25. Re:What is more damaging to society? by quacking+duck · · Score: 1

      Hong Kong and Singapore seem to be doing ok with very low tax rates...

      They're both certainly helped by having a very small land area, high population density, easy access to water for most, and weather that's not extreme enough to pothole highways after every winter or flood them away every summer. I'd suggest British colonialism benefited the economies and cultures of both during the 20th century too, compared to their immediate neighbours.

    26. Re:What is more damaging to society? by SwedishPenguin · · Score: 1

      Care to provide an example of a healthy country with a low tax rate? My own country (Sweden) would be considered healthy by any reasonable observer, yet we've had some of the highest taxes in the world for at least the past 50 years, during which the economy has grown. We provide tax-funded health care, education (including college), subsidized childcare, subsidized parental leave, etc, etc. We couldn't do that without our high level of taxation. The same is true of all of our Nordic neighbors and quite a few other European countries...

    27. Re:What is more damaging to society? by SwedishPenguin · · Score: 1

      I can't speak for the GP, but I can say that I will happily pay my taxes once I'm finished with my education. Without the taxes of others, I wouldn't have been able to have an education (my parents were never exactly wealthy) and would earn quite a bit less than I will. I'm willing to pay my fair share in order to make for a society with equal opportunity for all, where no one has to starve and no one can be denied health care.

    28. Re:What is more damaging to society? by zentec · · Score: 1

      Minimizing one's tax obligations through philanthropy or legitimate tax credits, breaks or deferments is one thing, funneling money earned outside the country to shield it from the IRS or hiding money under a complex web of fraudulent companies is completely another thing. And this is what that is about; rich people realizing gains through foreign transactions and failing to report it on their taxes.

      People go to jail for that. As well they should, it's a crime and the rest of society doesn't play that game. Why should the wealthy?

      As far as the other half of your question, it doesn't change the illegal behavior of those involved. Whether or not the government is entitled or feels entitled doesn't change the fact that not only are those wealthy that are involved are breaking the law, they're FREELOADERS enjoying the benefits of this society without paying the costs.

    29. Re:What is more damaging to society? by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      Do the swiss also have state and local taxes?

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    30. Re:What is more damaging to society? by russotto · · Score: 1

      First mention one thing that you benefit that is funded by the government, then offer to give it up, else you are just another selfish fellow shifting costs and burdens to others.

      That's nonsense. Suppose we lived in Govertopia. Everyone agreed that the amount of taxes they paid was just right, and the services they received were perfectly fair. Then one day the government raised taxes by 10%, and simultaneously announced that every left-handed white man over the age of 50 gets a membership at a luxury golf resort. Should no one but a left-handed white man over the age of 50 be permitted to object without being considered a selfish fellow shifting costs and burdens to others?

      Of course people are more willing to object to services they do not benefit from. That doesn't mean they're wrong.

    31. Re:What is more damaging to society? by thisisntme · · Score: 1

      It depends on the Canton. I believe in some Cantons the very rich can negotiate a "lump sum" that does not depend on their income.

    32. Re:What is more damaging to society? by marco.antonio.costa · · Score: 1

      Switzerland's top tax bracket is 40%+, so I'm not really sure what it is you're trying to get at. That we need higher taxes on the wealthy in America? I agree.

      No it isnt.

      Actual persons don't pay an income tax in Switzerland, just social security, VAT and others. No 'progressive taxation' bullshit on how 'wealthy' you are.

      The corporate income tax is 20%-ish.

      --
      Send your spendthrift head of state this
    33. Re:What is more damaging to society? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At least in Mexico they use real sugar. None of the HFCS stuff...

    34. Re:What is more damaging to society? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well. I just have my money in Switzerland, I don't live there. So no, I don't pay taxes there. And no, I don't pay taxes here either.

    35. Re:What is more damaging to society? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've never seen a poor person trying to lower his taxes

      BS

    36. Re:What is more damaging to society? by Falconhell · · Score: 1

      Both of which are the size of a postage stamp, no long highways, railways, large expenses to supplty remore areas etc.

    37. Re:What is more damaging to society? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Certainly there are many people like you. I only called the GGP out because he actually did call for higher taxes on a different group of people. Those kind of people are unfortunately common....

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    38. Re:What is more damaging to society? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, taxes at Canton and federal level but as in most countries outside the US these are collected by a single agency that then distributes it to the federal, canton and local goves.

      As you can expect the German speaking cantons usually have higher taxes than the rest

  31. If taxation is theft in a democratic country, by stomv · · Score: 4, Insightful

    then so is the use or reliance on roads, public schools or universities, police, firemen, zoning codes, enforcement of contracts, national defense, and so forth. Which is to say, taxation is not theft, and a civilized society is not free of financial cost.

    1. Re:If taxation is theft in a democratic country, by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 0

      So the thief washes your windows when he's done emptying your safe—it's still theft, as you aren't permitted to opt out. Moreover, taking advantage of services you're compelled to pay for, whether you use them or not, does not mean you've opted in. If nothing else, you should at least recognize that it is unfair to expect anyone to provide such services for themselves when the money which would pay for them has already been taken by force. You can speak of self-sufficiency after the money's been returned, not before.

      True, civilized society is not free of financial cost. However, the moment you legitimize the use of aggression, e.g. in the form of taxes, you no longer have a civilized society; you have a primitive society dominated by the use of force.

      --
      "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
    2. Re:If taxation is theft in a democratic country, by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      Here's the way I generally look at it:

      Let's say you have a dozen people living in a house that needs some roof repairs that will cost $6000. You discuss it over and try to figure out how to come up with the money. Person A says "Let's make it fair, we'll all chip in $500". Person B says "For you $500 is not too much, but for me that's way too much. Let's try to do things proportional to what everybody can contribute - I'll chip in $200, but that means other folks will have to pay more than $500." (and for the sake of example, let's assume that B isn't lying about this). So they negotiate, bluster, etc, and eventually come up with $6000, and everyone who chipped in benefits from having a roof that works. Or maybe they don't come up with $6000, and the roof collapses.

      Now just scale up the concept: Instead of a dozen people, we have 300 million people. Instead of $6000, we have a much much bigger pile of problems that need to be dealt with. And the negotiating positions and discussions aren't much different, except that it's done through politics rather than directly. And the consequences of screwing it up similarly increase scale.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    3. Re:If taxation is theft in a democratic country, by Random+BedHead+Ed · · Score: 1

      taxation is not theft, and a civilized society is not free of financial cost

      taking advantage of services you're compelled to pay for, whether you use them or not, does not mean you've opted in. If nothing else, you should at least recognize that it is unfair to expect anyone to provide such services for themselves when the money which would pay for them has already been taken by force

      Taxes are not aggression. GP is correct: we use taxes to pay for civilization. This is not new. Every one of us can find some uses of tax revenue - maybe even most uses - to be wasteful, but most of us put up with it because we like civilization better than caves, and if taxes were voluntary we would return to caves. If you don't like it, and can't be bothered to participate because you think life can be better outside of civilization, there are still caves. Have fun.

    4. Re:If taxation is theft in a democratic country, by cdrguru · · Score: 1

      If that is what they actually spent the money on, everyone would agree with you.

      Unfortunately, we are paying for mistresses being flown around the world. We are paying for studies of studies of studies by former professors that have an in with someone in the government. We are paying for regulators that admittedly do no regulation. We are paying for latinum-plated health care benefits for all levels of government when the same benefits will be taxed at high rates if they are offered to non-union members.

      If it was just a few expensive hammers or toilet seats, we could stomach that. But the problem with the US government today is that you will often find they are spending money to promote a nuclear power plant while at the same time funding people objecting to it. They government is so large that it is impossible to keep track of all of the different departments and agencies that are spending taxpayer money on stuff.

      And the legislators are passing laws so volumnous that they can't be read. They are written by staffers and lobbyists with the understanding that the people voting on them will never read them. It is then acknowledged that the courts will spend a decade figuring out what these laws actually meant. Look at the history of COPPA, for example. They couldn't get it right with three different sets of laws that were actually passed but then struck down.

      It sure is expensive to run a government that way.

      The only real solution is for the government to actually employ everyone in the US. Then health care wouldn't be an issue and neither would anything else.

    5. Re:If taxation is theft in a democratic country, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True, civilized society is not free of financial cost. However, the moment you legitimize the use of aggression, e.g. in the form of taxes, you no longer have a civilized society; you have a primitive society dominated by the use of force.

      Taxes are the entrance fee for a civilized society. If you prefer not to pay them, you're free to find an a la carte civilization. They've got great examples running in Somalia and Afghanistan, and I believe the Philippines, Haiti, Venezuela, and Nicaragua pretty regularly run lower profile examples, although I think this depends somewhat on the particular administration.

    6. Re:If taxation is theft in a democratic country, by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 0

      Taxes are not aggression.

      Taxes obviously are aggression. Aggression is defined as any non-defensive coercive act, defense being a proportional response to a prior aggressive act, and coercion being any violation of one's natural property rights, which derive from self-ownership and homesteading and may be transferred via voluntary contract. Taxes are clearly coerced—just try not paying them. They are not defense, as the taxpayer is not (in the general case) the aggressor. Ergo, they are aggression.

      ... we use taxes to pay for civilization.

      Perhaps you think that's what you're doing, but you undermine your own goal. One aspect of civilization is the absence of aggression. To the extent you endorse aggression, including taxes, you cannot have civilization. Moreover, civilization can exist without resorting to taxes. (This is good, as otherwise civilization would be impossible.)

      ... if taxes were voluntary we would return to caves.

      Well, if that's what you want.... no one's stopping you. Have fun. Personally, I prefer civilization, which is why I oppose aggression in all its forms. Every act of aggression pushes us one step backward toward those caves.

      --
      "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
    7. Re:If taxation is theft in a democratic country, by Late+Adopter · · Score: 1

      then so is the use or reliance on roads, public schools or universities, police, firemen, zoning codes, enforcement of contracts, national defense, and so forth

      All of which are the responsibility of local governments, with the exception of interstate transportation and national defense. Remind me why the Federal government needs so much of our money again?

  32. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by Serious+Callers+Only · · Score: 1

    Outing honest people whose only so-called "crime" is wanting to avoid the theft of their hard and presumably legitimately-earned dollars is completely and totally wrong, and negates much if not all of the good Wikileaks has done in exposing actual government and corporate wrongdoing. It also makes Wikileaks, directly or indirectly, an accomplice to the very real crimes of the state that it has spent so much of its time trying to expose.

    What if they are not honest people, but are in fact (for example) dictators stealing money from Tunisia or some other African country? Should they still act with impunity and should their actions still be hidden if they are exposed to wikileaks?

    Tax evasion is also a crime in most countries, and rightly so. If that's what they are exposing here they would also be doing good in my opinion (that's tax evasion not avoidance). Finally, I'm not aware that the death sentence is imposed for evading tax, so perhaps tone down the rhetoric a bit?

    However no-one knows yet what this information is exactly, and who it is on, so it is really far too early to judge this whistleblower and wikileaks. The guy is ruining his life to do leak this and will probably go to jail for it, so I imagine he has some pretty strong reasons to release the information, possibly because he feels morally obliged to...

  33. Whatsay, you just paste the whole NYTimes story by garyisabusyguy · · Score: 1

    It'll be shorter than your explanation of why the links don't work :)

    --
    Wherever You Go, There You Are
  34. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by upside · · Score: 1

    This really takes the cake. How about you stop "stealing" the use of all the public services being paid for by all other hard working people?

    --
    I'm sorry if I haven't offended anyone
  35. Privacy? by maxwell+demon · · Score: 2

    Not everyone who has money on a Swiss bank account is guilty of tax evasion. Since I assume WikiLeaks doesn't have the tax forms of the people on this list, they can't know who of them are tax evaders, and who simply hold their money there for other reasons (maybe they want to hide it from some near relative, and maybe even for good reason).

    It's one thing to give the tax office this data. It's another thing to make it public.

    Again: Just having money on a Swiss bank account isn't a crime, nor proof of a crime. Publishing it however invades the privacy also of law-abiding beople who just happen to have money there for legitimate reasons.

    --
    The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
  36. Re:Media whore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, in its official capacity, the US Government (specifically, the IRS) would just love to know names and amounts for tax evaders. The auditing smackdown will be of biblical proportions. The boost to the bottom-line will ease some budget problems, too.

    This may get the US Government to almost forgive Assange for all the embarrassment over all the Pentagon leaks.

  37. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by travdaddy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Outing honest people whose only so-called "crime" is wanting to avoid the theft of their hard and presumably legitimately-earned dollars is completely and totally wrong, and negates much if not all of the good Wikileaks has done in exposing actual government and corporate wrongdoing. It also makes Wikileaks, directly or indirectly, an accomplice to the very real crimes of the state that it has spent so much of its time trying to expose.

    What sense does it make to out those crimes, but also at the same time sign what might as well be the death sentence for many, many honest people who were heroic and brave enough to, at great personal risk, try their best to avoid funding those crimes?


    Should I Monty Python you? It's so overdone though.

    Reg: They've bled us white, the bastards. They've taken everything we had, and not just from us, from our fathers, and from our fathers' fathers.
    Stan: And from our fathers' fathers' fathers!
    Reg: Yeah.
    Stan: And from our fathers' fathers' fathers' fathers!
    Reg: All right Stan, don't belabour the point. And what have they ever given us in return?!
    Man: The aqueduct?
    Reg: What?
    Man: The aqueduct.
    Reg: Oh yeah, yeah, that they've given us, yeah, that's true, yeah.
    Man: And the sanitation.
    Stan: Oh, yeah, the sanitation, Reg. Remember what the city used to be like.
    Reg: Yeah, all right, I grant you, the aqueduct and the sanitation are two things the Romans have done.
    Mathias: And the roads!
    Reg: Well, yeah, obviously the roads. I mean, the roads go without saying, don't they! But apart from the sanitation, the aqueduct and the roads...
    Man: Irrigation.
    Man: Medicine.
    Man: Education!
    Reg: Yeah, yeah, all right, fair enough.
    Man: And the wine.
    All: Yeah, yeah, the wine!
    Francis: Yeah! yeah, that's something we'd really miss, Reg, if the Romans left.
    Man: Public baths.
    Stan: And it's safe to walk in the streets at night now, Reg.
    Francis: Yeah, they certainly like to keep order. I suppose they're the only ones who could in a place like this!
    Reg: Yeah, all right, but apart from the sanitation, the medicine, education, wine, public order, irrigation, roads, the fresh water system and public health, what have the Romans ever done for us!?
    Man: Brought peace.
    Reg: Oh, peace. Shut up!

    --
    Adidas To Bring Back Sneakernet
  38. Why Single Out Google? by eldavojohn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There's a whole Slashdot article with people ripping apart Google for "double Irish" and "dutch sandwich" styles of tax evasion.

    The only reason that it should hurt your karma is that you confusingly singled out Google when your own article lists Apple, Microsoft, IBM, Oracle, etc. Why pick on Google when everybody plays the same screw-the-taxpayer game? They're all crooks avoiding taxes in ways that a single individual like myself that makes very small fractions can't enjoy.

    You'll lose karma when you spin it like this: "Apple Hurts Schoolchildren by Avoiding Taxes" and "Google Welcomes World Peace by Denying War Machine Its Pound of Flesh." See what I did wrong there?

    --
    My work here is dung.
    1. Re:Why Single Out Google? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >There's a whole Slashdot article with people ripping apart Google for "double Irish" and "dutch sandwich" styles of tax avoidance.

      FTFY

    2. Re:Why Single Out Google? by echucker · · Score: 1

      The vicious little circle is that everyone wants a dividend check on their stock holdings, too. So we complain about not getting taxed fairly, but God forbid we don't get a return on our investment either. Can't have it both ways.

    3. Re:Why Single Out Google? by Random+BedHead+Ed · · Score: 1

      They're all crooks avoiding taxes in ways that a single individual like myself that makes very small fractions can't enjoy.

      Is that what they are - crooks? If tax laws allow them to do what they are doing, what do you expect? What should they do, voluntarily pay [mb]illions extra? I think they're doing exactly what we should expect companies to do. The flaw is not with the companies, it is with the tax code. Elect representatives and senators who do not favor tax loopholes, and ignore lobbyists who ask them to favor loopholes. The crooks are the laissez faire legislators and those who voted them in.

    4. Re:Why Single Out Google? by enaso1970 · · Score: 1

      Prefer "Steve Jobs to re-start Victorian work-houses for the poor (with smaller gruel rations)" vs. "Sergey and Larry save the world. Again."

  39. Oh good lord by Mysteray · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The public may soon find out that their favorite celebrity, politician or employer doesn't feel responsible to contribute financially to the commonwealth at the expense of privacy.

    Switzerland has great banks. In fact, there's at least one whole country where everybody puts there money there. There's no reason in the world not to put money in them. Having money in a Swiss bank is not a crime and it doesn't imply you're a criminal or a tax cheat. For example, maybe people are spooked by the circus surrounding US banks or something.

    The static from the US IRS got so bad that Swiss banks simply closed all accounts of "American persons". They completely kicked Americans out of their customer base. I find that pretty darn disappointing that my country is acting so obnoxiously that I personally can't do business on equal footing with the rest of the modern world.

    1. Re:Oh good lord by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What makes Swiss banks so great is secrecy, that's the reason they are so popular. They are not playing on equal foot
      with the rest of the world banks, they are cheating.

      Recently in Europe there has been a strong movement forcing Swiss banks to be more transparent.

    2. Re:Oh good lord by Mysteray · · Score: 1

      Imagine that - a business standing up for the privacy of their customers. Privacy as a product differentiator. Sad that it takes a whole country behind it for it to happen.

      In other news, Facebook makes a business out of selling your personal info. Americans are excluded from investing their money there, too: http://read.bi/eY0BJt

      Think maybe this plan of not putting the citizen first isn't working out so great? You know, in the end the citizen is the guy with the money after all.

    3. Re:Oh good lord by einar2 · · Score: 1

      Not all Swiss banks closed business relations with US customers.
      And yes, some financial products may not be sold to US citizens. This is because of legal agreements with the US government.

  40. The rich and powerful take what they want by prionic6 · · Score: 1

    we steal it back for you

  41. Don't see the correlation by js3 · · Score: 2

    What does having a bank account have to do with taxes? Taxes are supposed to be about the money you earn, not the money you have. Funny how this is turning out.

    --
    did you forget to take your meds?
    1. Re:Don't see the correlation by BradleyUffner · · Score: 3, Informative

      What does having a bank account have to do with taxes? Taxes are supposed to be about the money you earn, not the money you have. Funny how this is turning out.

      Did you earn a large amount of money that you don't want to pay taxes on? Hide that income in a Swiss account. US banks report that information to the IRS, Swiss banks do not. This allows you to hide income from the IRS and not pay taxes on it.

    2. Re:Don't see the correlation by ledow · · Score: 3, Informative

      Interest is money that's taxed.
      Income earned in other countries may not be adequately taxed (or declared as taxed in your home country) and then never actually get taxed because it doesn't enter that country. A bank account will tell you *exactly* how much that person earned worldwide and who needs to tax it. Most Swiss banks will NEVER tell the countries involved that they suspect untaxed money is sitting in their accounts - go abroad, earn £10m, stick it in a Swiss account, come home, claim benefits.

      There are a million and one ways to launder money, and to avoid taxation, and most of them involve off-shore accounts like these.

    3. Re:Don't see the correlation by js3 · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying people don't hide money or don't pay taxes on money that the earned but the government can usually tell through other means that you earned x amount of money and misreported it. If IBM pays you 100k to do contracting work and you report you only made 5k that year that's a red flag to get audited. It has nothing to do with your bank account.

      --
      did you forget to take your meds?
    4. Re:Don't see the correlation by js3 · · Score: 1

      Neither of which requires the government to know how much money you have in your bank account. The only time you get flagged for an audit is when someone reports they gave you money and you don't show that money earned on your tax filing. If swiss banks don't report it's hardly an indication of a crime (or reason to leak personal information about others).

      --
      did you forget to take your meds?
    5. Re:Don't see the correlation by cowboy76Spain · · Score: 1

      Neither of which requires the government to know how much money you have in your bank account. The only time you get flagged for an audit is when someone reports they gave you money and you don't show that money earned on your tax filing. If swiss banks don't report it's hardly an indication of a crime (or reason to leak personal information about others).

      False, false, false... the banks must inform the autorities if they see something that might be money laundering or other fraudulent activities... v.g., if you are unemployed but have great transfer of funds, or deposit and retire a lot of money in notes, if you own a fish and chips but deposit more than the wal-mart. Not that the banks are happy about it (profits are profits, even if they come from drug smuglers, kidnappers or other criminal), but they are forced to.

      In a swiss bank, you can pay with gold teeth and nobody will ask nor care where did they come from...

      --
      Why can't /. have a rich-text editor? Editing your own HTML is so XXth century.
    6. Re:Don't see the correlation by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying people don't hide money or don't pay taxes on money that the earned but the government can usually tell through other means that you earned x amount of money and misreported it. If IBM pays you 100k to do contracting work and you report you only made 5k that year that's a red flag to get audited. It has nothing to do with your bank account.

      True enough, that's an easy case. How about a creating a couple of shell companies that move money around and eventually deposit it into a Swiss bank? Quite a bit harder to figure out the money trail since it's not reported to the IRS on a 1099. That's what happens.

      You eventually can unravel the shells and trace the money back but it is often expensive and time consuming. So it doesn't always get done.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    7. Re:Don't see the correlation by js3 · · Score: 1

      Again, if a bank pays you interest they will inform authorities if their laws require them to do so. From what I can tell swiss banks are not required so they don't. It's a legislation issue not a privacy one.

      --
      did you forget to take your meds?
    8. Re:Don't see the correlation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because if it's there, it has to have been earned somewhere, and the likelihood of money in bank accounts where the government can't look tends towards money that was earned, is taxable, and wasn't taxed.

      Or, for the same reason people want to get paid for things in cash (with no receipt) - no record of the transaction, no way to say it's legit.

    9. Re:Don't see the correlation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The correlation is that the money "they have" is sitting in accounts not tied to them. At the very least, it may be earning interest that is clearly taxable. It also is a destination for money received throughout the world far from the prying eyes of the IRS.

      Just because the money comes from another country doesn't mean you don't owe taxes on it. This concept that the wealthy should be exempt from the same level of taxation as everyone else needs to go.

  42. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

    there you go. the sigfile that keeps on giving.

    while we don't like paying taxes, what happens if everyone stops?

    this is not complex. not any more complex than: if you stop going to work, eventually money stops coming in. sometimes life is simple like that.

    we are not arguing about *whether* to pay taxes but that the rich get out of paying their fair share. we can debate what fair is, but what's clear is that they pay little to no taxes. not even close to fair, in anyone's book.

    its a cheat and we let the privileged class get away with it. and how WRONG that truly is, too.

    --

    --
    "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
  43. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately it always comes with a side-order of corruption.

  44. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's hardly theft for the government to make you pay for services you use

    Interesting... you're implying that it is theft when you're made to pay for services you don't use. How... libertarian of you.

    Most tax dollars don't pay for services anyway, btw. They pay for bureaucracy. And every year there are more bureaucrats working for the government. The idea of tax isn't wrong. Of course civilisation comes with costs: policing, defense, prisons, a legal system. But at the moment, most of the money is simply wasted.

  45. Re:Media whore by TFAFalcon · · Score: 2

    As long as they aren't politicians.

  46. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by khallow · · Score: 1

    I like paying taxes. With them I buy civilization.

    Would you like paying less for the civilization you receive? Or is paying any amount for civilization worth it? If the latter, then add me to the list. I'd like to get a piece of your action too. I'll even pay taxes on it to make some more civilization.

  47. Re:Media whore by Revek · · Score: 0

    I was going for flamebait.

  48. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by imunfair · · Score: 1

    If we were honestly paying for things like that then you might have a point. Most of our tax money is redistribution of wealth though. The "rich" (>40k/yr) pay for the services for everyone else. (ever noticed how much of your property taxes are for education? huge percentage - even if you don't have kids)

    If we were really paying for our own police, fire, etc we'd be paying a flat tax amount and not a percentage of income. It would also come out to be a much smaller amount per individual than each person pays now except for the very poorest.

  49. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by hierofalcon · · Score: 1

    So you're implying that the police and fire deparments make more calls to millionaire's homes than poor people?

    The military of the US is considered an asset to multinational companies - it gives enemies slight pause before attacking them, but everyone who works for those companies benefits from that and not just the C?Os.

    This isn't an endorsement for cheating on your taxes - it is merely a reflection that the tax code is unjust and unfairly penalizes success. The fact that such a large percentage of the US pay little or no federal taxes is part of the reason the federal debt is so high. Politicans have no incentive to reign in spending because pleasing people who have no stake in the system keeps them in office.

  50. I think rich people are evil by 2TecTom · · Score: 2, Insightful

    In my opinion, overly affluent people are the real problem with the world today. Capitalism actually means all the people have access to the world's capital, not just the few percent. We live in financial despotism and employees are just economic slaves in denial. If democracy is so great why aren't our companies more democratic? From what I can see, greed is the insatiable effect of the law of diminishing returns. If materialism could actually produce happiness, wouldn't rich people stop at some finite point? It never ends because they're addicts. The rich and powerful are in the process of running society into a brick wall and for all of our science, we can't do squat about it.

    --
    Words to men, as air to birds.
    1. Re:I think rich people are evil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      truth hurts

  51. Re:Media whore by N1AK · · Score: 2

    Or possibly that they value the protection of privacy enough to see that it doesn't cease to apply just because they don't like someone.

    I wouldn't support an organisation that shared my private details, I don't believe anyone who feels the same, while being happy to see it happen to other people, can claim to be anything but a hypocrite.

  52. Our Community by jimmerz28 · · Score: 1

    Good I'm sick of having to deal with cutting funding for education, parks, roads, and pretty much everything else because certain people want to avoid helping pay/maintain for the community we live in.

    1. Re:Our Community by jcr · · Score: 1

      > I'm sick of having to deal with cutting funding for education

      When did that happen?

      The USA's spending per pupil has more than doubled since the 1960s, and that's inflation-adjusted.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    2. Re:Our Community by jimmerz28 · · Score: 1

      I think it started happening a few years ago when the recession started. Lack of income and therefore spending = less funding for all these things.

    3. Re:Our Community by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Simple, cut your military related spending in half.

  53. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by LordNacho · · Score: 1

    we are not arguing about *whether* to pay taxes but that the rich get out of paying their fair share. we can debate what fair is, but what's clear is that they pay little to no taxes. not even close to fair, in anyone's book.

    Here in the UK, the top 1% income tax payers pay about 25% of all the taxes:
    http://www.spectator.co.uk/coffeehouse/5245013/why-cameron-should-ditch-the-50p-tax-rate.thtml

    I imagine in the US and other wealthy countries, it's similar.

  54. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by LordNacho · · Score: 1

    You're completely satisfied with what your tax is buying you?

  55. Headline Restated with Different Bias by skywire · · Score: 1

    The public may soon find out that their favorite celebrity, politician or employer doesn't feel responsible to contribute financially to the commonwealth at the expense of privacy.

    The public may soon find out that their favorite celebrity, politician or employer takes the responsible action of protecting himself and his family from the criminal syndicate dominant in his locale.

    --
    Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.
    1. Re:Headline Restated with Different Bias by Duradin · · Score: 1

      Have you tried Somalia? I hear it's nice this time of year. You can pay off the criminal syndicate in lead there.

    2. Re:Headline Restated with Different Bias by Sentrion · · Score: 1

      If they're weathly enough to have a Swiss bank account then they are wealthy enough to LEAVE. If they're so concerned about protecting their families from the evil tax collector, then we are better off without them. In the US, for anyone with enough cash worth protecting there are plenty of legal ways to structure assets to reduce tax obligations and other risks - just consult an attorney specializing in estate planning, asset protection, or tax law. As a middle class American I can't participate and in that sense I don't think it's fair for these loopholes to exist, but they are legal, so I don't see a problem when people choose these options.

      But there is a special class of "rich" that likes to bitch and moan, and they have no problem with flagrantly violating the law to hide assets overseas. They will always complain but they will never leave as long as the raping and pillaging is so profitable.

    3. Re:Headline Restated with Different Bias by skywire · · Score: 1

      An interesting move, equating the selling of goods and services to willing buyers with "raping and pillaging".

      --
      Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.
    4. Re:Headline Restated with Different Bias by Sentrion · · Score: 1

      If we both live in the same community and exchange similar goods and services with the members of the community, and I pay the required taxes, and you do not, you cannot figure out who is getting raped and pillaged? I have to drop my prices to compete with you, but you get to maintain your standard of living. As you grow richer, as a result of your low-handed, illegal, and unfair tax evasion tactics, you are able to buy more of what you want within the community. Perhaps you and I may bid against each other on a house, but you will be able to outbid me because of all the cash you have illegally accumulated. And after you buy this house, and other goods and services from the community, you drive up the prices. And since property tax is also based on value in most communities, I end up paying even more taxes because the new house you bought down the street raised the average value of all the other houses on the street.

      I don't equate lawfull and ethical business practices with "raping and pillaging," but when you've seen what corruption, theft, and organized crime can do to a community, I don't know of a more fitting word.

    5. Re:Headline Restated with Different Bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By your logic I suppose you wouldn't mind if I bought your TV, as long as I'm a willing buyer conducting business with a willing seller, just as long as the burglar who stole your TV in the first place wasn't a party to the transaction, right?

    6. Re:Headline Restated with Different Bias by Ash-Fox · · Score: 1

      If we both live in the same community and exchange similar goods and services with the members of the community, and I pay the required taxes, and you do not, you cannot figure out who is getting raped and pillaged?

      The interesting thing about tax laws is that a lot of individuals who avoid paying taxes by using alternative legal methods are in fact... Legal and are working within the laws, thus any "required taxes" they need to pay have obviously been paid. I don't agree with the idea of tightening tax laws to the point that all methods become illegal. The last time Britain did this, their best and brightest moved out of the country and ran their businesses else where in other countries that had more liberal tax laws. This hurt the British economy significantly. Let's not forget that the rich in European countries often encounter various crazy tax laws where-by you could owe more than you earned (ie: 120% of what you earned due to increased taxes for the rich) because of politicians caving into pressure from the mass unhappy citizens.

      (I'm not familiar with the US tax laws, so I don't know about the US circumstances)

      --
      Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
  56. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by boristdog · · Score: 2

    And if those who are hiding vast amounts of money from the tax man paid their fair share on it, the majority would pay less for a lot better civilization.

    I make good money, I pay my fair share of all my taxes, around 45% for all federal, state and local taxes together after all legal deductions. Then I hope the roads are paved, the youth gets a good education, the truly needy get the help they need and the fire dept shows up quickly if necessary. If that looks like it's happening, then I'm happy and I don't complain about my taxes too much.

    It ticks me off when people who make gobs more than I do pay a FAR lower percentage than I do.

  57. that's good and all by shadowrat · · Score: 3, Insightful

    However, I want to know who these people are who owed the IRS 1 million dollars but only had to pay three thousand! i hate the IRS as much as the next guy, but those ads make me kind of mad!

    1. Re:that's good and all by blair1q · · Score: 1

      They're people who did their taxes wrong and really only owed that much, or who are bankrupt and the IRS got their last $3K.

      The IRS will cut a deal, but not if you can pay.

    2. Re:that's good and all by shadowrat · · Score: 1

      that does sound a bit more legitimate. also i find it odd that i was modded insightful. i really didn't comment about the story at all.

  58. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Taxes good. Republicans bad.

  59. Even the playing field by anegg · · Score: 1

    I say "yea!" to the disclosure. I would really like to know who is skirting/shirking the tax laws that I am unwilling/unable to skirt or shirk. Having those who can afford to break the rules able to do so with impunity doesn't do any good for the rest of society. Level the playing field, and then perhaps there will be greater pressure to make the tax laws more sensible.

  60. Re:Media whore by Lumpy · · Score: 2

    I dunno. I'm pretty sure that FooAtWFU genuinely hates both freedom and the educated as well. Oh and he eats babies.

    My statement is as valid as yours. See how it makes you look?

    Please go and actually read up on what Assange and WikiLeaks does, has done, and is about... and no you cant use FoxNews or any republican hate rag as a information source.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  61. Tax Evasion == GOODTHING by TonyXL · · Score: 0

    I would argue that tax evasion is a good thing, since taxes pay for invasions, wars, spying on citizens, corporate welfare, and ironically on attacking courageous leakers and whistleblowers. So instead of paying taxes, which can end up killing people, the mega-rich are building yachts, buying private jets, gold-plating things, etc., all of which creates jobs. Or they invest which creates/improves businesses and --yep, you guessed it-- creates jobs.

    1. Re:Tax Evasion == GOODTHING by Sentrion · · Score: 1

      They might as well keep their money offshore since they're creating all of these jobs offshore anyway. Except for those tax evaders who hire illegal immigrants in the US. I guess that's a good thing. For somebody.

      --

      Comments may be biased from a U.S. middle class perspective.

  62. Anti-american, huh? by vadim_t · · Score: 0

    Well, here's something that contradicts all those who claims that Wikileaks is running on some sort of anti-US plot.

    Something tells me that I can expect those people who claimed such things to suddenly become silent and pretend they never said it, though.

  63. End of Swiss banking tax evasion? by GodfatherofSoul · · Score: 1

    I thought the Swiss agreed to stop allowing US citizens to hide their money?

    --
    I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
  64. obviously Google doesn't think it's evil by mschaffer · · Score: 1

    Well, it may be immoral, but I guess that Google doesn't think it's "evil". I wonder where Eric Schmidt sets the bar on the whole evil/immoral thing?

  65. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by moortak · · Score: 1

    And what percentage of the wealth do they control? It doesn't matter what percentage of the population they are if they are being taxed more on greater sums of money.

    --
    Xavier Rabourdin for president 2012
  66. Flat Tax...? by careysb · · Score: 1

    If we were really paying for our own police, fire, etc we'd be paying a flat tax amount and not a percentage of income. It would also come out to be a much smaller amount per individual than each person pays now except for the very poorest.

    I think if you rolled all the various taxes into one flat tax it would be much higher than, say, income tax which only represents a portion of the taxes you pay. People would revolt it they learned the true amount they pay in taxes.

    --
    No trees were hurt in the posting of this text

  67. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 0, Troll

    I like paying taxes. With them I buy civilization.

    An unfortunately popular quote, which happens to miss the point completely. You're quite welcome to pay whatever "taxes" you want, but you have no right to compel others to fund your "civilization". What you really like is making other people pay taxes, so that you can have what you want at their expense.

    --
    "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
  68. refused to identify any of the individuals bla bla by countertrolling · · Score: 1

    fuck him... make the announcement when you release the info... the hype is so tiresome...

    --
    For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
  69. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 1

    Tax is not theft. ... Black is not white, whatever you libertarians might like to believe.

    Strangely enough, it's the libertarians who insist on calling things by their rightful names, and you who is insisting that "black is white". Tell me, what is the significant difference between "tax" and "theft"? Apart from the obvious fact that one is an action performed by the government, and the other is performed by a private citizen, there is none, and the identity of the actor does not change the nature of the act. Theft is theft, even when it's called a "tax".

    --
    "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
  70. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by Toze · · Score: 2

    "Buy" suggests a free market or choice, or at least that men with guns won't put you into a tiny little cage if you don't give them what they want. I'm not saying taxes are universally bad- in fact I think a number of taxes are quite useful- but I've always found that quote to be frustratingly inaccurate. We build civilization with sweat and blood. We pay for organization and public resources with taxes. It's not buying, and it's not related 1:1 with civilization.

    --
    No OS on the planet can protect itself from a user with the admin password. - Yvan256
  71. Selection process: by Hartree · · Score: 1

    This info is getting filtered by Elmer who made the determination that something fishy was going on with the account.

    That's in some respect a judgement call. It'd be pretty easy to have a list heavily biased toward those politicians/celebrities you don't like/agree with.

  72. Funding evil by rubypossum · · Score: 1

    I can agree, we all need to pay for the roads, police and military. I believe that patronizing the arts and sciences with government money is also a great benefit for society. However, the amount of tax versus the total money earned has been going up over the last century. Particularly for the lower income bracket. For example, the lowest income bracket pays 10% today, this was 1% for much of our history.

    Much of this money does not go to benefit mankind or to benefit anyone really. It pays for unjust wars of "freedom". It pays for a military industrial complex which is vastly larger than it needs to be in a time of world peace. It pays for a broken education system which is among the worst in the world - yet costs more per-pupil than any other (except Lichtenstein.) All of which has become impossible to fix due to entrenched political forces.

    So I don't blame anyone who evades taxes. Good for them. (I don't do it, btw. I just morally support anyone who makes that difficult decision.) Taxes should not be mandatory anyway. You want a driver's license? Show an "infrastructure tax payer" receipt. You want a cop to show up for an emergency? You better do the same. People WOULD pay for it. Just look at how many people pay for all kinds of insurance. Military costs would be paid through import duties and sales taxes.

    Or the other option is to allow a line-item income tax. Where a taxpayer could pick and choose what programs they want to fund. I would support that. What we have now is nothing more than an oligarchy shaking down their subjects. The battle is always between them, what part of the meat they'll get. It never occurs to them that killing the animal was wrong. The average taxpayer has no voice in the media and no choice at the poll. Both parties don't dare to challenge the status-quo. In fact, they fight brutally for the system.

    --
    I have a theory that the truth is never told during the nine-to-five hours. - Hunter S. Thompson
  73. And... by toby · · Score: 1

    The best way to maximise tax AVOIDANCE is to make sure the laws around tax EVASION are written in your favour. Which is what the kleptocracy does. And failing that, hide the money offshore (finally back OT).

    --
    you had me at #!
  74. Paying PHBs $$$ == "corporate" income tax by dlenmn · · Score: 1

    I am NOT all for a multi-billion dollar company paying effectively 2.4% while I continue to pay nearly 30% of my income... when you have the higher executives of Google being paid millions. Reduce the salaries of those PHBs down to something reasonable...

    I'm all for taxation, but I don't think corporate income taxes make much sense when you think about them. In the long run, all the money a corporation makes ends up with individuals through salaries, dividends, etc. That's the whole point of a coproation, to make a profit for investors and employees. Corporations don't just hold on to the money; that wouldn't make any sense.

    If those PHBs make bank, they'll be paying more than the 30% you pay, so the corporations' profits will effectively be taxed at that rate too. Corporate income taxes really just add another layer of bureaucracy -- you're taxing the same money at two levels (corporate and individual) instead of just one (individual). Now, individual income taxes are far from perfect (as Warren Buffett points out, he pays a lower tax rate than his secretary because the capital gains tax rate is so low), but that's just a reason to fix individual income taxes.

    1. Re:Paying PHBs $$$ == "corporate" income tax by Random+BedHead+Ed · · Score: 1

      I don't think corporate income taxes make much sense when you think about them. In the long run, all the money a corporation makes ends up with individuals through salaries, dividends, etc. That's the whole point of a coproation, to make a profit for investors and employees. Corporations don't just hold on to the money; that wouldn't make any sense.

      That's the whole point of a coporation, to make a profit for investors.

      FTFY.

  75. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, I think I have too much civilization. Perhaps we could cut back on that a bit.

  76. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    haha! what a fucking moron! you can get the fuck out if you don't like paying for roads and schools and all the other shit all the rest of us are paying for.

  77. cactus net by epine · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Not one person here would voluntarily pay taxes if they didn't have to.

    You're a bit dim concerning the larger scheme of things if you think you can cast the net that wide without catching a cactus. The short answer is that any person who has ever chosen a lottery or a casino over a mutual fund is not half as tax averse as you make out.

    I was reading John Rawls "Justice as Fairness" not long ago. He has this concept of the "original position". The way I recall the idea, you get to choose how the world is constructed, but you don't know who you will be when you wake up in this world when it comes into creation. You could be anyone, with uniform probability.

    With no foreknowledge of personal privilege, do you choose a world with no tax system? Or a world with kinds of institutions that have evolved in society as we know it? Some worlds will combine spectacular opportunity with spectacular inequity. The bottom of the pyramid is fat, so your odds of showing up as a burger flipper are relatively high; or with small probability, you could be the patriarch of Galt's Gulch.

    I didn't think the concept of choosing before coming into being was all that philosophically brilliant, but some people can't get their minds around the difference between choosing a *system* you can live with, or choosing your place within it, and that needed to be addressed. So I give Rawls his due.

    In a fictitious world where the no-tax fairy arrives and asks you if you would like a lifetime tax exemption, not many people would turn the offer down. But that's fantasy, not insight.

    If the Libertarian-transporter fairy arrived, and offered to poof you into a society organized on Libertarian ideals, with nothing resembling a tax system, I'd be terrified about what kind of society I might get poofed into. It's hard to pay for each service required individually, that would be a treadmill from hell, so I guess there has to be some kind of group organization, I can only imagine many of the groups once formed resemble condo associations. Ugh. But it's voluntary, so the coffee tastes great.

    There's a perception in world aid circles that when a country with a weak civic infrastructure discovers vast resource wealth (diamonds, oil, tantalum) that the country is just as likely to tip into civil war as to become an affluent society. And even if the society does become affluent in the short term, when the resource is exhausted, the country usually declines, and often ends up worse off than their neighbours, who didn't stub their toe on a giant diamond mine, and had to build their social capital the hard way. Countries with strong social institutions, like Canada, tend to benefit the most from resource wealth. Some countries with little resource wealth but cohesive institutions manage OK, because they don't have much choice, other than to work hard and row together.

    We're still learning that human nature is not as intrinsically wealth maximizing as many economists would portray it. I always think of one of the original theories of fluid dynamics, which perfectly described the behaviour of water, neglecting surface tension. Great, someone remarked, we now have the complete theory of water that isn't wet.

    It's the surface tension term in human nature that leads to cohesive social institutions. Sapolsky studied some non-human primates where self-interest is a lot more raw (the animals behave like impulsive two-year-olds). It was pretty clear they weren't able to stop bickering long enough to stack one stone on top of another, much less bake a mud brick. Libertarian to the last hairy armpit. What in economic theory distinguishes us from them? Our greed is more nuanced and restrained.

    One thing you can say in favour of Libertarianism is that it serves as an intellectual flu shot against certain kinds of really terrible thinking about how society could be better ordered, by the same kinds of people who destroyed Africa (out of kindness).

    Personally, there's no social structure I understa

    1. Re:cactus net by epine · · Score: 1

      I missed one point to bring this around slightly more on topic. If you concede that a tax system is a necessary evil as society is presently constituted (pending some hard won enlightenment), the best tax is shallow and wide, with no exemptions whatsoever. Whenever you make a tax more narrow (by pencilling out penicillin for grandmothers) the consequence is that everything else must taxed that much higher.

      The higher the tax rate, the more it distorts and encumbers Hayekian vigour. Flat taxes are also much harder to gerrymander like electoral districts and less costly to collect since you don't need complex classification guidelines.

      Every dollar that goes untaxed straight into a Swiss bank account just makes the tax burden that much worse for the rest of us. If your goal is to see the tax system collapse and human civilization 2.0 arise from the ashes of chaos (mysteriously free of the shackles of Caesar), this is a good thing.

  78. You have it backwards by copponex · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's not as if the rich are paying their fair share of taxes, and they haven't really since 1980. The United States has the same tax collection rate as Romania. So, you would expect it to have social services on par with Romania.

    Once you get to the actual civilized world, like England and France and Germany, you see the rate in the high 30s or low 40s, because that's what it costs to build and maintain a civilization that takes care of the elderly, the disabled, and the mentally ill.

    If you want to live in a place like Romania or Moldova, where the disabled and elderly are helped to die or filed away at the edge of town languishing until they are dead, that's fine. That's the road America has chosen right now. The wealthy have spent billions convincing the middle class that low taxes are great, but now we are seeing the results of that policy. They (the top 1%) have lowered their own tax rate from 34% to 23% between 1980 and now.

    But they're not willing to budge on the military they use to forcefully open markets. They're not willing to allow the middle class to have a public option to lower the cost of health care. They're not willing to improve free access to education to make our economy stronger and our population more employable.

    They want to keep depriving the US government of money until it breaks down, and then accept a much lower standard of government service so they can go for the 10 million dollar yacht instead of settling on the 7 million dollar model.

    They are worthless fucks who don't care about their countrymen, and I'd rather them emigrate to Romania before they rob America of the rest of it's wealth. Not after.

    1. Re:You have it backwards by C0R1D4N · · Score: 1

      In ye olden days, families were expected to take care of their own elderly and disabled, not everyone else's along with their own.

    2. Re:You have it backwards by levicivita · · Score: 1

      Your comment betrays ignorance I am afraid. More precisely, it is a great example why "research by Wikipedia" does not work when it is not backed by an actual intimate understanding of the subject matter.

      Specifically your ill informed comparison with "Romania", that backward, not "actually civilized" banana republic that you use as a boogie man only reveals your ignorance. Yes, Romania is a relatively poor country, the GDP per capita is about $12k/year (compare to $46k/year in the US) as per wikipedia.

      However, the level of health services available is not immediately obviously worse than in the US, once adjusted for the purchasing power of the median citizen, and especially the less affluent. People there can have high quality cancer treatments and heart surgery that would cost hundreds of thousands of dollars or more in the USand possibly bankrupt them and their families - all paid for by the public health plans. Expensive drugs are often covered. Extended hospital stays - of the orders of weeks or even months - are also very often covered. I have had friends from Europe who had surgery in the US and were shocked to be kicked out of the hospital hours after the doctor sowed the last stitch. That would be unheard of even in a backward place like Romania.

      You are guilty of oversimplification. I wish not to make the same error, only with a different sign. I will be the first to remark that, not price adjusted, the quality of Romanian health care is often not great especially for non life threatening diseases. The bureaucracy is often suffocating. Petty bribes are common. I wish not advocate for a "single payer" health care system.

      However, people who live in glass houses most definitely should wield their stones carefully.

    3. Re:You have it backwards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's your point? That we don't live in the 15th century? I think most of us realise that every time we sign and date a document, or watch the news, read the paper, or listen to the radio.

    4. Re:You have it backwards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Okay tough guy, you rant, and you rave. Why don't you employ folks.
      What is stopping YOU???
      Can't you work?
      Can't you think?
      Can't you do so independently?
      You will need to, if you want to PROVIDE for your general welfare.
      The US Government is there to PROVIDE FOR THE COMMON DEFENSE ONLY.
      I EMPLOY FOLKS PRODUCTIVELY! YOU COULD TOO!
      Starting a business is risky, but the rewards aren't there any more.
      SO WHY DO IT?

      "We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America."

      The basis of the United States is the Government works for me. Not the other way around.
      When I, as a small business man, pay more than 1/2 to the government, I am a slave to them. I am a patriot though, so I stay, and try to change minds instead of leaving. It's the harder thing to do, so probably the one with the most reward. Tea Party er albeit, but I pay lots of taxes, more than my $36G salary annually (prior to profit bonuses), and vote to earn the right! (full disclosure)

      When you ask "why do you businesses want to go to China and India? Why can't I have a job?"

      I respond with "what did you expect. You changed the rules, I'm not entitled to the majority of my earnings anymore. This company is leaving."

      To your statements about Europe:
      France, England, and Germany have much different political systems, where the onus is on the government to provide. We don't have that system, but we have higher tax rates --> GO FIGURE! Currently, the US has the largest corporate taxes in the world (since japan just lowered theirs).

      When you own the company, you have the freedom, and the right to do with your company as you please. You value your privacy, and wish to keep both. International business school teaches you that the cost of moving, if less than a year of the tax difference, is well worth it. THEREFORE, Federal taxes must stay under that line of our peer countries we are economically in competition with. Otherwise the companies leave, very simple.

      Here in the US, Businessmen won't argue back much, they'll just leave.
      WHY? Look at Joe the Plumber.
      You want that kind of scrutiny while you try to run a business day to day?

      The vast majority of businesses who employ folks here in the US are small. But many of these can leave too. Providing their goods back into the community in which they live at far lesser cost. Look at the fashion industry and any tag at Macys or JCPenny (MADE ELSEWHERE). When you can produce it for less ABROAD than shipping back costs, you'd leave too. Taxes are a major part of that equation.

      Before we try to start with the EPA, and the Giant Hassle required to start a company in the country, let's talk wages. A 15% tariff on wages (7.5% fica and medicare, matched by the employer is 15%) makes us expensive. Then you add federal (up to 33%), state (up to 12%), and local taxes (use and sales) to the plate, you keep less than 40% of what I pay out to you as the employee. I can't afford Americans when I have to pay them double to put food on their table. I am one! I can't afford MYSELF!

      Many more of these business owners can find work abroad, paying far better than the headache incurring business ownership they have now. However, they won't employ as many folks will they.

      Look specifically at the oil industry, the life blood of our car centric lifestyles here in the United States. Halliburton Co. relocated its top executives to a Dubai headquarters in 2007 and offshore driller Transocean has announced plans to move to Geneva. How do you propose that these things be replaced? You trying to tell me that BP agreeing to the Obama admin $20 Billion demand prior to court decisions isn't Government extortion. Not that they don't owe every person the oil spill affected. THEY

    5. Re:You have it backwards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks but no thanks. You've exported more than enough of your civilized country's problems already.

    6. Re:You have it backwards by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      I agree, but would go a bit further by pointing out that in the UK almost everyone gets some kind of subsidy from the government. Well, in fact everyone I should think since the cost of childbirth and childhood vaccination is met by the state. All prescription medicine is subsidised (you pay a flat £7.20 no matter the real cost or dosage). Visits to the doctor are free. There is an allowance for children and childcare and school is subsidised.

      It isn't just the elderly, disabled and mentally ill who benefit from fairer taxation and public services. We all do. Everyone gets ill from time to time. Most people have children and everyone gets an education. Even the childless benefit from having well educated younger people to pay their pensions and keep the country's economy going. That's right, you don't get out of your pension what you put in, it is reliant on investment of the money which is in turn reliant on the economy has a whole.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  79. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 1

    How about you stop stealing from them first? It's kind of unfair to demand that they be self-sufficient when you're taking from them the means with which to do so.

    Taxes and public services go hand-in-hand. It's no more reasonable to keep taking taxes while simultaneously demanding that objectors not use the public services they're paying for than it would be for the objectors to demand public services without offering to pay for them. Of course, if they offer to pay for what they use then you don't need a tax; an ordinary contract will do just fine. The tax is only necessary because you want them to pay for more than they need, on your terms.

    --
    "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
  80. Stop down-playing the importance of corruption by MikeRT · · Score: 3, Informative

    the fact that the gov mismanages our funds has nothing to do with the fact that the funds are NEEDED to 'run society'.

    You're wrong on two counts:

    1) It distorts the calculations on what is actually needed for the common good. That has everything to do with what we really need.

    2) It undermines the sense of duty people have to obey the law and contribute.

    The government is supposed to obey the law and serve the common good. When it doesn't and gets away with it, people feel like chumps for going along with it in the best of cases. In the worst cases, they feel like the rule of law is meaningless.

  81. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by Rockoon · · Score: 1

    Everyone thinks that they at least pay their fair share of taxes.

    The odds that the share you pay is fair is just about 0%. You either pay more or less than your fair share with almost certainty.

    --
    "His name was James Damore."
  82. Puh-lease by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 1

    let's say the top 1% - earned 25% of the wealth and paid 38% of the income taxes. That doesn't sound like "virtually nothing".

    This is merely the amount they couldn't hide in shell corporations, overseas, or bury underneath six tons of tax code specially crafted to create loopholes large enough for Lear jets.

    1. Re:Puh-lease by T.E.D. · · Score: 1

      Citation needed.

      The first one I found said that in 2007 the top 1% owned 36% of the country's net wealth, and 42% of its financial wealth (subtract out primary residence values).

    2. Re:Puh-lease by agw · · Score: 1

      And the poor fight back by working off the books. Great concept.

  83. Depends on how the money is getting in there. by Marrow · · Score: 1

    A secret account would allow you to accept money for services being performed under the table. Crafty ammendments, insider information, national secrets. There are lots of reasons why people should not have their accounts secret from the Law. Esp if they are elected or appointed officials. Even corporate board members should have their income visible...to make sure that any conflict of interest is quickly disclosed to the owners.

    Also, if they are signing a tax return that says they have completely declared all income, but fail to disclose interest from a foreign bank account, then that fact should come up on their employment review ( or election ).

    1. Re:Depends on how the money is getting in there. by Sentrion · · Score: 1

      US citizens have to report the institutions and account numbers for any funds held outside the US if the combined total exceeeds $10k. This requirement even extends to beneficiaries of trust funds. You can use google to find the form if you don't believe me. This reporting is required even if there is no interest income or even if there is a net loss due to account maintenance costs, etc.

  84. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by whiteboy86 · · Score: 1

    social care for disabled, firesquads, foster homes, police etc. I do not see how you could sustain that without taxes. Look at some rich corporations like Apple for example, they (Apple) haven't donated a dime in the last decade..

  85. You insensitive clod! by PPH · · Score: 1

    Think of all the taxes that went to create jobs in companies like Blackwater/Boeing/Lockheed.

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
  86. Julian the Informant by Sentrion · · Score: 1

    Now that he is in the crosshairs of the US government am I the only one that sees Julian's actions as evidence that he has been turned into a double-agent, cooperating with his prosecutors for a reduced sentence? It's not as if the US government hasn't been trying to uncover the identies of these Swiss account holders, right?

    It almost reminds me of when the Napster boys settled their lawsuit with the RIAA by agreeing to hand over the identities of their customers so that the RIAA could spread their reign of terror by suing single mothers, homeless men, and elderly shut-ins for the balance of their life savings and potential future earnings.

  87. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Reg: They've bled us white, the bastards. They've taken everything we had, and not just from us, from our fathers, and from our fathers' fathers. Stan: And from our fathers' fathers' fathers! Reg: Yeah. Stan: And from our fathers' fathers' fathers' fathers! Reg: All right Stan, don't belabour the point. And what have they ever given us in return?! Man: The aqueduct? Reg: What? Man: The aqueduct. Reg: Oh yeah, yeah, that they've given us, yeah, that's true, yeah. Man: And the sanitation. Stan: Oh, yeah, the sanitation, Reg. Remember what the city used to be like. Reg: Yeah, all right, I grant you, the aqueduct and the sanitation are two things the Romans have done. Mathias: And the roads! Reg: Well, yeah, obviously the roads. I mean, the roads go without saying, don't they! But apart from the sanitation, the aqueduct and the roads... Man: Irrigation. Man: Medicine. Man: Education! Reg: Yeah, yeah, all right, fair enough. Man: And the wine. All: Yeah, yeah, the wine! Francis: Yeah! yeah, that's something we'd really miss, Reg, if the Romans left. Man: Public baths. Stan: And it's safe to walk in the streets at night now, Reg. Francis: Yeah, they certainly like to keep order. I suppose they're the only ones who could in a place like this! Reg: Yeah, all right, but apart from the sanitation, the medicine, education, wine, public order, irrigation, roads, the fresh water system and public health, what have the Romans ever done for us!? Man: Brought peace. Reg: Oh, peace. Shut up!

    Audio version

  88. Bias by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

    The public may soon find out that their favorite celebrity, politician or employer doesn't feel responsible to contribute financially to the commonwealth at the expense of privacy

    Nope, no bias here. No consideration is necessary of the viewpoint that taxation is theft at gunpoint from legally disarmed victims. No thought of property rights, nor of punishing the producers who make modern life possible.

    --
    Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
  89. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by hedwards · · Score: 1

    No, I'm implying that nobody can foresee whether they'll need food stamps in the future. The service you're paying for is insurance. As long as people pay the taxes the program will be there. Anybody could get seriously ill and wind up homeless. When I had a heat stroke last summer, the bill for that was $14k, fortunately I had insurance which meant I only had to pay a small fraction, otherwise I likely would have had to either default on the debt or be homeless.

    Additionally, citation need for the bureaucracy. People on the right make that sort of assertion regularly, but are never able to cut it, even when the GOP controls both houses and the White House.

  90. Meh by PPH · · Score: 2

    Personal Swiss bank accounts are so 1990s. What Wikileaks will be revealing (and the IRS/Treasuery/US DoJ already has access to) is a list of names attached to accounts. That's a list of stupid people who went out on their own and got a Swiss account because they thought they were smarter than the law.

    The big bucks are sitting in bank and brokerage accounts under corporate names. Foreign corporations that the USA can't touch, owned by a series of holding companies, the details of which are locked in a filing cabinet somewhere in the Caymen Islands.

    Sure, there's 10 million francs in a Swiss account held for ACME GmBH. Who owns and controls them? Meanwhile, someone owns 100 shares of stock in Nauru Industries. Where's the connection? Good luck untangling that mess.

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
  91. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by WhiplashII · · Score: 3, Interesting

    They don't have to pay, they could move to another country.

    Not true - the US taxes all income earned by people born in the US, regardless of where they live / have citizenship. To avoid this, you have to:

    1) Renounce your US citizenship

    AND

    2) Convince the IRS that you did not renounce your citizenship to avoid paying taxes

    I am not kidding. If the IRS thinks it is possible that you renounced your citizenship to avoid paying taxes, they will annul your renunciation. And remember, the IRS does not require any proof, and your have no appeal outside of spending hundreds of thousands of dollars in tax court. After which they will probably win anyway, because in tax court you are considered guilty until proven innocent. Please see the relevant legal part of the tax code.

    --
    while (sig==sig) sig=!sig;
  92. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by roman_mir · · Score: 1

    I do not believe anybody should be getting any services from the gov't safe for minimum military.

  93. you misunderstand "cost plus" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    "Then there are subsidies which actively harm US interests. A couple of key examples are farm subsidies and "cost plus" contracts (a popular feature of defense R&D and related spending, where the contractor is paid a base amount plus an additional amount based on "costs" to a fixed cap)."

    A contract which pays actual costs plus a percentage of those costs is illegal.

    A cost plus contract is "cost plus fixed fee" or "cost plus award fee"... the former has a negotiated fee (aka profit), typically in the 5% area, almost never above 10% based on the originally bid scope and cost. That stays the same, even if there is an over-run on the costs, so the vendor actually gets a lower percentage profit for an overrun.

    A cost plus award has the fee (determined in advance) based on an evaluation of the contractor's performance. In almost all contracts I've seen, one of the factors determining the amount of the award is the degree to which the contractor kept the costs below a target. Bust the target, and no award.

    There is, no doubt, some playing fast and loose when it comes to defining costs, particularly for indirect costs (General and Administrative, G&A) which are usually figured as an (audited) percentage of the direct costs (wages for the toilers, materials, etc.). But, in general, even those costs aren't "profit" in a bottom line sense. They may keep people employed, or pay for fancy facilities, but you don't make any ROI on them. (and all the government contractors I've worked at or visited had facilities that weren't by any stretch "plush".. for plush you need to go to big name law firms or investment banks..)

    1. Re:you misunderstand "cost plus" by khallow · · Score: 1

      A cost plus contract is "cost plus fixed fee" or "cost plus award fee"

      The former is what I outlined.

      A cost plus award has the fee (determined in advance) based on an evaluation of the contractor's performance. In almost all contracts I've seen, one of the factors determining the amount of the award is the degree to which the contractor kept the costs below a target. Bust the target, and no award.

      So how do these reduce costs? If the award is high enough with respect to cost plus, then it's more like a fixed price contract (and maybe should have just been implemented as one). If the cost plus portion is big enough, then there's not enough incentive to control costs. In the private world, the only place I've heard of such contracts is for legal services, which aren't know for controlling costs.

      There is, no doubt, some playing fast and loose when it comes to defining costs, particularly for indirect costs (General and Administrative, G&A) which are usually figured as an (audited) percentage of the direct costs (wages for the toilers, materials, etc.). But, in general, even those costs aren't "profit" in a bottom line sense.

      A lot of profit isn't "profit" in a bottom line sense. That's the magic of creative accounting.

      and all the government contractors I've worked at or visited had facilities that weren't by any stretch "plush".. for plush you need to go to big name law firms or investment banks..

      Why would they? Law firms and investment banks aren't in the cost plus accounting business. They don't need to appear to be frugal. Government contractors are in the business of appearing to be frugal. Fancy architecture and expensive furniture doesn't help them get business, adds to their real, uncompensated costs, and looks bad, if the media or political figures should get wind of it.

  94. Huge flamebait by roman_mir · · Score: 1

    this entire article is a huge flamebait for me... must fight the urge to post lots and lots of comments on hating gov't...

    1. Re:Huge flamebait by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      It's okay - there are already several dozen, and all the usual names are there, so feel free to go ahead. It won't really make a difference either way.

  95. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by Bemopolis · · Score: 3, Informative

    Tell me, what is the significant difference between "tax" and "theft"?

    I know this one. The ability and legality of the US Government to levy and collect taxes is directly codified in the Constitution.

    --
    "I guess the moral of the story is, don't paint your airship with rocket fuel." -- Addison Bain
  96. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I downloaded it from Piratebay myself, but each to their own.

  97. the correlation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well suppose I have a million $. And suppose I invest it in some asset that appreciates in value but doesn't spin off any income. Zero taxes. Now suppose I die. My heirs...zero taxes. But a stepped up basis which means they got the appreciation free of taxes.

    But only the rich can afford to do things this way. Its how the rick families stay rich. While you and I pay taxes.

    There are exceptions like Florida where some assets may be not income producing but you still pay a tax on the value of the asset...stocks for example.

    1. Re:the correlation by hierofalcon · · Score: 1

      My dad was an auto mechanic working at a local dealership for one of the big three. My mom was a part-time bookkeeper/secretary. Neither ever made as much in a single year as I made when I started working as a programmer. Yet they gradually bought small amounts of stocks and my mom now uses the proceeds of those years of investing to live without having to rely solely on social security as neither had pensions. Mom benefited from the step up provisions at dad's death and paid all taxes they had to pay as they came due. My mom isn't rich, but she's better off than most of her friends.

      You don't get rich by the way you suggested.

      You get rich by not spending money you don't have, by waiting to buy things (other than a house) till you can pay cash, and by paying off your mortgage as quickly as possible. You stay well off by taking care of your health so you don't have huge bills, by covering risks of big medical bills by insurance, by not having bad habits like drugs, cigarettes, alcohol, and by not breaking the law. You stay well off by marrying one person and staying married for better or worse. Giving charitable donations and putting God first helps too, although not a popular concept on Slashdot.

      Live well within your means and you'll have a decent life, whether you ever are considered rich by the immensely wealthy.

  98. not really by dlenmn · · Score: 1

    Bosses are employees too, and (as the parent points out) they certainly seek to enrich themselves.

    Having regular employees make a profit is also necessary for a company; if it didn't happen, no one would work there.

  99. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, it's rather difficult to reform the civil service to reduce waste. Who would implement the reforms? Answer - the same people who implement all government policy: the civil service. This is why it never gets any smaller. You ask for a citation, I point you at the number of government workers throughout the history of the US. We would need a very radical government to actually change anything, and naturally the people you think are "on the right" are no more capable of doing it than Obama is capable of cutting back the national security state. The only approach to reducing bureaucracy that stands even the slightest chance of success is to privatise services. Not because the private sector is necessarily better at running things - we all know that's not always true - but because the resulting shakeup separates the service from the government bureaucrats, and thus gives it the potential to be less wasteful.

  100. Dead on. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I am Swiss, and you're dead on. There is only a very small, elitist circle here that has a lot of money. Mostly bankers and managers of international corporations, and most of them are not even Swiss. They only come to Switzerland because of the good market, low taxes for businesses, good infrastructure and security.

    Yeah, it's true, we have a good infrastructure. You can reach almost every point by public transport. Almost everybody has telephone line / Internet access. Low criminality rates (except in economic crimes, insider trading for example is still very common and rarely prosecuted). However, purchasing power of a average middle-class swiss person is about the same as in the US, if not even slightly lower. We have an increasing overpopulation problem which causes apartment prices to skyrocket, so that an many people have a really hard time finding a home. We have an incompetent government that is overprotective in regard to large businesses/banks. We have media corruption (not a single paper noticed that with the beginning of this year, there is a new law which prohibits development of "hacker tools" while in Germany some time ago there was a huge outrage because of a similar law). We have a stupid bureaucracy.

    There was some resistance against the upper class here recently, however, it mostly fails because the upper class threatens the public that they will leave the country if the people will vote for laws "against them" (like i.e. higher taxes).

    I don't say Switzerland is a bad place - but I am sick and tired that it is always praised as a neutral country, where everyone is wealthy and free like nowhere else, no one is oppressed and everyone is happy. Because it really isn't.

    Mod parent up.

    1. Re:Dead on. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Forgot to mention: we also have great social security and health care. The compulsory health insurance fund even has to pay for alternative medicine (homeopathy and such). I call that fucking retarded. No wonder it is so freaking expensive.

  101. taxes != contributing by tomohawk · · Score: 1
    Contributions are voluntary, taxes are compulsory.

    Depending on the complexity of the the applicable tax law, the difference between a "tax cheat" and someone just trying to abide by the law becomes more and more a matter of opinion.

  102. I have a slightly different viewpoint by Burning1 · · Score: 1

    I have a slightly different viewpoint: as a single male living in the Bay Area, who doesn't have children or own a home, I pay a lot of taxes. In fact, every 4 years I pay my share of the US national debt*. I'm proud to demonstrably do my part.

    However, at this point I feel like I'm being taxed enough. I would like it if more people would help out. Minimally, I'd appreciate it if we stop voting to run up the debt.

    * Based on the number of households in the US, not on the US population. By the US population I nearly pay my share on a yearly basis. I have no expectation that children should be taxed, however. So I feel per household is fair.

  103. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 1

    social care for disabled, firesquads, foster homes, police etc. I do not see how you could sustain that without taxes.

    First, I personally don't really care whether any of that can be sustained. If it requires taxes to exist then we're better off without it. However, I'll continue under the assumption that we expect me to persuade those who do care that such services are sustainable anyway.

    Second, aside from Social Security and Medicare (a small part of "social care for disabled"), none of the services you listed are handled by the federal government. Fire, police, roads, schools, etc. are all paid for by the states, counties, and/or municipalities in which they reside. Ergo, eliminating federal income taxes would have approximately zero effect on any of the traditional public services used to justify them.

    The only major public service left is national defense, and—given that our geography lends us as good a natural defense as you'll find outside of large island nations like Australia—our per-capital nation defense costs ought to be among the lowest anywhere. That they consume a significant fraction of the GDP is a consequence of the fact that the military spends most of its time playing World Police rather than concentrating solely on defense.

    Third, it's not like the money itself goes away if you eliminate the taxes. It's still there to be spent on comparable services and/or donations if that's how people choose to use it. The only difference is that the choice would be made by those who actually earned the money, rather than by those empowered to take it.

    Look at some rich corporations like Apple for example, they (Apple) haven't donated a dime in the last decade.

    Which means their shareholders were left with more to donate on their own. Personally, I'd rather the surplus were distributed to the shareholders (via dividends or growth in assets / share price). It's less morally ambiguous. The board should invest, and leave it to the individual shareholders to donating their shares of the proceeds if they choose.

    --
    "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
  104. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by omb · · Score: 1

    And you must still believe in the Tooth Fairy and Father Christmas as well

    Mit der Dummheit kaempfen Goetter selbst vergebens

  105. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by einar2 · · Score: 1

    Roads, police, fire department, school, safety checks on food products, regulation for the standardization of various devices (e.g you are not fried when you plug in a hair dryer), a legal system to settle quarrels...
    In short, a lot of things we like to call civilization.

  106. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by SnarfQuest · · Score: 1

    For those of us who don't like civilization, can we get final fantasy instead?

    --
    Who would win this election: Andrew Weiner vs Andrew Weiner's weiner.
  107. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by roman_mir · · Score: 1

    All of those things can be done privately even police. I know most will not agree, but at the very minimum none of those issues, none of them are a federal issue.

  108. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by einar2 · · Score: 1

    Being without citizenship is rather hard. This happened to a Russian friend of mine living in a Baltic state.
    And besides, as a former US citizen, who would allow you in instead?

  109. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by couchslug · · Score: 1

    "I like paying taxes. With them I buy civilization."

    So why do you not give ALL your money for government redistribution, and advocate a government that owns all wealth in behalf of the people?

    --
    "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
  110. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by LordNacho · · Score: 1

    If it's insurance, surely a private insurance firm would not charge the wealthy dozens and dozens of percents of their incomes to provide it. In fact, the actuarial calculation to do this would probably be done on an individual basis. And the poor might be charged much more, due to higher chance of losing their job, illness etc.

    So whats the idea with the same rate for everyone, and higher charges for people who (might) need it less, if insurance is the proper analogy?

  111. Manning and Source Protection/Anonymity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So Julian made a big point about how "Wikileaks never knows who their sources are", and this protects them legally because they aren't complicit in the actual leaking. Since Wikileaks now is complicit in this particular leak, does that alter their position at all?

  112. It's not the amount, it's the system by Fished · · Score: 1

    What I resent is not the amount of taxes I pay, but the ridiculous complexity of the tax code, which makes it nearly impossible to know how much you're going to owe any given year if the picture is at all complex. I literally went from receiving a $3500 refund one year to owing $22K the next. What changed? My wife left me, I lost all my tax credits (like the child tax credit, etc.), I got hit with the marriage penalty tax, the alternative minimum tax, etc. etc. ad nauseam. This has literally forced me into bankruptcy. Give me a simple system where my taxes are predictable and reasonable, and I'll pay them happily. But get rid of this ridiculous tax code that is designed to enrich the lawyers and the accountants!

    --
    "He who would learn astronomy, and other recondite arts, let him go elsewhere. " -- John Calvin, commenting on Genesis 1
  113. Here's why Swiss Bank Sccounts are private by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Swiss banking privacy isn't just about letting people avoid taxes or hide assets from their creditors or letting criminals and dictators stash their cash somewhere safe outside their own countries. The laws were primarily designed to protect one specific group of criminals from one specific government during the first half of the 20th century. The government was Germany, and the crime was being a Jew who had enough money to get away, and Germany was pressuring Swiss banks to provide information on their German customers.

    Switzerland does report information on accounts involved in criminal investigations, but only if the offenses are crimes under Swiss law. Being Jewish isn't a crime there, and tax evasion is a civil bureaucratic matter, not a crime, but bank robbery is a crime they take very seriously. And Switzerland does charge taxes on interest earned in Swiss bank accounts, though that might be lower or higher than the taxes you'd pay in your own country.

    1. Re:Here's why Swiss Bank Sccounts are private by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit. The laws were designed to protect the gold the nazis stole from being given BACK. There's still tons of nazi money that hasn't been given back and sits in Swiss banks. Don't kid yourself, the Swiss are complicit fuckers STILL.

  114. All personal income is taxable by PhinMak · · Score: 1

    A "cashless" black market is also exempt from taxation. Nice try though!

    It is not "exempt". It is tax evasion. Ever heard of Al Capone? Jailed not for bootlegging and murder etc etc, but for not paying taxes on his ill-gotten gains.

    Furthermore, estimates are that the black/underground market is as high as 28% (!!!!!) of the US economy. Source1 Source2 Pay your niece to babysit using cash? You're enabling tax evasion. Pay your drywaller in cash? Probably also encouraging illegal immigration. Borrow your brother's truck in exchange for a case of beer? TAX EVASION! Tony Soprano, "legitimate businesses", drug dealers and money laundering? TAX EVASION AND THE 4 HORSEMEN OF THE APOCALYPSE!

    Two conclusions:
    -- Everyone is crossing the line from avoidance to evasion. Rich AND poor.
    -- Tax laws (all laws, really) are draconian in their complication, pervasiveness and obscurity.

    It's almost enough for me to seriously support the "FairTax"...

  115. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by WhiplashII · · Score: 1

    No, you misunderstand me. The official US position is that if you were born in the US, the IRS has claim on you for life. Regardless of multiple / changed citizenship - they will extradite you if you don't pay them taxes on income earned anywhere.

    It is not difficult to find a new home country for those of us that create businesses. We just are forced to examine only the smaller set of countries that will not extradite on tax evasion charges, and then we can never visit the US again. I believe the US is fairly unique in that respect.

    --
    while (sig==sig) sig=!sig;
  116. Well theres your problem in big letters by Shivetya · · Score: 1

    What is waste? I am sure we can find justification for every government expenditure, whether its a new library named for a local politician to whether men in African gay bars (in Africa) contract AIDS at a higher rate than in other locales. Therein lies the problem, we are a greedy society, everything we want obviously is warranted.

    So, we end up with the budget mess we have because of people who think like you do. It is incredibly easy to "guilt" people into paying for ANYTHING. It all depends on how you word the question. Ever watch Yes Prime Minister? They have several great skits on just how easy it is to manipulate the public into doing something or not doing something, how to coerce them into paying taxes and the like. We see it everyday. What happens in Atlanta when they had budget problems, well the obvious, they cut fire and police services; specifically in areas where people griped the most about taxes.

    A government that does everything for you can make you do anything as well, they have you by the balls. If not directly they certainly have enough people who will line up to hang you by your balls. All because their needs are justifiable.

    what is "waste"? is funding fundamental science waste? is funding liberal arts waste? are the likes of the FDA waste? is paying for some dubious piece of art in your own town waste?

    Yes, Yes, No, and Yes.

    Yes, because there is no guarantee we are not targeting needs of society that are of the utmost importance, or at least we cannot verify we are. Where is the list of what we are funding? Who decides what is right and what isn't? When is it too much or too little? Whose little pet projects are we funding, what big corporation is getting a free ride? Justify all of it. It will add up.

    Yes, because the term is too broad and it is common for such terms to be tossed about in order to bury any attempts at real analysis.

    No, because the FDA protects the public and enforces government regulations which are designed to protect the public. Guaranteeing the safety of the food and medicines the public consumes benefits society as a whole. The test of any agency and every program within

    Yes because if society doesn't want to pay for your Piss Jesus then society should not be forced to fund it. I have nothing against artist creating what they want, what I do have a problem with is that we must fund stuff they cannot find anyone else to buy. Look, if you want to make a living selling your art, be it poetry, paintings, stories, or whatnot, then by all means do so. Do not justify the government stepping in and paying for it because those damn trogs are too stupid to know what is good for them. Good art thrives, the rest relies on the government to exist.

    Until we have the balls to stand up and stop just handing money out right and left we will forever be in trouble. We don't have the luxury of paying for items outside of root government functions which mainly are to protect the people and their freedom. Taking money from Peter to pay Paul for something which generally only benefits Paul is a violation of that requirement, you deny Peter his freedom to spend his money where he wants. While some taxation is understandable and required we have lost the connection between why we are taxed and what for. In other words, we no longer see the benefit, we see only the waste. We see only the waste because the burden has grown so big.

    So, yeah, start gathering up those hundreds of thousands spent here and there, it will be substantial once you start. As a major radio personality likes to state, its a debt snowball. Start with the smallest and work out from there. Yeah its going to cost money to do it but damn , its better than pissing away our children's future all because we can't make up our minds.

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
  117. WOW! by jafac · · Score: 1

    Who knew there was gambling going on at Ricks.
    Frankly, I am shocked.

    --

    These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  118. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by zippthorne · · Score: 1

    It does not necessarily follow that the more taxes you pay, the more civilization you get.

    I'm sure I can trust that you contribute more to the government than you're legally required to, right? And don't claim any exemptions for anything?

    --
    Can you be Even More Awesome?!
  119. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You sure about that? A little more than half of USA taxes goes into making war machines, train militaries and continuing wars.

    There is nothing civilized about war.

  120. They aren't rich because they didn't pay taxes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They are rich because they make wise investments. I myself don't pay taxes, because I'm not liable for taxes and I will never choose to do anything taxable. Tax is legislated as being the cost necessary and fiscal or economic friction introduced to correct unlawful activity; if government at any stage of charter, derives more taxes than fees, then you are a screwed-up nation and country: taxes reduce all to slavery if that is their primary source of currency. Yet, none would study to discern that taxes are the jurisprudence of a criminal operation in a de-facto standing, whiles fees are the de-jure compensation for such ascribed service.

    Section 83a of Infernal Revenue Code exempts 99% of Middle and Low class individuals of qualifying their securities as taxable Income, but they neither studied or versed into Law and neither schooled into Law.

    All original enactments of the Legislature for Licenture of qualified Motor Vehicles and Motor Vehicle Code "General Provisions" of the First Title as Continuation or Extension prior to Uniform Commercial Code overlay, exempts 99% of Middle and Low class individuals of qualifying their automobiles and rolling chassis and carriages and dollies from ever necessitating a License Plate to the privilege of an estate neither Insurance so as to blame an institution for unfixed damages, but they neither studied or versed into Law and neither schooled into law all.

    Obama's medical care program as well as all Firearm restrictions are being grafted into misleading titles of legislation particularly to all Tax codes, where they have no effect when properly challenged, yet the same applies.

    Rich people are SMART PEOPLE. Just because you see murderers and thieves using the law to their advantage doesn't mean they are the one's murderering and stealing: that alleged poor people that you say are the one's doing the damage to theirselves. Who cares if the alleged "Wealthy" have all the monopoly State-franchise Labor Regulation "currencies", because the alleged "poor" have it their option to not work for paper money: the people can coin their own money from the aluminum dross of their trash soda cans and that is more lawful than the paper currencies that is neither lawful nor subjecting them to any substanding.

    The people are poor and evil, and now they are going after the much-more lawful false-gods they theirselved submit theirselves unto.

    I am laughing that the world is burning, because it all looks like LA Riots again: your own neighborhood, you wanted to buy/enrich an institution by working for it's slave-made foreign imports rather than grow your own, because you are not willing to study and depose all the bastard State-franchise institutions that violate your ability to subside without making yourself liable to any kinds of taxes.

  121. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please help me understand how seizing less of my property has a cost associated with it.

    But then again, I bet you're one of those people who wants your taxes cut, but wants somebody elses services to be cut or diminished to finance it. I think the term for that is "fiscal conservative."

  122. Attornies, Lawyers, Counsellors, and...militia. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you found out that your doctors allowed cancer to spread in your body because the big-pharma "medications" advertised to your use were the same that lowered your bodily PH, then you bet the militia will be moving.

    If you found out that a city allowed all kinds of neuro-toxins to introduce to the water supply that caused all kinds of disabilities in the health of the population that became the reaped investment model of the economy, then you bet the miliitia will be moving.

    If you found out that the courts introduced you as a secondary class personage through a contract that you generally-appeared to accept implicitly without reservation so as to deprive you of your Right to Public Vehicular Travel on the Roads without License and without Insurance, then you bet the militia will be moving.

    If you found out that a foreign prinipality or a pirate country within a country was employing all locals into the courts to create a structured scheme of securities fraud where began a perprestured personage called a Birth Certificate where you are coerced to be trustee over that was quietly liened to $50 million that was monetized to spend into circulation by that same foreign principality for the life-blood tricking the trustee to work for free, then you bet the militia will be moving.

    If you found out that Child-Protective Services or Social Services were earning no less than $50k on every adoption of child abducted into their care for various non-death matter, and that in the process of the fostering of that child through it's institution would expose to more rape-pederasty so-as to necessite medical subscriptions of a conservatorship for more currencies awarded to the CPS or SS, then you bet the militia will be moving.

    If you found out that the purpose of Education was for an invasive foreign principality to reduce the populous to a chattel of dependent personages to bifurcate their cost of maintenance into a wealth-generation scheme for privileged State-franchises to employ trustees to oversee, then you bet the militia will be moving.

    Hey...look! This is all happening today, and you don't comprehend it because you are either a Smart Retard like me or a a Dumb Educationed Person.

  123. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by jgtg32a · · Score: 1

    I have heard about that before, and seeing that it may actually become relevant to me I did a little research. It looks like you can exclude up to $91,400

  124. You bet I would. by crovira · · Score: 1

    People seem to feel the resulting vegetation would be tainted, but it actually wouldn't.

    --
    MSBPodcast.com The opinions expressed here are my own. If you don't like 'em... Think up your own stuff.
  125. Is Assange a plant by the people in power? by Sebastopol · · Score: 1

    Could Assange be a pre-emptive plant by the higher ups to deflect attention onto sacrificial targets in various arenas? What if the list is just a subset to take the scrutiny off of the bigger criminals, and the latter goes undetected/unpunished? Maybe he's a plant so that they can ferret out anonymous sources that run to him with secrets?

    Hmmm...

    --
    https://www.accountkiller.com/removal-requested
  126. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by zephvark · · Score: 1

    Government... "services". Ya, about that. It decides what we "need", forces us to use it, makes the competition illegal, and charges us whatever it thinks it can get away with. There are certainly useful things that a government does, but most of its attention is spent "servicing" us.

  127. Re:Media whore by blair1q · · Score: 1

    I don't care if it is a good thing this information is public.

    If he's committed a crime he should go to jail for it.

  128. Are they really 'Naming' evaders? by slamden · · Score: 1

    FTA: "Elmer said he would not reveal what specifically was in the documents, and said that he personally would not disclose 'individual companies or individual names' of the account holders."

    I read that to say that he will release lots of details proving how large this problem is, but won't reveal the actual people who are doing it. Am I misreading that?

  129. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A+++ Best civilization I've ever had the pleasure of participating in. Would be born here again.

  130. Free Market != Anarchy by BlueBoxSW.com · · Score: 1

    ...

  131. The dividng line between Europe and Asia is by crovira · · Score: 1

    the Ural mountains.

    West is Europe, East is Asia.

    --
    MSBPodcast.com The opinions expressed here are my own. If you don't like 'em... Think up your own stuff.
  132. He's going to hurt people who will have him killed by crovira · · Score: 1

    Sad to say, Assange will cost them more alive that it will cost to have him killed.

    The rich are quite merciless.

    --
    MSBPodcast.com The opinions expressed here are my own. If you don't like 'em... Think up your own stuff.
  133. all Roads are Open as a Matter of Right to Travel. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are confusing Security Interest to Rites.

    Roads are all free to roam over and travel upon, yet what has been foisted upon State nationals and Americans is the United States allowed the fetter-all Goobermint to pave private improvements of assphault and traffic-control devices (regulating only commerce) onto the public Roads and thereby creating an intentional jurisdiction nuisance.

    When you have a License Plate on your craft/rolling-chassis/mobile, then you are in a private contract that takes you out of your publicly-secured Rites and into a commercial mode of conduct. Look into the original enactments for Driver licensing and you'll see it only applies to persons transporting cargo or passengers for hire or profit or compensation: commerce.

    Same goes with Insurance, in that it puts blame of your damages onto another party of interest rather than address you in County Court perhaps the Small-Claims compartment of redress.

  134. You all forget, Switzerland is Templar island. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The reason why Europe hasn't been sacked again by Muslims is because the original profenders of the border and frontier affront to the spread of Islam has been maintained by the private interests among these elite perverted "tax dodgers" and "wealthy." If money is property in future interests yet to be spent, then by saying where someone can invest their money is stealing their time they used to earn said money: slavery.

    You bet that if Europe was in good hands of the original bankers, not the recent batch of Jewish Illuminati, then you wouldn't see any Islame Mudslimes running through the place like Rioters in Los Angeles.

    You all should be looking for the remnants of those people to see if them and their unhindered investments hadn't been displaced by the recent sprawl of Jews that destroyed Russia and Germany with their Hahallocaust revisionist story that claims 4-million Jews dying of Natural causes is more redressable than when over 20 million non-militant Germans and Russians were killed after over 100 million soldiers were destroyed by the Allied powers that in-turn allowed foreigners to enter those two nations in cause of cultural genocide.

  135. good news here by ncmathsadist · · Score: 1

    This is delicious. I can't wait to see some of these shirkers get a goring from the tax authorities.

  136. Congress? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'll bet lots of Congressmen are on the list.

  137. to hell with your revolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I come from a multinational (including US) middle class family with residency in Switzerland. I pay my fair share of taxes to BOTH the US and Switzerland, considering I feel my income has nothing to do with the US. Some people have said I should be paying full US taxes simply for holding US citizenship, but they have clearly never led and international lifestyle. Anyone who has would know that we are treated as second class citizens. I will never see any of the benefits of my tax money; I haven't even had my votes counted for the last few decades. People either never consider that you don't have to be filthy rich or corrupt to hold a Swiss bank account and my privacy is threatened all the time just like this. Maybe some of those tax evaders need to be exposed BUT THIS IS NOT THE WAY TO DO IT. Assange is the perfect example of the martyred criminal who steals the hearts of the uneducated masses but has his own hidden agenda.

  138. Re:Media whore by FooAtWFU · · Score: 1
    You get me wrong. I should clarify. He doesn't necessarily hate the people of America, but he's pretty open about considering America a "corrupt regime". As for rich-people hating, it's pretty common in a variety of circles, one way or another. I don't mean to make a moral judgment on it right here, but just to point out there's easily more to it than gaining notoriety for himself.

    I suppose I really ought to avoid statements that people can read connotations of that sort into them, but I was tired this morning. Sorry.

    --
    The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
  139. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by mjwx · · Score: 1

    I like paying taxes. With them I buy civilisation.

    My problem is that last year I paid for A$14,092 worth of civilisation and I'm not getting it. OK, The NBN is on it's way but Conroy and Abbott are still making trouble for it, Fibre me now.

    I don't begrudge paying taxes, I keep about 80% of what I earn (well the bank keeps a lot of it) and get good healthcare for minimal cost out of pocket but I don't want to miss a good opportunity to put the boot into a few of the bell ends in Canberra.

    --
    Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
  140. Re:Media whore by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

    Please go and actually read up on what Assange and WikiLeaks does, has done, and is about... and no you cant use FoxNews or any republican hate rag as a information source.

    So, only the compliant media that supports your viewpoint can be used to argue against you? No matter how well documented or reasoned the dissenters are*? I assume you don't lose many arguments.

    *I forget, now that a liberal Democrat is president, is dissent still the highest form of patriotism?

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  141. mentioning losing karma is karma whoring by electrosoccertux · · Score: 1

    in the same way that "I'm going to out on a limb and..." is.

  142. no representation without taxation by electrosoccertux · · Score: 1

    We need to change it to "no representation without taxation"

    That means all the elderly folk sucking the life out of our youth, and the people on welfare, don't get to vote.
    Why?
    Because people just vote themselves money anyways. If you already have money you're less likely to vote yourself more.

  143. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by electrosoccertux · · Score: 1

    Outing honest people whose only so-called "crime" is wanting to avoid the theft of their hard and presumably legitimately-earned dollars is completely and totally wrong

    Tax is not theft. Someone evading tax is not honest.

    Black is not white, whatever you libertarians might like to believe.

    how dare you make such a reference on MLK day. I am offended on behalf of all 3 black people that visit slashdot.

  144. Smart. by Journe · · Score: 1

    Am I the only person thinking Assange is just painting a giant bullseye on himself now?

  145. To Tax or Not to Tax by xenobyte · · Score: 1

    It has been said countless times that if everybody paid their taxes, we'd all have to pay a lot less. That is probably true, although lowering the tax will 'reset' the tax screw and open op for more spending and thus raising the tax again.

    There are two things that makes people try to avoid taxing. The first is simple greed and really not that interesting. The other is the feeling of being overtaxed which may or may not be justified. It is a fact that many countries, especially the European ones, have a proportional tax system where the percentage increases as your income increase. It is a socialistic thing ("the widest shoulders have to carry the greatest load") of course which in itself makes some people take offense from a political point of view.

    But a lot of people also see it as unfair on several levels, mostly because they not only have to pay the most, they're also the ones making the least use of the system (less in need of health care, social security, unemployment benefits, public schools etc.) and thus feel double-taxed. Add to this a lot of extra burden on the system from people not seen as part of the system (not contributing), especially 'chronic losers' (drug addicts, homeless, refugees, an-alphabetic immigrants and so on), and people feel yet more burdened by what could be (has been) described as 'freeloaders' or 'leeches on the system'.

    So instead of just chasing tax evaders, some effort should be put into making people more happy to pay their taxes. A beginning would be to take a good, long and hard look at what the tax is used for, and then to make the taxing more fair, for instance by allowing for 'opting out' of certain public services. If you know you don't want to use the public schools or government health care you don't have to pay for these but cannot make use of them either. After all, it really isn't fair that these people pays for both the public schools and the private school they chose for their kids to attend. Also an effort should be put into making the tax more fair in itself. You should not be punished for working more or for spending more. Both these are really good for the community on several levels so it should really be taxed less, not more.

    So maybe tax evaders are really freedom fighters, not just criminals... ;)

    --
    "For every complex problem, there is a solution that is simple, neat, and wrong." -- H.L. Mencken (1880-1956) --
  146. That's an argument for land value tax by jonaskoelker · · Score: 1

    Those in the know can buy land near the rail projects ahead of time and reap the profits.

    Land Value Tax would solve that; see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Land_value_tax

    Land tax is, dissimilar to other taxes, also isn't distortionary; it doesn't carry a dead weight loss.

    So taxing land would improve the overall wealth of society, and get rid of corruption. Note also the most recent bubble and burst? Was it a mortgage crisis or a land speculation crisis? How can you tell?

  147. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by currently_awake · · Score: 1

    The public highway system definately benefits americans. Or do you prefer to drive/walk/cycle on dirt roads? I suspect you prefer having public police rather than street gangs or private armies running each area of the city. Having enforced standards for food is in your best interest, unless you like having your kids get food poisoning.

  148. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by rastos1 · · Score: 1

    I like paying taxes. With them I buy civilization.

    I also liked buying civilization with my taxes. But then it turned out that my taxes were wasted/lost/embezzled/pocketed by bureaucrats/spent on bailing out banks/...

  149. Kill communists like "copponex" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They are worthless fucks who don't care about their countrymen, and I'd rather them emigrate to Romania before they rob America of the rest of it's wealth. Not after.

    Why do you "think" that money other people earned is somehow yours?

    This is why Marxist sub-humans like yourself need to be rounded up and killed.

    1. Re:Kill communists like "copponex" by copponex · · Score: 1

      The natural resources and shared infrastructure of a nation belong to everyone in that nation, not just the latest generation of robber barrons who benefit from it.

      To disprove that point, name 20 CEOs and their amazing contributions to American life in the last 20 years.

    2. Re:Kill communists like "copponex" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The natural resources and shared infrastructure of a nation belong to everyone in that nation, not just the latest generation of robber barrons who benefit from it.

      Natural resources aren't worth shit without somebody expending labor and capital to harvest them. They therefore belong to whoever can mine or drill for them.

      "Shared infrastructure" such as roads cost pennies of every dollar currently seized in taxes.

      So again, what makes you think you're entitled to other people's stuff?

    3. Re:Kill communists like "copponex" by copponex · · Score: 1

      You're too fucking stupid to understand why nations who tax progressively have a middle class and a vibrant economy, and why places like Brazil and vast parts of Africa resemble pre-Revolutionary France.

      Stop wasting my time, and get back to mowing that lawn so you can buy more overvalued gold coins.

    4. Re:Kill communists like "copponex" by Lotunggim+Ginsawat · · Score: 1

      Citation needed. Which OECD country has progressive tax system, and has a middle class and a vibrant economy? Scandinavian countries? Hahahaha!

  150. Help me rethink my position, then by jonaskoelker · · Score: 1

    you might want to rethink you position on liberal arts: they might be useless for 99% of their students, but by no means for society

    I'll give rethinking my position a fair shake if you'll help me rethink it.

    As you have used the term, what are the liberal arts? What is the societal use of people being well versed in the liberal arts? What is the social use of people getting degrees in the liberal arts?

    1. Re:Help me rethink my position, then by SomeKDEUser · · Score: 1

      literature, history, languages, philosophy. Some put mathematics there, too.

      People knowing history and language makes them better citizens. People knowing literature and philosophy makes them better humans (ok, that is debatable, but it can't hurt to have some knowledge of what other articulate people have written in the past). In general, these are the disciplines which should help people have a sense of perspective, and hopefully be less prone to believing bullshit.

      And of course all those disciplines are unproductive so "the market" won't support them. But it's like art and music: these things make life worth living. And arguably, spending money on things that can make people happy is by no means the worse a government can do.

    2. Re:Help me rethink my position, then by jonaskoelker · · Score: 1

      In general, these are the disciplines which should help people have a sense of perspective, and hopefully be less prone to believing bullshit.

      Interesting. My bullshit detector recipe lists a somewhat different bundle of ingredients:

      - Formal logic and proofs, as seen through the lens of mathematics. Knowledge of the most commonly used types of invalid or illogical arguments.

      - An understanding of statistics and how not to get lied to with data. Remember to compare against baselines, compute conditional probabilities the right way around. Beware of selection biases.

      - Philosophy of science and epistemology: we can know stuff through our senses and through experiments. An appreciation of the effect of science on society.

      - Psychology: the biases of human cognition, memory, intuition and emotion. The reason we double-blind those scientific studies that deal with humans. Confirmation bias, selective memory.

      - Economics and political science: having an understanding of which unintended consequences (misguided) policies might have. Having an understanding how what the left hand is doing affects what happens in the right hand. The seen and the unseen, and the use of knowledge in society.

      It seems my bullshit detector leans more towards the natural and social sciences, but maybe I'm biased towards that end of the spectrum. I can see how history and economics interrelate, though, and philosophy includes philosophy of science and moral philosophy which is touched upon by economics---you can't evaluate an economic policy without a yardstick, and economic yardsticks are made out of moral philosophy.

      spending money on things that can make people happy is by no means the worse a government can do.

      The government could also not take the money in the first place, and then the people could themselves spend it on what makes them happy. If economic theory is worth anything, that will tend to make people better off, as they can always make the same choices the government would have made for them.

      People knowing literature and philosophy makes them better humans

      How so?

      People knowing history and language makes them better citizens.

      I get history (especially when related to economics). Care to explain how language makes people better citizens? What is a good vs. bad citizen?

      And of course all those disciplines are unproductive so "the market" won't support them.

      There seems to be a great market for education in the liberal arts. However, there doesn't seem to be a great market for liberal arts graduates, except as unskilled labor. As I would expect---are you willing to pay a premium on your groceries if the cashier knows 16th century french legal philosophy? Why/why not?

    3. Re:Help me rethink my position, then by SomeKDEUser · · Score: 1

      basically, you agree with me (and I with you), but you don't like that I do not show enough contempt towards the literary minded.

      Usually, I have huge problems interacting with them, because they (to me) make no sense. But realise this: there is another, completely different form of bullshit detector, which involves no maths at all.

      People who read a lot, especially old and obscure stuff, have a perspective on the public discourse which allows them to realise that a given specious argument had already been considered bogus during the Roman Empire.

      Now they will tell you that this argument is bogus because Pliny the younger made fun of it, and it will drive you mad, because the reason the argument is wrong is because it is logically flawed. But it remains that society is much better off with these guys and their bolloney detector than if they had none.

      I must also add that the statistical/data driven drivel is somewhat new, and because of that, the literary (as opposed to scientifically) minded are susceptible to it. But you will _never_ convince one of them with logic. You must be able to make the esthetic argument for a proposition to have any impact at all. Personally, I usually can't.

      As a final note, it is not because someone sounds sciency that he is. It is the mode of thought which counts -- I have met scientists who clearly have no sense of logic at all.

  151. Re:Outing criminals is one thing . . . . by einar2 · · Score: 1

    While in theory, I agree with you, economic efficiency asks for pooling.
    In my country most of these services are no federal issue. They are offered by the community and are paid by --- community taxes.