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White House Proposes "Wealthy Tax"

President Obama is proposing a new tax rate for people making over $1m a year. The new rate is part of a larger plan which seeks to bring in $1.5 trillion in new tax revenue and is sure to meet opposition in congress. From the article: "The core of the president's plan totals just more than $2 trillion in deficit reduction over 10 years. It combines the new taxes with $580 billion in cuts to mandatory benefit programs, including $248 billion from Medicare." GOP Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin said, "Class warfare may make for really good politics but it makes for rotten economics."

2,115 comments

  1. Tax planning and rich people by ge7 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    So all they did was give even larger incentive for rich people to start playing games with taxes. Remember that tax planning isn't illegal, nor is forming offshore companies. It's unlikely to change as well, because foreign companies are needed too. As long as you keep the money in the offshore company accounts and not your personal ones, you don't need to pay taxes from them. The people making over one million dollars a year have all the means to do this - normal working people don't.

    You know what, maybe start looking if the huge companies pay taxes? For example Google does a insane amount ($60 BILLION) of tax dodging.

    1. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Who cares how 'large' the incentive is? There will always be incentive for people to cheat to keep their money. It's our patriotic duty to make sure they pay their fair share for this country. This is a step in that direction.

    2. Re:Tax planning and rich people by adamchou · · Score: 1

      You know what, maybe start looking if the huge companies pay taxes?

      That will just push companies to go offshore too. Look at how much GE paid last year. Its arguably even easier for these big companies to go off shore anyways since most of them are already multinational

    3. Re:Tax planning and rich people by compro01 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Then how about we tell the multinationals where to get off and push heavy incentives to actual local businesses, who make up more of the economy than the huge companies and can't hold regions hostage when they throw a tantrum about not getting treated special?

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    4. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      Keeping the money that you earned and worked for is cheating, as opposed to having it taken from you by force and redistributing the money to what other people lobbied for? Or failed projects like Solyndra? Or questionable involvement in wars that have no impact on us?

      This is not patriotic. This is just a step towards tyranny. Obama could take 100% of what the rich make and it wouldn't solve any of our problems.

    5. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So instead of giving them "reason" to seek tax loopholes, you suggest giving up that tax revenue without a fight? How is that going to result in a revenue increase?

      Some rich people (and wannabes) always bring up the "they (yeah right) will leave and go to tax havens. I say good riddance. If they like it better in those countries, what's stopping them? Or do they just want to stay here and twist our arms, because they actually like it here, you know, with the jobs and the infrastructure, and just don't want to pay as much taxes?

    6. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

      What should they do, magically produce money out of thin air to pay the taxes, entirely separate to their revenue stream...? Of course the money for taxes come from the price of their goods.

    7. Re:Tax planning and rich people by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 1

      So all they did was give even larger incentive for rich people to start playing games with taxes.

      Let them play games then.

    8. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Corporations do not pay taxes at all.
      That's economics from junior high school.
      All corporations do is pass their tax costs on to the price of their goods.

      Wooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooosh.

      This doesn't matter atall, the purpose of tax is to fund the government spending. If the corporations evade taxes as opposed to passing them to the users of the services, the government doesn't get the revenue it needs.

    9. Re:Tax planning and rich people by rickb928 · · Score: 1

      "Or questionable involvement in wars that have no impact on us?"

      How about "Or questionable involvement in wars that may harm us or have no impact on us?"

      Trust me, wars have impacts on us. Even the ones we aren't involved in, few as they are.

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    10. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Shimbo · · Score: 2

      Corporations do not pay taxes at all.
      That's economics from junior high school.
      All corporations do is pass their tax costs on to the price of their goods.

      Well, that's a silly argument. You might just as well say individuals don't pay any taxes, it just goes on their wage bill.

    11. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      dear god, mod parent up.

    12. Re:Tax planning and rich people by hittman007 · · Score: 1

      ...It's our patriotic duty to make sure they pay their fair share for this country...

      Define fair share.

      To some people that means they need to pay a higher percentage.
      To others that means they need to pay the same percentage.

      --
      --- When you start with the conclusion that you want, then throw out any facts that don't agree, is it true?
    13. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's also our patriotic duty to get this Fast and Furious, Solyndra, Obamacare, Acorn, SEIU, TSA sexually molesting, cash for clunkers, corrupt shithead our of office.

    14. Re:Tax planning and rich people by rickb928 · · Score: 2

      Nol, the government gets that revenue from other taxpayers. Me, for instance. And perhaps you.

      Again, the equaton shouldn't be how much in taxes we pay, it should be how much we need to pay for a well-functioning government. It's the well-functioning part where the argument bogs down. Too much? Too little? Wrong things?

      We're in a bind now that was inevitable - economic conditions warrant goverment expansion, but both the tax base and debt load make that counterproductive. Our fault. Our fix. Painful no matter what we do.

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    15. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Getting our fiscal house in order wouldn't solve any problems...? Infrastructure projects don't serve any purpose...? What state do you live in?

    16. Re:Tax planning and rich people by RingDev · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Keeping the money that you earned and worked for is cheat

      BWAHAHAHAHAHAH. LOL.

      The vast majority of this income in this range is "Unearned Income." People aren't earning nor working for multi-million dollar annual incomes, they are enjoying the benefits of others work by collecting dividens and stock profits.

      -Rick

      --
      "Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
    17. Re:Tax planning and rich people by larry+bagina · · Score: 0

      And for some people, it means complaining that their taxes are too low while somehow forgetting they have the option of paying more if they want to.

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    18. Re:Tax planning and rich people by spiffmastercow · · Score: 2

      ...It's our patriotic duty to make sure they pay their fair share for this country...

      Define fair share.

      To some people that means they need to pay a higher percentage. To others that means they need to pay the same percentage.

      I'll settle for same percentage.

    19. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Penguinisto · · Score: 1

      ...not quite understanding what you're getting at, since if taxes go up, I sincerely doubt that my wages will go up in order to compensate for that shift.

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    20. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No, using public services to make money, then hiding your earnings so that you don't have to pay for those public services is CHEATING. EVERYONE in this country benefits from tax-funded services. But the rich seem to think that because they make millions, they don't have to contribute.

      Let's put it this way: I am one car on the road, and I have to pay taxes for road upkeep. Mr. Millionaire has a fleet of 1000 semi trucks to deliver his product, but he doesn't have to pay for road upkeep? Does that seem fair to you?

    21. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Lundse · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Keeping the money that you earned and worked for is cheating...

      Only true if you did not in any form, directly or indirectly, benefit from society. Say, by ever buying anything that used any sort of public infrastructure (and benefitting from the reduced price).

      "Money you earned and worked for" is not as simple a term as you might think - tied in with that work and its value are layers upon layers of additional worth, all stemming from the society you live in. Society is not robbing you - even if you paid 90%, you would still be getting a bargain, compared to how you much you and your time is worth sans society.

      --
      IAIFARSIJDPOOTV - I Am In Fact A Reality Star; I Just Don't Play One On TV
    22. Re:Tax planning and rich people by nedlohs · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So because people will play games with taxes we should just set all taxes to 0%, right?

      The whole idea for upping the rate is because those on such incomes will be doing such things with their taxes. So since you are only going to get to a tax some portion of their income you have to use a higher rate to get the same end amount. And yes that sucks for the people who don't want to bother tax planning.

      And do you really think anyone is going to say - well I was fine with the federal income tax taking $3,500,000 of my income but now that they want $4,500,000 I'm going to start "playing games". I suspect they're already doing all they can.

    23. Re:Tax planning and rich people by skids · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Rich people use more public services than poor people in support of their activities. So yes, a larger percentage.

      Not to mention if you fail to regulate capitalism by tweaking the "score," the inevitable result is slavery.

    24. Re:Tax planning and rich people by mcgrew · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Sorry, but that's just stupid. You could as easily say that working people aren't taxed, they just pass the costs to their employers.

      You can't pass the cost to your customers if your competitor doesn't. I have no choice in my personal taxes, but I choose whether or not I pay Kraft's taxes.

    25. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Trepidity · · Score: 1

      You clearly didn't pay attention in junior high school, if you think that taxes on profits are a cost to a company. Profits are what you make after costs are netted out. Corporations are only taxed if they turn profits.

      They would function in a roughly cost-like manner if the rate of profit were completely fixed, so e.g. a company that suffered a 2% reduction in profit had to and was able to raise its prices by 2% to compensate, but rates of profit fluctuate according to a number of factors. Where the 2% reduction in profit will come from: price increases, wage decreases, dividend decreases, pressure on suppliers for price decreases, etc. depends on a lot of factors.

    26. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      VAT tax on imports -- its the best solution to multiple problems: offshore manufacturing, and corporations paying no income taxes.
      When we are the only industrialized country without a VAT tax on imports, we are at a massive disadvantage. Currently, our exports are taxed twice (income taxes paid by corprs in the US, and VAT taxes when imported into other countries), and our imports are not taxed at all.

    27. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Penguinisto · · Score: 1

      You missed a small step.

      It's their money that will go offshore, not them. They'll just continue living here, while shell corporations and other dodges sit comfy and nearly tax-free in the Cayman Islands, Switzerland, etc.

      Besides, if Warren Buffet wants to pay more taxes that badly, the IRS actually does accept donations. He's more than welcome to give as much as he wants.

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    28. Re:Tax planning and rich people by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      No shit sherlock. You are a smart one!

      Except of course that everyone over 4 years of age knows this already. That you think it is a revelation says lots about the quality of your junior high school and nothing about anything else.

    29. Re:Tax planning and rich people by skids · · Score: 4, Informative

      This smells like more class warfare shit.

      The only class waging war in this country on other classes is the rich.

    30. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Mitchell314 · · Score: 1

      That's false, even from a basic economics approach. Tax is a burden that's shared between suppliers and consumers and proportioned based on supply and demand elasticity.

      --
      I read TFA and all I got was this lousy cookie
    31. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Grizzley9 · · Score: 1

      This doesn't matter atall, the purpose of tax is to fund the government spending. If the corporations evade taxes as opposed to passing them to the users of the services, the government doesn't get the revenue it needs.

      This "need" is where the whole argument is.

    32. Re:Tax planning and rich people by adamchou · · Score: 1

      That's not how it works though. The multinationals just make shell corporations offshore but they still conduct business in the United States as normal.

    33. Re:Tax planning and rich people by plalonde2 · · Score: 2

      You say same percentage, I say same relative impact to standard of living. Fair means different things to different people.

    34. Re:Tax planning and rich people by JackieBrown · · Score: 1

      What public services are you talking about that the rich use more than the poor that and do not have to pay for already?

    35. Re:Tax planning and rich people by mcgrew · · Score: 5, Insightful

      First, there isn't enough money in million+ income hands to balance the budget.

      That's no reason why they shouldn't contribute to balancing it.

      This smells like more class warfare shit,

      Yeah, and the middle class is losing the war. We should start fighting back.

      and now they'll tax the remaining producers into moving their assets out of the country. Maybe it'll get him re-elected, right? We'll worry about the economy in the 2nd term.

      Nice disingenuous straw man there, Mr. Koch. This isn't about corporate taxes, this is about personal income tax. Why should Warren Buffett pay half the rate his secretary does? Buffet vs his secretary IS class warfare.

    36. Re:Tax planning and rich people by sycodon · · Score: 1

      This is pretty much like the Commerce Clause as most progressives would like to use it today. Everything is commerce, so the feds can regulate anything.

      In this case you are saying that you owe society no matter what you did to earn money because if not for society, you couldn't earn money. But, earning money is not a side affect of society, it is the primary purpose of society to provide order and mechanisms for economic growth. All other benefits of society flow from that. In other words, it's like saying a star football player should kick back some of his wages to the NFL because if not for the NFL, he wouldn't be able to earn money playing football.

      But in the end, we all know what happens when Democrats proposed tax increases and spending cuts together. The tax increases happen and the spending cuts don't

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    37. Re:Tax planning and rich people by ArcherB · · Score: 1, Insightful

      So all they did was give even larger incentive for rich people to start playing games with taxes. Remember that tax planning isn't illegal, nor is forming offshore companies. It's unlikely to change as well, because foreign companies are needed too. As long as you keep the money in the offshore company accounts and not your personal ones, you don't need to pay taxes from them. The people making over one million dollars a year have all the means to do this - normal working people don't.

      You know what, maybe start looking if the huge companies pay taxes? For example Google does a insane amount ($60 BILLION) of tax dodging.

      First, companies don't pay taxes. Their customers do. To put it simpler, when you tax a company, they raise prices to pay that tax. Customers pay those higher prices to cover that tax. Companies don't print money. They get paid by their customers.

      Next, the best way to eliminate "creative accounting" in regard to taxes is to make the system simple. A national sales tax, for example, would eliminate any benefit from basing your companies off shore. The only way around a sales tax is to buy stuff off the black market or move yourself off shore.

      I know that people don't like the idea of everyone having to pay taxes and they balk at the idea that rich people will get to spend all of the money they receive, but a sales tax is the only fair tax. Rich people spend more money, thus pay more in taxes. Poor people spend less money, thus less in taxes. Don't want to pay taxes, don't spend money. I understand that the wealthy can afford to save large sums of money to avoid taxation, but the money will get spent eventually, meaning it will get taxed eventually. All capital gains will be taxes. All bonuses will be taxed. All the money that those greedy fat cats will receive will get taxed. No amount of tax attorneys can get around a sales tax.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    38. Re:Tax planning and rich people by offsides · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Based on your argument, they should cut the taxes on the low and middle class to at most half of what they currently are, since that's about what the wealthy are currently paying. If Warren Buffet, one of the richest men in the world, says that it's not fair that he pays less in taxes than the middle-class people who work for him, why are you arguing? Or are you one of those few wealthy elites who is going to suffer from the tax changes that would otherwise benefit the vast majority of us slashdotters?

      I don't like paying taxes any more than you do, but it's something we all have to do to contribute to our communal well-being. If you really don't want to pay taxes, go buy yourself a private island and run the entire thing autonomously. I bet you'll pay a lot more in "upkeep" and "maintenance" than you're currently paying in "taxes", and get a hell of a lot less for it. I'm not saying that all of our tax money is being used in the best way possible all the time, but I like having roads to drive on, emergency services to call if there's a problem, and all the other benefits of living in this country that are paid for by taxes. And while there's a ton of services that I currently DON'T use, that doesn't mean I won't pay my share now so that (in theory) they'll be there for me when I do need them. But it's a crime, morally and ethically if not legally, that the wealthiest members of our society who have the GREATEST ABILITY to pay their taxes, also have the most loopholes to get around paying them. If they don't want to pay their share, how about we strip them of their citizenship and let them move to some other country whose tax laws are probably a lot worse for them than even the proposed changes here. And since IIRC there are laws about taking money out of the country, they'd end up paying a lot of that in taxes when they left anyway.

      To anyone who makes over $1M/year and claims that raising their taxes is unfair, SUCK IT UP. Those of us who make a LOT less than that are finding perfectly good ways to live our lives within our means, and if you can't afford to live within yours, CHANGE YOUR LIFESTYLE.

    39. Re:Tax planning and rich people by AmElder · · Score: 4, Informative

      While I didn't take economics in Junior High, my High School course taught me that the supply of most goods is not perfectly price elastic. It taught me that in theory taxes are only partially passed on to the consumer except in cases of perfect price elasticity. It taught me that in theory, except in cases of perfect price inelasticity of supply, higher taxes on businesses will result in higher prices and fewer goods being sold in that market. Apparently this concept is called tax incidence, though I don't remember that from High School. It also taught me that a tax on individuals is not the same as the tax on corporations. Therefore, based on what I learned many years ago in high school economics, in the case you're talking about, which has very little to do with the proposed tax on individuals, it's true that the consumer bears some of the burden of those taxes. However, it's also true that corporations do in fact pay taxes. That is, ceteris paribus, assuming things like that they don't totally avoid the taxes by using loopholes.

    40. Re:Tax planning and rich people by mypalmike · · Score: 1

      "All corporations do is pass their tax costs on to the price of their goods."

      Taxes are charged on earnings, not revenues. A corporation can reach the break-even point of revenues and expenses based on pricing without considering taxes at all. When a company considers pricing where taxes are concerned (i.e. when they are profitable), it becomes a matter of maximizing after-tax profits. In other words, the producer aims for the price point at which they will reap the most rewards. This is generally identical to the price point that they would reap the most rewards if there were no tax at all to consider.

      --
      There are 0x40000000 types of people: those who understand 32-bit IEEE 754 floating point, and those who don't.
    41. Re:Tax planning and rich people by SiChemist · · Score: 3, Informative

      Warren Buffet wants wealthy people (like himself) to pay at least the same percentage of their income as the middle class do in taxes. I find it difficult to argue with that logic.

    42. Re:Tax planning and rich people by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Making Buffett pay the same percentage as his secretary, rather than half as much would be him paying his fair share. As the tax code is written now, he pays half the rate. That is patently UNFAIR.

    43. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I think what the poster was trying to say was that taking every dollar from the evil rich wont close the budget gaps, or even approach paying off our national debt. If there's really an effort to fix the problem you have to reconcile the fact that our government spends far more than it can realisitically get from the populace.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    44. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Darth+Snowshoe · · Score: 0

      You may choose to vote, and to promote your views, however you like. Please try not to be offensive in doing so. It's telling that you posted this comment without any attribution. Would you write the same thing, in the same manner, if your family were reading it?

      Free bonus fact: Obama didn't start the TSA - George W. Bush did.

    45. Re:Tax planning and rich people by ArcherB · · Score: 0

      Rich people use more public services than poor people in support of their activities. So yes, a larger percentage.

      Not to mention if you fail to regulate capitalism by tweaking the "score," the inevitable result is slavery.

      Really? Please explain how "Rich people use more public services than poor people in support of their activities." I keep hearing this and yet to see any good explanation of this. Most "rich" people I know use private airports, private schools, even private roads in their own neighborhoods, yet they still pay more in taxes than I do. How are these people using more "public services" than us poor people who send our kids to public schools, get groped in public airports and drive on public roads or take public transportation?

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    46. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Yeah, there's no faster way to get rich than to sit back and just wait for it to roll in ....

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    47. Re:Tax planning and rich people by The+Moof · · Score: 1

      I'll settle for same percentage.

      Then you're actually in favor of a tax decrease for the wealthy. With our current tiered system, they pay a higher percentage than us.

      The problem isn't the percentage paid, it's that the tax code is full of loopholes that allows them to get out of paying their fair share (same goes for corp. taxes). Want to fix the tax code and generate more revenue? Close the existing holes that are being exploited.

    48. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Moryath · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Precisely.

      Republicans have always been the party of class warfare - the rich beating up on the poor. Every time the Republicans get into power they want "tax cuts" that they say will "spur economic growth." NEVER in history has this actually worked as they claim it did - voodoo economics was terrible.

      Paul Ryan and the Republican liars scream about Reagan "cutting taxes"... they always forget that Reagan RAISED taxes again in 1983 and 1986 when the Democrats in congress demanded it, because it was evident that keeping taxes low just increased the deficit and the debt.

    49. Re:Tax planning and rich people by afidel · · Score: 2

      Interesting analogy since the owners keep about 50% of the income in the NFL yet do none of the labor.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    50. Re:Tax planning and rich people by geekmux · · Score: 2

      So all they did was give even larger incentive for rich people to start playing games with taxes. Remember that tax planning isn't illegal, nor is forming offshore companies...

      Er, root-cause analysis? Perhaps these things SHOULD be illegal. Perhaps when we realize that "tax planning" is simply a nice way of re-defining "tax dodging"...

    51. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Jhon · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      And to some it means to pay SOMETHING.

      With nearly 50% of the US paying no federal income tax, they have no problem asking for "more". Want to be 'fair'? Get rid of the EIC -- or at least prevent it from giving back MORE money that was originally paid by the recipient.

      To be even MORE fair, get these folks in the system. Even at a nominal 1%. And link it to the upper end of the tax code -- at a 3:1 ratio. So every 3% more you want me to pay past 30%, the low end needs to pay 1% more. Want to raise my taxes 20% (to a total of 50%)? The low end gets raised to about 7%. I pay 50 -- they pay 7. How's that unfair to the 7?

      Our country was founded on the ideal of "No taxation without representation". It appears that somewhere along the line something flipped to where we have "Representation without taxation" for a hell of a chunk of our population.

    52. Re:Tax planning and rich people by sycodon · · Score: 0

      "Rich" people contribute more to the economy more than poor people.

      Rich people buy more expensive products, and thus pay more sales tax. More expensive products generally mean more people were paid to produce them (airplanes, for example), maintain them, and perhaps operate them.

      Rich people employ more people than do the poor. In just a personal capacity, maids, butlers, gardeners, mechanics, drivers, lawyers, accountants, etc. In most cases, these people also in turn, employee others as well.

      Rich people contribute more to charities and other philanthropic causes. Arts, education, programs for the poor. Bill Gates is insanely rich and gives away more money than all the poor people combined (I good bet anyway).

      Unlike Uncle Scrooge, rich people don't keep all their money in a room where they can roll around in it.

      And as for your slavery comment, well, Stalin is calling, he wants his propaganda back.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    53. Re:Tax planning and rich people by ArcherB · · Score: 0

      Corporations do not pay taxes at all.
      That's economics from junior high school.
      All corporations do is pass their tax costs on to the price of their goods.

      Well, that's a silly argument. You might just as well say individuals don't pay any taxes, it just goes on their wage bill.

      It's not an argument. He's pointing out that if you raise taxes on a business, the business passes that tax on to its consumers, meaning everyone pays that tax, regardless of the customer's income. It's basically a sales tax, but one that is levied on selected businesses only, and one that customers don't see. For example, if the government started taxing sodas, people would complain that the greedy PepsiCo is raising their prices, not that they are paying more in taxes.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    54. Re:Tax planning and rich people by hittman007 · · Score: 1

      You say same percentage, I say same relative impact to standard of living.
      Fair means different things to different people.

      Be careful with that argument as well, its as ambiguous as what I was responding to earlier with the line "Define Fair Share."

      I could easily take what you just said to mean that if I get a raise that taxes should go up to include all of my new income... After all, a raise has the effect of increasing my standard of living, which would be an impact...

      I'm about 90% sure that that is not what you meant, however it could easily be interpreted that way.

      --
      --- When you start with the conclusion that you want, then throw out any facts that don't agree, is it true?
    55. Re:Tax planning and rich people by RingDev · · Score: 5, Insightful

      But, earning money is not a side affect of society, it is the primary purpose of society to provide order and mechanisms for economic growth

      No, it isn't. The primary purpose of society is to continue the existance of the society. Economic growth is a result of our current growth rates and stability of social interactions. Consolidation of wealth however leads to threats to the continuation of society as we know it. The challenge though, is that many of those with wealth believe they would benefit more from a new society in which more wealth was consolidated. So they can use their wealth to influence people who aren't in their wealth class to believe that there isn't a threat to social stability.

      It is a masterful art, but it will not lead to a better America.

      That isn't to say that we need to get all commie and make everyone equal. A progressive tax program is hardly full on commie though.

      And to counter your political jab: We all know what happens when Republicans propose tax cuts and spending cuts. Taxes decrease on the rich and the poor die in wars. :P

      -Rick

      --
      "Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
    56. Re:Tax planning and rich people by sycodon · · Score: 1

      You mean, like the government?

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    57. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Moryath · · Score: 0

      Garbage.

      The "poor" pay a larger percentage of income in "fees" and base regressive taxes (like sales tax) than the rich do.
      The middle class pay a larger percentage of income in fees, base regressive taxes, and income tax than the rich do.

      The rich pay the least percentage of income in taxes, period.

      This unequal, fucked up system brought to you by Republicans, the Party of Class Warfare (remember the "war on poverty"? Rich vs Poor).

    58. Re:Tax planning and rich people by larry+bagina · · Score: 0

      Ooh, a car analogy! Even better - gasoline and diesel taxes pay for road construction and maintenance. Those 1000 trucks pay much more than 1000x the fuel taxes that you do. And if you're driving an electric vehicle (with a nice big government subsidy or two), you're a free-loader. Doesn't seem fair, does it?

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    59. Re:Tax planning and rich people by inode_buddha · · Score: 1

      "You say same percentage, I say same relative impact to standard of living. Fair means different things to different people."

      That's too bad, isn't it?

      --
      C|N>K
    60. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you consider only the wealthiest few percent, it works great. The rest of us just aren't people. It's all a matter of selecting the appropriate "out" group.

    61. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Well. He's clearly wrong.

      There are other countries with larger public sectors. They obviously have higher tax rates to fund it.

    62. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, having a stable, safe, society with roads, police, and other services is not free. People who don't think they should pay taxes can go live in a place where no services are provided. Have fun there.

    63. Re:Tax planning and rich people by sycodon · · Score: 1

      It is a crying shame that this post languishes at a score of 2. It should have been first post, modded +5 and the topic closed because there's not much to say beyond this,.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    64. Re:Tax planning and rich people by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but that's just stupid. You could as easily say that working people aren't taxed, they just pass the costs to their employers.

      You can't pass the cost to your customers if your competitor doesn't. I have no choice in my personal taxes, but I choose whether or not I pay Kraft's taxes.

      Ah, but if you don't buy your cheese from Kraft, who do you buy your cheese from? The federal government can't just single out Kraft to tax. If they tax Kraft, they have to tax Kraft's competitors as well. The only way that the government can tax Kraft and not their competitors is if Kraft's competitors are based overseas and not subject to US taxation. Think of it as a reverse tariff.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    65. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No, using public services to make money, then hiding your earnings so that you don't have to pay for those public services is CHEATING.

      Then why does the US tax every dollar you make overseas, even if you are overseas for the entire year? If I live in Thailand the entire year and earn my salary over there, I still have to pay US taxes on it - even though I didn't use any US public services. It's not about paying for what you use - it's about paying for what Government wants.

      Let's put it this way: I am one car on the road, and I have to pay taxes for road upkeep. Mr. Millionaire has a fleet of 1000 semi trucks to deliver his product, but he doesn't have to pay for road upkeep? Does that seem fair to you?

      Mr. Millionaire's company probably pays those taxes on those 1000 trucks. Unless you're suggesting he personally owns them? Do those trucks pay fuel taxes, excise taxes, and State registration taxes? How are they not paying for road upkeep - they pay fuel costs...

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    66. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Jhon · · Score: 2

      "So because people will play games with taxes we should just set all taxes to 0%, right?"

      That's not what happens. The higher your make the tax rate, the more people will find ways to not pay it and you will generally collect less. The lower the tax rate, the less incentive people have to find ways to not pay taxes. Somewhere along that curve is an "zone" that maximizes revenue...

    67. Re:Tax planning and rich people by sycodon · · Score: 1

      A million bucks is a million bucks. Unless you are the feds, then it's just another token in the pot.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    68. Re:Tax planning and rich people by nine-times · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Great, so we can't tax rich people because they will dodge taxes?

      You know, con men often get away scott free, so I guess we should just do away with laws against theft and fraud. No point trying to close loopholes in the laws or improving enforcement, since I'm sure they'll just find another way to get around those new laws too.

      I'd keep discussing this with you, but I'm off to shoot myself in the head. You see, I won't be able to make my life perfect, so what's the point?

    69. Re:Tax planning and rich people by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      No shit sherlock. You are a smart one!

      Except of course that everyone over 4 years of age knows this already. That you think it is a revelation says lots about the quality of your junior high school and nothing about anything else.

      Unfortunately, most people DON'T know this. If they did, they wouldn't be calling for taxes on (insert big company type here). People are constantly calling on government to raise taxes on big-whatever, but they don't seem to understand that they are the ones who will be paying those taxes.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    70. Re:Tax planning and rich people by smash · · Score: 1

      Actually, its a larger incentive to not even bother playing the game and relocate to china, russia, or anywhere else that provides less disincentives to operate.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    71. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 4, Informative

      Apparently Obama will propose that people earning more than $1 million a year pay at least the same tax rate as middle-class earners. That's aiming mighty low.
      America's median income is about $50,000. The typical taxpayer at that level pays approximately 20 percent in taxes.
      Granted, that's a higher rate than most of today's super rich pay because of countless deductions, credits, and loopholes -- including, especially, their ability to take their incomes in the form of capital gains, taxed at 15 percent. That's a big reason Buffett's hundreds of millions a year are taxed at just over 17 percent -- a lower rate than his secretary faces, as Buffett often says.
      But a 20 percent rate is still ridiculously low compared to what millionaires and billionaires ought to be paying. Officially, income over $379,150 is supposed to be taxed at 35 percent....

      Robert Reich

      So there you have it. Somehow Obama will end up proposing a tax change that will have the millionaires paying a proportionally equivalent share of income, and the Republicans will scream that this qualifies as "redistribution of wealth", and in the end, Buffet will end up with a massive windfall. Warren's a canny one, I'll grant you that.

    72. Re:Tax planning and rich people by ByOhTek · · Score: 1

      And for some people it means taxing more on money that isn't required for living, than on money needed to make a minimal or even modest existence.

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    73. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      Only true if you did not in any form, directly or indirectly, benefit from society. Say, by ever buying anything that used any sort of public infrastructure (and benefitting from the reduced price).

      I make 100% of my income overseas. I live overseas. I still have to pay US income tax on my income (as well as income tax overseas). I don't use any US public infrastructure, however...

      Taxation isn't about you paying your fair share, or infrastructure maintenance; the President last week talked about 153 bridges that are structurally deficient, yet he wants MORE money specially allocated to repair what should be done via gas taxes (which turn a profit for the US Government - they bring in more money via gas tax than is spent on road maintenance).

      Taxation is about power. It's about taking money from one group, and using it to buy the votes of another group to maintain your own position. There's a reason why the US Tax Code is ~6 times longer than the Bible. In the US taxes are not about fairness or a functioning society - it's all about power for the Congressional members and the President.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    74. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      Not paying tax that you don't have to pay is cheating now? Wow, it's clear which side of the line you stand on. By the way when you say "pay their fair share" what about people being responsible and not demanding more handouts than "their fair share".

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    75. Re:Tax planning and rich people by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

      Arguably, the legal system.
      Barring blatantly evil things, legality is largely a matter of how good of a lawyer you can afford.

    76. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      Presumably the tax is on income, not capital. Of course there's inheritance tax, that very special form of taxing capital.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    77. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      Unlike Uncle Scrooge, rich people don't keep all their money in a room where they can roll around in it.

      Actually the single best way to get rich is just to not spend any money. Quite a lot of rich people just don't spend.

    78. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      I have yet to see a rich person who used a lot of public transportation, food stamps, section 8 housing, welfare, and SSI disability payments...

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      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    79. Re:Tax planning and rich people by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

      Nobody really pays any taxes, they just give back some of the paper the government printed.

    80. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you insane?

      The bottom 2/3rds have NO representation. Sounds like you are a rich asshole with blinders on that has ZERO clue as to how america works outside of his prep school American history class that made him believe that Washington was fighting for all americans freedom and not about Money.

      Dumbass 3rd generation rich leech. go make your money instead of sucking grandpa's dead tit.

    81. Re:Tax planning and rich people by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      Sure, but that wasn't the argument being made.

      And I'm pretty sure you don't want to maximize revenue. You want to fund your expenses while reducing GDP by as little as possible. Or if you are politician then fundng your expenses while incentivising the things you like and punishing the things you don't like.

    82. Re:Tax planning and rich people by arth1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      While the rich "work", it's mainly having money work for them.

      Even if everybody had the means to and greed to get a face job, tan, tailored suit and the right club memberships, and enough money to invest after that, society would fall apart if everybody were investors and canape pushers, and no-one were workers. Reward skill, not greed.

    83. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just downsize the profits such that they only have 5 dream vacations, 2 Lamborghini's, and 6 vacation homes this year.

      What happens instead is what the parent said.....

      (fictional example)
      Cost of Tax on business: $500mil
      Cost of goods on the market: $50 per unit sold.
      Profit: $800 Mil.

      Cost of Tax on business: $750mil
      Cost of goods on the market: $62 per unit sold.
      Profit: $800 Mil.

      Cost of Tax on business: $900mil
      Cost of goods on the market: $85 per unit sold.
      Profit: $800 Mil.

      See any trends here? No matter what the business never lowers it's profit. It only raises the cost of it's goods.

    84. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      It rolls out just as easily. Why don't you take the risk?

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    85. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      As if an incentive is needed. If there's one or 10 percent tax to evade, you think that makes a difference?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    86. Re:Tax planning and rich people by jekewa · · Score: 1

      People aren't earning nor working for multi-million dollar annual incomes, they are enjoying the benefits of others work by collecting dividens and stock profits.

      While one might argue that those receiving dividends and stock profits aren't working for it, it is earning, but is often taxed as "gains" instead. It is still income, though.

      --
      End the FUD
    87. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Jhon · · Score: 1

      "Consolidation of wealth however leads to threats to the continuation of society as we know it"

      I question your premise. I would consider the loss of opportunity and liberty to be the greatest threats to the continuation of society AS WE KNOW IT.

      If Wealth is finite, you are absolutely right. If it's something that can grow and expand (and, yes, shrink), your premise is flawed.

    88. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      Mr. Millionaire has a fleet of 1000 semi trucks to deliver his product, but he doesn't have to pay for road upkeep?

      Er I am sure that his 1000 semi trucks each pay taxes for road upkeep. In fact I would say he is paying a shitload more tax every day than you are. You should be happy that he lets you use his road.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    89. Re:Tax planning and rich people by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      Of course they understand it. They also understand that while we don't have a free market as such it is free enough that competition will see other corporate expenses cut as well.

    90. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Alaska. Where bridges are infrastructure projects.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    91. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      You clearly didn't pay attention in junior high school, if you think that taxes on profits are a cost to a company. Profits are what you make after costs are netted out. Corporations are only taxed if they turn profits.

      Not always... Here in the State of Washington we have a corporate Business & Occupation tax which is a tax on gross sales receipts - not profits. You can lose every dime of revenue - and then some - and still have a hefty tax bill...

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    92. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 2

      Or better yet - how about we set the corporate income tax rate to zero? No reason for GE and others to offshore so much. And we'd be VERY attractive to foreign companies as well... There'd be quite a few jobs created from that little maneuver.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    93. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Opportunist · · Score: 2

      Odd. My government has an (in percent of the GDP) much bigger spending amount on social, teaching, public transport and so on, and yet we make ends meet (well, mostly, at least better than the US does).

      Maaaaybe one of the reasons is that we don't spend half our GDP on military.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    94. Re:Tax planning and rich people by ByOhTek · · Score: 1

      Not just a well function government, but a well functioning overall system.

      Ex:
      If a higher percentage of income is retained by a smaller and smaller percentage of people (as has happened in the last few decades), and those people are the people who do the investing, etc. to earn more income, eventually they have less and less incentive to invest, and this reduces jobs, and the economy tanks.

      The taxing and the projects at least help produce jobs, even if in the government and associated sectors, that would have instead been lining pockets. Yes they pass on the cost to the consumer, but eventually, if the price becomes too high, they have to chose between a smaller (but still positive) profit margin, or no sale. Typically the choice will be to at least have a profit margin.

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    95. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      Here's the business model that has crippled Japan, is hemorrhaging America, and is beginning to suck Ireland dry.
      1. Use American talent to invent new technologies, processes, and products.
      2. Contact China, or India to manufacture, or handle product there.
      3. Train Chinese, or Indians to do the job.
      4. Begin manufacturing the product in China, or India.
      5. Sell, THEN Ship the product to America,(HP business model is a good example).
      6. Create artificial corporate accounting that sucks the wealth out of the company that sold the product in America.
      7. Result; No Income, No Taxes, period.
      Oh, and the Bush tax cuts, for some insane reason, are allowed to live.

    96. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Lumpy · · Score: 0

      Showing up at the rich neighborhoods with torches and rifles looting the Mansion is Class warfare.
      Anything else is a bunch of whiny babies trying to make people feel bad for them.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    97. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      You pay those taxes for the privilege of being an American citizen and having to tell everyone you meet overseas that you are Canadian so that they don't hate you.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    98. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      'cause it just so happens that I play in the wrong golf club.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    99. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      No, the problem is people are tired of paying taxes for bullshit. Every hour on the hour there's some new scandal involving tax dollars spent on unimaginable nonsense, or simply unaccounted for. Can you ideological fuckheads not understand that? Are you that fucking detached from reality? Step out of your reality distortion echo chambers for one, single blessed minute and really look around. Yes, we all love roads and bridges and fire engines and all the good stuff. But is it too much to ask that the government get the fucking bullshit under control before coming back to rape our wallets for more? Is that really so godamned hard for you dogfucking ideologues to understand??? Wake. The. Fuck. Up. Already!

    100. Re:Tax planning and rich people by ByOhTek · · Score: 1

      That's where the difference comes in. They can only raise prices so much, before they stop being able to "make the sale". A this point, they have to start cutting into profits, as long as they can still keep a positive profit margin, I'm fine with this.

      (they being companies and corporations)

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    101. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      This smells like more class warfare shit.

      The only class waging war in this country on other classes is the rich.

      Do you realize the top 25% pay 60% of ALL Federal revenues with just their income taxes and Social Security taxes? Yep - those evil rich pay the supermajority of all Federal revenues. Clearly not paying their fair share and waging war on everyone else...

      How about we do a truly fair tax system? Our Government is spending $3.7 trillion this year; every single person in the US - man, woman, child - now has to pay $11,746 in annual taxes. Everyone pays the same amount... That's fair, no class warfare, no BS.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    102. Re:Tax planning and rich people by h4rr4r · · Score: 3, Informative

      They do far more than that level of damage to the road. Road wear us a function of axle loading and goes up by the forth power. This means those trucks are being subsidized by small cars.

    103. Re:Tax planning and rich people by jgtg32a · · Score: 2

      Google is NOT dodging taxes they are avoiding them. Dodging is where you don't pay taxes (illegal), avoiding is where you play the tax game(legal).

    104. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Oddly, the "out" group chosen is never the smallest one. Usually it's the unemployed, the homeless, the old, the young, the students... why never the Forbes 500? I mean, it doesn't get smaller than that, does it?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    105. Re:Tax planning and rich people by khr · · Score: 1

      I make 100% of my income overseas. I live overseas. I still have to pay US income tax on my income (as well as income tax overseas).

      I lived and worked and was employed overseas for quite some time. You know you can deduct the foreign taxes you pay from your U.S. taxes? And you can deduct a significant amount of your foreign income from your U.S. taxable amount...

    106. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LifesABeach · · Score: 2, Interesting

      GE Paid? The U.S. GAVE GE 2.5 Billion Dollars. WTF!

    107. Re:Tax planning and rich people by zotz · · Score: 2

      Isn't his "official" rate already higher? And yet he is described as actually paying less. If you raise his "official" rate but he ends up paying the same amount as now and so still pays less, how does that help?

      I still think neither side of this debate puts all of the cards on the table when explaining their position.

      all the best,

      drew

      --
      FreeMusicPush If you want to see more Free Music made, listen to Free
    108. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      So clue us in, how does economy work? Please do, I need a good laugh.

      It's so damn easy to say "You're wrong!" without giving a hint of a statement just why and how it would be done better.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    109. Re:Tax planning and rich people by fishthegeek · · Score: 1

      What country are you from? I'm curious.

      --
      load "$",8,1
    110. Re:Tax planning and rich people by HBI · · Score: 0

      When I see something like this, I immediately consider the breadth of my life experiences, and I cannot help but come to the conclusion that a hard lesson was missed by many.

      No one is going to look out for you, period. Even your parents - as those of us old enough to see our parents retire and start to degenerate into childhood will witness, if not others. Everyone is self-interested. This means that anything collective is ultimately going to be manipulated to someone's benefit. The government is no exception.

      Most people sit on their asses and expect "the system" to assure them of a good living within certain standards. Then they get pissed when they are manipulated and used by others who are actually playing the game, ie, the rich. So they take the lazy way out and vote a proxy, the government, to do the job for them. Then, when the government lines the pockets of those who participate in it, and nothing trickles down to you, maybe it'll be the fault of the individual politicians. You can keep telling yourself that. The reality is that it's always your fault that you're not doing better. You aren't playing the game.

      Meanwhile, the government has been waging war against the rich, but you don't see any results. Because it's in their pockets, not yours.

      --
      HBI's Law: Frequency of calling others Nazis is directly correlated with the likelihood of the accuser being Communist.
    111. Re:Tax planning and rich people by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Their fuel costs are not in line with the road damage they do. That again is a place where Mr.Millionaire comes out ahead by stealing from me. My small car does far less road damage but my per mile fuel costs are not lower by that much. Road wear is a function of axle loading and goes up by the 4th power.

    112. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Opportunist · · Score: 0

      Companies aren't fuel tax exempt in your country? Wow, talk about backwards.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    113. Re:Tax planning and rich people by DesScorp · · Score: 1

      Keeping the money that you earned and worked for is cheat

      BWAHAHAHAHAHAH. LOL.

      The vast majority of this income in this range is "Unearned Income." People aren't earning nor working for multi-million dollar annual incomes, they are enjoying the benefits of others work by collecting dividens and stock profits.

      -Rick

      That money is their property. Not yours. Not the government's. What this comes down to, at its base level, is that you're calling for a big chunk of that property to be seized from them because of your own envy. "They've got it and I don't, and that's not fair". What you're doing is nothing more than coveting your neighbors' goods.

      --
      Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    114. Re:Tax planning and rich people by cforciea · · Score: 1

      So you are saying that any solution that does not close the deficit by itself should be dismissed? I'd certainly like to hear what your plan is!

    115. Re:Tax planning and rich people by RogerWilco · · Score: 2

      I would even argue that the wealthy can afford to pay a higher percentage than the middle class. The middle class and lower need most of their money to pay for their food, housing, transportation, energy, healthcare, tuition, etc. If you're talking about the real middle class, they often do have the income to save some, go on a holiday or buy an iPad. But it's nothing compared to those that can afford multiple homes, yachts, business jets, etc.

      --
      RogerWilco the Adventurous Janitor
    116. Re:Tax planning and rich people by HBI · · Score: 0

      It attacks the worldview of the left. It would invalidate their beliefs. They still believe that socialism can be made to promote the commonweal, despite all the evidence that it cannot. This proposal is a milder, kinder version of Stalin's assault on the kulaks in the 30s. We all know how this story ends.

      --
      HBI's Law: Frequency of calling others Nazis is directly correlated with the likelihood of the accuser being Communist.
    117. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Would you prefer to pay the local income tax? If so, I know at least that you're not working in Europe...

      But you can't go to your embassy in case you have problems? You can't rely on the US to offer you aid in case you get into trouble abroad? If not, then yes, you should feel cheated.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    118. Re:Tax planning and rich people by BergZ · · Score: 1

      I know him, and he lives in the great state of denial.

      --
      Warning: This sig is not thread safe. For more information see Slashdot's sig policy.
    119. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Mordok-DestroyerOfWo · · Score: 2

      And yet those 50% that pay nothing in taxes control 2% of the wealth. Fair huh?

      --
      "Never let your sense of morals prevent you from doing what is right" - Salvor Hardin
    120. Re:Tax planning and rich people by GodKingAmit · · Score: 1
      Look, I've heard this a lot but it is just totally wrong. Prices are set by supply and demand.

      Look at Exxon Mobil, last year it sold petroleum products for a profit of XX billion dollars. If we lowered corporate taxes, why would Exxon sell petroleum products for any less than it already did? Because the shareholders decided to be kind?

    121. Re:Tax planning and rich people by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      That is his point. A company cannot just raise prices in response to an increased tax load. Price is set by what the market will bear, if they could raise prices they would be doing it already.

    122. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Homr+Zodyssey · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately we have neither at the moment.

      Warren Buffett says so.

    123. Re:Tax planning and rich people by scubamage · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Thats the heart of the matter, and its what Warren Buffet was talking about in his open letter. The super rich earn their entire living (in most cases) off of capital gains and dividends which are taxed at a flat 15%. If they have no "work" income, that's all they pay. As far as I know they don't pay into social security since that comes from payroll taxes. Or SSI. Or any of those other things you see coming out of your paycheck each week (I could be wrong, if I am please let me know). Compare that to someone like me who has 25% of their work wages taken in taxes, and then has 15% of my capital gains taken on investments. I lose significantly more of my income than a rich person who lives on investments will, and it has a far more drastic effect on my spending ability. What Buffet suggested makes sense - either change the way Capital Gains taxes are done, or throw everything into "total income" instead of considering them separate things for tax purposes. Its not class warfare, its equalizing things. I have a hell of a lot of respect for Buffet, the guy was a smart kid who built himself up from scratch, and he has probably one of the most sober views on finance out there.

    124. Re:Tax planning and rich people by HBI · · Score: 1

      Most small businesses work by transferring the business income to the bottom line of the individual taxpayer, regardless of whether they incorporate or not.

      Attack the small business owner on the personal tax bottom line and you kill jobs. They'll hobble the business before they cut their standard of living. They aren't running charities here.

      It is you that does not understand business.

      --
      HBI's Law: Frequency of calling others Nazis is directly correlated with the likelihood of the accuser being Communist.
    125. Re:Tax planning and rich people by h4rr4r · · Score: 2

      Or Coca-Cola would just take the hit to profit per unit instead of raising prices but by doing that sell far more soda than PepsiCo. If a business could raise prices it would. Price is based on what the market will pay, not what costs are.

      Welcome to econ 101.

    126. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Higher or lower doesn't matter as long as they are kept from evading them altogether. Seriously, I doubt that there's anyone evading tax as much as the rich, and they do have the means to do so.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    127. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly! Once we get rid of gov't and it's soocialist commie taxes, the corporations will step in and make sure eveyrthing runs right.

    128. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Consolidation of wealth however leads to threats to the continuation of society as we know it. The challenge though, is that many of those with wealth believe they would benefit more from a new society in which more wealth was consolidated.

      Which is why the wealthy generally favor the progressive politics of the Democratic Party. They know that the policies of the Democratic Party help them consolidate ever more of the wealth of the country in thier own hands.

      We all know what happens when Republicans propose tax cuts and spending cuts. Taxes decrease on the rich...

      Then please explain why the share of federal tax revenue paid by the richest fraction of the U.S. population increases every time Republicans pass tax cuts.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    129. Re:Tax planning and rich people by SunTzuWarmaster · · Score: 1

      With all due respect, sir, this article is specifically about the opposite.

    130. Re:Tax planning and rich people by scubamage · · Score: 1

      Actually, Mr. Millionaire probably has the corporation chartered in Scotland, where there is no taxes on business. Therefore all earnings made by the trucks are taxed at scotland's rate of 0%. So no he probably doesn't pay taxes on those trucks.

    131. Re:Tax planning and rich people by SiChemist · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I think that most of Buffet's income is in capital gains which are taxed (inexplicably) at a much lower rate than income. This is such an absurd concept. If a baker sells a loaf of bread, he's taxed on his profits at the income tax rate, but if a trader sells some financial instrument, he's taxed on the proceeds at a much lower rate. The baker (arguably) has contributed more to the economy but is discriminated against, tax wise.

    132. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Mordok-DestroyerOfWo · · Score: 1

      Some would call it slavery, others would call it an economic based caste system. As education and social mobility become more expensive you start to see poverty become a generational tradition. But hey, you have your pool and your wave runners, it's okay to fuck the poor for that. Logic like yours is what is so disturbing about unchecked Capitalism. Always remember, money begets money.

      --
      "Never let your sense of morals prevent you from doing what is right" - Salvor Hardin
    133. Re:Tax planning and rich people by scubamage · · Score: 1

      The tax is supposed to be based off of Buffet's recommendations, which would include both capital gains AND income. The issue was that capital gains were taxed at a flat 15% versus the graded system for income. Most of the mega-rich don't earn any income, they do however earn millions in capital gains and dividends yearly. Hopefully it makes it through the way buffet suggested without getting too bastardized.

    134. Re:Tax planning and rich people by TheLink · · Score: 1

      But chasing the evil parasitic rich to other countries with higher taxes might actually help your country ;).

      Think about it - evil rich guy says, "if you raise taxes I'm going to take my ball and go screw up a different country".

      Note: I'm not saying all or even most rich people are evil OK?

      --
    135. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1, Interesting

      And for some people, it means complaining that their taxes are too low while somehow forgetting they have the option of paying more if they want to.

      Actually, if you carefully parse what people like Warren Buffet say, you will realize that he is complaining that other people who earn as much as he does are not paying enough in taxes. The reason that he would like to see the tax on other people who make a lot of money increased is because he makes money off of helping people avoid taxes, if the tax rate on the rich goes up, the demand for that service will go up.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    136. Re:Tax planning and rich people by DesScorp · · Score: 1

      This smells like more class warfare shit.

      The only class waging war in this country on other classes is the rich.

      Back that argument up. Well, it's not an arguement, it's a stupid statement, but back it up anyway. How is keeping your own money and property "class warfare" against others? The only real class warfare in this country is from envious people... like you... screaming for the property of others.

      You have no right... none... to other people's money. And that's precisely what you're demanding.

      The only difference between you and the thugs in London robbing people in the street and looting shops is that you don't have the balls to do it yourself. You hide behind politicians and blather BS platitudes like "fairness".

      --
      Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    137. Re:Tax planning and rich people by joebok · · Score: 1

      They are not trying to balance the budget solely on taxing million+ incomes. Pull your head out of the sand.

    138. Re:Tax planning and rich people by bberens · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Here's the funny thing about all this. Raising taxes on the wealthy has zero impact on their lifestyle. Let me say that again, z.e.r.o. impact on their lifestyle. Why? Because of the beauty of capitalism. The prices of high end goods and services is based on the availability of money, not the nominal cost of production. Things that poor people buy are generally priced based primarily on production costs (food, non-designer clothing, etc.). Taxing billionaires (assuming they're taxed evenly) doesn't mean that they get fewer or lower quality houses, yachts, cars, etc. It means that the prices of the goods and services they purchase goes down.

      --
      Check out my lame java blog at www.javachopshop.com
    139. Re:Tax planning and rich people by MightyMartian · · Score: 0

      It's not tyranny,because you have a voice in who it is that gets to tax you. The Founding Fathers weren't against taxation, they were against taxation without representation. Well you have representation, now pay your fucking taxes. If you don't like it, work to get someone elected who will lower them. And quit calling it theft. No civilization in history has functioned without taxes. It's your fucking dues, pal, what you owe this big thing called society. Don't like it, move somewhere where there isn't taxes. Of course, you'll have to pay a private army to keep what's your's yours, so you may find at the end of the day simply paying your taxes much better.

      And get rid of those Libertarian notions. It only makes you look like a sociopath.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    140. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Only true if you did not in any form, directly or indirectly, benefit from society. Say, by ever buying anything

      You paid taxes on the purchases...

      ... tied in with that work and its value are layers upon layers of additional worth...

      Each layer of which is taxed....

      Society is not robbing you - even if you paid 90%, you would still be getting a bargain, compared to how you much you and your time is worth sans society.

      I'm a business owner in the equine industry. I work on my business 7 days a week, sometimes topping 15 hours a day. My business employs multiple people, and what I purchase in support of my business supports untold more workers in other businesses.

      So you want me to work as much as 100hours a week, and give 90% of what I make to government so that they can support others and then tell me what a bargain I'M getting? Are you out of your mind?

      I get taxed when I buy materials to build a shop.
      I get taxed on the goods I purchase to sell in the shop.
      I get taxed when I open the shop.
      I get taxed on the pay I give to my employees.
      I get taxed on the goods I sell to others.
      I get taxed on the heat in the shop.
      I get taxed on the water I use in the shop.
      I get taxed on the power consumed by the shop.
      I get taxed on the property the shop sits on.
      I get taxed by the school district in the county the shop is in.
      I get taxed on the hay I grow.
      I get taxed on the suppliments that I feed the horses.
      I get taxed on the fee for delivery of the hay I bought.
      I get taxed on the hay I buy to make up the difference in what I cant grow on my own.
      I get taxed on the building I constructed to store the hay in.
      I get taxed on the materials to build the hay barn.
      I get taxed on the vet bills for the horses.
      I get taxed on the services of the farrier.
      I get taxed when I charge someone to board their horse.
      I get taxed when I charge someone to train their horse.
      I get taxed when I charge someone to transport their horse.
      I get taxed on the work vehicles I purchase.
      I get taxed on the fuel for my business vehicles (tractors, trucks, trailors).
      I get taxed on the old vehicles I sell to replace.
      ...
      And THEN I get taxed on what I take for myself out of MY business.
      And I get taxed to buy my house.
      And I get taxed to STAY in my house.
      And taxed to buy food.
      And taxed to buy fuel.
      And taxed to buy clothes.
      And taxed to send my kids to school.
      And taxed to go to a movie, or to dinner, or to a ball game, or to a play, or ... or... or... or...


      The more money I make, the more I put back into SOCIETY. Not only am I consuming more luxuries, which employ people, I am also taxed on ALL OF IT.

      I can tell you right now that if I'm told I will be paying 90% of what I make will be taken in the form of taxes, there's no fucking point in me spending 100+ hours a week earning that money. I will lay off my employess, cut all my business contracts, close my doors, and I will go to work for someone else stupid enough to bust their asses every damn day and get almost nothing for it. I'll let someone else invest their life into their business to get very little back. All the taxes that I pay will dry up and be reduced down to the lowest common denominator you seem hell bent on getting everyone in line for. Either you're malicious or completely dillusional. Dear God I hope it's the latter...

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    141. Re:Tax planning and rich people by AmElder · · Score: 1

      This is fun, it brings back the stale smell of undergraduate economics courses. IANAE, but if I recall correctly, one problem with a sales tax is that it's regressive. Its burden falls disproportionately on the less well off. Assuming an equal tax rate on all goods and of all consumers, it's a flat tax: everyone pays the same percentage. However, the same percentage of expenditure means more to someone with less. It's "fair" in that it treats everyone equally, but it's not fair in that it doesn't effect everyone equally. Of course fairness comes up when you're discussing tax policy, but I think you have to remember that life isn't fair and you're not going to solve that through the US tax code.

      As you say, at first blush, a sales-tax-only code looks like it would also create an incentive to take money out of the country. People from elsewhere would want to be paid in dollars in the US and spend them abroad. Tax law isn't easy and anyone who says it is... well they're wrong!

    142. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I assume you are talking about the 40-50% of the people in the US that pay 0 federal income tax. Yes, they should pay as well. I know the common replies, but they pay unequal amounts of other taxes and blah blah blah. Our policies are getting us more and more into a welfare state. Politicians have complete control over those 40-50% that do not pay federal taxes. The system we have now that allows and I believe encourages people to live from birth to death on nothing more than different forms of federal subsidies is the problem. Not the extreme wealthy.

      Argue and counter all you want, the bottom line is look at the debt, people saving depleting, and the amount of people living on the different government welfare programs. It is increasing every single year and approaching the levels of many countries in Europe, it is for most people an acceptable and normal way of life and they will vote it keep it that way.

    143. Re:Tax planning and rich people by bberens · · Score: 1

      I will believe that corporations don't pay taxes when Republicans stop whining about tax levels on corporations. Because that talking point essentially means we can make corporate taxes whatever we want and it won't negatively impact corporations at all.

      --
      Check out my lame java blog at www.javachopshop.com
    144. Re:Tax planning and rich people by DesScorp · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      "Yeah, and the middle class is losing the war. We should start fighting back."

      Fight back against what? People keeping their own money, instead of seeing a government bureaucrat take it from them and hand it to you, just because they made more than you?

      --
      Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    145. Re:Tax planning and rich people by SaroDarksbane · · Score: 0

      it's mainly having money work for them.

      I'm sure all those investors in Solyndra are kicking back and enjoying all the rewards that having their "money working for them" entails.

      To the extent that rich people make good choices as to what companies to invest in, their money benefits them AND the economy as a whole. To the extent that they make poor choices, that money is dispersed in a bankruptcy, and they no longer have it.

      Taking the money the rich by force and investing it according to government whim only makes utilitarian sense if you are willing to make the claim that the government can invest it wiser. Since you seem to believe that rich people can kick back and reap returns on their money without any work or thought, you apparently already think they invest their money wisely.

      To put it another way, the more you claim that a particular rich person can sit back and let their money work for them, the more you invalidate your own argument that the government should take over the management of it.

    146. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Warren Buffet wants the tax rate on the wealthy to go up because he makes money by selling people methods of sheilding their money from taxes. What Warren Buffet doesn't tell you when he talks about the percentage of his income that is taxed is that that money was already taxed once when the corporation that he owns earned it in the first place, then it is taxed again when it is paid out to him (which is the tax rate he tells you about).

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    147. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Erh... no. Not even on a per-person level, and certainly not as a group (where a DAMN lot more "poor" people contribute a fair lot more than the few "rich").

      Rich people buy more expensive products. Right. French wine, italian designer jeans, a yacht at the shores of Abu Dhabi... notice something? None of those things are domestic made or sold.

      Rich people employ more people than poor. How many of them are actually not foreigners? When was the last time you saw a non-foreign gardener?

      Rich people contribute more to charity. Wrong. Just plain wrong. Yes, on a per-person base, but in general, you will see a lot more money coming from people who can't even really afford it than from rich. I've done my share of charity work, and it's actually shameful how much (and what!!!) rich people donate. Most of the time it's for the tax writeoff, I've seen stuff being dumped on us that makes you ponder whether they just wanted to evade the disposal fee AND get a tax writeoff at the same time. Very, very few rich people are actually really philanthropists who give out of the goodness of their heart.

      Sorry, but... no.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    148. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're a lemming.

    149. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because this is NOT about personal income tax. What Buffet fails to mention is that most of his "income" is due to dividends and interest on investments. This is called Capital Gains. You should be asking the question "Why are they not saying that, then?" Because they don't think it matters. But it DOES matter. Income tax capital gains tax. If capital gains taxes go up, then fewer people will invest. Without investors, businesses will either stagnate or never get off the ground. At least not American businesses.

    150. Re:Tax planning and rich people by OutSourcingIsTreason · · Score: 1

      I earn my money and the rich don't. I pay a higher tax rate on my money then than the rich. And that's what's not fair. Get it?

      --
      "Fascism should more properly be called corporatism because it is the merger of state and corporate power." -- Mussolini
    151. Re:Tax planning and rich people by metalgamer84 · · Score: 1

      Mod points to you sir, I agree heartily.

    152. Re:Tax planning and rich people by MightyMartian · · Score: 0, Troll

      The money is their property AFTER taxes. Get over it. You owe society more than society owes you.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    153. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nice disingenuous straw man there, Mr. Koch. This isn't about corporate taxes, this is about personal income tax. Why should Warren Buffett pay half the rate his secretary does? Buffet vs his secretary IS class warfare.

      Perhaps because his secretary is paying an earned income tax...while Buffett is paying capital gains tax on his investments. They are two entirely different types of taxes. So why not compare apples to apples next time and not apples to oranges.

    154. Re:Tax planning and rich people by cHiphead · · Score: 1

      Lol, that argument is moot, rich people will play games regardless, this is not any sort of incentive for them to 'start'. If you earn income anywhere in the world as a US citizen you are liable for income taxes. You are being unethical by pretending income is not earned by using shell corporations and holding corporations to limit your personal income on paper. The money is all tied up in the effort to avoid paying any income taxes on it, and that is where the problem lies in our tax system with all of the sheltering loopholes available.

      Not that I like paying taxes any more than the next guy, but hiding millions upon millions of dollars of income from the tax man just to keep yourself from having to write a bigger number on a check to send to him (and not, as a result of the reduction in your overall worth, needing to work overtime for a year to afford it, at some point its just goddamn numbers and no real work that involves blood and sweat and energy).

      --

      This is my sig. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
    155. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      You think facts matter to people like him?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    156. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      " this is about personal income tax"
      No, this is actually about CAPITAL GAINS tax not income tax. Buffet does not pay income tax, he pays capital gains tax. If his secretary gets dividend from Berkshire Hath then that income is taxed at the same rate as Buffet's. She would be in a lower INCOME tax rate than Buffett if Buffett received a salary from Berk Hath rather than dividend payments.

    157. Re:Tax planning and rich people by darth+dickinson · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Odd. My government has an (in percent of the GDP) much bigger spending amount on social, teaching, public transport and so on, and yet we make ends meet (well, mostly, at least better than the US does).

      Maaaaybe one of the reasons is that we don't spend half our GDP on military.

      Well, you don't have to, when the US and their allies have your back.

    158. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Buffet already pays 31% on his earnings before he ever fills out a tax return. That 31% is what Berkshire pays in corporate income tax and it is QUITE significant, though certainly not every company pays that type of rate.

      Closely held companies will simply switch to a partnership structure so that the investors pay tax directly and once at a high rate, rather than twice at two lower rates.

      Alternatively you could credit investors for the tax paid at the corporate level but treat dividends and capitals gains at the full income tax levels.

      This is AMT 2.0 and everyone hates AMT already. It has ZERO chance of passing.

    159. Re:Tax planning and rich people by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      No fucking kidding. Either the parent is a liar, or he needs a new accountant. You don't get double-banged. I've known plenty of Americans working in places like Canada or Britain, and they even have tax treaties to make it all relatively simple.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    160. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Rei · · Score: 1

      The greatest period of economic boomtime in our nation's history -- from the end of WWII to the 1970s -- had a top income tax rate generally in the 75-90% range. Now, one can certainly argue that that wasn't *because* of such a tax structure; there were all sorts of other factors at play. But at the same time, it's pretty hard to argue that it *hindered* our nation's economic growth.

      That said, I completely disagree with Obama's approach on this. The focus is entirely misdirected. This is going to hit most of the top several percentiles hard, but the top 1% -- the super-wealthy, who control nearly 40% of the nation's wealth -- only weakly. The wealthiest Americans earn most of their money through capital gains. But naturally, nobody is going to touch the capital gains rate. :P

      Furthermore, I'm tired of the standard approach to problems being, "eliminate deductions". A graduated income tax is a way to approximate a tax on luxury spending, without all of the complications such a luxury-spending tax would entail. That is, the poor *can't* spend most of their money on luxuries; they need it for necessities. The wealthy *can't*, except in one type of circumstance, spend their money on necessities; there's just not that much "necessities" a person needs to live, so the rest is going to go toward luxury. The "one type of circumstance" is charitable giving -- helping others with necessities. Hence, those sort of things should be deductible. A high minimum tax which ignores charity not only discourages charity, but it's also unfair, in that you're making it no longer a tax on luxury spending, but simply a tax on success.

      --
      Man on crucifix terrorizes church, demands they eat his flesh and blood. Details at 11.
    161. Re:Tax planning and rich people by gumbi+west · · Score: 1

      All of that is true, but it does not apply to monopolies and need not apply to the labor market where really high wage workers could be considered to have a monopoly--you will notice that firms rarely fire their CEO and hire a new one because of a wage dispute, it is always about poor performance.

    162. Re:Tax planning and rich people by TheLink · · Score: 2

      Then you're actually in favor of a tax decrease for the wealthy. With our current tiered system, they pay a higher percentage than us.

      No they don't, according to Warren Buffet: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/15/opinion/stop-coddling-the-super-rich.html

      Sure he could be wrong and you could be right, but I'd prefer to believe Warren Buffet about this sort of stuff.

      Of course, if you're not employed or earning very little, you'd be paying less tax than Warren Buffet. But I'm assuming the "us" means the average slashdotter.

      --
    163. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Talderas · · Score: 1

      Sure, but that wasn't the argument being made.

      And I'm pretty sure you don't want to maximize revenue. You want to fund your expenses while reducing GDP by as little as possible. Or if you are politician then fundng your expenses while incentivising the things you like and punishing the things you don't like.

      That point along the curve is going to be some point before reaching maximum revenue as you will see a drop off in revenues past that and an ever increasing hit to GDP.

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    164. Re:Tax planning and rich people by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      So, vote for someone different.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    165. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why should Warren Buffett pay half the rate his secretary does? Buffet vs his secretary IS class warfare.

      How much did each pay in actual dollars, not percentage? I don't have the answer but I'd guess that Buffet paid more money than the secretary.

      Mij

    166. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Until the customer doesn't buy them anymore, since he can't 'cause HE has to carry the burden of the taxes corporations don't pay.

      The game works for both sides, corporations and the government. Taxing corporations leads to increased product prices because they will pass it on. Ok. Governments, though, if not able to tax corporations will tax its citizens instead. So whether I pay 85 for the product and 25 bucks less tax (because that's now paid for by the corporation) doesn't make a difference for me.

      Taxes will end up at the consumer. Nowhere else. No matter whether you tax him directly or indirectly, he will in the end foot the bill.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    167. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really, so the poor and middle class people have to pay for all the debt? Should they pay the majority of the debt. It seems that that is exactly what congress have been voting for. Everytime the do budget cuts to essential welfare programs, they are taking more cash from the poor an needy. How many cuts should the poor before we leave them to die of starvation while the wealthy sit in their luxurious mansions enjoying a huge feast that can feed hundreds of people? Seems like most the wealthy people are only interested in a free ride.

    168. Re:Tax planning and rich people by joebok · · Score: 1

      The long-term capital gains rate is (currently) 15% (for people in the 25%+ regular income bracket). A lot of income from capital gains will bring the overall tax percentage down. The rich have more opportunity to invest, so they benefit substantially more than people than people that only get paychecks.

    169. Re:Tax planning and rich people by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      The same percentage does not mean the same thing. To a guy earning a million bucks a year, 50% (just pulling a number out of my hat) represents a helluva smaller hit than for a guy earning twenty grand a year.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    170. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Think they got that thought through to the end? I mean, before they now start to push people lower and lower and increase the amount of the poor?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    171. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Gutboy · · Score: 1

      But he gets to subtract that cost from his income so he pays less taxes on that. Do I get to subtract the cost of fuel off my income? He gets to count his food as a business expense, do I get to do so? Why do businesses get to subtract any expense off their income, but I don't get to do the same?

    172. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Talderas · · Score: 1

      Price tweaking is set by supply and demand. There is a floor to how low a product will be set and taxes are part of that floor. If you raise taxes on the company then they will go and do a study on how much they can increase the price by without significantly impacting revenues in order to offset the cost of the taxes.

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    173. Re:Tax planning and rich people by StillNeedMoreCoffee · · Score: 1

      Your kidding of course. You would not go into a restraunt and expect to get waited on (by an underpaid worker) and get food prepared (by an underpaid cook) and get your dirty dishes cleaned up after (by an underpaid bus boy/girl), no of course, you would want to pay the bill for the service provided so the wealth restaurateur can afford his country club dues.

      Why? because if you don't that wealth restauranteur will have the police go after you and put you in jail for theft.

      Well you travel the roads, drink the water, breath the air that now does not have a heavy burden of sulfur dioxide and Nitrox oxide. Your food does not contain DDT and your resonably safe from illegal robbery and if you are can call on law enforcement and the judical system to help fix the problem. You don't have to worry much about forgeigners rolling tanks down your street and when you retire you probably won't starve.

        But hey, you would rather be a one person country, not walk on the roads, get your own water from a well from land you own, and get off the grid. But then the industrial park next to your house is going to foul your ground water because another exectutive wants to make that last payment on his Bentley, then you will have to start using your hard earned money to pay the hospital bills, unless the other executive that needs to make payments on his yacht rejects you for insurance, and you will start to have to pay for bottled water.

      Where do you people get this idea that all the money you earn is yours free and clear? You are being irresponsible and un-patriotic.

    174. Re:Tax planning and rich people by gumbi+west · · Score: 1

      There is no reason to think taxes change anything about job creation.

      One story: higher taxes -> less incentive to work, so hire someone else to do it! -> more jobs because the small business owner doesn't want to work

      another story: higher taxes -> more pissed off small business owner, but he still works -> no change

      Why would this happen? We don't really understand it, but most men and women work 40 hours a week for most of their life and taxes don't change this.

    175. Re:Tax planning and rich people by modecx · · Score: 3, Interesting

      So instead of giving them "reason" to seek tax loopholes, you suggest giving up that tax revenue without a fight?

      If the rich seek to exploit tax loopholes, that creates demand for lawyers who exist solely to understand, lobby for and even to create the tax loopholes in the first place. Demand for tax lawyers will make people become tax lawyers; laws of supply and demand you see.

      Do you really mean to create even more lawyers?! Talk about unforeseen consequences.

      --
      Constitutional rights may be respected, repealed, or modified; but they must never be ignored.
    176. Re:Tax planning and rich people by ultranova · · Score: 1

      What you're doing is nothing more than coveting your neighbors' goods.

      No, what he's doing is telling you to render unto Caesar the things which are Caesar's.

      --

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

    177. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You really want to play politics, fine.

      Precisely.

      Republicans have always been the party of class warfare -

      I'd say Obama is way ahead of everyone on that front. His policies make for good sound bites and getting the uninformed to cheer for him. Obama is making a larger poor class and a smaller middle and upper class. The thinking is the more people in the poor class, the more votes he and his party will get. Those people depend on the government to live. With more and more people depending on the government, who is going to pay for the costs? Instead of doing things that are good for the people of this country, his is activity doing things good for himself and his party.

      example: His health care reform. Forcing everyone to have insurance helps the insurance companies. Many small business are going to opt to pay the fine rather then cover health care. The fine is cheaper. The people will go to the government for their health care. Who pays for the health care then? The government does say the uninformed. Who pays for the government? All the citizens do. In other words in choosing the public option, you are choosing to pay for your own health care. Many will say the public option should be there. Well by forcing things, the government enacted a public option without calling it that. Also what about all the non citizen who get free health care now? Last I checked I have not seen a hospital turn people away. When they do not pay, those costs are turned over to those who can afford to pay. Why do you think the cost of health care keeps going up so much? There are many people who go to the hospital and do not pay. Stop treating people who are not citizens of this country who do not pay. Health care costs may actually drop then.

      The stimulus bills. The billions spent, sorry borrowed, created what again? A whole lot of not much. And he wants to do it again. Many people point at how much debt that GW Bush made. They over look that Obama spent more in three years than Bush did in eight. Bush added to the debt. Obama doubled it. Not a good thing.

    178. Re:Tax planning and rich people by surgen · · Score: 1

      That will just push companies to go offshore too.

      Good. Maybe that way maybe the US gov't will stop PAYING GE so goddamn much of our money in tax rebates.

    179. Re:Tax planning and rich people by scubamage · · Score: 1

      You realize sales tax is tax deductible, right? Beyond that, you're just advocating trickle down economics which doesn't freaking work. If it did, we wouldn't have 1% of the population controlling 90% of the nations wealth (and growing). And yes, Bill Gates and Warren Buffet both gave away a massive amount of money. However, they haven't had much success getting other billionaires to follow suit, something Buffet openly explained din his letter to the white house. Seems most of them have no interest in actually benefiting society, just growing their own hordes. Also, don't forget that rich people in general pay significantly less in taxes (by percentage), because they make most of their earnings off of capital gains (taxed at a flat 15%) instead of wages (taxed on graded scale, starting at 10% and progressing up to and above 35%). This means, on average, they contribute less by percentage. That slack is then pushed down on to lower income earners to make up the difference.

    180. Re:Tax planning and rich people by MattyMatt · · Score: 1

      Google will move its operations overseas??? It's already done. Tax breaks and incentives for corporations and the wealthy such as those proposed by the Republican party have done little but further concentrate wealth at the top.

    181. Re:Tax planning and rich people by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      I know that people don't like the idea of everyone having to pay taxes and they balk at the idea that rich people will get to spend all of the money they receive, but a sales tax is the only fair tax. Rich people spend more money, thus pay more in taxes. Poor people spend less money, thus less in taxes.

      In absolute terms, you're correct. As a percentage of income, however, you are completely wrong. A person on minimum wage, for example, is likely to be spending close to 100% of his or her income, because they only just earn enough to cover their cost of living. A middle class person may be saving up to around 50%. If someone's income is $1m (the figure in TFA) then they can live very comfortably spending only 10% of their income each year and can invest the rest.

      A sales tax is a regressive tax - the poor pay a larger proportion of their income than the rich - and so the result is that you end up with wealth concentrating in the hands of the rich. Those people with an income of $1m spend $100K and invest $900K. Those with an income of $10K spend $10K. After 10 years, the person with an initial income of $1m has now saved $9m and is getting far more than enough to live on just from dividends / interest. Meanwhile, the person with an income of $10K is still living hand to mouth.

      Oh, and you've also provided a strong incentive to spend money abroad where you aren't taxed.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    182. Re:Tax planning and rich people by nysus · · Score: 1

      Boo fucking hoo. Go live in the Sudan, then. I hear the taxes are really low there.

      Otherwise, if you want to live in a first-world country, you're going to have to pay for it. Why does everyone expect a free ride?

      --

      ---Technology will liberate us if it doesn't enslave us first.

    183. Re:Tax planning and rich people by mcmonkey · · Score: 1

      What I wonder is what they are thinking in Washington. First, there isn't enough money in million+ income hands to balance the budget. Not even close. Hell, you could take every dollar in profit every company in the US showed last year, and every cent of income from every millionaire, and you haven't even come close to closing the budget gap. Barely half, thinking of some presentation I saw not long ago.

      No one change is going to balance the budget or pay off the federal debt. Raising taxes won't do it. Cutting entitlements won't do it. Cutting military spending won't do it. So by your logic, we should change nothing--just keep spending.

      How is it class warfare to suggest that those those benefit most from a stable society and economy contribute proportionally to maintain that stability?

      As has been pointed out elsewhere, a progressive tax rate is not class warfare.

    184. Re:Tax planning and rich people by thynk · · Score: 1

      Currently, we in the USA spending about 4.7% of our GDP on defense. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_military_expenditures Historically fairly low. IN fact, we spend over 200 billion MORE on aid for the disadvantaged than we do on defense. The poorest households in the US have a pretty good life when compared to most of the world. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OkebmhTQN-4

      --

      Good judgment comes from experience, and a lot of that comes from bad judgment.
    185. Re:Tax planning and rich people by sycodon · · Score: 1

      They don't keep 50% of the players income.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    186. Re:Tax planning and rich people by hierofalcon · · Score: 2

      I, for one, would be perfectly all right with not being the world's policemen any more. I've felt that way for a long time. That doesn't change the fact that a lot of countries, throughout history, have greatly appreciated the fact that we spend as much on our military forces as we do - even if the people now living there don't. A good number of them wouldn't be countries anymore if we hadn't.

    187. Re:Tax planning and rich people by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      Or Coca-Cola would just take the hit to profit per unit instead of raising prices but by doing that sell far more soda than PepsiCo. If a business could raise prices it would. Price is based on what the market will pay, not what costs are.

      Welcome to econ 101.

      So how much profit does Coca Cola make from a single can of soda?

      Over the past decade, the profit per 8-oz. serving increased from half a penny to nearly a penny ($0.009), as the company utilized technology to improve efficiency. This might not sound like much, but when extrapolated across more than a billion servings per day, that's a lot of money!

      So, if the government taxes soda, say a meager $0.02 per can, do you really think that Coca Cola is going to take LOSS of $0.011 per can? Does selling more soda at a loss somehow make you more money? Seems to me that it would just make the loss greater.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    188. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Outlaw government contracts to companies that outsource anything.
      Outlaw PII being displayed on monitors, devices outside the country's borders.
      Outlaw financial data being used, accessed or display outside the country's borders.
      Outlaw management of systems by employees outside the country's borders.
      Get rid of H1B visas, or make it so that they are twice as expensive as hiring local workers.
      Require that H1B visa holders pay all taxes, including social security, welfare, even though they'll never be able to collect on it.
      Require that H1B visa holders pay a 20% non citizen tax on top of that - make it expensive as hell to not be a citizen and work in the states - for the workers and employers.

    189. Re:Tax planning and rich people by tverbeek · · Score: 1

      GOP Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin said, "Class warfare may make for really good politics but it makes for rotten economics."

      So cut it out, Paul.

      --
      http://alternatives.rzero.com/
    190. Re:Tax planning and rich people by sycodon · · Score: 1

      Taxes decrease on the rich and the poor die in wars.

      I guess that's why nearly half of the U.S. population pays no income tax.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    191. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 2

      Like China? How's that working out for their "workers"?

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    192. Re:Tax planning and rich people by couchslug · · Score: 1

      He DOES pay for upkeep via the MANY taxes on trucking businesses including the fuel tax. There is a fair-sized "tax and permit compliance" industry required to keep operators legal. Lots of software involved too, unfortunately all Windows-based.

      I'm not disagreeing with your premise, but that example is worthless.

      Now if you take issue with where those taxes go after collection, that's a different issue!

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    193. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1, Insightful

      There are other countries with larger public sectors. They obviously have higher tax rates to fund it.

      True, but living in North Korea sucks, unless you're one of the elites. That's where this ultimately will lead. The only real policy battles taking place these days among the politicians and the corporate executives is over their position in the ruling class, and making sure their kids are part of the global leadership in the NWO.

      Oh, and don't forget - right now, America puts virtually the entire tax burden on the upper middle classes, and the rest on the middle class. About 1/2 the population doesn't pay any taxes at all, and a significant portion of them have a net gain from the tax system. The US right now has THE MOST progressive tax system in the world.

      Note the segment where the unemployment is all concentrated - right in the middle class. Low-wage and just above (service and labor jobs) are plentiful, very low unemployment there. If you have a Masters degree or a decent college degree and professional experience, you're likely to have an easy time getting work. It's the middle class that's going away. Many of those jobs are gone forever.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    194. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      The difference is that at some point the companies can't just up the price anymore, because people won't buy their goods. They either have to lower their revenue or improve their production methods to become cheaper.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    195. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Been modding, so I'll go anon.

      There's good reasons for capital gains to be taxed at close to the income rate, because otherwise you get people inventing ways of changing one into the other. But you also have to remember that when you invest a buck, you might lose that buck. Go and work for someone, and they owe you money, regardless of whether they made any themselves. If you want people to risk their bucks, you might want to give them a smaller profitability hurdle.

    196. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      Do you use public transportation? Then you should pay even more in road taxes, since the average axle loading on buses is even higher... But you are, of course, overlooking things like excise taxes, registration taxes, and other things that tend to go with the value of the vehicle - and I bet those taxes on a Bentley are a bit higher than on a Prius.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    197. Re:Tax planning and rich people by TheTyrannyOfForcedRe · · Score: 1

      Corporations do not pay taxes at all. That's economics from junior high school. All corporations do is pass their tax costs on to the price of their goods.

      Don't go around admitting that you fell for that line of bullshit unless you're still in junior high.

      Companies charge as much for their product as consumers will pay. That's basic economics. When a company is already charging the absolute maximum that it's customers will pay, money to pay for additional tax increases must come out of their profit on the item.

      If the company added the additional tax cost (C) to the cost of the item (X) then the item would cost X + C. When X is already the maximum that customers will pay, X+C is over that maximum. Customers will not buy the product. This doesn't apply for things that customers must purchase like food and shelter but it can move their preferences between products that satisfy those basic needs.

      From a purely common sense viewpoint, if corporations (aka the rich / the Republicans) didn't pay taxes but only passed them on to consumers then why would the rich guys be so opposed to tax hikes? What the fuck would they care? They would happily say a-ok and pass that shit onto the middle and lower classes.

      --
      "Liechtenstein is the world's largest producer of sausage casings, potassium storage units, and false teeth."
    198. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      Maaaaybe one of the reasons is that we don't spend half our GDP on military.

      Right. After all, if you get in a scuffle with a neighbor, the US will bail you out, or at least support the UN or NATO troops to do so.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    199. Re:Tax planning and rich people by magarity · · Score: 1

      Maaaaybe one of the reasons is that we don't spend half our GDP on military.

      Half of GDP on the military? Are you replying to a North Korean?
       
      This article is about the USA's budgetary woes, and the US doesn't even spend 5%, never mind 50%.

    200. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your comment assumes that those of means aren't already doing all they can to avoid paying their fair share. If that were true there would be no need for this law.

    201. Re:Tax planning and rich people by TheTyrannyOfForcedRe · · Score: 1

      The only class waging war in this country on other classes is the rich.

      It's not so much a war...more like a massacre.

      --
      "Liechtenstein is the world's largest producer of sausage casings, potassium storage units, and false teeth."
    202. Re:Tax planning and rich people by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      Sorry, forgot my source:

      http://www.fool.com/news/1999/foolplate990910.htm

      I should have also noted that other things effect the profit margin/price per can of Coca Cola such as sugar prices, shipping costs (gas prices) and other non-tax cost pressures that may effect profit drastically. Sure, per can they won't make much difference, but when you are selling billions of cans per day, the smallest price fluctuation makes a HUGE difference to the bottom line.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    203. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Squiddie · · Score: 1

      By definition the average worker does not keep the all the money that is produced by his work, not because of taxes even, but because the company must turn a profit. It's a sort of tax if you think about it. If the company paid each worker exactly what they produced, there would be no profit, and there would be no wealthy people. We accept this, so why can't the wealthy accept that they must pay taxes to live in this nation? Are they not the ones who benefit the most from the infrastructure, since they must ship their goods to be sold? Do they not benefit from the armed forces, which exist now only to protect their interests, not defending the nation. It isn't the rich, that fight in wars, it isn't they who build roads. It's everyday people that do these things. They do not work as hard as you think they do.

    204. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Dunbal · · Score: 0

      Do I get to subtract the cost of fuel off my income?

      Sure you do. You get your income. You pay your expenses (including all taxes). What's left in your bank account is your income, less the costs of your fuel, etc. Why do you think it's any different for a rich person? His gross income is bigger than yours. His expenses would make you cry. His net is probably not much more than yours in percentage points. Yeah, there's more zeros. How about you come up with the capital and the balls to risk it, instead of complaining about those who do?

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    205. Re:Tax planning and rich people by euroq · · Score: 1

      Then why does the US tax every dollar you make overseas, even if you are overseas for the entire year? If I live in Thailand the entire year and earn my salary over there, I still have to pay US taxes on it - even though I didn't use any US public services. It's not about paying for what you use - it's about paying for what Government wants.

      That is an interesting, but separate, problem from the one we are discussing - which is the merit of different tax rates for various income brackets. Don't get them confused.

      --
      Just because the U.S. is a republic does not mean it is not a democracy. Democracy/republic are not mutually exclusive.
    206. Re:Tax planning and rich people by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Ireland tried that, look how that worked out. Germany is bailing them out. How about we emulate the country doing the bailing out rather than the bankrupt?

    207. Re:Tax planning and rich people by adamchou · · Score: 1

      Zero is too low but something like 5% should be plenty attractive. I don't know of any 1st world nations that offer that kind of a tax rate. Then we'd be getting more companies to want to come here and getting our own companies to pay too.

    208. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are saying we should just continue to up the tax because rich people dodge it? Would we eventually get the tax rate to 100% and the rich would dodge it at 100%?

      What we need is a totally new tax structure something like the fair tax.

    209. Re:Tax planning and rich people by RingDev · · Score: 1

      Heh, if I had all the answers, I wouldn't be sitting here posting on /. I'd be off trying to implement them and to lead the US back to a world leader status.

      From my understanding though, specifically following the lessons learned in Japan's "Lost Decade" and the US post WWII, I would say that we should be focusing a LOT more on education.

      Innovation is what leads nations out of economic slumps. Post WWII the US poured tons of money into sending war vets to college. We transitioned over a few years to a nation with some of the highest rates of post-secondary education in the world, and as a result enjoyed decades of leadership in innovation, economic growth, and quality of life.

      And Japan's recovery coming out of the 90's was significantly fueled by it's advances in technology and related exports. All of which was underpinned by their substantial investment in education.

      So now we're looking at the nation, we're running a 6% production/capacity gap, which means there is no drive, even with tax cuts, for companies to hire. And we have 9% unemployment, many of those workers are trained for jobs that no longer exist.

      So IMO, we sould work with the lessons we've learned: get the unemployed educated and retrained for growing fields with job demand. Pushing blue-sky R&D projects to open the doors to new technological leadership. And to refine the IP laws of this country to open up competition and innovation.

      Those would be the areas that I would focus spending on. It's the long game. It wouldn't get us out of our current stagnation for a few years. But when the benefits begin coming in, they will be far more benefitial than the current crop of tax cuts that the GOP is demanding.

      -Rick

      --
      "Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
    210. Re:Tax planning and rich people by sycodon · · Score: 1

      I'll spare you the dreaded citation needed thing because I hate that.

      But let's just say I am skeptical of that statement. Although it may be true of Buffet, who seems to spend very little of his wealth when compared to most "rich".

      But then don't forget, even if you don't spend it, it is still in some financial instrument, where is is used to invest in others. Unless of course, it is stuffed in a mattress.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    211. Re:Tax planning and rich people by sosume · · Score: 0

      the richest 10% pay for 90% of all taxes .. so take it easy.

    212. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AC here so probably get buried, but this...

      Hell, you could take every dollar in profit every company in the US showed last year, and every cent of income from every millionaire, and you haven't even come close to closing the budget gap. Barely half, thinking of some presentation I saw not long ago. ...is absolute rubbish.

      The total corporate profit each year is about $1.6 trillion and the top 0.1% of earners in the US (which is people earning over about $1.5m I think) earn about 7% of GDP (about $1 trillion). So both of these combined dwarf the $1.4 trillion deficit.

    213. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 3, Informative

      Actually, Mr. Millionaire probably has the corporation chartered in Scotland, where there is no taxes on business. Therefore all earnings made by the trucks are taxed at scotland's rate of 0%. So no he probably doesn't pay taxes on those trucks.

      In the US, if you earn the dollar here then you get to pay taxes here. Now, on those trucks registered in Scotland, he doesn't have to pay US taxes on income earned overseas - but he would if those trucks were registered in the US and used in Scotland.

      Any dollar earned in the US is subject to taxation - regardless of the domicile of the company. The only benefit to forming an overseas shell corporation is to defer US taxation on money earned abroad; that's what Google, Apple, Microsoft and the like have foreign offices - they can keep the earnings overseas without paying US taxes. But for money earned in the US - regardless of the country of incorporation - there are US corporate income taxes to be paid. And if you're a US company, you also have to pay US taxes on money earned overseas. Thus you can see why companies set up overseas offices and subsidiaries.

      I've looked at this stuff in depth - it's a big concern for all US expats.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    214. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Taty'sEyes · · Score: 0

      First, there isn't enough money in million+ income hands to balance the budget.

      That's no reason why they shouldn't contribute to balancing it.

      This smells like more class warfare shit,

      Yeah, and the middle class is losing the war. We should start fighting back.

      and now they'll tax the remaining producers into moving their assets out of the country. Maybe it'll get him re-elected, right? We'll worry about the economy in the 2nd term.

      Nice disingenuous straw man there, Mr. Koch. This isn't about corporate taxes, this is about personal income tax. Why should Warren Buffett pay half the rate his secretary does? Buffet vs his secretary IS class warfare.

      Why is it that you think I don't contribute? I'm pretty sick and tired of slackers telling me I don't contribute when 50% of filers pay no taxes and a good percentage of them get money back in addition to not paying ANY federal tax. Do you have any idea of how much I pay in taxes? Any? After you add up all the taxes I pay (fed, state, local, property, etc.), I'm lucky if I still have 37%. Why is it that you feel I am only entitled to 37% of my own fucking money, while 50% of filers get to keep 100% or MORE? I work my ass off for what I have and yet some snot nosed brat is going to tell me I don't pay my fair share? When did slashdot become a bastion for the liberal? We used to be libertarians. Now get off my lawn!

      --
      We show geeks how to get their dream girl at EyesOfOdessa.com
    215. Re:Tax planning and rich people by scubamage · · Score: 1

      "It's class warfare, my class is winning, but they shouldn't be." - Warren Buffet

    216. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Moryath · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Wow. You have ZERO thinking skills.

      Obama is making a larger poor class and a smaller middle and upper class.

      Under Clinton, the middle class grew and the poor shrank. Under Bush, the middle class got fucked. Whose policies are better again?

      example: His health care reform. Forcing everyone to have insurance helps the insurance companies. Many small business are going to opt to pay the fine rather then cover health care. The fine is cheaper. The people will go to the government for their health care. Who pays for the health care then? The government does say the uninformed. Who pays for the government? All the citizens do. In other words in choosing the public option, you are choosing to pay for your own health care. Many will say the public option should be there. Well by forcing things, the government enacted a public option without calling it that. Also what about all the non citizen who get free health care now? Last I checked I have not seen a hospital turn people away. When they do not pay, those costs are turned over to those who can afford to pay. Why do you think the cost of health care keeps going up so much? There are many people who go to the hospital and do not pay. Stop treating people who are not citizens of this country who do not pay. Health care costs may actually drop then.

      Spoken like someone who hasn't actually read up on anything. The biggest change is not the requirement of coverage - a REPUBLICAN idea first put into place by Romney. The biggest change is the number of abuses the current turds running what I call the "death care" industry can no longer get away with. No charging people an assload of money for a kid with a congenital condition. No dropping people because they developed a serious condition. No turning people away because they have a preexisting condition or requiring years of "no coverage for anything related" when these are the sort of ass turds who can make a missing toenail "related" to a need for corrective heart surgery.

      The stimulus bills. The billions spent, sorry borrowed, created what again? A whole lot of not much. And he wants to do it again. Many people point at how much debt that GW Bush made. They over look that Obama spent more in three years than Bush did in eight. Bush added to the debt. Obama doubled it. Not a good thing.

      Most of that debt is actually Shrub's debt. Obama stopped holding the cost of Bush's wars off the books, so 8 years of war debt all finally showed up on the balance sheets at once. Much of the rest of it was the spending crap from Bush's final year - remember, Obama took office in January and less than a month later these assholes handed him Bush's final budget, expected him to sign it, and then tried to hold it over his head.

    217. Re:Tax planning and rich people by BlackSnake112 · · Score: 1

      Well, become a citizen of Thailand and give up your US citizenship. Then you do not have to pay US taxes. That is unless you still own things in the US. The taxes on cars, and houses will still have to be paid. You could move the cars over to Thailand. The house, just sell it.

      I am not saying to actually do any of that. You point is clear. People want things from the governmnet. That is what those people pay taxes for. The belief that the ultra rich pay nothing is wrong. They pay less of a percentage in taxes vs their income. What I mean by that is someone making 40K a year pays what 35-40%* in taxes. While someone making $1 million pays less of a percentage of their income. This is due that after 75K (could be 70K got to look it up again) the amount of taxes you pay on income drops. Due away with that drop. Keep the percentage the same all the way up. More tax revenue helps the government pay for things that people want. I am not so sure the congress critters would do that though. After all most of them fall into this smaller tax bracket.

      *I think that is wrong. Cause I make around 45k a year and I pay more like 44% in taxes by my math and the person who does my taxes. I keep seeing the 35% number around though. I have asked and the tax person tells me a single guy pays the most. So get more write offs.

    218. Re:Tax planning and rich people by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      You realize they make most of the money right? More than 60%, you knew that though right?

      They also have over 80% of the wealth.

      Paying that same dollar value would mean some could not eat and I would be paying too little. That is not fair, by any rational measure.

    219. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      Only up to a certain point; this year, it is up to an equivalent of about a $107,000 income in the US. Every dollar earned above that results in taxes paid overseas AND in the US. And the US taxation starts at the higher tax rate (the rate of $107,000 and up).

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    220. Re:Tax planning and rich people by sycodon · · Score: 1

      What the stat? Top 5% pay 40% of the income taxes? How is that not contributing?

      Everyone knows why Warren buffet pays half the rate his secretary does. He does not earn an income, he earns capital gains. Go ahead and raise the capital gains rate then you say? Fine, just don't bitch when you try to get a loan in the future.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    221. Re:Tax planning and rich people by DarkOx · · Score: 1

      RingDev and if you did not have their capital to use for your "work" you would have virtually no income.

      Their being able to provide you the opportunity to use their capital is why you have a job. If you let the government take if from them, that wealth will be wasted. It will go to employ someone, probably not you, in some inefficient or poorly allocated effort until its gone. Then its gone and our economy is smaller and or society poorer.

      Nobody should be taxed on anything except consumption. All consumption should be taxed, save for a tiny range of food products and possibly housing to make the system a little less regressive. Anything else is immoral, you have no right claim what belongs to another. The fact that the wealth use more public resources is automatically accounted for in a pure sales tax system because they do more consumption (if they want to).

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    222. Re:Tax planning and rich people by scubamage · · Score: 1

      Hmm, interesting. I appreciate the info actually, I just know that the Cayman Islands and Scotland were big places to set up shells specifically to avoid taxes. Thanks for the correction!

    223. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Fallingcow · · Score: 1

      The road use (that is, the damage they do to the roads) of semi trucks and other heavy vehicles is subsidized by fuel tax paid by others. Despite their high fuel consumption, heavy vehicles don't even come close to paying for the damage they do (practically all of it), while personal vehicles pay way more than it costs to keep up with the wear they cause (almost none, by comparison).

      Not complaining, just pointing it out.

    224. Re:Tax planning and rich people by euroq · · Score: 1

      But in the end, we all know what happens when Democrats proposed tax increases and spending cuts together. The tax increases happen and the spending cuts don't

      Historically, this is not true. Although you may find cherry-picked instances of it, in general, Democratic legislation has paid for itself (which is where the tax in tax and spend comes from). The Clinton years spring to mind. Republican legislation has generally been deficit spending for the past 30-40 years - spending without the tax part.

      The recent "bailouts" and "stimuli" from the Bush and Obama administrations are not good examples - they had to do with fighting a "Great Recession" and as such were atypical.

      --
      Just because the U.S. is a republic does not mean it is not a democracy. Democracy/republic are not mutually exclusive.
    225. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Ex-MislTech · · Score: 1

      The leech does not care about your suffering, it is a leech.

      The pirates of the Potomac are beholden to wall street and corporate pirates,
      and just like in Rome the mob is pandered to for appeasement.

      We are the new Rome, we are going down the same road.

      Lenin's plan is in full effect.

      http://thinkexist.com/quotation/the-way-to-crush-the-bourgeoisie-is-to-grind-them/350096.html

      “The way to crush the bourgeoisie is to grind them between the millstones of taxation and inflation.”

        Vladimir Lenin quotes (Russian Founder of the Russian Communist Party, leader of the Russian Revolution of 1917, 1870-1924)

      Check out the 10 points of the communist manifesto, we are well on our way...

      --
      google "32 trillion offshore needs IRS attention"
    226. Re:Tax planning and rich people by adamchou · · Score: 2
      The number you're thinking of was 3.2 billion and we didn't give it to them...

      GE's 2010 financial statements reported a $3.25 billion U.S. "current tax benefit," which is where the Times, which declined comment, got its $3.2 billion "tax benefit" number. But a company's "current tax" number has nothing to do with what it actually pays in taxes for a given year. "Current tax benefit" and "current tax expense" are so-called financial reporting numbers, used to calculate the profits a company reports to shareholders.

      http://features.blogs.fortune.cnn.com/2011/04/04/the-truth-about-ges-tax-bill/

    227. Re:Tax planning and rich people by zotz · · Score: 1

      I get how he does it. What I don't get is how raising the regular income rate and not the capital gains rate will cause someone making the majority of their income as capital gains pay more.

      This is such an absurd concept.

      In some ways perhaps, but if you bought a $10,000 house in 1960 and basically only maintained it rather than improved it and you sell it today for $300,000 you have not made $290,000 in income/profit in my mind.

      Sure, if you could buy the 1960's $10,000 house on the lot next to yours for $10,000 on the day you just sold your house for $300,000 ok, but if that house next door is going to cost you $300,000 then you haven't made a thing. You put one house's worth of money into the house when you bought it in 1960 and you get one house's worth of money out of it when you sell it today.

      To treat that as regular income would be a rip off of major proportions.\\all the best,

      drew

      --
      FreeMusicPush If you want to see more Free Music made, listen to Free
    228. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      You have to pay the local income tax no matter what. I worked in Belgium for a few years and paid full income taxes there. There's no dodging the local income tax. And above a certain point I had to pay US income taxes as well... Now, if I was a Belgian citizen working in the US, I wouldn't have to pay Belgian income taxes. The US is pretty unique in demanding all its citizens pay income taxes to the US regardless of where they earned that money...

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    229. Re:Tax planning and rich people by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      No I don't, wish I could.

      Excise, registration and everything else do not make up for the subsidy we provide those with very heavy vehicles. Sales tax is a one time cost, registration in my state is by vehicle class, not car cost.

    230. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Vaphell · · Score: 1

      if they didn't nationalize banks with all their gigantic debts and liabilities they would be just fine, their problems have nothing to do with their low CIT rate.

    231. Re:Tax planning and rich people by visualight · · Score: 1

      Conservative think tanks love to pull this shit. Accuse everyone else of what they themselves are doing. Fucking liars the lot of them. Well not all, some are just idiots buying in to whatever the think tanks tell them to think.

      When Bush was acting like a fascist all the conservatives in the country spent all day calling everyone else a fascist.

      Now in these times all the conservatives are accusing everyone else of class warfare.

      Bullshit. The class warfare is what has been waged on the poor *by the wealthy* for the past 30 years.

      --
      Samsung took back my unlocked bootloader because Google wants me to rent movies. They're both evil.
    232. Re:Tax planning and rich people by zotz · · Score: 1

      Indeed, but raising the regular income rate that they pay is not going to get the job done.

      --
      FreeMusicPush If you want to see more Free Music made, listen to Free
    233. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      And what is the benefit to the economy of Joe and his wife going to the lake for the weekend, versus 40 tons of dishwashers being shipped from the factory to the retail store?

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    234. Re:Tax planning and rich people by subanark · · Score: 1

      Supply and demand isn't the only factor in setting a price. If there was a flat tax of $5 per software product sold, you can bet no one would sell it for less than $5. As a simple model (if supply is infinite), you can imagine a profit per item vs number willing to buy. Then you pick the largest rectangle that fits within that graph, which represents your total profit. That is, as you set the price higher, those who don't buy are represented by those left of the rectangle. The profit lost from those willing to pay a higher price, but pay the lower one instead are represented by the area above the rectangle. If you add a tax, the location of your rectangle will change, the price will go up, probably by less than the tax, fewer people will buy, and profits will go down.

    235. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      The greatest period of economic boomtime in our nation's history -- from the end of WWII to the 1970s -- had a top income tax rate generally in the 75-90% range.

      Difference is those top brackets were for incomes over about $4 million a year (in today's dollars). The other major difference was that those in charge were actually being responsible with the money and using it to actually pay down the debt as quickly as possible. They knew how important it was, and did it.

      The ones in charge now (on both sides) cannot be trusted to do that at all. They play word games and accounting tricks and will continue to borrow and any extra revenue they get will just be spent on more bogus crap shoring up their own power. Even this plan, with the best possible outcome, will increase the debt from $16 trillion today to something like $30 trillion (!!!) in 10 years. Sure, better than $32 trillion, but not by much, and with all that activity leaving the private sector for redistribution to "those most in need", the revenue is likely to continue to drop.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    236. Re:Tax planning and rich people by adamchou · · Score: 1

      It won't because GE is already keeping all its profits offshore. That's how its avoiding all these taxes. We need to lower the corporate tax rate to bring those companies back home instead of going offshore to countries that have a lower tax rate than us.

    237. Re:Tax planning and rich people by euroq · · Score: 1

      No, it isn't. The primary purpose of society is to continue the existance of the society.

      Although I don't disagree with the point of your post, I would point out that this statement is rather bold. Who defines what the primary purpose of society is? Different Americans, Chinese, Englishmen, etc. would all probably give different answers of what the primary purpose of society is.

      --
      Just because the U.S. is a republic does not mean it is not a democracy. Democracy/republic are not mutually exclusive.
    238. Re:Tax planning and rich people by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Or they could have used the money to pay for that. You are correct though, the banks were the straw that broke the camels back.

    239. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 2

      You're welcome... The US Government is actually pretty draconian when it comes to taxation. For example, if I am a Canadian or French or Japanese citizen, and I work and live in the US and earn my money in the US, I do not pay income tax back in Canada, France, or Japan - just here in the US. But if I'm a US citizen and live and work in Canada, France, or Japan - I pay Candian/French/Japanese income tax - and I also have to pay US income tax. We're pretty unique in the world in that our Government demands you pay "your fair share" of every dollar you make anywhere in the world.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    240. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Toonol · · Score: 1

      How about... reduce all expenditures by whatever percentage is necessary to match revenue, and then keep the growth in budget balanced to growth in income?

    241. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Ex-MislTech · · Score: 1

      MOD PARENT UP !!!

      --
      google "32 trillion offshore needs IRS attention"
    242. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 2

      The vast majority of this income in this range is "Unearned Income." People aren't earning nor working for multi-million dollar annual incomes, they are enjoying the benefits of others work by collecting dividens and stock profits.

      You do know that this plan doesn't change that, right? The rates ONLY apply to earned income. Are you also aware that every economist and politician already knows that the capital gains rate is at the top of the rate/revenue curve?

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    243. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Bardwick · · Score: 1

      The buffet thing bugs me, not because she pays more. They both fall under the same tax system. She is more than welcome to put her money on the market, and pay the same amount of taxes on her returns. He risks millions of dollars to INVEST in companies that hire people like her. She is more than welcome to use the same system he is. You think she doesn't benefit from his risk? Check your 401k, where do you think that would be if people like buffet stopped investing. She chose to be a secretary, he chose to be a financial buff. People on here aren't complaining that they have it bad, they are complaining because someone else has it better.

    244. Re:Tax planning and rich people by RingDev · · Score: 1

      If Wealth is finite, you are absolutely right. If it's something that can grow and expand (and, yes, shrink), your premise is flawed.

      I would not say that wealth is finite, but I will say that the anual growth of wealth is finite.

      And if you look back over the last 10 years or so, about 98% of that wealth growth has gone to the top 10% of the nation, and the other 2% has gone to the other 90%.

      I would consider the loss of opportunity and liberty to be the greatest threats to the continuation of society AS WE KNOW IT.

      I would agree. But if you look at the functional result of consolidation of wealth, that is EXACTLY what we see. As wealth consolidates, those that are on the losing end are put into a position where they are significantly less able to ever aquire more wealth. Being so disadvantaged, they will be less likely to have the oportunity to go to college, to get a good public education, to get proactive health care, they will be more likely to be incarcerated, etc... They will never enjoy the opportunities or liberties of those who have benefited from the consolidation of wealth.

      And if we look at the functional impact of those who would have had more wealth consolidated to them if we move to more progressive taxation, having a person who is earning over $1 million per year pay an additional 3% taxation on their income over $1 million, will have a negligable impact on their ability to educate their children, purchase property, travel, eat well, aquire top rate medical care, etc...

      So my point is that a progressive tax system has a negligable impact on the liberties of those at the top, where as flat tax systems are inherently regressive and have a significant impact on the liberties of those at the bottom.

      -Rick

      --
      "Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
    245. Re:Tax planning and rich people by sycodon · · Score: 1

      YOU, are the eeeeeevil rich.

      nysus, on the other hand, lives in his mother's basement.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    246. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm saying that portraying people who are financially successful as the root of our defecit problems is either dillusional or outright dishonest. I'm saying that focusing on that area of our economy is focusing on a pimple on the elephants butt.

      The amount of waste in our goverment both through pet projects and inefficiency is unbelievable, and our entitlements are completely off the scale. Our grandparents saved money for retirement. That concept is completely foreign to the vast majority of Americans, and in fact they are looked at with skepticism by creditors and the IRS if they arent heavily in debt. Now those people who have nothing but dedt are looking to the government to secure their retirements, and you want the people who are actually good and making and keeping money to be the cure. It's pathetic.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    247. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      I look at the demand for more tax dollars as the result of Government wanting to spend more, not as a means of being 'fair'. It's being sold as fair - or class warfare - but those dollars are being raised because the Government wants to spend even more. And by spending, the Government - and those who control it - gain even more leverage and power over the nation. In a sense, the desire to create a millionaire's tax rate IS class warfare - but it is by the members of Congress and the Administration against other millionaire's "not in the circle" of power. We're seeing the Government-based rich fighting against the private-sector-based rich.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    248. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

      As long as we have only this planet for resources, there is a limit on expansion. (And even if we start mining asteroids or colonizing space, there's also a limit, but not one that matters in the near term.)

    249. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Toonol · · Score: 1

      I earn my money and the rich don't.

      You're immoral. They do earn their money. It's theirs, and you want to steal it.

    250. Re:Tax planning and rich people by MasaMuneCyrus · · Score: 1

      I don't know how your state is, but a lot of states actually make food and necessities sales tax exempt.

    251. Re:Tax planning and rich people by metiscus · · Score: 1

      Their money is exactly that, theirs. The government in the USA has enumerated powers and it has the right to levy taxes and duties to finance those ends. The scope of government has far exceeded its constitutional mandate by engaging in undeclared wars, a welfare state and a global empire. So to pay for its abuses of authority, the government has propagandized that "we" have a right to the possessions e.g. wealth of others, that somehow they owe more than the rest. Remember, governments do not produce anything. Everything the government does, it does with money taken by force from another. Robbing the wealthy simply reduces the efficiency of the economy by putting government in control of the private capital market and encouraging further violations of its constitutional mandate.

    252. Re:Tax planning and rich people by sycodon · · Score: 1

      You post, as opposed to being like a car wreck, where you can't look away, is more like spying a fat, nakid women on the overpass.

      A truly WTF? moment.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    253. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      What you see on MTV, the rock'n'roll lifestyle, that is not representative of rich people. It's like when you see average types who hire out a limousine for a party, hands and heads hanging out screaming - rich people don't live like that.

    254. Re:Tax planning and rich people by MasaMuneCyrus · · Score: 1

      China is a good place to go if your want your hard-earned IP and research to be stolen.

      Russia is a good place to go if you want government cronies to send you to jail and pick apart your company for scraps. ....There's always Ireland?

    255. Re:Tax planning and rich people by 2short · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "The US right now has THE MOST progressive tax system in the world"

      The extra caps doesn't make this statement any less ridiculously false.

    256. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Politburo · · Score: 2

      Let me just get this straight.. your hypothesis is that a profitable business owner would rather kill the business (NB: his/her source of income) than pay a higher tax rate?

      FYI, John Galt is a fictional character.

    257. Re:Tax planning and rich people by hierofalcon · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Of course they have to contribute.

      But I challenge you to come up with any sane argument that anyone should pay more to the government than anybody else. Everything should be $ for $ equal. Warren Buffet doesn't enjoy any more benefits as a billionaire from the government than I do - probably a lot less. This is true at every level - federal, state, county, and city. Is the local fire department more likely to come to his house to handle a fire than any where else? Are the police in Omaha more likely to have to call on his property? Does the military of the U.S. have to work harder to defend his family than mine? No. Everyone should be billed for government services at the exact same amount.

      The biggest problem the country faces is that too many have no cost of government (or worse). At the federal level, they are the majority. We won't change the federal government and start to shrink it as long as it doesn't matter to the majority how much Congress spends. When they start having to pay for their share of government, Congress will stop spending so much. I know that there are federal bills that everybody pays - even if you don't have a tax burden but they are for specific programs that you will - maybe - get something back from some day. This article is about taxes.

      And before citing all the companies people like Mr. Buffet own, remember that they each have a large number of employees that receive the same benefit he does from the federal government's activities with them. All business taxes should be abolished anyway as the companies just raise their prices to cover them or go broke.

      Should the wealthy contribute to society? Yes. And through history they have. Locally, there are many rich people who have donated money to help the college and town build and expand. The U.S. library system we have was massively aided by donations by one wealthy individual. You could make a really good argument that the Bible suggests everyone contribute to help the needy. But there is no reason it should funnel through a massive federal bureaucracy to accomplish this. If the particular wealthy person doesn't want to - so be it. Wealth redistribution to fit the style of the current poobahs in office (of whatever political persuasion) is just wrong.

    258. Re:Tax planning and rich people by SETIGuy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No. The idea that he's lying when he tells us his tax rate is just another falsehood that Fox News throws out there because their audience tends not to understand their own taxes, much less his. The tax on dividends and capital gains is far less than half what tax on regular income is. The rich play games to get essentially all of their income classified as capital gains. It's not like the burger flippers at Mcdonalds are allowed to work for the option to buy a share an hour at $8 below the market price.

      Fox News, and CNBC, and Fox Business will tell you that the capital gains tax rate should be zero. And the inheritance tax, too. That's because they don't want to be taxed at all.

    259. Re:Tax planning and rich people by 2short · · Score: 1

      "Low-wage and just above (service and labor jobs) are plentiful"

      Um.. no.

    260. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Jhon · · Score: 2

      Hah. Me rich? Of my grandparents, 3 came to this country as children -- penniless. I'm the first one in my family to not only go to college, but to FINISH HIGH SCHOOL. I was effectively homeless for part of my 2nd term at the local community college -- living out of lockers and getting a $25 hotel 2 or 3 times a week until I got a better job and could afford a real room. I finished school with no debt and on my own blood/sweat. How about you?

      My wife came to this country when she was 19 only slightly better off than my grandparents. All 3 of her siblings and herself all host post graduate degrees and there's one doctor. All with no debt (except the Dr -- but $300k isn't that bad considering his current income). And again -- all by their own sweat/blood. How about you?

      I'm solidly in the middle-class ($~80k/year living in southern california -- that puts me in the LOWER end of the spectrum here).

      The only dumbass here is you suggesting that the bottom 2/3rds have no representation -- in my area, people paying virtually no taxes other than sales keep voting for more "stuff" they don't have to pay for. The only person I see with blinders is YOU -- with zero clue as to how economies work.

    261. Re:Tax planning and rich people by cduffy · · Score: 1

      People don't accept a wage they can't live off of, though.

      Look at what starting pay is at a fast food joint in NYC or Sunnyvale. The market forces there mean that "minimum wage" isn't the minimum wage -- nobody can live off of it, so you can't hire someone for that little, even for fast food.

      The same applies to higher-end jobs as well -- what people are willing to work for varies with what it costs to maintain a given standard of living.

    262. Re:Tax planning and rich people by euroq · · Score: 2

      I make 100% of my income overseas. I live overseas. I still have to pay US income tax on my income (as well as income tax overseas). I don't use any US public infrastructure, however...

      You don't have to. You choose to because you want to keep your American citizenship, which is apparently worth the taxes you are paying otherwise you would stop paying it.

      Also, I would argue that the overseas taxation is a bit muddled in the U.S. tax code (to say the least), however, your argument is besides the point of this Slashdot discussion - debating the merits of various taxation levels at different incomes.

      Taxation is about power. It's about taking money from one group, and using it to buy the votes of another group to maintain your own position.

      This could be said about any democratic society. That being said, our tax expenditures are especially messed up due to the way we have disproportionate representation, by population, in our upper house of legislation - the Senate. Remember that there are 2 senators for the state of California (pop. ~50M) and 2 senators for the state of Wyoming (pop. ~300K).

      --
      Just because the U.S. is a republic does not mean it is not a democracy. Democracy/republic are not mutually exclusive.
    263. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      In Washington State (where I was born and raised and mainly lived when in the US) we paid by blue-book value of the car, and by weight/vehicle class. I do know that fuel taxes on road vehicles tend to be a net money earner for the Federal Government. Perhaps we need to look at where those dollars are spent in the first place - use it to maintain the infrastructure that generated the dollars first, and IF there's anything left, look at expanding other alternatives second.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    264. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Warren Buffet is also a smart guy (financially speaking), unlike the Tea Party Nutjobs.

      Few people will disagree with shaving off entitlements and cutting tax loopholes. What WB pointed out was that Capital Gains taxes aren't the same rate as "income tax" from non-investments.

      Now fixing the problem is subject to opinion because there's two ways of looking at it.

      You either lower taxes for all to 15% (The Capital Gains tax rate),or you increase the Capital Gains tax to 35%. Here's why both are wrong:
      - If you lower taxes for all, you blow an even larger hole in federal budget, This probably shouldn't be considered.
      - If you raise Capital Gains taxes... you let Wall St. self-destruct as people stop investing in equity markets. Taxing capital gains tax again as income increases the tax to 50% (35% on top of 15%), the only equities you can own that you don't get capital gains taxed are REIT's... which you may remember "Mortgage backed securities" for blowing up during the financial crisis.

      Anyway the ideal outcome is that the taxes are averaged instead of stacked. So make the capital gains tax ZERO, and then tax the net income as a whole at the 35% rate. Ideally they start lowering the payroll tax and broaden the tax base by loosening immigration rules for those who can actually afford to live in the US. Want to be a legal US landed immigrant/taxpayer? Buy a million dollar property in cash, no Visa's required, just clearly show how that money was made at the border.

    265. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Fallingcow · · Score: 1

      LOL

      Actual, total taxes paid for all levels of government combined is already very nearly flat, until you hit the top of the income bracket, at which point capital gains makes it very, very regressive.

      If we all truly paid the same, the ultra-wealthy would be in for a huge tax hike, while the rest of us would see only a few small adjustments here and there.

    266. Re:Tax planning and rich people by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

      Let them move to China. Seize all their assets in US banks and brokerages houses when they're boarding the plane.

    267. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Toonol · · Score: 1

      No, the problem is people are tired of paying taxes for bullshit.

      Exactly. You know, I might support a limited tax increases, if it really would go into deficit reduction. But it won't. It will get spent, very inefficiently, on stuff I probably don't think is important in the first place. The beast needs to be starved, because it cannot behave rationally.

    268. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Nursie · · Score: 1

      The richest 10% in terms of annual personal income starts at around $80k per annum.

      That's decent earning, but it's hardly "the rich". I'd be far more interested in what the top 1% pay, and if it's proportional to their income when compared to the lower percentiles.

    269. Re:Tax planning and rich people by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

      The higher your make the tax rate, the more people will find ways to not pay it and you will generally collect less.

      Find me one economist that actually claims that.

    270. Re:Tax planning and rich people by The+Moof · · Score: 1

      I assume that was the article about him paying less taxes than his employees (paywall and all). And if you look at last year's income tax brackets/worksheets (pdf warning), it backs up what I'm saying about abusing loopholes to pay less than lower/middle class taxpayers. In terms of percentages, he's *supposed* to be paying more than us. However, through the tricks and loopholes, he's paying less.

    271. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      You realize they make most of the money right? More than 60%, you knew that though right?

      Often claimed, but the facts are otherwise. It is great red meat for the class warfare mill however...

      As far as wealth accumulation goes, I've accumulated a lot more wealth than most would assume possible on my income, because I've lived like a cheap bastard who wants to retire when I'm 45 - not 65. I guess I should be penalized for showing such fiscal restraint as well?

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    272. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 2

      The money is their property AFTER taxes. Get over it. You owe society more than society owes you.

      How come this only applies to certain people?

      And if you claim it applies to everyone, they why are those getting food stamps and public housing and welfare check NOT out on the highways picking up trash and spending their hours helping out at the nursing homes?

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    273. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      There are two things to keep in mind about this. First, Warren Buffet makes part of his money from selling people plans to minimize their tax burden. Second, this appears to be a new income tax, the reason that Warren Buffet pays the rate he does is because he doesn't pay income tax, he pays capital gains tax. The way this article presents this, this new tax bracket will not effect Warren Buffet's taxes at all.
      Warren Buffet's whole article was disingeuous. He knew full well that most people would not notice the fact that in order for the tax code to be changed to increase his taxes to close to the same percentage as the middle class, it would require changing the capital gains tax rate, yet most people would think of it in terms of the income tax rate.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    274. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      OK, let's do the German thing - ZERO percent capital gains tax on investments held for more than 1 year. That's the reason Buffett pays less taxes than his secretary - his income is from capital gains, not earned income. Let's skew it even more that way!

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    275. Re:Tax planning and rich people by jthill · · Score: 1

      it's like saying a star football player should kick back some of his wages to the NFL because if not for the NFL, he wouldn't be able to earn money playing football

      If there were no other way to fund the NFL, then that'd be exactly right

      Suppose the players were the ones receiving ticket and media revenues but the NFL was building and maintaining the stadiums, negotiating the media contracts. Somebody's got to pay to the people doing that work. There's no one else to do it.

      If you're going to complain about taxes, talk about the ratio of discretionary income to taxes paid. That's the true measure of pain. It's indecent to make people choose between food and taxes, so don't consider necessities when assessing fairness. Steve Forbes proposed a flat deduction to cover them, with a flat tax on the rest, no exceptions.

      --
      As always, all IMO. Insert "I think" everywhere grammatically possible.
    276. Re:Tax planning and rich people by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      That strikes me as a separate debate. At any rate, even the Roman government gave out bread to the masses in Rome, because the alternatives were food riots, which were nasty affairs.

      So, let's put it this way, the government maintains a minimum standard of living simply because the alternatives are ultimately much more expensive.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    277. Re:Tax planning and rich people by element-o.p. · · Score: 1

      ^And this is the crux of the problem right here.^

      "Waaahhhh!!! Someone has more money than me. That's not FAIR! Mr. President, can you go take some of that from them so that we will be more equal?"

      Are there rich people who have wealth that they didn't earn? Sure. Without a doubt, there are rich people who have simply lucked into privilege by inheriting the wealth that someone else worked for. But there are also rich people who worked hard, paid their dues, and invested wisely, and now are reaping the benefit of their hard work. Quite frankly, I couldn't care less if someone is rich because they are "collecting dividends and stock profits" because both of those things require investing income. Whether you are sacrificing your labor to build a business (i.e., Bill Gates, much as I dislike Microsoft and their products) or investing your capital (i.e., Warren Buffet), you are still taking a risk and giving up your resources now for the promise of a future payout. That's the way things are SUPPOSED to work. I'll never be a millionaire, much less a billionaire, because I wasn't willing to pay the dues required to get there. But I am a rather comfortable middle-class to upper middle class, and I got here through twenty-plus years of hard work (college, crappy entry-level jobs, finally got a break in IT, and another ten or twelve years of advancing through the IT career field). You can gripe that the wealthy are just parasites leaching off the hard work of others, but quite honestly, I don't see it that way.

      What I do see, however, is the wealthy deciding that the U.S. is not a hospitable place for business or investments if this tax plan is approved, and moving their money elsewhere. If that happens, expect our economy to spiral even further downward, because when a nation consumes more than it produces, it will eventually go bust. The handwriting is already on the wall. Our economy is in trouble, and shipping jobs, manufacturing and businesses overseas because the President has the misguided idea that taxing the rich will fix the deficit will only make that worse. Fasten your seatbelts, ladies and gentlemen, because we are in for a rough ride.

      --
      MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
    278. Re:Tax planning and rich people by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

      A national sales tax, for example, would eliminate any benefit from basing your companies off shore.

      A national sales tax is the equivalent of a zero tax rate on billionaires. It just makes the day when their heads are on poles outside of the NYSE that much sooner.

    279. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Squiddie · · Score: 2

      The taxes that they pay, is the price that must be rendered to live in this society. If you don't want to pay taxes, then stop using that government issued currency, stop using the infrastructure build with those taxes and move to Somalia. I'm sure that a smart capitalist will be able to make a great industry in a place where they are not hindered by government.

    280. Re:Tax planning and rich people by euroq · · Score: 1

      There is no one in the United States that doesn't pay taxes. There are sales taxes and there are state taxes, to name a few. Perhaps theoretically there is someone who is only using food stamps and doesn't buy ANYTHING except tax-exempt goods and services don't pay taxes, but it's certainly not 50%.

      In other words, federal taxes aren't all taxes.

      BTW, I like your idea of nominal taxes. It would possibly help educate lower-income citizens on why it is not OK to have their legislators vote for anything and everything that costs money because people should understand that everything has a cost. On the other hand, it could also be seen as punitive... taxing an extremely poor person who is struggling, just because we want to teach them a lesson.

      --
      Just because the U.S. is a republic does not mean it is not a democracy. Democracy/republic are not mutually exclusive.
    281. Re:Tax planning and rich people by QuantumPion · · Score: 1

      And I'm pretty sure you don't want to maximize revenue. You want to fund your expenses while reducing GDP by as little as possible. Or if you are politician then fundng your expenses while incentivising the things you like and punishing the things you don't like.

      True, but if you are already "past the hump" of the tax rate vs tax revenue curve, increasing taxes is obviously detrimental, which is the point. The objective is to be at or below the hump.

    282. Re:Tax planning and rich people by corbettw · · Score: 1

      Next, the best way to eliminate "creative accounting" in regard to taxes is to make the system simple.

      Absolutely correct. Make things simpler, with fewer (if any) loopholes and dodges, and you'll get more income.

      A national sales tax, for example, would eliminate any benefit from basing your companies off shore.

      Absolutely incorrect. Every single example of a national sales tax is loaded with idiotic plans for "prebates" and other such nonsense that would require a huge bureaucracy to maintain. Not to mention, without repealing the 16th amendment, this is an invitation to double taxation.

      Just go to a simple flat tax of 20% with $40,000 deductible per earner regardless of source, nothing else. That would bump the revenue to the federal government from $866B to $1.01T, and reduce the tax paid by median earners to only $2000 (it's currently over $3000) and reduce people making under the median to $0 (it's currently between $100 and $2000 per earner). This simplifies the tax code, reduces the burden on middle-class families, and makes it impossible (and pointless) for the wealthy to create trusts, offshore companies, and other tax dodges.

      This is all just for personal income. We could do the exact same scheme with corporate income and realize even greater benefits.

      But of course, this doesn't allow politicians to monkey with people's lives by getting them to go for tax breaks. So it'll never happen.

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    283. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      The best way to deal with this would be to set the income tax rate at the same for everyone and do away with all tax deductions, except for one that applies to everyone. Get rid of these social engineering tax deductions designed to encourage people to take actions that politicians approve of.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    284. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Toonol · · Score: 1

      Well you travel the roads, drink the water, breath the air that now does not have a heavy burden of sulfur dioxide and Nitrox oxide. Your food does not contain DDT and your resonably safe from illegal robbery and if you are can call on law enforcement and the judical system to help fix the problem. You don't have to worry much about forgeigners rolling tanks down your street and when you retire you probably won't starve.

      Those are great advantages of society, but it's disingenuous to use that to support a tax increase; all those things can be done with the money the government is currently taking in, with plenty left over. The government is spending a lot of money on things that you wouldn't put on that list... things that offer little benefit to society, or that are actively detriments, or items that are good inefficiently done. Take a look at a detailed breakout of the federal budget as proof of that.

      When we could have a 'good' government for less than what we are already paying, why should we support a tax increase?

    285. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Bengie · · Score: 1

      ".With our current tiered system, they pay a higher percentage than us."

      Not when you take loopholes into account. We're talking about effective tax not the fictional values listed in the code.

    286. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Grygus · · Score: 1

      Taxes are a necessity for a functioning government. You won't find a system that (a) doesn't require them and (b) works for societies with significant populations. The money serves power, but it's too cynical to say that power is the entire purpose. I also think you're being somewhat shortsighted; you still benefit from the presence of an American Embassy, or from treaties negotiated and maintained by the American government, or you benefit indirectly because your company is benefiting in various ways. You will still be eligible for Social Security and Medicare. Your money isn't only being used for things that don't and won't affect you.

      Do you also pay income tax to your host country?

    287. Re:Tax planning and rich people by euroq · · Score: 1

      Interestingly enough, the proposed legislation being debated talks about doing just this - closing loopholes. Honestly I think they should just burn the entire 15,000 page tax code and start over. They could fit it on a few pages - tiered income brackets, a few pages for tax breaks for job creation and disasters such as loss of a home, throw in a small deduction for charitable donations and viola! Done. Of course, we'd put all of the tax professionals out of business, but that's another story...

      --
      Just because the U.S. is a republic does not mean it is not a democracy. Democracy/republic are not mutually exclusive.
    288. Re:Tax planning and rich people by antifoidulus · · Score: 1

      You are an idiot and have no idea what you are talking about, i.e. a Republican. Guess what dumbass, YOU ARE NOT TAXED ON EVERY DOLLAR YOU EARN WHILE OVERSEAS! As an American living abroad for quite some time, I know. You have an exemption of about $100k. And of course, it used to be after the first $100k you started at the beginning of the tax bracket, but your lord and savior the man-child Bush raised taxes on us disloyal bastards(who tend to be on the whole more intelligent than your average American and thus significantly less likely to be Republican). About the only group of people, besides the poor, he raised taxes on.

      But there I go again disrupting Republican talking points with those zany things called facts and reality. I'll try harder to live in your right-wing fantasy world next time.

    289. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Toonol · · Score: 2

      The bottom 2/3rds control completely who gets elected. The upper 1/3 have no power against them.

      Pity that the bottom 2/3rds are pretty much self-destructive.

    290. Re:Tax planning and rich people by ravenshrike · · Score: 1

      What's the probability that the bread will end up poisoning the consumer?

    291. Re:Tax planning and rich people by euroq · · Score: 1

      I wish the right would stop saying "rich people" when they refer to the benefits that rich people bring to the society.

      There are two distinct types: rich people and job creators. There are not necessarily the same nor are they mutually exclusive. But by doing so, we could start debating the right things... how to get job creators to keep creating more jobs, without bothering with all this "class warfare" bullshit that I keep hearing about.

      --
      Just because the U.S. is a republic does not mean it is not a democracy. Democracy/republic are not mutually exclusive.
    292. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Their fuel costs are not in line with the road damage they do. That again is a place where Mr.Millionaire comes out ahead by stealing from me. My small car does far less road damage but my per mile fuel costs are not lower by that much. Road wear is a function of axle loading and goes up by the 4th power.

      I love the way the public schools have created so many kids with this kind of class envy and sense of entitlement.

      The trucker contribution of the total dollars going into the federal Highway Trust Fund is equal to 37.7 percent of highway account revenues, which only includes gas taxes, retail taxes, and use/tire taxes. The average annual taxes for a tractor trailer is about $9,000. Add to that state diesel tax, registration fees and weight fees - another $5,000 a year. That's about 35 times the amount of the average passenger car (assuming 25 MPG).

      Oh, and without all those trucks moving stuff from where people PRODUCE stuff to your little urban paradise, you would run out of food in less than a week. So, by all means, tax them until nobody will drive them any more - and starve.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    293. Re:Tax planning and rich people by TigerTime · · Score: 1

      First off, your post is so off base i'm inclined to think it's sarcasm. Rich people do not use more public services. If anything they use less because they don't need the government doing things for them when they can just buy it themselves. Medicaid? No. Public Transportation? No. Welfare? No. Any of the other hundreds of services for lower income people that rich people aren't allowed to use? No.

      But regardless, lets assume your first statement is accurate. Rich people pay more money than poorer people, regardless of what the percentage is. Even if millionaire salaried people were taxed at a lower percentage, they're still paying more. Take the following for example (even though this is more hypothetical than realistic considering most multi-millionaires have an actual job and don't just live off of stock trades like Warren Buffet):

      $1,000,000 * 0.15 = $150,000
      $20,000 * .25 = $5,000

      So again, why would a rich person need to pay a higher percentage, even if they did use more public services, when they are already paying more money for those supposed greater public service benefits?

    294. Re:Tax planning and rich people by networkBoy · · Score: 0

      Wow...
      I suppose I shouldn't be surprised by the downmod....

      How do you get /. to show you if it is troll or flamebait mod these days?
      I only see the total mod value, not the components of the mod.

      --
      whois gawk date unzip strip find touch finger mount join nice man top fsck grep eject more yes exit umount sleep dump
    295. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Bardwick · · Score: 1

      Cheating? They broke ZERO laws.. Someone needs to answer some very simple questions. Loopholes: Name one. Everything there was written with specific purpose in mind. Rich not paying thier fair share: How much are they currently paying and how much is "Fair". I dont' want theory or morals, I want actual numbers and specific statutes. Tell me we need immigration reform? What parts, name them. What would be the result in enforcing current laws? I want number damnit, not theories.

    296. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget Tax Dodger Warren, the "My Secretary pay's more taxes than I do, because I dont even pay my taxes" Buffet

    297. Re:Tax planning and rich people by skids · · Score: 1

      Something tells me that a bunch of people as lazy as you describe would be too lazy to form a government, so there's a gaping hole in your logic.

    298. Re:Tax planning and rich people by shellster_dude · · Score: 1

      Even if that were true, which it isn't, the vast majority leave their money in banks or invested in companies. If it is in a bank, the bank is investing it in companies. In either case that wealth is being used to produce more wealth, which is creating jobs.

    299. Re:Tax planning and rich people by DesScorp · · Score: 1

      The class warfare is what has been waged on the poor *by the wealthy* for the past 30 years.

      Again, how? Just what is it about keeping your own money that's "warfare" against others? You guys keep saying this, but you never explain just how this "warfare" supposedly works?

      --
      Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    300. Re:Tax planning and rich people by RingDev · · Score: 1

      if you did not have their capital to use for your "work" you would have virtually no income.

      I disagree. Having a credit market definately eases growth, but it is not an absolutely manditory asset. Growth will occur with out it, it will just be slower and have additional and different issues.

      I'm not saying that we should be taxing everyone down to some sort of commie level of suckiture. There is a middle ground between communism and oligarchy. We don't have to march in lock-step to one or the other.

      If you let the government take if from them, that wealth will be wasted.

      I also disagree with this premise. Some of it will be wasted, just as the original corporation would have wasted some portion. Heck, my company just wasted something between $50,000-$100,000 on sending a full team of peopole to Ireland for a requirements debate on something that might impact us for $2000 worth of labor. The government holds no monopoly on waste.

      Additionally, some government programs generate far more wealth than they costs. The two biggies IMO: Transportation and Education. I benefit from both of those investments to a huge amount every day. Every one of my co-workers, my family, and my friends was educated through either public schools or via federally/state subsidized education programs. These are people I depend on daily to provide me with goods, services, and companionship. With out their educational backgrounds, it would be impossible for me to do my job, to contribute to society, or to collect my paycheck.

      Anything else is immoral, you have no right claim what belongs to another.

      Yet you claim rights to roads that I have paid for, you claim rights to schools I have funded, you claim rights to hospitals, etc...

      The fact that the wealth use more public resources is automatically accounted for in a pure sales tax system because they do more consumption

      Arguably true, but the consistent outcome of regressive taxation is a consolidation of wealth, which leads to a reduction in liberties of those who are on the losing end.

      So which is more imoral: to tax a person who earns more in a way that won't significantly impact their liberties, or to set up a taxation system that explicitly leads to a reduction of liberties of the majority of the population?

      -Rick

      --
      "Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
    301. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What allies? How many US allies are there by their own choice and how many are there because the US forced them to be allies?

      The "the entire world depends on US military" is such a huge bag of shit. How many countries is the US involved in militarily? 97 according to this article.

      As Tyrell says in Bladerunner, "A candle that burns twice as bright burns half as long, and you have burned very brightly". The US as an empire is circling down the drain and the closer we get to the bottom, the faster we go.

      Patriotic American, but fucking hell, I think we've gone to far to make any corrections to our downwards spiral.

    302. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good riddance? I like your attitude!

    303. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 2

      So then you're suggesting that there's a point at which a person who was skilled becomes greedy instead for continuing to exihibit that which made him a success? Who decides when a person is no longer skilled, and is now greedy? Is it those who had neither skill nor ambition, and who never chose to sacrafice and sweat to succeed and now envy those who did?

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    304. Re:Tax planning and rich people by skids · · Score: 1

      Easy: the poor are too busy trying to eat to wage class warfare. It's the rich that have the time to.

      That, and your infantile understanding of the concept of property, which is an entirely social construct, is badly in need of an upgrade.

    305. Re:Tax planning and rich people by ravenshrike · · Score: 1

      The really rich people, the dynasties? They have all their money/land/stock tied up in trusts that they can access, but they don't technically control. Which means that things like inheritance taxes don't even touch them. That little system started after inheritance taxes became popular. Prior to that, your average rags to riches to rags turnaround was 3 generations.

    306. Re:Tax planning and rich people by anyGould · · Score: 1

      If memory serves, the argument is that people are allowed to arrange their finances in the manner best for them - and if that means "paying less taxes" is best for them, so be it. (Contrarywise, it's that people shouldn't be required to do things in the manner that doesn't serve their interests).

      The whole thing is a bit of a dodge anyway - since the government has control over tax law, they can simply close any loopholes they don't want people using. (And the dirty secret is that if you're rich enough to be in government, you're likely using all those dodges yourself.)

    307. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 2

      I did, and I do. I'm a business owner, and employer. I put my own ass on the line, and now I'm being told that I should give almost all of what I make in large part to support those that never tried.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    308. Re:Tax planning and rich people by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      True. But they rely far more on working roads, an independent and efficient judicial system and a stable society than the poor. To a guy in the slums of Detroit, it really doesn't matter that the rest of the US isn't like his area. To Warren Buffet, it matters a lot.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    309. Re:Tax planning and rich people by skids · · Score: 1

      By and large, rich people only spend money on schemes to make them more money. It's why they remain rich.

    310. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Electricity+Likes+Me · · Score: 2

      50% of people filing federal income tax returns in the US don't pay any net money into federal income taxes. They do however pay state-imposed taxes, sale's taxes, stamp duties on property transactions, payroll taxes (via their work) etc.

      You might want to learn more about your own tax system's functioning.

    311. Re:Tax planning and rich people by roman_mir · · Score: 2

      that's because Warren Buffet is a liar. His tax rate is his company's tax, which is over 35%, and then he pays 15% dividend on that. All of the taxes that his company pays is the money that he is not earning as the largest shareholder.

      He is also a two faced liar for the reason, that his company is the sole benefactor of the death tax in USA, since he profits from the fire-sales that happen when an estate must be liquidated to pay the death tax, he then restructures the companies and sells them at profit.

    312. Re:Tax planning and rich people by DesScorp · · Score: 1

      "The money is their property AFTER taxes."

      Wrong. It's their property from the get-go.

      "You owe society more than society owes you."

      "Society" doesn't owe me a damn thing. And the reverse is true as well.

      --
      Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    313. Re:Tax planning and rich people by compro01 · · Score: 1

      The "bridge to nowhere" is a hell of a lot better idea than pundits slam it as.

      Go look at a satellite map of Anchorage. To the east, mountains, to the south, mountains and water, to the north, mountains and water, to the west, water. The city is out of room to build anything. Build a bridge across the Knik Arm and suddenly you have huge tracts of land to build on.

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    314. Re:Tax planning and rich people by jekewa · · Score: 1

      And I agree wholeheartedly with that. I had a semantic issue with "aren't earning," which they are.

      A dollar is a dollar, I think, and it shouldn't make a difference where or how you earned it: tip, wage, bonus, dividend or other capital gain. If we're going to stick with an income-tax based government, we should make the tax system easy to undertand and treat every dollar the same, insofar as taxes are concerned, and no matter who earns them.

      Smarter people than me (in economics and finance) have better details. Sadly, I think they get mired in politics, and too often with people dumber than me (in economics and finance).

      --
      End the FUD
    315. Re:Tax planning and rich people by skids · · Score: 1

      ou realize sales tax is tax deductible, right?

      If you're rich enough to spend enough and to have an accountant to keep track of it all. Ever tried to deduct sales tax on a form 1040? (Which supports your point even further.)

    316. Re:Tax planning and rich people by ooshna · · Score: 1

      Your right its totally unfair.

    317. Re:Tax planning and rich people by element-o.p. · · Score: 2

      While the rich "work", it's mainly having money work for them.

      What's wrong with that? Have you ever opened a savings account at a bank? Have you ever put money in a 401k or other retirement plan? Congratulations! You, too, have tried to get your money to "work for [you]" That's not a bad thing; it's a smart thing, although with our current financial situation, traditional investing in the stock market may not be a wise decision. I knew a guy a few years ago who was a millionaire. Trust me, he worked for his money. Even if you are just an investor, you spend a lot of time studying investments, learning which ones are good and which ones are bad. Just as a construction worker or other manual laborer may look at my job as a network administrator and say, "That's not working!", to someone outside of the industry, investing doesn't look like work...but I dare say that it's longer, harder work -- with more risk -- than you'd think.

      Even if everybody had the means to and greed to get a face job, tan, tailored suit and the right club memberships, and enough money to invest after that, society would fall apart if everybody were investors and canape pushers, and no-one were workers.

      Well, yeah. Society would fall apart if everyone were an investor. You can't invest in a business if no one is actually making products. However, I would argue that society would also fall apart if no one were investing. Investors provide the capital that businesses need to expand and grow. Remove the investors, and you are left with small mom-and-pop operations. Companies like Cisco, Dell, Apple, Microsoft, HP, etc., etc., etc., got where they are because someone invested in them. Do you seriously think our economy would be better off if no one had invested in these companies when they were still operating in their respective garages?

      Reward skill, not greed.

      Do you seriously think there is no skill required in investing? Try it out some time. Give yourself a million dollars in Monopoly money. Pick a few stocks to "invest" that money in. Take a little time -- a few weeks, a few months, a year, whatever -- and see how your stocks do. Then tell me if you think you could make a living at it. A successful investor is every bit as skilled at what (s)he does as someone successful in any other career field. I know /. group-think says that investors are the epitome of evil -- and people like Bernie Madoff and Michael Milkin before him didn't do much to dispel that myth -- but without them, our economy would crumble. And if you think your financial situation sucks right now, you should see what it would look like without investors to drive the economy.

      --
      MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
    318. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anthony+Mouse · · Score: 1

      I think that most of Buffet's income is in capital gains which are taxed (inexplicably) at a much lower rate than income.

      It isn't inexplicable at all. It's because of inflation. If you buy a stock for $100 in 2001 and sell it for $150 in 2011, you have a nominal gain of $50, but in real terms you only made $22 because $100 in 2001 has the same buying power as $128 in 2011 (according to the CPI -- it's probably even worse than that in reality).

      We want to tax people on actual gains rather than just inflation, because taxing inflation causes investors to hold existing, poorly-performing investments even where new investments are more attractive (and economically beneficial), in order to put off paying the tax as long as possible.

      They could change it so that they actually calculate out the inflation using the Consumer Price Index between the times the asset was bought and sold and then tax on the real gain rather than the nominal gain, but long-term investors would actually end up paying less that way than they are now, which could result in a reduction in government revenue. And short term investors (like high frequency traders) would lobby against it aggressively because they have no inflationary component of their gains to deduct.

    319. Re:Tax planning and rich people by DesScorp · · Score: 1

      What you're doing is nothing more than coveting your neighbors' goods.

      No, what he's doing is telling you to render unto Caesar the things which are Caesar's.

      And in a representative republic, there is no Caesar. There's us. And unlike the Roman Empire under Caesar, we have property rights that can't be taken away at the whim of the emperor. We get to decide, via our representatives, how much goes to the public coffers. If you want a system where "Caesar" can just take what he likes, then move elsewhere, because this country was founded on laws and principles very much in opposition to that kind of notion.

      --
      Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    320. Re:Tax planning and rich people by TooMuchToDo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      While we're at it, why don't we eliminate the EPA and the minimum wage?

      Government exists to cater to its citizens, not to corporations. Corporations can feel free to GTFO and make room for someone else who won't require us to race to the bottom with regards to our standard of living, environmental regulations and so forth.

    321. Re:Tax planning and rich people by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      With our current tiered system, they pay a higher percentage than us.

      ...unless they earn it in stock and other investment, which is normal. Then they pay a lower percentage than the guy working at Walmart.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    322. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Jhon · · Score: 1

      http://www.econlib.org/library/Enc/SupplySideEconomics.html

      Want another? Most claim this -- many will argue about degree.

    323. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Q-Hack! · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You owe society more than society owes you.

      Wow, That statement alone scares me more than any other socialist diatribe.

      It leads me to think of another just as bad... "All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others"

      --
      Some days I get the sinking feeling Orwell was an optimist.
    324. Re:Tax planning and rich people by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      That's why you have a sales tax on certain products, but not on others. Food, housing and transportation up to a certain level, various house hold items up to a certain level - no tax. It's done like that in plenty of countries.

      Yes, it creates a whole new bureaucracy. The advantage is that the income tax bureaucracy can be stripped down to compensate.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    325. Re:Tax planning and rich people by slamb · · Score: 2

      With nearly 50% of the US paying no federal income tax, they have no problem asking for "more". Want to be 'fair'? Get rid of the EIC -- or at least prevent it from giving back MORE money that was originally paid by the recipient.

      Now that's what I call class warfare. And so unlike raising taxes on people who can afford them, it is indeed rotten economics.

      Have you looked at the actual table? For a single person, the Earned Income Tax Credit isn't available if (s)he earns more than $13,460. That's comparable to the US Census Poverty Threshold of $11,344 (for a person younger than 65). If not for the Earned Income Tax Credit, people who have an income might actually starve, go homeless, etc. So when I say this is class warfare, it is only because it could actually kill the working poor.

      In contrast, the wealthy really can afford it without noticing. There was an interesting New York Times article on this recently, which linked to this Citizens for Tax Justice fact sheet. If you read through it, you'll see that the revenue from increasing the tax rate on the top 1% by income would be similar to that of raising it on the bottom 60% by the same percentage. I assure you, there will be enough left over to provide basic necessities of life! (In fact, I'm not in the top 1%, but I certainly could pay more taxes without great hardship. It might mean it'd take me longer to afford a house, but I'm not exactly homeless in my 2-bedroom rented townhouse.)

      If you're not swayed by arguments such as "don't kill people with taxes", then consider no taxes on poor people an investment. If they have all of a home, healthy food on the table, adequate medical care, a quality education, and available jobs, it's reasonable to believe that many of them will go on to become middle-class tax-payers: enough so to pay back your investment with far more than the nominal 1% tax rate you're suggesting. In fact, by effectively selling too soon, you're virtually guaranteeing you'll throw away what you put in with that government-provided K12 education and the like.

    326. Re:Tax planning and rich people by XDirtypunkX · · Score: 1

      Corporate taxes are on profit, raising your prices to offset them is completely nonsensical as any sensible company has already tried to set its prices for maximum profit. They're not going to try and earn less profit and if they can earn more that suggests their prices aren't set for maximum profit. What you're spouting is one of two lies about corporate profit, the other being that it costs jobs in the company (again, because to offset your tax by cutting jobs means your company was not earning maximum profits in the first place with those jobs).

      Taxes on sales or on gross income are on customers. Corporate profit taxes are on companies and shareholders.

    327. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Compholio · · Score: 1

      Or better yet - how about we set the corporate income tax rate to zero? No reason for GE and others to offshore so much. ...

      General Electric Paid No Federal Taxes in 2010

    328. Re:Tax planning and rich people by chrb · · Score: 1
      Newsflash: Warren Buffet is not a corporation.

      Closely held companies will simply switch to a partnership structure so that the investors pay tax directly and once at a high rate, rather than twice at two lower rates.

      Maybe you would like to research why Buffet doesn't already do this, if it's such a great tax dodge?

    329. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Toonol · · Score: 3, Insightful

      He's right, Buffet is wrong.

      Well, that's the short version. The long version is: Buffet is right, but his remarks are being misconstrued by nearly everybody. Deliberately so, by the politicians.

      The rich have higher income tax rates than the poor. This is absolutely the case. If you're arguing that the tax rates should be increased on the rich because you think they're less than the poor, you're simply misinformed.

      Now, there are other types of taxes. Estate taxes, tariffs, capital gains taxes. Those are charged at different rates. Capital gains are charged at a rate ranging from 0 to 15%, Note that rich people pay a higher rate on gains than poor people, also. However, if a person makes 90% of his income from capital gains, and you average together the different types of taxes he pays, the overall tax burden on the rich guy might be lower.

      This is deliberate. Capital gains taxes are low on purpose, because those drive investment. However, if the situation is unacceptable, the solution is not to adjust the base rates, the solution would be to raise the capital gains taxes. I don't believe Obama's plan does this; instead, it's using Buffet's statement as a marketing point for other tax increases.

    330. Re:Tax planning and rich people by teg · · Score: 2

      True, but living in North Korea sucks, unless you're one of the elites.

      On the other side, living in Norway, Canada or Germany doesn't suck quite as much. If North Korea is where "this will ultimately lead", then the other way leads to Somalia.

      For a more reasonable argument, assuming that someone who disagrees with you isn't extremist and that there are positives and negatives on both sides is usually constructive.

    331. Re:Tax planning and rich people by ravenshrike · · Score: 1

      In which case they look for other ways to maximize profit, like moving offshore.

    332. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      The tax is supposed to be based off of Buffet's recommendations, which would include both capital gains AND income. The issue was that capital gains were taxed at a flat 15% versus the graded system for income. Most of the mega-rich don't earn any income, they do however earn millions in capital gains and dividends yearly. Hopefully it makes it through the way buffet suggested without getting too bastardized.

      They won't raise capital gains taxes because they know it will reduce revenue from those taxes - it's pretty well-known and even Biden indicated that was the case. It's all a bunch of misdirection to drum up some "tax-the-rich" class warfare, and Buffett is just being a good shill. You know he doesn't really buy the rhetoric because his own company (Hathaway something) doesn't even pay the taxes it's supposed to - they owe about a billion or so going back to 2002. BUT - being a good shill has it's benefits. Buffett owns a major stake in some coal producing companies, which could be hurt by some really tough EPA regulations that are being proposed. Funny how Obama recently nixed those regulations. Coincidence? I think not.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    333. Re:Tax planning and rich people by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      And tell me, where exactly would you be without a larger society? You may have not noticed this, but we're not solo predators, we're a social beast, no matter what sociopathic Libertarian philosophy may say.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    334. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The other benefit here is that it rewards saving. I've yet to see a convincing argument against a national sales tax.

    335. Re:Tax planning and rich people by footNipple · · Score: 1

      You're not entirely correct. Short term capital gains occur when profits are generated on assets owned for less than a year. These gains are fully taxed as income. Long tern capital gains ( > 1 year) are taxed at a lower rate. In Buffett's case, he has owned his BH shares since they were created, so he just sells off enough shares throughout the year to cover A PORTION of his income needs.

    336. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Toonol · · Score: 1

      Rich people use more public services than poor people in support of their activities. So yes, a larger percentage.

      I think this is obviously wrong. If a rich guy makes ten times as much money as a poor guy, you think he uses MORE than ten times as many public services? I would think he uses proportionately fewer, like two or three times. Your argument would make more sense if you were arguing FOR a flat tax.

    337. Re:Tax planning and rich people by visualight · · Score: 1

      Oh please, it's been explained a million times.

      Again and again tax breaks and subsidies for the wealthy.

      Again and again cuts to programs that benefit the poor.

      Steady decreasing wages for working class over the past 40 years.

      Steady increasing wealth for the already super rich over the past 40 years.

      SUPPLY SIDE ECONOMICS IS CLASS WARFARE.

      --
      Samsung took back my unlocked bootloader because Google wants me to rent movies. They're both evil.
    338. Re:Tax planning and rich people by schm0 · · Score: 1

      No, the problem is people are tired of paying taxes for bullshit. Every hour on the hour there's some new scandal involving tax dollars spent on unimaginable nonsense, or simply unaccounted for. Can you ideological fuckheads not understand that?

      I agree. We should end the wars, tax wall street and the banks for screwing us into a recession, and the uber-rich for making a fortune during that time. Let's get our country back on track! Or just eliminate Medicare and Social Security. I mean, those are equal things, right?

    339. Re:Tax planning and rich people by lowtekk · · Score: 1

      Or we could just acknowledge that corporations don't really pay taxes, they just pass those costs down to the consumer as they would an increased expense in manufacturing or materials.

    340. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Yakasha · · Score: 1

      No amount of tax attorneys can get around a sales tax.

      Doing your shopping overseas tends to help though.

    341. Re:Tax planning and rich people by jthill · · Score: 1

      I make 100% of my income overseas. I live overseas.

      How much tax would you pay if you were a citizen there?

      I don't use any US public infrastructure, however...

      However you do use theirs, while paying, if anything, substantially less than what citizens pay for it.

      --
      As always, all IMO. Insert "I think" everywhere grammatically possible.
    342. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Toonol · · Score: 1

      They don't spend it, but they don't ignore it. Their money is invested, which typically helps all us poor people.

    343. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Jhon · · Score: 1

      "In other words, federal taxes aren't all taxes."

      Who claimed it was? However, this entire story is about FEDERAL taxes and FEDERAL spending.

      That person X pays $600 a year in local/state sales tax has virtually no impact on the fact that they may be getting $1000 more back from the feds than they paid via an EIC with regards to our FEDERAL DEBT.

      If someone pays ZERO FEDERAL taxes -- and in fact may get MORE back than they pay, how is that fair? They have NO incentive to ask the government to curb spending. It's NOT punitive to ask them to pay SOMETHING -- and to pay MORE when they want MORE. It's getting them invested in society. When they realize that if they want their kids to have a special federal food program might mean they pay an extra $5 or $10 a year in federal taxes, they may reconsider that choice...

    344. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Cyberllama · · Score: 1

      This is why government exists. Some things will never be paid for by private individuals but offer benefits so far in excess of their costs its ridiculous not to do them. Public education and public health are two primary examples. Have you ever really considered how much more money we'd have to spend on Law enforcement and prisons if we, as a for instance, stopped paying for public education?

      Perhaps your familiar with game theory and the prisoner's dilemma. Neither party will achieve the optimal outcome by selfishly pursuing their own self-interests--it requires a 3rd party to step in and enforce some discipline to ensure that everyone achieves the best possible outcome.

      As a for instance, needles for drug addicts. If the government provides them, the company who makes the needles profits. The addicts themselves will never spend money on something that means less heroin (or whatever drug we're talking about) however they each receive a net aggregate benefit far in excess of the needles total cost. A few million spent on needles can easily translate into tens of millions of dollars LESS spent on healthcare for Hepatitis and AIDS down the road. A huge part of that benefit goes to the drug addicts but much of it goes back to the government and hospitals who might likely get saddled with their healthcare costs in the end.

      The net benefit to everyone for such a simple program is huge, an order of magnitude, at least, greater than the cost. And yet, if left to the free market and private charity it would never happen. That's a simple example. This is what government is supposed to do. You benefit from those tax dollars spent so much more than you realize, and its a benefit far greater than what you could do with your own spending power. You benefit by getting robbed less, by spending less on security, by cheaper prices and by any other number of other ways.

    345. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Courageous · · Score: 1

      First, companies don't pay taxes. Their customers do. To put it simpler, when you tax a company, they raise prices to pay that tax.

      Second, employees don't pay taxes. Their employers do. To put it simpler, when you tax an employee, they raise their required salary to pay that tax.

      This is a fun game.

      C//

    346. Re:Tax planning and rich people by antifoidulus · · Score: 2

      And of course, you like 99% of Republicans, fail basic reading comprehension. That data specifically excludes the payroll tax which, especially in the wake of increasing income inequality, is incredibly regressive. If you include payroll taxes and other usage taxes(sales taxes and license taxes etc.) then the rich pay considerably less as a percentage of overall taxes than their wealth. But I guess it's folly trying to argue facts with a Republican. The Republican talking points can all be empirically countered with less than 5 minutes of research and yet Republicans love to remain purposely ignorant. Asking a Republican to actually listen to facts and reason is like asking a Christian not to talk to an imaginary man in the sky. Not going to happen.

    347. Re:Tax planning and rich people by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      The police exist almost solely to keep the poor from taking from the rich. (Usually by paying a lot of attention to crimes against the rich, and little attention to the crimes against the poor, so that criminals prey on the poor, not the rich. In fact, taking expensive things is often treated different _by law_, with specific laws to cover it and specific organizations to handle it...and only the rich have expensive things.)

      The military exist almost solely to keep other countries from taking assets belonging to the rich. (You think they'd invade for your house?) Actually, recently, it's started to exist to start taking from other countries.

      The civil legal system exists almost solely to settle disputes between the rich, or to settle a dispute between the rich and the poor in favor of the best lawyer, which means the rich.

      I could go on, but that's like half the entire government funding right there.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    348. Re:Tax planning and rich people by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      So we should just bend over and take it, while at the same time putting all the burden for this bullshit "deficit reduction" on the poor? The rich are largely the ones who wanted this shit, they can be the ones to pay for it.

    349. Re:Tax planning and rich people by jthill · · Score: 1

      Same ratio of discretionary income to taxes paid.

      --
      As always, all IMO. Insert "I think" everywhere grammatically possible.
    350. Re:Tax planning and rich people by footNipple · · Score: 1

      Great, so we can't tax rich people because they will dodge taxes?

      No! You can't tax rich people TOO MUCH because if you do, then capital flight will occur.

    351. Re:Tax planning and rich people by slshwtw · · Score: 1

      The tax on the profit from selling the bread is more akin to the tax paid on dividends by someone who holds stock, which is taxed like any other income. Tax on the sale of stock is more like tax on the the sale of the bakery. As I'm not in the business of finance (or baking) I can't compare the difference in tax on these actions, but the reduced tax rate on capital gains is not for frequent traders as it only applies to long term gains (stock that is held for at least a year).

    352. Re:Tax planning and rich people by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      True, but living in North Korea sucks

      Only an idiot would bring up North Korea in this context, ignoring all the first world nations that prove him wrong.

    353. Re:Tax planning and rich people by kaatochacha · · Score: 1

      How is a comment with multiple turds, mulitple accusations of someone being less than capable of thinking, and that tired old Canard of Bush=Evil even vaguely insightful? Insightful should mean "hmm, good point", not "hmm, i agree with you completely, now let me have some of that flavor-ade"

    354. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      That strikes me as a separate debate. At any rate, even the Roman government gave out bread to the masses in Rome, because the alternatives were food riots, which were nasty affairs.

      So, let's put it this way, the government maintains a minimum standard of living simply because the alternatives are ultimately much more unpalatable to the ruling elites.

      FTFY

      Note that when riots organized by Twitter and Facebook happen in Tunisia, Egypt and "Libya" (oops - that was Hillary), it's all good and they are rebel heroes and the government forces get carpet bombed. But if it happens in England you get 4 years in jail just for encouraging it on Facebook.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    355. Re:Tax planning and rich people by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      Low-wage and just above (service and labor jobs) are plentiful, very low unemployment there.

      Someone obviously hasn't been paying attention these past couple of years.

    356. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      Bridges are infrastructure projects everywhere.

    357. Re:Tax planning and rich people by jthill · · Score: 1

      Individuals do not pay taxes at all. All individuals do is pass their tax costs on to the price of their labor.

      --
      As always, all IMO. Insert "I think" everywhere grammatically possible.
    358. Re:Tax planning and rich people by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      The poorest households in the US have a pretty good life when compared to most of the world.

      So? Is that supposed to mean that their life still doesn't royally suck here? And don't bring up any shit about 3rd world countries. We're one of the most developed nations in the world. We're not supposed to have any of that shit, and comparing us to countries that do is completely disingenuous. Compare the life of the poor here in the US to say, Germany, Sweden, or Norway.

    359. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Toonol · · Score: 1

      Corporations do not pay taxes at all.
      That's economics from junior high school.
      All corporations do is pass their tax costs on to the price of their goods.


      No, corporations do pay taxes. They may raise their product prices to compensate, but the effect of the price increase is generally a decrease in total sales meaning that consumers get charged more AND the corporation earns less money. After all, if they could have made more money by raising their prices, they would already have done that. They have to set their prices at a higher level than the market would naturally settle at. Increases in taxes screw the consumer AND the business in favor of the government.

    360. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Duradin · · Score: 1

      And he has whatever he had in America to come back to.

      Law enforcement to protect his property. FDIC to protect his savings. SEC to try to protect his investments.

    361. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1, Troll

      "The US right now has THE MOST progressive tax system in the world"

      The extra caps doesn't make this statement any less ridiculously false.

      It's true. Check the stats. Lowest 50% don't pay any income tax, many of those get distribution FROM the tax system, and the payroll taxes in most European countries is much higher, and they are paying VAT taxes which is also paid by every consumer.

      I won't link the Wikipedia article (since it's not really a source), but it's even acknowledge there that the US has the most progressive tax policy.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    362. Re:Tax planning and rich people by antifoidulus · · Score: 1

      Uh huh, and the rich never EVER have asked from a handout from the government after their own shit-brained schemes backfired and they were going to lose their bonuses unless the government stepped in and saved the rich from the consequences of their action. Never happened, not at all.... oh wait, thats right, it has happened, continues to happen, and will happen again. The rich always use the money of the middle class to save them from any negative consequences they may face, then scream bloody murder when people actually expect them to pay back into the system.

      Also, your analogy is so hilariously bad that it hurts(but being a Republican stupidity comes with the territory). You do realize that the rich benefit overwhelmingly from government expenditures don't you? Your war for oil, government infrastructure, police and fire services to protect your property, an education system that provides productive workers, research that helps extend your life. But hey, the middle class should pay for all that right? Just as they should pay for the rich's bailouts.

    363. Re:Tax planning and rich people by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      Yes, but if you look at the budget, typically military/defense spending is going to be one of the top 3 categories.

    364. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anthony+Mouse · · Score: 1

      GP was right but incomplete. Companies don't pay taxes because they're just intermediaries. They take money from customers and give it to employees and investors. If you increase taxes on a corporation, it will cause one or more of the following things: They will raise prices on consumers, lay off employees or reduce employee compensation, or the value of your 401K will go down. It isn't General Electric who would pay the tax, it's you, as a customer/employee/pensioner.

    365. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      Bridge to Nowhere wasn't near Anchorage, it was Ketchikan to Gravina Island.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravina_Island_Bridge

      If you'd looked at a map of Anchorage you'd see that to the north is Knik Arm (which the Knik Bridge would cross to Point MacKenzie), to the east are mountains, to the south is Turnagain Arm and to the west is water.

    366. Re:Tax planning and rich people by s73v3r · · Score: 0

      So basically, put the entire burden of balancing the budget on the poor? Because to follow through with your plan, you would have to make large cuts to assistance programs that many of the poor depend on. And cut just about NOTHING that affects the rich. Your plan is truly nothing but class warfare. The plan Obama laid out tries to spread the pain somewhat equally.

    367. Re:Tax planning and rich people by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

      Fair is easy to define: A fair tax would be one that is a fixed proportion of the wealth of an individual. Use of wealth is obvious, because a person's wealth is proportional their interest in the stability of society. If society collapses, a destitute man looses nothing. A rich man loses everything.

      The mistaken idea of the current income tax is that earned income is a measure of that interest in stability. The wealthy try to make sure it isn't. Taken as broad averages, the current income tax rates do set up something proportional to wealth. But of course those are averages. For individual people, it's not proportional, and nearly everyone is overtaxed or undertaxed proportionate to their wealth. And at the very upper end there's not even an approximate proportion and everyone is undertaxed.

    368. Re:Tax planning and rich people by slamb · · Score: 1

      Hah. Me rich? Of my grandparents, 3 came to this country as children -- penniless. I'm the first one in my family to not only go to college, but to FINISH HIGH SCHOOL. I was effectively homeless for part of my 2nd term at the local community college -- living out of lockers and getting a $25 hotel 2 or 3 times a week until I got a better job and could afford a real room. I finished school with no debt and on my own blood/sweat.

      Congratulations on your achievement. You obviously worked very hard...and, frankly, were a little bit lucky as well. What would have happened if you got a major illness during this time? Or your parents did and you had to drop out of college to support the family? Or any number of other scenarios...rags to riches stories like yours are inspiring but I don't think they're as common as you seem to be suggesting, even among smart people willing to work very hard. This infographic shows that the bottom 1/5th actually lost ground from 1980 to 2009.

      My own luck was to be born into a loving, two-parent family who gave me healthy food, a stable home environment, medical care, and a college education. I now have an excellent job. Maybe I would have been able to pull it off without some of those things, but I'm sure glad I didn't have to.

    369. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
      Yeah, there's no faster way to get rich than to sit back and just wait for it to roll in

      I know you want to be sarcastic, but that is actually true. That's what most of the truly wealthy do: nothing. One family member manages the inheritance while the other 20 members demonstrate the idleness of the rich.

      The lone manager typically doesn't work all that hard either: the most difficult struggle in life is to make that first million dollars; if that is handed to you by your parents, then 90% of your life's work has already been done for you for free.

      Why are you apologizing for the idle rich? Unless you are wealthy yourself, do you know what they think of people like you? They call you a useful idiot.

    370. Re:Tax planning and rich people by ravenshrike · · Score: 3, Informative

      Um, Clinton had a dot-com and post-soviet bubble. Not to mention the beginnings of the housing bubble. Not to mention his policies were much more moderate than Obama's and the military at the time had a lot more that could be cut without utterly destroying it. Not to mention that his insistence for SigInt over HumInt(because SigInt is cheaper and looks flashier in sound bites) was probably what allowed both the 9/11 attackers to get through and the crap intel from Iraq.

      As for Romney, a republican in Mass. with both houses controlled by Dems, who is by far the Republican equivalent of the most right Blue Dog democrats, is a really fucking stupid appeal to authority.

      As for the supposed war debt being off the books, how big of an idiot are you? While the wars were never in the projected totals for defense at the start of the year, at the end of each year their cost was certainly accounted for. The biggest expense signed over to Obama was the first stimulus and bank bailouts.

    371. Re:Tax planning and rich people by s73v3r · · Score: 0

      Our grandparents saved money for retirement.

      And any who lost those savings, because either the stock market went through a "correction" or because they had huge medical expenses to pay for were left to die in the street. Gee, things were sooooo much better then.

    372. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      Correct me if I'm wrong here, but I thought that only served a useful public purpose once, at IPO time. After that it's just money chasing money round in cricles. And again, while the principle is apparently sound, the practise is very much not so, as recent events have indicated. I'd be well in favour of higher taxes on higher earners, but only in conjunction with spending cuts.

    373. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Tarsir · · Score: 1

      Could you be more specific? An example maybe?

    374. Re:Tax planning and rich people by omb · · Score: 1

      No, Obama and the Demo-rats want to stop spending, 90% counterproductive and wasteful,
      stop the Green crap and then they won't need to tax.

      Tax is legalized theft and making it FAIR is nonsense.

    375. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A sales tax has three problems:

      1) It's varialbe and directly tied to economic activity. I.E. more spending = more taxes but less spending = less taxes. This means that in an economic downturn your tax base vanishes overnight. The states are almost all funded from sales taxes and they're all in huge trouble because of this.

      2) You'd need a Constitutional Amendment to get it.

      3) By definition you reduce what you tax. This is why 'sin taxes' are so attractive. If you tax consumption then you will get less consumption. If your tax base is based on that consumption then your taxes will have diminishing returns.

    376. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Toonol · · Score: 1

      Doesn't work that way. Profit doesn't increase linearly with sale price of the items. Otherwise, we could do this:

      Cost of Tax on business: $900mil
      Cost of goods on the market: OVER $7,000 per unit sold.
      Profit: $60 BILLION!!!!

      In reality, sales follows a curve, not a line, and price increases will decrease sales. A new expense (like taxes) will generally be divided between price hikes to the customer and cuts in profit, sharing the pain. After all, if they could have made more money by charging more, they'd already be charging more.

    377. Re:Tax planning and rich people by x6060 · · Score: 1

      Because if they dont then one of their competitors will. Then the competitor under cuts them and takes away a portion of their market share and makes a lot more money.

    378. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with sales tax is it is effective, but only to a point even if we ignore under-the-table deals that bypass sales taxes.

      Rich people don't actually spend all the money they receive. Once you reach a certain point, you are accumulating wealth faster than you can realistically spend it (or even want to spend it). Instead, you start putting some of that wealth towards generating more wealth for yourself in the form of investments. In the short term, this is actually good behavior because it means money to hire folks, start new businesses and so on. In the long term it gets bad as the wealth continues to accumulate at the top through a form of aristocracy (the children then use the wealth of their parents to generate more wealth for themselves).

      A better answer to that particular problem is a strong estate tax. This was the method preferred by the US founders to prevent an aristocracy of wealth from forming. We have an early form of it even today. But at the same time, this form of aristocracy isn't as closely guarded as one of royalty, so you still see folks 'strike it rich' with some smart investment from old money from time to time.

    379. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I am living paycheck to paycheck I am spending nearly 100% of my income each month, a large portion of which would be taxed via the sales tax. Poor people may spend less money comparatively and pay less in taxes, but the portion of their income that is taxed is much, much higher than a rich person who might only spend 50% or 10% of their income.

      I am not so sure that's a "fair" tax.

    380. Re:Tax planning and rich people by tepples · · Score: 1

      Doing your shopping overseas tends to help though.

      That's why countries have import tariffs.

    381. Re:Tax planning and rich people by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      That said, I completely disagree with Obama's approach on this.

      I completely agree with it. The GOP just wants to cut spending on "entitlements", which is code speak for "cut assistance programs that the poor depend on." They would have the entirety of the budget balance come from that, placing the entire burden on the poor. If that doesn't scream "Class Warfare," I don't know what does. Obama's plan tries to distribute the pain somewhat equally among all.

      A high minimum tax which ignores charity not only discourages charity

      There's very little actual evidence to back that statement up. You have "gut feelings," but almost nothing in the way of cold, hard data.

    382. Re:Tax planning and rich people by onetwentyone · · Score: 1
      Listing everything out as you have done makes the situation look much worse than what actually occurs. I've taken the liberty of consolidating the above in to the various tax categories thus putting this into a much more realistic light.

      All fall under sales tax:

      I get taxed when I buy materials to build a shop.
      I get taxed on the goods I purchase to sell in the shop.
      I get taxed on the goods I sell to others.
      I get taxed on the heat in the shop.
      I get taxed on the water I use in the shop.
      I get taxed on the power consumed by the shop.
      I get taxed on the suppliments that I feed the horses.
      I get taxed on the fee for delivery of the hay I bought.
      I get taxed on the hay I buy to make up the difference in what I cant grow on my own.
      I get taxed on the materials to build the hay barn.
      I get taxed on the work vehicles I purchase.
      I get taxed on the fuel for my business vehicles (tractors, trucks, trailors).
      I get taxed on the old vehicles I sell to replace.
      I get taxed on the vet bills for the horses. I get taxed on the services of the farrier.
      I get taxed when I charge someone to board their horse.
      I get taxed when I charge someone to train their horse.
      I get taxed when I charge someone to transport their horse.
      And taxed to buy food.
      And taxed to buy fuel.
      And taxed to buy clothes.
      And taxed to go to a movie, or to dinner, or to a ball game, or to a play, or ... or... or... or...

      Property taxes: (vary depending on where you live or your store is located)

      And I get taxed to buy my house.
      And I get taxed to STAY in my house.
      And taxed to send my kids to school.
      I get taxed on the property the shop sits on.
      I get taxed by the school district in the county the shop is in.
      I get taxed on the hay I grow.
      I get taxed on the building I constructed to store the hay in.
      I get taxed when I open the shop.

      State / Federal Income Taxes: (state only if applicable)

      I get taxed on the pay I give to my employees.
      And THEN I get taxed on what I take for myself out of MY business.

      Now a bunch of these can be combined even further which, you'll find, I also took the liberty of doing for you:

      Sales Tax:
      I get taxed when I purchase goods or services at a rate my state has decided.

      Property Tax:
      I get taxed for owning property at a rate my state and local county have decided.

      State / Federal Income Taxes
      I get taxed on my income and I'm responsible for making sure my employees have the appropriate taxes taken out of their income.

      You're welcome.

    383. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Then up the tariffs. Pay my tax or pay my tariff.

      Fuck, what is this here, who runs the show? The government or the corporations? Ok, ok, I know the answer, let me rephrase it: who SHOULD run the show?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    384. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Mindwarp · · Score: 1

      The other Kings said I were stupid to build a castle across the Knik Arm, but I did it anyway!

      --
      The gift of death metal does not smile on the good looking.
    385. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First, companies don't pay taxes. Their customers do. To put it simpler, when you tax a company, they raise prices to pay that tax. Customers pay those higher prices to cover that tax.

      If there's one thing I learned from John Boehner about how to run a business, it is that you never raise prices. If government increases your tax burden, the only smart solution is to fire staff so you can pay the tax with what used to be their salaries.

    386. Re:Tax planning and rich people by joebok · · Score: 1

      My understanding was that the structure would be something along the lines of the current alternative minimum tax. You compute your tax via the regular rules, then according to the "buffet" rules and pay the larger. I don't know any of the details of the alternative, but my understanding of the intent is to try to ensure that everybody above a certain income level pays at least a certain % of their income regardless of the source of the income.

    387. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      Bottom line is, most of these companies want to sell to Americans. If Americans decide to take steps to curtail offshoring, those companies pretty much have to suck it up. There's a stick and a carrot available.

    388. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      How come this only applies to certain people?

      The general belief is this: society provided the environment for which you succeed or fail in. Thus, if you succeed in society, society is credited (taxes). Whereas if you failed in society, society has to pay (welfare)

      If you truly disagree with this belief, voting for either party will not help, as the parties don't fight over the underlying belief, but simply over how much and who we tax (or basically, who the "certain people" in "How come this only applies to certain people"). Your best recourse is to move (to say, Egypt or Libya)

    389. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anthony+Mouse · · Score: 1

      The only way to avoid "tax planning" is to implement a poll tax. As soon as you have different taxes on different activities, people have the ability to choose the activities with lower taxes and avoid the activities with higher taxes. That's what tax planning is.

      More to the point, you can't tax people who operate outside of your jurisdiction and you can't force other countries to raise their tax rates to match or exceed yours in order to prevent companies moving operations there to achieve a lower tax rate. Tax competition exists, and the fact is it's generally more profitable to win the competition by having lower effective corporate tax rates and attracting corporations who convert people who would be collecting unemployment to people who are paying payroll and income taxes.

      And that's what we've been doing for some time now. We have a high nominal corporate tax rate for political reasons, but corporations don't actually pay it, and we like it that way because it keeps more of them here.

    390. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 1

      The government which provides services in aggregate that individuals and smaller entities are unable to provide at the same efficiency. Failing to help provide for those services, while enjoying the benefits of those services is cheating. The last thing people of considerable means should be complaining about is a lack of access to elected officials.

      --
      Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
    391. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Toonol · · Score: 1

      The only class waging war in this country on other classes is the rich.

      We don't have classes in this country. Different levels of income do not constitute a class.

    392. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Jhon · · Score: 1

      "Have you looked at the actual table [wikipedia.org]? For a single person, the Earned Income Tax Credit isn't available if (s)he earns more than $13,460. "

      Really? Have you ever looked at the "big picture"?

      In recent years, credits for low- and middle-income families have grown so much that a family of four making as much as $50,000 will owe no federal income tax for 2009, as long as there are two children younger than 17, according to a separate analysis by the consulting firm Deloitte Tax.

      "If you're not swayed by arguments such as "don't kill people with taxes""

      Silly rhetoric. It's not "killing" when asking them to get invested in the system. If a person pays SOMETHING, they are more likely willing to make responsible voting choices if they know that asking/getting MORE stuff from the fed will mean they will pay MORE in taxes. It's far too easy for someone who pays NOTHING to ask for more.

    393. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      "Low-wage and just above (service and labor jobs) are plentiful"

      Um.. no.

      What I meant was that there have been proportionally fewer job losses in that sector than in the better-paying skilled jobs. It's why "underemployment" is so prevalent now.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    394. Re:Tax planning and rich people by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      To the extent that rich people make good choices as to what companies to invest in, their money benefits them AND the economy as a whole.

      Yes, but is it beneficial enough to allow that to be so many people's only source of income? Or should it only be encouraged as a secondary income, while having an actual job?

      To put it another way, the more you claim that a particular rich person can sit back and let their money work for them, the more you invalidate your own argument that the government should take over the management of it.

      Not in the least. For one, that really only benefits the rich person. It has some benefit to society, but not nearly as much as it does to the rich person. Meanwhile, social programs and infrastructure projects have a much greater benefit to society.

    395. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Mindwarp · · Score: 2

      Just out of interest, what tax rates are you paying right now, and what would be the expected tax rates if this legislation were to pass?

      --
      The gift of death metal does not smile on the good looking.
    396. Re:Tax planning and rich people by nine-times · · Score: 1

      Oh, I see. So rich people are so delicate that we can't breathe in their direction without them taking their ball and going home. You know what I think we should do? We should just start giving rich people money. Bribe them to stay in the country. Bankrupt ourselves to do it.

    397. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First, companies don't pay taxes. Their customers do. To put it simpler, when you tax a company, they raise prices to pay that tax. Customers pay those higher prices to cover that tax. Companies don't print money. They get paid by their customers.

      First, customers don't pay taxes. Their employers do. To put it simpler, when you tax a customer, it raises cost of living to pay that tax. Employers pay higher wages to cover that tax. Customers don't print money. They get paid by their employers.

    398. Re:Tax planning and rich people by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      So then you're suggesting that there's a point at which a person who was skilled becomes greedy instead for continuing to exihibit that which made him a success?

      Considering half the justification for this shit is the idea that greed causes people to invest, and if they didn't have the greed incentive, they wouldn't do anything, yes.

    399. Re:Tax planning and rich people by bored · · Score: 2

      We're pretty unique in the world in that our Government demands you pay "your fair share" of every dollar you make anywhere in the world.

      But AFAIK, you do get to deduct foreign taxes, so if you living somewhere with a significantly higher tax rate, then you aren't going to owe taxes in the US too.

    400. Re:Tax planning and rich people by reasterling · · Score: 1

      Its burden falls disproportionately on the less well off.

      So classify the things that are sold based on necessity.

      bread - no tax luxury yacht - tax a lot

      See that was not so hard.

      --
      "For I desired mercy, and not sacrifice" -- God
    401. Re:Tax planning and rich people by andymadigan · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The combined population of Africa, India and China is >50% of the world population. Saying that the poorest U.S. households and better off than that lot isn't saying much at all.

      Now, if we compare to the "west" (Canada, U.S., Japan, the E.U., Switzerland, and the Nordic States).

      Our Human Development Index is lower than the E.U., our Gini coefficient is higher than the E.U.

      Our GDP PPP per capita is quite a bit higher than Europe. This is mostly because the U.S. focuses on squeezing as much productivity as possible out of the population, and because Europe has been reduced to rubble twice in the past century and subjected to a tug-of-war by Russia and the United States a little more than 40 years.

      Germany manages a trade surplus, and even in the midst of the financial crisis their deficit is barely 7% of revenues, in 2005 ("the good times") the U.S. deficit was 21% of revenues. Germany's GDP PPP per capita is lower than the U.S. Most European countries target general welfare of the populace over 'productivity'. I'd certainly rather be certain of having a home, medical care, and enough to eat rather than knowing that the rich are getting richer.

      By the way - Germany's overall GDP is almost the same as the U.S., despite having a much smaller population, and half the country still recovering from 40 years of communist rule. They also have fewer natural resources and lack direct control over monetary and trade policy.

      In other words, we should be doing significantly better, both in terms of welfare and economically, so much for being the greatest country in the world. We got complacent, and decided that we should deregulate as much as possible. Let companies outsource their entire businesses, reduce funding for education, and make no attempt to economically revive unproductive areas like Appalachia. We'd prefer to massively subsidize farms and big businesses to distort the market.

      --
      The right to protest the State is more sacred than the State.
    402. Re:Tax planning and rich people by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      For a political position that worships the 'free market', the right instantly forget Market 101 when it comes to taxing corporations. People do not price things based on what it costs to make them, you moron. (Except in the sense that they'll stop if they can't make a profit.) They price things based on what the market will pay for them. Taxes can't make a corporation sell things at a higher price, because if they could sell it at a higher price, they already would.

      I love the idea that corporations have some 'set amount of profit' they want to make, no more, and no less, and if something like more taxes come along to take some money from their profits, they can, and will, decide to randomly raise their price, which they could have done at any time, but have refrained from because...uh...something. Likewise, if we reduce their taxes, they will nicely reduce their prices for no discernible reason.

      Seriously, you guys are so complete and utter idiots it's astonishing. The price of goods and services is set by the market, by supply and demand. It is not a number that individual suppliers can randomly set. (At least, not and stay in business.)

      Of course, in the technical sense, you are correct, corporate taxes do get passed on to customers...just like income taxes get passed back to corporations because individuals buy less. Taxes are removing money from the cycle of the market, and hence the entire market feels them in some manner. (Of course, then the government is supposed to spend the money, putting it back.)

      Of course, removing money from individuals results in a much more random and economic depressive behavior than removing it from corporations, because individuals are a lot less logical about their situation. And it's much easier to tax corporations, because the government knows where they live.

      But here's the $64,000 question: If corporations just pass the costs on, WHY ARE THEY CONSTANTLY TRYING TO REDUCE THEIR TAXES, you fucktard?

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    403. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1
      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    404. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anthony+Mouse · · Score: 1

      You know, con men often get away scott free, so I guess we should just do away with laws against theft and fraud. No point trying to close loopholes in the laws or improving enforcement, since I'm sure they'll just find another way to get around those new laws too.

      The problem is that by and large they aren't loopholes. The reason that rich people and corporations don't pay taxes isn't because they're committing tax fraud, it's because we created tax incentives to do things like research and development, hiring employees, doing construction, etc. And then people with money do those things, and get the tax incentives, which lowers their tax rate. That was the whole idea! We wanted to get them to do those things, and now they are. In exchange they pay lower tax rates. If you take away the tax incentives then they stop doing as much of those things we want them to do.

    405. Re:Tax planning and rich people by hedwards · · Score: 1

      A national sales tax would ensure that they moved all of their operations off shore rather than just a portion. It astonishes me how folks trot out the sales tax line all the time without comprehending that it's even easier to circumvent than the income tax is.

      The easiest way to make corporations pay their taxes is to prevent them from booking losses without first booking profits, require that any losses only counter act gains and remove all the stupid subsidies that they're given to create jobs in the US without requiring them to follow through.

    406. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      The irony is poetic.

      I should fully invest myself in my business, and if I should become successful I should shut up and pay all the taxes I pay now because that's a good deal. I should further pay much more in taxes so that people other than myself may have a tax "free ride".

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    407. Re:Tax planning and rich people by sycodon · · Score: 2

      The essential message of Feyshtey's post is that he contributes far more to society than your average Democratic constitute. Yet they keep coming back to the trough for more.

      And you left out a raft of business taxes that most people don't pay...payroll taxes, Business licenses, commercial vehicle taxes, etc.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    408. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Toonol · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't be opposed to the fair tax, but I'd rather have a simpler flat tax:

      Standard deduction of $10,000 per family member. (Or employee, if you're a corporation.)
      You're taxed 20% of every dollar earned over that amount (regardless of source... income, capital gains, inheritance, etc.)

      There might be some simple factors that shift the standard deduction up or down, like catastrophic medical expenses, but the shorter the tax code, the more productive the economy will be.

    409. Re:Tax planning and rich people by JDG1980 · · Score: 1

      "Lowest 50% don't pay any income tax, many of those get distribution FROM the tax system" Hold on a second. You started with the statement that "The US right now has THE MOST progressive tax system in the world" and then proceeded to isolate ONE specific tax, the income tax, which is actually about the only progressive tax we have at all. You're completely forgetting about state and local sales taxes, which are regressive. You're ignoring Social Security payroll taxes, which are also regressive. Everyone who legally works for a living in the United States pays Social Security tax from dollar one of their earnings.

    410. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Nursie · · Score: 2

      Please never again compare the arab revolts and the UK 'riots' in such a way, it just shows your ignorance.

      There's a difference between political demonstration and looting a new pair of Nike's.

    411. Re:Tax planning and rich people by adamchou · · Score: 1

      They are already getting around that too. I don't remember how exactly they do it but its something along these lines... GE manufactures stuff in the states and makes profits in the states. Then they setup a shell company in the Netherlands and they hire that company to provide them with all the services like marketing, hr, etc. Those service fees end up being almost a large portion of the profits they made in the states so they end up having very little reported income in the states.

    412. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 1

      Taxing isn't stealing. Using criminal terms to refer to an opposing viewpoint is the last resort of the intellectually bankrupt.

      --
      Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
    413. Re:Tax planning and rich people by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      I'd say Obama is way ahead of everyone on that front.

      How dare he try to spread the economic pain around equally, rather than concentrate it all on the poor.

      How the fuck can you even think he's ahead of everyone on the "class warfare" front? Especially when the GOP currently is the one that wants to concentrate all of the pain from this "deficit reduction" bullshit on the poor. Explain how that's not class warfare.

      And the rest of your "get the poor to depend on government" is absolute bullshit. The reason that there are more people requiring government assistance now is because those assholes at the top fucked the economy over. Failing to recognize that makes your position completely invalid.

      The stimulus bills. The billions spent, sorry borrowed, created what again? A whole lot of not much. And he wants to do it again. Many people point at how much debt that GW Bush made. They over look that Obama spent more in three years than Bush did in eight. Bush added to the debt. Obama doubled it. Not a good thing.

      And you overlook the fact that W did it during times of economic prosperity. Obama did it in a time where the economy was in the shit, and spending was needed to stop it from falling even further.

    414. Re:Tax planning and rich people by catchblue22 · · Score: 1

      I've posted this here before in the past, but the marginal tax rates from the mid 1940's to the early 1960's was 93% on money earned by an individual over $200000. This period was also a time of outstanding economic health for the American middle class. One could make the argument that this act of redistribution effectively created the modern American consuming middle class. I could make the argument that having more money in the hands of the masses allowed them to (a) consume the goods that modern technology was creating and (b) invest in education, allowing workers who would have previously languished in low paying jobs to become engineers and doctors. However, I don't have the time to write a proper detailed argument right now.

      --
      This and no other is the root from which a tyrant springs; when first he appears as a protector - Plato (423 to 327 BC)
    415. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Toonol · · Score: 1

      If the government passes a law saying you can get a lower rate by doing X, they shouldn't make X illegal. They should just not pass the loophole in the first place.

    416. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Berkyjay · · Score: 1

      You are an excellent debater.

    417. Re:Tax planning and rich people by jjohnson · · Score: 1

      With nearly 50% of the US paying no federal income tax

      This is a lie.

      --
      Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
    418. Re:Tax planning and rich people by JDG1980 · · Score: 1

      That argument might have made some sense during the Cold War, but it makes little sense now. Most First World countries today face few serious military threats. To the extent that there are threats from terrorists, this can usually more effectively be dealt with through non-military means such as law enforcement. There is no evidence that the US invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq have enhanced the security of the US or of the rest of the world.

    419. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Every single example of a national sales tax is loaded with idiotic plans for "prebates" and other such nonsense that would require a huge bureaucracy to maintain.

      The current system requires a huge bureaucracy to maintain. Do you really think that cutting everyone an identical check would require a BIGGER one? Even if it did, the added expense would be well worth having a simpler, more streamlined, less abusable tax system

      Not to mention, without repealing the 16th amendment, this is an invitation to double taxation.

      Given that these proposals are about REPLACING income tax with sales tax, repealing the 16th (with an amendment that also authorizes Congress to collect sales taxes) goes without saying.

    420. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      We're pretty unique in the world in that our Government demands you pay "your fair share" of every dollar you make anywhere in the world.

      But AFAIK, you do get to deduct foreign taxes, so if you living somewhere with a significantly higher tax rate, then you aren't going to owe taxes in the US too.

      Only up to the amount of taxes paid that would be equivalent to making ~$107,000 in the US. After that point, you pay full overseas taxes AND you pay US taxes - at a US tax rate as if you had paid all along (meaning you jump in at the 25% tax bracket). It'll cover the first chunk of cash only, and only if you've already paid those taxes overseas AND spent less than 30 days in the US AND do not have investment income in the US above $100,000...

      When I lived in Belgium, I earned $165,000 per year. I paid Belgian taxes on the first $96,000 (it was a lower threshold, then) I earned, and Belgian and US income taxes on the last $69,000.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    421. Re:Tax planning and rich people by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      I would say that we should be focusing a LOT more on education.

      I agree wholeheartedly on this. Too bad the GOP Tea Party is completely against it.

      I actually agree quite a bit with the rest of your post, too. The biggest problem, however, is that it would require more spending, at a time when Congress is controlled by a group that is opposed to any spending based solely on ideology and their hatred of the President and desire to see him out of office.

    422. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 1

      You realize you are using a machine that was built by a society of people working together for hundreds of years to connect with other intelligent people to discuss abstract thoughts about the functioning of society, right? Absolutely none of that would be possible without ... society: ie individuals working together for the common benefit of all. You may disagree about how that society should be organised and governed, but denying it any role in your life is absurdly hypocritical.

      --
      Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
    423. Re:Tax planning and rich people by StillNeedMoreCoffee · · Score: 1

      Your right, the government is spending it on wars and war profiteering, on no-bid contracts for Haliburton and KBR, on tax breaks for Oil companies and mega-farms, and giving tax breaks to the ultra wealthy. Are suggesting that Warren Buffet should pay less of a tax rate than his secretary? or Exon Mobile not paying any tax?

      I think the thing the president is going to propose is an alternate minimum tax for people making over 1mil a year. Seems only fair.

      And getting companies to pay taxes like everyone else (because we know this Supreme court sees them as individuals, then they should pay taxes like every other utra wealthy individual dont you think?)

      Lets look back to the last run of economic prosperity, during the Clinton years. The taxes proposed are from that time. Lets go back to something that works, not conjecture that if we give money to the rich that it will trickle down. That Regan era failed strategy has just been re-packaged as job creators rather than trickle down but it is trickle down. We give them money and they give it back as jobs. Did'nt happen in the 10 years they had those breaks and look at the banks and other companies sitting on money. They haven't released it to help the economy. Use history to see what has worked and what has not.

    424. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      True, but living in North Korea sucks

      Only an idiot would bring up North Korea in this context, ignoring all the first world nations that prove him wrong.

      I didn't ignore anything - I started with the first country I thought of with a "large public sector", and I addressed other country's taxation policies as well (which YOU then chose to ignore).

      We've been accelerating the growth of the public sector and implementing greater and greater interventionist policies (both domestic and foreign-policy related) for about a dozen years now and here we are. Maybe it's time to try going in another direction.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    425. Re:Tax planning and rich people by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      It's not even a tax on wealth. It's a tax on income. Why not call it the high-income tax?

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    426. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      If they could raise prices further they already would have. At least that's how it works in a market based economy. After the optimal price is reached, price increases tend to be offset by losing customers.

    427. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      Then do you know about the exemptions related to time spent overseas, and investment income based in the US, and how those affect your overseas income taxes?

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    428. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "First, companies don't pay taxes. Their customers do. To put it simpler, when you tax a company, they raise prices to pay that tax."

      Stop parroting this asinine canard. In a highly fungible market, the marginal profit will be hit before prices are raised and passed on to the consumer.

    429. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Jhon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "What would have happened if you got a major illness during this time?"

      I had a lesion on my larynx. LA County picked up the tab.

      "Or your parents did and you had to drop out of college to support the family?"
      Father died when I was 17. I didn't go to college right away to help my mother pay the mortgage. I did that for 4 years.

      What I *DIDNT* do was blow off high school, get someone pregnant or get involved with drugs/alcohol. I also didn't pick a major with virtually no chance of an economic payout. (Well, I did at first... Philosophy -- but switched that when I realized that I'd most likely be unable to repay any loans I would assume).

      What's silly is someone with a degree in 16th century literature and a $100,000-$200,000 debt is upset that they cant find a job that will help pay their student loans... Sounds to me that they would have been better off picking a different major/career path. A little "expected income" research when planning a major would have helped.

    430. Re:Tax planning and rich people by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      And yet, it was the society here that allowed them to be able to make it. Do you honestly think that half of them would be a tenth as prosperous in a place like Somalia?

    431. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Q-Hack! · · Score: 1

      The Clinton years spring to mind.

      And yet, during Clinton's time in office, he ended up with a higher debt than he started with. Is there an example of when the Democrats have truly paid for there increased spending? I suspect not. Both parties have been in a deficit spending for several generations now, with fancy numbers tricks to attempt to pay for said spending.

      As an aside? Does anybody really know how much the government pays in interest on the national debt? At what point does that interest payment exceed the countries ability to pay it without raising the national debt? Have we passed this point already? I predict doom and gloom for our future regardless of what either political party does today.

      --
      Some days I get the sinking feeling Orwell was an optimist.
    432. Re:Tax planning and rich people by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      No, they don't. The rest of us make our money by the sweat of our brow. They make their money on the sweat of other's brows.

    433. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Squiddie · · Score: 1

      You know, it's not exactly ideological to ask you to pay your taxes. The ideologues are the ones who say that we should pretty much cut all taxes, now that is reality distortion.

    434. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      Way to pick out ONE thing I said, ignore the rest of my post, and then build a straw man out of it. I didn't ignore anything. Other countries have similar taxes, except the payroll taxes and sales taxes and VAT taxes (which the US doesn't have at all), are even HIGHER, thus more regressive.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    435. Re:Tax planning and rich people by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      You are a dumbass. Yes, it applies to everyone. No, they're not picking up trash because they're too busy having to work for a living. The fact that they don't pay anything in income tax makes sense when you consider the fact that they ALREADY DON'T HAVE SHIT FOR INCOME.

    436. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      Social Security and Medicare aren't necessarily paid if you live and work abroad; you'll collect only what you had originally put in. And yes, I pay income taxes in my home country - and on a portion of my income, I also pay US income taxes as well. And if I spend more than 35 days in the US each year, I end up having to pay US income taxes on ALL my foreign income - the deduction goes away.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    437. Re:Tax planning and rich people by AmElder · · Score: 1

      Ah ha! But how do you tax a yacht made out of bread!? :D

      Anyway, I'm glad to hear it's that easy.

    438. Re:Tax planning and rich people by phorm · · Score: 1

      You know, maybe if things *had* been done that way, then a $10k house wouldn't cost $300k today...

      More than 10k, sure, but a 30x increase, no.

    439. Re:Tax planning and rich people by firewrought · · Score: 1

      First, companies don't pay taxes. Their customers do. To put it simpler, when you tax a company, they raise prices to pay that tax.

      This is an oversimplification. Instead of translating a tax hike into a direct tax increase, a company might choose to pay its shareholders less or leave the business altogether. Similarly, there's no guarantee that a tax drop will be passed onto customers either.

      A sales tax is the only fair tax. Rich people spend more money, thus pay more in taxes. Poor people spend less money, thus less in taxes.

      This is also an oversimplification... a greater percentage of the money that poor people spend goes to meeting basic necessities. Is it fair to tax that at the same rate? Many places exempt food and medication to make it easier for people to make ends meet. Of course, a very different mindset would argue that the only fair tax is a poll tax where everybody pays the same... but this isn't practical. And a third mindset would argue that wealth should be repetitively taxed like we do land, RF spectrum, etc... some countries have a "wealth tax" that works in terms of your total net worth.

      Ultimately, tax policy must balance a mixed (and sometimes conflicting) set of objectives. Nobody's ever going to invent a tax code that is fair, enforceable, meets revenue goals, spurs the economy, accelerates social justice, and is simple all at the same time.

      money will get spent eventually, meaning it will get taxed eventually

      People pay dearly to have money now instead of eventually.

      --
      -1, Too Many Layers Of Abstraction
    440. Re:Tax planning and rich people by nine-times · · Score: 1

      You're right. This is a triumph of the free market.

    441. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Mab_Mass · · Score: 1

      I can tell you right now that if I'm told I will be paying 90% of what I make will be taken in the form of taxes, there's no fucking point in me spending 100+ hours a week earning that money.

      Well, then it's great that nobody is saying anything like this. The specific proposal from Obama is that millionaires should be the same rate as the middle class. This is done by changing capital gains tax to match income tax.

      Put aside all of the rest of the rhetoric and tell me how that one, specific suggestion isn't a good idea.

    442. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Jhon · · Score: 1

      If by this, you mean your post, I agree.

      easy citation

      About 47 percent will pay no federal income taxes at all for 2009. Either their incomes were too low, or they qualified for enough credits, deductions and exemptions to eliminate their liability. That's according to projections by the Tax Policy Center, a Washington research organization.

    443. Re:Tax planning and rich people by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      "Society" doesn't owe me a damn thing. And the reverse is true as well.

      WRONG. Like it or not, being in this society has benefited you greatly. If you truly believe the opposite, then get rid of all your possessions, and go live somewhere where society has collapsed, and attempt to build yourself up again. If what you say is true, then it should be no problem to build yourself up to your current levels of prosperity in a short amount of time.

    444. Re:Tax planning and rich people by WesternActor · · Score: 1

      Warren Buffett may write a check any time he likes to make up the difference. A check to the U.S. government for $4 billion, say, would keep the government running for almost a day. If all the billionaires in the U.S. did that of their own accord, we might be able to keep the government running within its means for, oh, a month or two. Good times!

      --

      --Matthew
      "If the lights of Broadway blind me, I won't mind..."
    445. Re:Tax planning and rich people by phorm · · Score: 1

      To put it simpler, when you tax a company, they raise prices to pay that tax. Customers pay those higher prices to cover that tax.

      Or when they don't meet shareholder expectations of continuous rise in profit, etc etc. Just because that's the way it is, doesn't mean it's good. There's also a ceiling to how much you can raise prices. Too much, and suddenly you're uncompetitive and nobody is going to buy your product.

    446. Re:Tax planning and rich people by valdyn · · Score: 1

      I think what parent really meant was % of budget, not % of gdp. Either way spending 4,7% of gdp is very very high up in the ranking. This is more than 50% of the budget by any way you want to put it huge, unless you want to only compare the USA with 3rd world countries in civil war and dictatorships.

    447. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But rich people spend very little money, the poor spend much more in aggregate ans much more as a percentage of earnings. The rich may only spend more individually.

    448. Re:Tax planning and rich people by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      We get to decide, via our representatives, how much goes to the public coffers.

      And that's what we're trying to decide, asshat.

    449. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First, companies don't pay taxes. Their customers do. To put it simpler, when you tax a company, they raise prices to pay that tax. Customers pay those higher prices to cover that tax. Companies don't print money. They get paid by their customers.

      Yes! An second, customers don't pay taxes. Their employers do. To put it simpler, when you tax a customer, they raise their wages to pay that tax. Companies pay those higher wages to cover that tax. Customers don't print money. They get paid by their companies.

      So in the end, no one pays taxes! How fantastic!

    450. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      How much tax would you pay if you were a citizen there?

      I pay the full amount - did in Belgium, did in Chile, now do it in China. I pay full income taxes in the overseas jurisdiction.

      Now, I can deduct the first $107,000 of income from US income taxes IF - and only if - I spend less than 35 days a year in the US. Any longer than that and I have to pay full income taxes on every dollar earned overseas - taxes in China and in the US.

      However you do use theirs, while paying, if anything, substantially less than what citizens pay for it.

      I pay the same amount; in fact, in most places foreign employees also "contribute" to the social security/national retirement plan but as foreign nationals they do not qualify to ever receive those benefits. It's like paying for Social Security and being prohibited from ever receiving a SS check.

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    451. Re:Tax planning and rich people by DigiTechGuy · · Score: 1

      I would say fair share means the same specific amount. Divide federal government expenses by number of adults in this country, and there you have your fair tax burden. I firmly believe in small government with a primary role of protection of individual liberty and property rights. Other roles would include major infrastructure, defense, and others... All of which could be run successfully at much lower levels. Taxing the same dollar amount from every adult citizen to cover a given years expenses would fix government rather quickly as everyone would have a vested interest in keeping government spending at reasonable and justifiable levels.

      For example...
      2010 Federal spending: $3,552,000,000,000
      2010 population: 308,745,538
      2010 population excluding under 18: 234,564,071
      2010 population excluding under 18 and over 62: 184,591,890

      So under a truly fair and equal tax, ever adult from 18-62 years old would pay $19,242.45. Alternatively, make the fair and equal share of taxes payable by everyone, and it's only $11,504.62 per person. In this scenario paresnts would have to be liable for childrens taxes up to age 18. This would work as a great disincentive for the poor to have children.

      This isn't a ridiculously unreasonable amount when fairly divided.People would be very angry and would quickly become interested in what government is spending money on instead of what the latest celebrity wore or said. What if we cut a few entitlement programs and other government waste we can see how that might affect the tax burden... Eliminate Social Security: $724 billion savings
      Eliminate Medicare: $462 billion savings
      Eliminate Medicaid: $293 billion savings
      Eliminate unemployment: $158 billion savings
      Eliminate food stamps: $69 billion savings
      Cut defense spending by 2/3 (probably could do more): $482 billion savings

      Just those big ticket entitlements and defense spending amounts to $2,188 billion in savings... How does this apply to the tax burden on individuals under a truly fair and equal tax?

      2010 federal spending after cuts to entitlements and defense: $1,364,000,000,000
      Tax burden spread fairly and equally among adults age 18-62: $7,389.27
      Tax burden spread fairly and equally among all adults: $5,815
      Tax burden spread fairly and equally among everyone: $4,417.88

      That tax burden doesn't seem all that unreasonable for anyone to pay under any of those three ways of dividing the tax burden. Those numbers are still quite high as I just cut the big easy ones. Defense could probably be cut a lot more, and with less defense spending and of course an less unconstitutional wars and invasions of sovereign nations, spending on veterans, war injuries, military reitrements and pensions, etc. would drop sharply once those people die off and the new base of such spending is on a smaller military that actually defends the country. There are surely plenty of other programs at lower spending levels that amount to entitlements and other redistribution programs. I would wager that is waht most of the remaining spending under my quickie budget cut plan consists of, and in fact that budget could be cut at least in half after a closer look, if not more.

    452. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      He sells funds that, among other ways, help people avoid taxes by investing in tax-free municipal bonds. Warren Buffet's company sells various funds that invest people's money in ways that reduce the amount of taxes they pay.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    453. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      And I pay taxes on those assets every year - 1099s for interest income and other capital gains, property taxes to pay for the law enforcement and fire protection for my house, and so on. I wasn't aware that local police and fire was a function of Federal dollars...

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    454. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      Please never again compare the arab revolts and the UK 'riots' in such a way, it just shows your ignorance.

      There's a difference between political demonstration and looting a new pair of Nike's.

      I see you've gotten all of your information about both from the mainstream media. Please do a little research with some decent source information. The kids in the UK are completely in tune with what's happening in their country, and their prospects are looking very hopeless. Even more so when so few will now be able to afford higher education.

      And I don't know about Tunisia, but the activities in Libya were entirely orchestrated by Hillary Clinton and her partners in the EU, to get control of Libya's resources away from China.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    455. Re:Tax planning and rich people by onetwentyone · · Score: 1

      You're right. I did forget business taxes. As for "average Democratic [constituent]" you might want to leave it as "average [constituent]". I don't know of any information offhand which demonstrates republicans are more likely to be small business owners or vice versa. I could be wrong, I've only done a few quick searches on the subject this morning.

    456. Re:Tax planning and rich people by WesternActor · · Score: 1

      Buffett may give as much of his excess earnings to the government as he likes. Nothing is stopping him, or anyone, from writing a check for as large an amount as possible and sending it to the treasury department. I'm sure they'd be happy to have it, since $4 billion or so would keep the government running for most of a day.

      --

      --Matthew
      "If the lights of Broadway blind me, I won't mind..."
    457. Re:Tax planning and rich people by slamb · · Score: 1

      In recent years, credits for low- and middle-income families have grown so much that a family of four making as much as $50,000 will owe no federal income tax for 2009, as long as there are two children younger than 17, according to a separate analysis by the consulting firm Deloitte Tax.

      I can live with that. If you're thinking they're not paying taxes, you're wrong. They're just not paying federal income tax. This family of four making up to $50,000 will spend a far greater proportion of their income than I do and therefore also pay a far greater proportion of sales tax. There's also property tax, taxes paid by their employer(s), etc.

    458. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For products with higher elasticity of demand and/or competition, raising prices to offset taxation is a more difficult strategy to pursue. If raising my prices to maintain a per-unit profit results in a sales volume that decreases total profit, that is a bad strategy. While unrelated to taxes, we've seen this play out with NetFlix. Similarly, if I raise my prices to maintain profits, and a competitor keeps their prices static (or they have lower profits already, and thus lower taxes), I could lose market share to that competitor (depending on other factors, such as importance of brand association with the product, durability of the product, etc.).

    459. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Duradin · · Score: 1

      States never get Fed money, eh?

      So I ask again, why haven't you renounced your citizenship if it is such a burden with no benefits?

    460. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      But do those benefits add up to more than what is given to anyone else? Remember, the meme is that the rich benefit disproportionately from Federal spending. I know that I pay fuel taxes on the fuel I use to drive my car, and I pay excise taxes and registration fees for my car that I use on those roads. And I know that my property taxes pay for local police and fire and courts which give the stable society...

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    461. Re:Tax planning and rich people by john82 · · Score: 1

      You say same percentage, I say same relative impact to standard of living.
      Fair means different things to different people.

      How would you determine "relative impact to standard of living"?

      Until that's defined, I have to side with "same percentage". Someone show me what's fair about progressive tax rates anyway. You're always left at the whim of some politician to determine what your "fair share" is. Establish what constitutes "taxable" (from among income, investments returns, assorted gains, etc) and apply a flat tax rate. In addition, the combined tax rates of Federal, State and Local should not exceed the share left for the individual.

    462. Re:Tax planning and rich people by s73v3r · · Score: 2

      Their being able to provide you the opportunity to use their capital is why you have a job.

      So? Am I supposed to get down on my knees and blow them out of appreciation? Fuck no. Yes, that capital serves a purpose. No, I don't believe it is something so important that we all need to bend over backwards to appease them, especially on the backs of the poor, as the GOP wants to do.

      This is absolute horseshit. Extremely regressive taxes, like the kind you are proposing, are the system that is immoral. Forcing the poor and middle class to bear the burden of taxation, while the rich get to play free, is what's immoral. And quite frankly, your idea that the taxes for the wealthy would be accounted for in your shitty regressive system is laughable when you consider the fact that the wealthy have been doing nothing but hoarding their wealth for the better part of the decade. Meaning it would not amount to shit under your system.

    463. Re:Tax planning and rich people by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      I understand that was a hypothetical, but I think it's worth pointing out that the '2%' premise is _insane_ and not how corporations work.

      Prices are set by the market, not individual corporations. Corporations attempt to make as much profit as they can, but usually they can't do that by randomly varying the price of their goods.(1)

      Instead, they set the price of their good as high as it can go to start with, (which will be roughly where everyone else is), and hence cannot raise it unless everyone else does.

      If a company suffers a 2% reduction in profit, they usually just have to wince and take it. There's no magical thing they can do to get back that 2%, because if there was something they know of that give them 2% more profit, they already did it. (Yes, sometimes the loss of 2% can cause them to do risky things to get it back...but corporations are actually more likely to do risky stuff during good times when they have a buffer.)

      The idea that corporations are just sitting around thinking 'Well, yes, we could raise prices and make more money, but we'll refrain from that out of the goodness of our heart...wait, they raised our taxes? Well, damn, I guess we will have to raise the prices...' is just utterly insane.

      There a slightly more logical assumption that 'If we raise taxes on corporations this will raise the price of goods across the board', which is probably true to some extent...but that's better than raising taxes on people for two reasons. 1) Market corrections take a long time to happen, and 2) people are much more stupid and panicky with their money than corporations, so more taxes on people has much more a depressive market effect than on corporations. (Likewise, giving people money is a lot more anti-recessive than giving corporations money, precisely because people are idiots and instantly spend it...putting it in the economy.)

      There's also the argument that raising prices is, hypothetically, more regressive than progressive income taxes. The fact that it's always Republicans fighting corporate income tax, and always Democrats in favor it, should rather hint that's not true. (But I don't really have time to explain why. Let's just say it causes inflation, which hits people who actually own money, instead of the poor.)

      1) If they can do that, it means something is wrong with the market. Quite possibly they have a monopoly.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    464. Re:Tax planning and rich people by RobNich · · Score: 1
      --
      Hello little man. I will destroy you!
    465. Re:Tax planning and rich people by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      I know that people don't like the idea of everyone having to pay taxes and they balk at the idea that rich people will get to spend all of the money they receive, but a sales tax is the only fair tax. Rich people spend more money, thus pay more in taxes. Poor people spend less money, thus less in taxes.

      The problem is that the poor person might spend 40% of his monthly income on just what he needs to survive (let's just say food etc, assume each person has a paid-up crapshack/mansion), while the rich person, even if he buys the most expensive of basic necessities, will spend, say 10%. Maybe he'll blow the rest on cocaine, hookers and yacht/jet/supercar fuel, maybe he'll save it, but he won't pay anywhere near the percentage of his total income that the poor person did on sales taxes for his basic necessities.

      So you see that sales taxes are inherently regressive, and this is why I'm almost categorically against them.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    466. Re:Tax planning and rich people by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      A national sales tax would ensure that they moved all of their operations off shore rather than just a portion. It astonishes me how folks trot out the sales tax line all the time without comprehending that it's even easier to circumvent than the income tax is.

      Why would a sales tax mean that corporations would move offshore? They will be taxed on the products they sell here regardless of where they are located. If they want to move offshore, fine. If they want to sell their widgets here, they will be taxed. The only way to avoid paying the sales tax is to not sell your products here. I don't see a whole lot of companies rushing to get out of the American market.

      Corporations move off shore to avoid paying corporate taxes. If those are eliminated and replaced with a sales tax, that benefit disappears. Sorry, but your argument is false.

      The only products that won't be taxed are exports, but that still helps our our trade deficit and the workers that produce exported products will still buy stuff domestically and paying sales taxes on those.

      The easiest way to make corporations pay their taxes is to prevent them from booking losses without first booking profits, require that any losses only counter act gains and remove all the stupid subsidies that they're given to create jobs in the US without requiring them to follow through.

      Ah, but see, that's the beauty of a sales tax. It would eliminate the need corporations have of cooking their books. Of course, it may put a lot of crooked accountants out of a job, but I've heard of worse things.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    467. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      a sales tax is the only fair tax. Rich people spend more money, thus pay more in taxes. Poor people spend less money, thus less in taxes.

      But the value of money isn't a constant. A sales tax on necessities can hit a poor family hard, but would barely be noticed by the rich. So a sales tax ends up being distinctly UN-fair. It taxes the first few thousand dollars you make, i.e., the money you need to survive, and doesn't distinguish that from the last few dollars you make, where spending is discretionary if you make enough.

      Don't want to pay taxes, don't spend money.

      Really? I mean, really!? We're talking about a SALES TAX! And how should we survive without spending money? Grow our own food and kill squirrels with sharpened sticks if we want meat? How will we afford the seeds? How will we buy the gardening tools? Fertilizer? Canning equipment? Knives, etc., to gut the squirrels? Shall we barter? How much squirrel meat and string beans will I need to produce to barter for my child's clothing? How many ears of corn for milk-free formula for a lactose-intolerant baby who can't always nurse? Shall I smelt the ore myself to make the part for my car when it breaks down?

    468. Re:Tax planning and rich people by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      Corporate tax on multi-nationals essentially amounts to instituting a tariff on exports. It's a terrible idea for a country with a massive trade deficit.

      I say this as someone that thinks we don't tax enough in the US (and don't offer enough services).

      At worse there should be a tax-deduction for all corporations as a percentage of gross (something in the 8-12 percent range) allowing most companies to avoid paying it, and encouraging investing surplus profits.

      --
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    469. Re:Tax planning and rich people by gtbritishskull · · Score: 1

      Okay... we can argue semantics. It is classified as "unearned income" by the IRS, and it is taxed at 15% with no FICA taxes. For comparison, earned income above $8,500 in 2011 is taxed at 10% + 5.65% in FICA taxes (in case you can't do the math 15% 15.65%, capital gains are being taxed BELOW someone in the lowest "earned income" tax bracket with an actual tax rate).

    470. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know, those people that control no wealth might look at those who do and say, "You know, we could just take it." And they will. It's happened before and it can happen again. Don't be delusional. There are all sorts of points where I agree with you, but know that the wealth you control is only possible because the rest of society says that it's yours. You want to alienate yourself and make yourself hated by that society? I don't and I don't think you do either.

    471. Re:Tax planning and rich people by prehistoricman5 · · Score: 1

      How would a national sales tax be more "fair?" It's a well known fact that sales taxes are highly regressive taxes, placing the largest tax burden on the poorest people because low income people spend the vast majority of their income while those with much higher incomes save their money.

      --
      Fuck Beta
    472. Re:Tax planning and rich people by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      True, "tax planning" is exploiting legal gray areas. Make them black areas, problem solved.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    473. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Samalie · · Score: 2

      Actually, at least in my own personal opinion, you have the argument wrong.

      I have no issue that others have more wealth than me. People smarter/better/luckier/whatever than I took risks with their money & created businesses, corporations, etc that DO help "society" if in nothing more providing jobs. The rich can continue to get richer...no argument whatsoever from me.

      What pisses ME the fuck off is that I as an upper middle classer pay something in the neighborhood of my income into tax. Plus I pay payroll taxes, local taxes, sales taxes, property taxes, etc etc etc so that realistically somewhere near 50% of my income ends up in someone's tax drawer. But fine, lets ONLY take my ~25% income tax into account...

      Now take someone who maes the same amount of gross cash per year, but put him in the shelter of a corporation where he can write off fucking everything. Or the Buffet type where it is all capital gains, not "income".

      I pay 25% of my annual earnings. Buffet pays 15% of his annual earnings.

      How in the FUCK is that even slightly fair to anyone?

      My idea...make income taxes a flat tax...every man, woman, child and corporation pays (picking a number out of my ass) 22% of their earnings to Uncle Sam. Period, end of discussion. No tax shelters, no deductions, no bullshiot, fuck you pay or don't do business in/live in the USA.

      Pick the number so that the deficit goes automatically to $0. Then force our elected officials to strip a couple of trillion dollars out of the annual budget. Force the law so that both (a) deficit spending is illegal and (b) every dollar of surplus must immediately go towards debt repayment. Slash the shit out of the DoD - the USA can no longer play World Police. Slash the shit out of congressional salaries and benefits...get rid of the 3294587345 staffers every fucking member has (exxageration, I know). If the current crop of politicians, Dem and Repub alike refuse to do it, fuck them, elect people...NORMAL PEOPLE...who fucking will. Get these rich assclowns out of the business of making themselves and their cronies richer.

      The tax system is biased towards those with the cash to fuck the most with the deductions/transfers/deferrals/etc. Ive seen above even where people are pissed that the rich already pay the majority of the tax revenues. Well no fucking shit sherlock, they have the most fucking MONEY to pay...but proportionally, they pay less per dollar earned than us "normal schmucks" who keep bending over & letting the rich fuckers in congress give it to us up the ass.

      THATS the fucking problem.

      --
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    474. Re:Tax planning and rich people by RobNich · · Score: 1

      I'm replying to the same person again! Explain how sales tax is not paid by billionaires. Do they not purchase goods?

      --
      Hello little man. I will destroy you!
    475. Re:Tax planning and rich people by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      And if you're driving an electric vehicle (with a nice big government subsidy or two), you're a free-loader.

      You mean a vehicle that not only helps lessen our dependence on foreign energy, but does far, far, far less damage to the roads as a giant truck that increases our dependence on foreign energy is the freeloader? Tell me, how much is the gasoline lifestyle subsidized? How much in subsidies do oil companies receive?

    476. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Jhon · · Score: 1

      I can't live with that.. If they aren't paying federal taxes, they aren't helping pay our federal expenses. And to say they are paying "SOME" taxes is nothing but a cheap cop-out.

      Their $600/year sales tax burden does NOTHING to reduce our 14 trillion dollar deficit. And if they pay nothing, they have no problems asking for "more" stuff.

    477. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Duradin · · Score: 1

      They don't buy anything. Trusts (that they happen to have access to) that are tax-exempt purchase things.

    478. Re:Tax planning and rich people by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      Do you use public transportation? Then you should pay even more in road taxes, since the average axle loading on buses is even higher...

      And the costs are distributed among all those that use it, thus bringing the cost per person down.

    479. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Johann+Lau · · Score: 1

      "What I do see, however, is the wealthy deciding that the U.S. is not a hospitable place for business or investments if this tax plan is approved, and moving their money elsewhere."

      Yeah... the usual blackmail. It never takes long for the true colors to show up. I say, give the middle finger to that worldwide. That should take care of *that* argument.

      The problem isn't jealousy. Consider it friction. If you want to go 100mph, you have a certain amount of air friction. if you want to go at 1000mph ("wah, wah, want to be filthy rich" and all that :P), you get more friction, the upper hard barrier being the speed of light. In other words, e.g. if you want twice as much, you gotta work 4 times as hard (not a real figure, only slowly kicks in above a certain threshold, etc... just like real friction). What would be your problem with that? Seeing how it would make it easier for everyone else to get to a decent level? Luxury is very secondary.

      Economies are in trouble because they are based on whoring itself out to a few brutes to begin with, instead of national interests of all citizens, and justice in general. And your medicine: more of that bullshit? You are screwed alright, but not for the reasons you think. If anything, it's because stuff like this (TFA) is too little, too late.

    480. Re:Tax planning and rich people by john82 · · Score: 1

      Our country was founded on the ideal of "No taxation without representation". It appears that somewhere along the line something flipped to where we have "Representation without taxation" for a hell of a chunk of our population.

      And yet, if you live in DC you ARE taxed without representation. Better yet, despite the fact that there is a mayor and a city council, members of congress seem to have no qualms about interfering in DC's financial and other affairs. The residents of DC deserve the same rights as the citizens of any other state. Puerto Rico is in the same position.

    481. Re:Tax planning and rich people by gtbritishskull · · Score: 1

      Then they use that money to buy politicians that deregulate banks and start unnecessary wars so that they can make money off of the public (limited liability, military contractors). They also use these bought politicians to lower their tax rates (Bush tax cuts). I just want them to pay their fair share.

    482. Re:Tax planning and rich people by dila813 · · Score: 1

      our patriotic duty ?? Every dollar paid to the government destroys 78 cents, never to be seen again. The Patriotic thing is to the country, not the government. The United States isn't defined by our Government but our form of government and tradition/culture/history ......... which is the celebration of the individual. You must be thinking of another country's government which defines their country when you make these statements. They don't apply here.

    483. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Nursie · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I don't believe you. Not for a second. Mostly because I'm British and was in London at the time.

      You've been misinformed if you thought there was anything political going on, or if you thought the numbers involved were in any way significant. People were given prison sentences for commiting crimes of acquisition, or conspiracy to do the same.

      I'm not even going to comment on the veracity of your claims on the Libyan thing.

    484. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Palshife · · Score: 1

      If I ran a corporation, and my tax burden were lessened, but I could continue to sell my product at the same price, why would I lower my prices?

      --
      Attention deficit disorder is a complicated issue, spanning several major... HEY LET'S GO RIDE BIKES!
    485. Re:Tax planning and rich people by antifoidulus · · Score: 1

      Yes I do. But if you spend too much time in America then you really aren't living overseas then are you? You were being intentionally misleading.

    486. Re:Tax planning and rich people by zotz · · Score: 1

      Perhaps, but I am not so sure. Other things have gone up like crazy too. Cars for instance.

      --
      FreeMusicPush If you want to see more Free Music made, listen to Free
    487. Re:Tax planning and rich people by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      I love the way the public schools have created so many kids with this kind of class envy and sense of entitlement.

      Like yourself? Yeah, your posts are pretty amusing how you bend over backwards to explain why the rich are just plain better, and therefore shouldn't have to give back to society.

      Oh, and without all those trucks moving stuff from where people PRODUCE stuff to your little urban paradise, you would run out of food in less than a week. So, by all means, tax them until nobody will drive them any more - and starve.

      Because there are no local farms, right? Everything has to come from so far away.

      You know damn well this isn't an argument in your favor.

    488. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      capital gains which are taxed (inexplicably) at a much lower rate than income

      The rationale for that rule is to encourage investment. Basically, by having a lower tax rate on investment gains, it encourages people within the country to invest their money (thereby stimulating economic development), it allows people to use investments for their retirement, it encourages people in other countries to invest their money in the US, and so on. Now, one can certainly whether having a tax incentives on investments is actually a good idea... but it seems at least reasonable that such incentives would have the desired effect of stimulating investment and thus economic growth. Whether or not the incentives effect is 'big enough' to offset the tax loss is very hard to know.

      That's the reason for the rule, in any case. Of course it becomes strange when a subset of the population uses investment income as their primary source of money, instead of a supplement/savings/retirement/etc. In particular, the richer you are, the larger the fraction of your income probably comes from investments, so your marginal tax rate actually goes down.

      In principle we could imagine a tax rule whereby you get a tax break for investments, but if you earn above a certain amount, that tax break disappears. Then again, if the "tax break encourages investment" rule is true at all, then presumably taxing the people who have the most to invest would nullify the positive effect of that rule.

      My point here is that the situation is complicated. I don't know what the optimal tax code would look like... and it's really not easy to discern what it should be. (Having said that, I agree with Buffet that taxing the rich at least as much as the middle class would be fairer and likely better for the economy, too.)

    489. Re:Tax planning and rich people by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

      That's not what you were saying. You were saying that taxes collected go down when taxes go up because people try to avoid taxes. The idea that taxes rates can effect the economy in ways that will reduce collected taxes is entirely different.

      So I repeat my question. Name an economist who says that if you increases taxes, taxes will go down because rich people will avoid them.

    490. Re:Tax planning and rich people by epine · · Score: 1

      So all they did was give even larger incentive for rich people to start playing games with taxes.

      Oh god, welcome to the bike shed of small minds. Does that sentiment pass for intelligence when you are debating software designs? I didn't think so. Not if you're gainfully employed. While you're at it, why don't you observe that packets don't collide if you don't send any. Perfect network protocol achieved, without halfway trying.

      Let's play follow the derivative. Wheeeeee! Welcome to tax rate zero, where honesty is a way of life. There's no other possible interpretation of your sentiment after supplying only the induction step. A base premise might be that we're already on the high side of too much evasion incentive. If you said that out loud, someone might ask you to prove it, but that would resemble real work, the kind you get paid for, where there's a difference between right and wrong, and it's better to advocate one than the other.

      The miracle of zero taxation would be wonderful but for the annoying correlation between societies which manage to collect taxes and much higher standards of living, even with the monumental tax bite considered. Honestly, it boggles the mind how this could be. Africa: the 50,000 year anomaly.

      Secondly, the incentive you are speaking to is a subordinate incentive. The primary incentive is to actually make a big heap of money in the first place. The secondary incentive is too keep as much as you can. If you put 100% of your efforts into the subordinate incentive, welcome to zero tax rate! You might miss the income you're no longer earning when you wake up in the gutter a year later.

      Oh, but the primary incentive remains constant, and effort expended on the subordinate incentive comes from the printing press of human cupidity. The miraculous thing about a cupidity incentive is that it never subtracts from anything else you're already doing, so it's not subject to an equilibrium equation such as any division of effort in how you make your money in the first place.

      Money can't buy you love, and apparently it can't buy you brains either. Try harder. Please. What you said shouldn't pass for intelligent thought anywhere geeks congregate. I'm not saying your statement is false, I'm saying that it's erected on unspoken Wile E. Coyote contingencies. Would you accept the same if someone out there was poised to pull the lever to unleash a trillion tons of SO2 into the atmosphere? FFS I hope not.

    491. Re:Tax planning and rich people by glodime · · Score: 1

      First, companies don't pay taxes. Their customers do.

      ... or their employees (or potential employees) or their shareholders do. Tax incidence is not limited to customers.

    492. Re:Tax planning and rich people by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      True, my dad's an accountant and the people who start to show interest in this stuff are in the upper-middle class - not rich by first world standards, just working joes who make a decent bit more than average. That's where the incentive kicks in for people to start with this "tax planning" business. So when you're up in the 6+ digit range the incentive is VERY much already there, no sense tiptoeing around it, you're already knee-deep in it.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    493. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Adrian+Lopez · · Score: 1

      Keeping the money that you earned and worked for is cheating, as opposed to having it taken from you by force and redistributing the money to what other people lobbied for?

      Rich people make most of their money from the labor of others, so speaking of rich people "keeping the money [they] earned and worked for" is very misleading. Having a certain portion of that money end up in the public coffers is better than hoping that money will somehow "trickle down" into the US economy.

      --
      "In prison you just have to shut your eyes and take it. Here you have to shut your eyes and give it."
    494. Re:Tax planning and rich people by zotz · · Score: 1

      If they could actually do this that would be one thing. Somehow I think it will end up hitting the folks without the time, skills, or contacts to find the loopholes.

      --
      FreeMusicPush If you want to see more Free Music made, listen to Free
    495. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A national sales tax will tax all the money I've saved for retirement AGAIN unless a complicated. You see, I haven't been sitting on my butt waiting to the government to take care of me. I've worked hard, saved, and invested for retirement. A national sales tax without some way to exempt my current savings would tax me again on the same money. I'm not against tax change but do you have a way to address this problem or are people who save just another target?

    496. Re:Tax planning and rich people by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

      I know about the Laffer curve. It has nothing to do with what you were claiming.

      Besides, It should be obvious to anyone that we are on the increased taxes=increased revenue side of the Laffer curve, because the past decades of tax cuts lead to reduced economic growth and reduced tax revenues.

    497. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Joce640k · · Score: 1

      So all they did was give even larger incentive for rich people to start playing games with taxes. Remember that tax planning isn't illegal, nor is forming offshore companies.

      This is why they should abolish all income tax and do it all via sales taxes. It's *much* harder to dodge taxes that way and it doesn't penalize people who are doing the right thing, ie. trying to live within their means.

      The current system allows rich people to dodge taxes and forces the sensible people to pick up the tab for everybody who goes into massive credit card debt, loan defaults, etc. Let the people who overspend pay for once.

      --
      No sig today...
    498. Re:Tax planning and rich people by gfxguy · · Score: 2

      The problem with Warren Buffet is that it's the source of income that is causing the discrepancy.

      Warren Buffet makes most of his money on capital gains. His secretary has "normal" income. When he complains he pays a lower percentage than his secretary, it's because she's paying income taxes and he's paying capital gains taxes.

      You might ask "So what? Capital gains should be taxed as income!"

      That ignores several important things, though: capital gains taxes actually affect everybody, not just millionaires. Many "normal" people invest, and it could count against fairly typical things like simply selling your house (depends on the circumstances). Secondly, investing is a big driver in the economy, and higher capital gains taxes have often led to slowing the economy. I understand some people out there want to "punish" the wealthy by making them "pay their fair share," but if your goal is actually to increase government revenues and/or improve the economy, capital gains tax increases are likely to hurt, not help.

      Some more things: we need to be very careful when discussing this that we say things like "lower percentage" instead of "less tax." Make no mistake - he may be paying a lower percentage than his secretary, but he pays WAY MORE.

      Two other points about Buffet: as has been mentioned, he's free to give what he thinks is his "fair share" to the government, but he chooses not to. Secondly, part of Buffet's business is capitalizing on businesses that must sell because they cannot pay inheritance taxes. You reach this "more money than God" point where high taxation actually means very little to you, but there are many "minor" millionaires to whom it does, and when Buffet can lobby to have their taxes raised, he can capitalize on their loss. I have very little respect for Mr. Buffet (believe me, I used to have a ton of respect for him). He's now no different than other corporations that lobby the government for favorable legislation, and to play on "class warfare" to do it is despicable.

      I want to add that I'm not necessarily against higher taxes... if you are going to tax capital gains at a higher rate, it needs to also be progressive, but start at a level a lot higher than income is taxes... like STARTING at a million, and progressively increasing from there.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    499. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 1
      It certainly isnt convenient when someone lists all the things they are taxed on is it. Unfortunately those are the realities of being a business owner. In fact, those are a subset of them. I didn't go into training costs (which are taxed) or insurance costs (which are taxed) or accountant fees (which are taxed), or a dozen other things.

      It's easy enough for a person thats never risked it all or personally invested themselves in a venture to believe that these "rich" people are just soaking the world of it's wealth and abusing the poor workers. But the reality is that people who dont actually own a business dont have the first fucking clue of all the bullshit that goes along with it. You don't hear people complaining about it much because it's accepted as a part of the deal. You want to succeed, you pay your dues. But what's hapenning now is that people who are paying their dues are being made out to be pirates who pay nothing and should be required to pay nearly everything.

      State / Federal Income Taxes: (state only if applicable)

      I pay these taxes for myself on what I earn.
      I pay these AGAIN for all those I employ.
      I pay these a THIRD time for every dollar the business earns, regardless of whether it's paid out to any individual. I pay if I spend it, and I pay if I save it.

      Sales Tax:

      I pay these taxes for myself for all necessary and luxurie goods I purchase myself from my personal income.
      I pay these on all goods I purchase for use or resale for my business.
      I pay these all a THIRD time for all goods and services I sell as a part of my business.

      Property Tax:

      I pay my personal property tax on my house.
      I pay property tax also on that of my business, and every building supporting it.


      For every $300 you're taxed on at the grocery store I'm taxed on $5000. You don't want to acknowledge that for every one tax you pay out in the above categories I pay out 2, sometimes 3, sometimes more, and I do it on scale that you cant allow to be spoken because your argument crumbles. I know this based on my personal expenses and those of my employees. You don't want to talk about that though, because it erodes your arguments in seconds.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    500. Re:Tax planning and rich people by RobinEggs · · Score: 1

      a sales tax is the only fair tax.

      This doesn't even begin to approach fairness unless *ALL* forms of purchase are taxed. Land, homes, cars, investments, vacations, etc. All of it taxed just like a loaf of bread (and don't get me started on whether it's fair to tax a loaf of bread, but for your argument we're assuming that it is). The problem with sales taxes has always been that the ultra-rich spend an exceedingly small percentage of their money on the everyday items subject to sales tax. A tax can't possibly be universally, perfectly fair if luxury goods are exempt; it's utterly laughable when people claim that a national sales tax similar to the various state sales taxes could solve all of our problems.

      I understand that the wealthy can afford to save large sums of money to avoid taxation, but the money will get spent eventually

      I don't think you understand the magnitude that wealth can achieve, or the power of investments: if you hypothetically earned a billion dollars on the day you were born, and you (or your parents, while you're still drooling) could spend a thousand dollars an hour until the minute you croaked and you couldn't spend a billion dollars unless you lived to 113. That's quite a long "eventually" for all of your income to finally be taxed. Not to mention that earning even 0.9% interest on that sum could let you spend the $1000/hour and still very slightly increase your fortune every year; in which case your original sum will never pay a dime in tax.

      It's absolutely possible to never spend a dime of a 7-10 figure fortune and still live in the top 5% of Americans (and the top 0.01% of humanity) on your interest alone. Even a lottery jackpot of $4 million (or 0.4% of that billion I mentioned before) invested at 1% can let you spend the median yearly income for the rest of your life without touching the principle. To say that great fortunes are "eventually" spent, and thus taxed, is only true if you define "eventually" as "before the sun explodes".

    501. Re:Tax planning and rich people by skids · · Score: 1

      Now there's a stretch. You should see if the circus is hiring a plasticman.

    502. Re:Tax planning and rich people by gtbritishskull · · Score: 1

      Fine... denounce your US citizenship if you feel like it is just costing you too much money.

      Last year the US pulled in about $1 trillion in personal income taxes from ALL citizens, while we spent somewhere between $800 billion and $1 trillion on defense. Do you benefit from the US military being deployed all over the world? If so, then we should probably increase your tax rate.

    503. Re:Tax planning and rich people by publiclurker · · Score: 1

      Like any of your corporate masters would ever go to a place where they would not have our country to leach off of. Try another lie, you've just about worn that one out.

    504. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Heh... The biggest problem is...they are typically paying the same percentage of their taxable income as we do or more.

      Each time people keep making swipes at "the rich" with Taxes...we, the middle class and the poor, namely everyone else, end up shouldering it all. If you knew anything of how the "rich" structure their lives, their businesses, and their possessions in this current climate- something that Buffet already knows entirely too well how it's done and is doing it himself...or he'd not be that wealthy... - you'd realise that this is merely trying to position himself in an even better position over other "rich" people, by way of turning the screws tighter on ourselves...

      Each and every time you hear "tax the rich", look at who started the whole call for it. The rich elites that claim to know more than you and know better than you how to do things. When you see this...they're typically not being altruistic. Human nature kind of precludes someone committing financial (personal power...) suicide like that. They're doing it for a reason- and it's not one that's actually favoring "the common man" like they claim it is.

    505. Re:Tax planning and rich people by HereIAmJH · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure I'd say that the rich use more public services, but I would say that they have received more benefit from our society than average. Unless they earned all their money in another country and moved here.

      Of course, you could say that that wealthy receive more protection from public police and fire departments since they have more assets to protect. Does a wealthy business owner get more benefit from the US military protecting markets for US products than the Walmart clerk that is selling them?

      --
      Another day, another update to a Google android app.
    506. Re:Tax planning and rich people by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      It's only passed on directly to the customers in some cases, not all.

      Companies with high profits (drug companies for example), and companies selling a commodity with limited supply (oil companies for example) are selling as high as they can (what the insurance companies and various governments will pay in the first, and supply and demand in the second). It's only companies with a competitive market that are forced to sell at razor thin net margins where taxes equate a price hike (something like Walmart for example).

      The real problem with a corporate income tax is that you are creating a barrier to exporting. A European company is incentivized to export to the US (no VAT), while a US company is at a disadvantage exporting to Europe (Corporate income tax). With a massive trade deficit it is a terrible strategy.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    507. Re:Tax planning and rich people by skids · · Score: 1

      The bottom 2/3rds control completely who gets elected. The upper 1/20 have a massive propaganda campaign run through a corporate shill media empire, astroturfing lackeys, and the ear of every important person in Washington to make sure the details work out in their favor against them.

      FTFY.

    508. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      That's a boldfaced lie and you know it.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    509. Re:Tax planning and rich people by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      Some people like to pretend that things like public schools are things that wealthy people capitalize on because their employees have some basic level of education, and that their employees and customers use public roads to get to their places of business, and so on and so forth.

      Of course, that forgets the fact that it's the employee that benefits from education, and that employee pays taxes (including the usual property taxes) that pay for public education. The same thing applies to roads... the employer pays the employee enough to pay for gas to get to work. The way transportation infrastructure should work is that taxes are collected on gasoline and other transportation related goods and services, NOT income tax. The federal government makes more money on a gallon of gasoline than the oil companies, so when some business ships products and uses the road systems for it's business, they are already paying way more than the average person.

      You could suggest that businesses get a higher degree of police and fire protection or, at least, they have more to protect and therefore should pay more. In most instances, police and fire protection also come from property and other taxes, in which case the business is, again, already paying more than most people.

      I've always argued for a system of taxation that is more "use" based - taxes on gasoline and vehicles and registrations for transportation infrastructure, taxes on property for police and fire protection... but it's largely like that already (but, unfortunately, heavily subsidized by income and unrelated sales taxes).

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    510. Re:Tax planning and rich people by stoolpigeon · · Score: 2

      I live in one. It's a mess. Everyone cheats on their taxes. VAT is about to become 27% so when you shop at a store they ask, "Do you need a reciept?" because that affects the price. The effective income tax is something like 50% - if everyone payed it they couldn't live. Yet the government is broke, infrastructure is a mess and the solutions I hear being tossed around all center on new taxes. I wonder how that will go.

      The original post is correct. Government plans the revenue based on everyone paying this thing - but it wont come close to generating the revenue projected and the debt will get worse, not better.

      --
      It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
    511. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Jhon · · Score: 1

      WTF? What do you think "tax avoidance" is? And it's not "illegal". If you've a mortgage and you declare it on your 1040 -- it's called a "tax avoidance".

      And that's exactly what I was saying.

    512. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 0

      Ah, so whatever the BBC says, I guess.

      What about 4 years for a Facebook posting?

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    513. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Jhon · · Score: 1

      Agree with you about DC. Less so with PR as it's not a state (at least not yet -- if ever).

    514. Re:Tax planning and rich people by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      Wealthy people didn't get that way losing it to inflation; they don't stuff it in mattresses or keep it all in safes.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    515. Re:Tax planning and rich people by gtbritishskull · · Score: 1

      Ah... the old Ad Hominem attack. Classic.

      When you have no response to a well thought out and logical argument, attack the person. Though implying they are a hypocrite is not very original.

    516. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Capt.DrumkenBum · · Score: 1

      You have it almost right. The original poster should take all his/her possessions to a place where society has collapsed, and see how long they get to keep their stuff, and their life.

      --
      If I were God, wouldn't I protect my churches from acts of me?
    517. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Squiddie · · Score: 1

      No, that would not create jobs, or at least as many as you would expect. They would just base themselves here, but manufacturing would still be overseas.

    518. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying that we should be taxing everyone down to some sort of commie level of suckiture. There is a middle ground between communism and oligarchy. We don't have to march in lock-step to one or the other.

      The proposition here is to take $1.5T from the class of people with $1M or more of yearly income.

      According to wikipedia, less than 1% of the population earns more than $350K. Lets suppose that 1 out of 200 people earn 1M per year or more.. now thats 1.5M people. In order to get $1.5T out of 1.5M people, you have to take an average of $1M per person.

      The question is, are you outraged that they propose to take an additional years worth of income from this class above what they already take? If not, why not?

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    519. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Lucky_Norseman · · Score: 1

      The Clinton years spring to mind.

      And yet, during Clinton's time in office, he ended up with a higher debt than he started with.

      More in dollar amount, but less as a percentage. Clinton took office with the debt at 66% of GDP, and left it at 56%.
      The amount increased by about 1500 billion. How the percentage could decrease while the amount increased? One hint: Inflation
      GWB took office with the debt at 56% (of course) and left with the debt at 84%

    520. Re:Tax planning and rich people by joebok · · Score: 1

      In my opinion, they should just get rid of the capital gains tax rates entirely - call it all income. I think that would be a simplification and eliminate loopholes. I think it has been a driver for lots of the problems we are facing - including the mortgage crap. Make it equally attractive, from a tax basis, to invest in an actual business directly as from just buying a mutual fund or even a stock.

      Several years ago I read an article by Fred Smith (the Fed Ex founder and CEO) saying it wasn't fair to be taxing his planes and trucks at a much higher rate than capital gains. He was all for lowering his taxes to the long-term capital gains rate rather than raising the other taxes - but regardless, the huge discrepancy is fueling the creation of increasingly complex spreadsheets, not jobs, and that is a basic dysfunction in the economy.

    521. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > when you tax a company, they raise prices to pay that tax

      This is asymptotic. Further analysis is required to determine how much of the tax will be borne by reduced profits, increased prices, or different levels of supply / methods of production.

      > balk at the idea that rich people will get to spend all of the money they receive

      Like you noted, when taxes are introduced, the market adjusts to compensate. No one would receive their pre-tax salaries if taxes were eliminated.

      > Rich people spend more money, thus pay more in taxes. Poor people spend less money, thus less in taxes.

      Poor people spend a greater percentage of their income in taxes. Living has certain fixed costs which dominate at lower income levels. You generally have to be wealthier to be able to afford to invest. And deferring taxation is incredibly valuable.

      > it will get taxed eventually

      But not this year. We aren't running a government 'eventually,' we're funding it for this year. And again, deferring taxation is valuable.

      > make the system simple

      You're now taxing many many more transactions. That's actually far more complex. Double reporting is currently required to prevent tax evasion. Do you want to keep this system and report all your purchases to the government? Or do you prefer a thriving black market? (I don't even want to report all my transactions to Google...)

      Other questions will emerge, adding complexity. If I give you a gift, is that taxed? What if you give me a gift a moment later, of approximately the same value? What if I buy a stock or bond? What if I 'put money in' a bank account (aka 'buy a rate of interest')? What about estate taxes? What about services? Barter? Purchase of foreign currencies? Purchases in foreign currencies?

      If any of these questions are even slightly hard, we have tax attorneys again, and then complexity comes rushing right back in. Teachers often get exemptions from local sales taxes. Imagine tax attorneys arguing over every transaction. Should they do it at the store, where there's no incentive to argue, or at the end of the year, requiring the government to defensively audit trillions of transaction around the country each year?

      --
      I've seen a dozen tax systems batted around as more fair or less expensive to maintain or harder to cheat or better at getting revenue. But all of these properties tug on each other sooner or later.

      I follow the Willie Sutton approach to taxation: just go where the money is. Ultimately, there's no 'fair' system of taxation. There are 300 million special cases with different hardships and needs. Once you realize everyone has a sob story, just toss fairness out and get it done. At the very least, don't get hoodwinked by sob stories from people who are rich.

      They're rich: they can afford counseling and antidepressants.

    522. Re:Tax planning and rich people by sycodon · · Score: 1

      While the assertion is purely anecdotal I agree, I am comfortable going with the assumption that a business owner is more likely to be a Republican or at least more conservative in nature.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    523. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Stone+Rhino · · Score: 1

      That's why there's a one-house exemption in capital gains. If you have multiple houses that you're buying and flipping, it's different than your primary residence in the tax code. Investments are different from a primary residence.

      --


      Remember, there were no nuclear weapons before women were allowed to vote.
    524. Re:Tax planning and rich people by TFAFalcon · · Score: 1

      Fair share : As much as they would pay now, if they didn't have hordes of tax attorneys to help them avoid paying taxes.

    525. Re:Tax planning and rich people by stoolpigeon · · Score: 2

      If you live in Thailand for an entire year and pay the same US taxes you would have payed if you had lived in the U.S. - you are an idiot.
       
        Foreign Earned Income Exclusion
       
      I moved to Hungary in July. I'll file an extension in April. When I do file my taxes I'll qualify for the foreign earned income exclusion, which means excluding over $90,000 of my income. Which for me, means all of it. My budget for living here counts on the fact that I don't pay any US income tax. (I still pay social security, etc.)

      --
      It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
    526. Re:Tax planning and rich people by slamb · · Score: 1

      I had a lesion on my larynx. LA County picked up the tab.

      I'm sorry to hear that, and about your father's passing. It's very good that LA County was able to pick up the tab, though. I wonder if after this round of budget cuts they would still be able to help out people like you. I don't know anything about lesions on the larynx...if you had gone untreated, would you have been able to work? would it have been life-threatening? To me it sounds like there are many ways in which you came very close to not making it as far as you have, and I wouldn't want to make it any harder.

      In my own life, I had pneumonia once and anaphylaxis once. They were relatively minor inconveniences for me (a couple weeks sick and 5-10 pounds lost in the first case; just a really itchy rash in the second), but I also had good medical care and medication. If I hadn't, they would have been much more serious, maybe even fatal. I also used to get a lot of sinus infections, treated with antibiotics, and eventually had sinus surgery. I got allergy shots for five years. And if I'd been homeless, I probably also would have been likely to have more illnesses... I doubt I could have gotten where I am today.

      What's silly is someone with a degree in 16th century literature and a $100,000-$200,000 debt is upset that they cant find a job that will help pay their student loans... Sounds to me that they would have been better off picking a different major/career path. A little "expected income" research when planning a major would have helped.

      Yeah, my fiancée made the mistake of not thinking about how she got a job when she picked her major. (She eventually went to graduate school and got a degree that let her get a real job.) I'd thought of it as more of a middle-class mistake, though...do you know how often student loans don't get paid back for this reason? It wouldn't be too crazy for government-paid student loans to be only issued for majors that can be reasonably expected to return their investment...

    527. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Nursie · · Score: 0

      Over the top likely to be reduced on appeal.

      However incitement/conspiracy is a crime on both sides of the atlantic IIRC.

      My news wasn't just from the BBC, pray tell what rock-solid new org you got yours from? Alex Jones?

    528. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      It's a streatch that a man who became rich by selling people funds that help them avoid taxes supports increasing taxes so as to increase the sales of those funds? As opposed to thinking that a man who makes a lot of money and uses every tax deduction available to him, thinks that he should be paying more taxes, when, in addition to the fact that he is not required to take advantage of every tax deduction he is eligible for, he has the option of paying the government more than he owes, yet doesn't.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    529. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 2, Informative

      The Heritage Foundation claim that the poor aren't really poor because you can buy a TV on Craigslist for 20 dollars has been thoroughly debunked:

      http://front.moveon.org/the-craigslist-welfare-program-will-it-work/

      http://thinkprogress.org/yglesias/2011/07/19/272511/poverty-is-mostly-about-housing-health-care-and-education/

      The availability of cheap household durables aside, being poor in the US sucks a lot. Which is why we outstrip the rest of the first world in homelessness, school drop-outs, incarceration of the poor, and people dying of treatable illnesses.

    530. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Tomato42 · · Score: 1

      There are always ways around the system. The bigger the possible savings the more money you have to pay for the leech^H^H^H^H^Hlawyers.

      In the end the only people with more money are the lawyers

    531. Re:Tax planning and rich people by gtbritishskull · · Score: 1

      I see you remembered to slip that "federal income" in there. A lot of pundits forget it, and are therefore lying. EVERYONE already paying 5.45% (7.65% normally). And this does not include the employer match (7.65%). So, I agree. We should make it fair. Get rid of the $110k limit on Social Security FICA taxes, and charge FICA on all income (even unearned income). And don't claim that payroll taxes are somehow don't count. Congress has been robbing the "Trust Fund" to pay general expenses for a long time now.

    532. Re:Tax planning and rich people by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      You know, you dipshits with your conspiracy theories never cease to amaze me.

      Warren Buffet suggests that people like him aren't paying enough in taxes: you immediately assume it's because he just wants to make more money selling his tax avoidance services, pat yourself on the back for being able to see through the bullshit, and even get mods to circle jerk you to a +3.

      Glenn Beck says "Buy gold!" on his show, then during commercial breaks shills for a company that fucking deals in gold, and you see him as just giving helpful financial advice.

      Of course, maybe this doesn't apply to you, personally, and in that case I apologize. However, most of the people who bitch about Warren Buffet are pretty predictable when it comes to their beliefs, so I'd be willing to put money on you being, in fact, one of these kinds of dipshits.

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    533. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Other's property is only theirs because everyone else agrees that it is theirs. Let's see what happens when we have a large and angry population willing to kill and steal from those who do have things. It's happened before, and it can happen again. No one wants that, not you, not me.

    534. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      Here's a scenario for you:
      You grandmother dies (probably because evil capitalists sold her kidneys on the black market or something). She leaves you the family home; a beautiful Victorian in downtown San Fransico. You sell it because there's no way you can afford the $45,000 yearly taxes on it. Guess what. That income from that sale is Capital Gains.

      You'll be lucky to pay the accountant fees from the exchange.

      By by family home, and you're left a tiny fraction of its worth.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    535. Re:Tax planning and rich people by epine · · Score: 1

      I'm meant that rhetorically, but money really is a bike shed of the human mind.

      The global economy is the most complex system around (or second only to the female mind), yet confident opinions abound on less rationale that people put forward to choose their nail colour.

      Differential equation with no stated boundary condition? Fine, it integrates to the same a priori answer either way.

      Game theory 401. Prerequisite: Matrix math: Exception: People who opine about government (but please bring a complete set of oil paints to illuminate your workings).

      As soon as the world "government" enters the debate, people treat it like the Explorers Club, and check their brains on the coat rack while handing their keys to valet parking.

    536. Re:Tax planning and rich people by gtbritishskull · · Score: 1

      The military. Case in Point -> Iraq War.

    537. Re:Tax planning and rich people by GreatBunzinni · · Score: 1

      Next, the best way to eliminate "creative accounting" in regard to taxes is to make the system simple. A national sales tax, for example, would eliminate any benefit from basing your companies off shore. The only way around a sales tax is to buy stuff off the black market or move yourself off shore.

      This idea that tax evasion in the form of "creative accounting" is eliminated by simplifying the tax system (that is, remove some rules from what is currently enforced) is naive and out of touch with reality. You must understand that rules are imposed to restrict types of behaviour which are deemed harmful. If rules are eliminated then the ability to restrict bad behaviour is hindered, if not eliminated. If you change a system so that it is no longer capable of hindering specific forms of harmful behaviour then, obviously, you won't get an improved system. Instead, you get a system whose actors are free to commit a series of harmful acts, but now with complete impunity and absolutely no pressure to stop that behaviour.

      To put it shortly, if you "simplify the system" then what you are effectively doing is urging people to conduct harmful actions with complete impunity. It's like saying that if stealing was suddenly made legal then the crime rate would go down because any thief would be completely free to steal whatever he wished, as his actions would no longer be considered a crime.

      Rules, whether complex or simple, are placed for one reason alone: restrict behaviour deemed harmful. If a considerable number of taxpayers are evading their responsibilities by employing legal tricks and ploys then you get them to stop defrauding the state by imposing rules that fight that sort of behaviour. Otherwise you are only fooling yourself in believing that you are doing society any good at all.

      --
      Slashdot, fix your code or at least hire someone who is competent at it to do it for you.
    538. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 1

      You are being asked to give a bit more back not to those who never tried, but also to those who:

      - tried and failed, and aren't getting hired.

      - are too young to try anything, and need an education to get a chance to try.

      - would try, but need a working infrastructure to do so.

      - tried but are struggling due to lack of demand, due to the above three factors.

      You are also being asked to pay back to a system that has given you the opportunity for the success you enjoyed: one that created infrastructure projects such as the interstate highway system, the internet, and a lot of higher education using marginal tax rates which historically have been much higher than those at the present. Your attitude is worse than "may be the best man win," it's "I got mine, screw you."

    539. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Tomato42 · · Score: 1

      And then fiscal year end will become a Red Letter Day...

    540. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA! Good one!

      Oh, you weren't kidding?

      The USA has a long and glorious history of welching on their agreements and hiding whenever any actually credible threat to it's "allies" surfaced, only riding to the rescue when it's own interests are finally threatened. E.g. both of the two world wars.

      And then they take the credit for the glorious victory. Go Team America!

    541. Re:Tax planning and rich people by gtbritishskull · · Score: 1

      Military... Case in Point -> Iraq War.

    542. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      Ah, gotcha. The counter-argument is of course that if everyone went home with exactly the same every day, regardless of how hard they worked or how in-demand the fruits of their labor was, then everyone would obviously strive for perfection in all they do.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    543. Re:Tax planning and rich people by element-o.p. · · Score: 1

      Both parties are the parties of class warfare. The Republicans represent large corporations, and the Democrats support the welfare state and labor unions. What's your point? Quite frankly, if I'm going to support one side or the other, I'm going to support the side that actually produces goods,that is, the businesses.

      However, to be honest, I believe that having relative parity in the government keeps either side from excess, since both sides are more interested in furthering their own political power, regardless of what it costs the nation as a whole.

      --
      MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
    544. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 0

      your posts are pretty amusing how you bend over backwards to explain why the rich are just plain better, and therefore shouldn't have to give back to society.

      If that's how you decide to paraphrase anything that I've said, you're either not reading my posts or you're completely missing the point. Nothing I've said even approaches this twisted viewpoint you claim I've espoused.

      While I've been defending the middle class from further erosion by misguided policy, you and others have actually done your own "bending over backwards to explain why the rich are just plain better", specifically in the name of Warren Buffett. Well, Buffett, for your information, is nothing but a shill for Obama and the rest of the wealthy elites. The first lie is that this proposal even has anything to do with capital gains income, which is what Buffett was referring to when he claimed he pays a lower rate than his secretary. The next lie is that Buffett cares one whit about paying taxes, since his company owes hundreds of millions in back taxes going back at least to 2002. What he is really after is some favorable treatment from the EPA, to avoid more taxes and expenses for his large coal mining companies. And that's exactly what he got when Obama nixed the latest proposal from the EPA for stricter pollution controls.

      So you're gonna walk to the local farm with your cart every week. What happens in winter when nothing is growing? Do a Google for "A week without truck transport" if you really don't think it's a big deal.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    545. Re:Tax planning and rich people by gtbritishskull · · Score: 1

      No, they just get politicians to go to war (with the publicly funded military) for them so that they can enjoy the benefits of being a war profiteer (Iraq War).

    546. Re:Tax planning and rich people by h4x0t · · Score: 1

      Google Inc. cut its taxes by $3.1 billion in the last three years using a technique that moves most of its foreign profits through Ireland and the Netherlands to Bermuda.

      The FIRST line of that article. This was an issue the first time that was posted on slashdot
      The $60bn is the total amount the govt loses out on due to this kind of mucking about with numbers and such. Not any one company.

    547. Re:Tax planning and rich people by fortapocalypse · · Score: 1

      More realistically: (1) If you increase capital gains taxes, you reduce the incentive for people to trade in the market, and if people pull all of their money out of the markets prior to the tax increase- well, if you think we have problems now, just wait... (2) If the leader of the U.S. economy can't figure this out, why do we think we can, and (3) oh screw it, 50% of you just stopped reading anyway.

      How about we just do away with taxes completely and privatize all government functions? If you don't mind causing turmoil by screwing with our tenuous economy by raising taxes that limit trading, you might as well just cause complete anarchy right from the start by shutting down government completely and seeing what happens. I think that either some moral form of libertarianism (severely limit government) or moderation/centrism (stop changing things) is what our country and our world needs right now. I'm done with this sort of discussion.

      -- Faith may not be rational, but that doesn't mean you can't have it.

    548. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Jhon · · Score: 1

      "I wonder if after this round of budget cuts they would still be able to help out people like you."
      This was circa 1990. As far as now, yes they would -- and still do.

      "I don't know anything about lesions on the larynx...if you had gone untreated, would you have been able to work? would it have been life-threatening?"
      Was found early. Could have turned cancerous in 10-20 years.

      "To me it sounds like there are many ways in which you came very close to not making it as far as you have, and I wouldn't want to make it any harder."

      What made it harder was the cheap availability of student loans pushing up the costs of private college curriculum -- and to a far lesser degree, public as well. This is due because people don't pay back their loans -- so banks get their money no matter what.

    549. Re:Tax planning and rich people by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      That's not what happens. The higher your make the tax rate, the more people will find ways to not pay it and you will generally collect less. The lower the tax rate, the less incentive people have to find ways to not pay taxes. Somewhere along that curve is an "zone" that maximizes revenue...

      Oh bullshit. Anyone making that kind of money already has a personal accountant doing all of their taxes who already knows about all the loopholes. Will this push some people along the edges of being "rich" into hiring an accountant? Sure. Will this have any effect on the accounting habits of the top 1% of the top 1% of the top 1%, where all the money is? Nope.

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    550. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 0

      No, Alex Jones is nothing but hyperbole gold-selling crap with very little (if any) substance.

      I do like these guys, even though their show is never anything that would persuade anyone, but it's really good if you already have an idea of who the real bad guys are these days. At least they always source everything. They do come up with some crackpot theories, but everything they put out is easily verifiable.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    551. Re:Tax planning and rich people by RingDev · · Score: 1

      You know, if you're going to throw out numbers, you should pick accurate ones. The million dollar + income tax bracket change is only expected to generate $448B, 1/3rd of the amount you are talking about.

      Which using your own numbers means taxing people ~$333k. I don't have a good number for "average" anual income of the top 1.5% of Americans, but let us supose that is works out to be on the order of $10 million.

      And that turns out to be a net increase of... 3%

      OMG!!! A 3% tax increase on people's income OVER a million dollars!!! The poor subjegated people that will be effected! How will they ever life with their rights and liberties being stripped away so!

      Come on, get real, this is an insignificant change to the individuals it effects, and it directly benefits the other 98.5% of the population. More so, it works against the trend of stripping the liberties of the lower 98.5% to benefit the uppser 1.5%.

      -Rick

      --
      "Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
    552. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Homr+Zodyssey · · Score: 1

      Typical. Noone else should say anything but the guy I agree with, right?

    553. Re:Tax planning and rich people by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 1

      So, what do you call this bell curve? The Tax Fraud Curve? How does it interact with the Laffer Curve? :)

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    554. Re:Tax planning and rich people by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      I'm unclear here. Are you saying there wasn't looting during the UK riots? I mean, what are you saying? I'm willing to concede that there was a socio-economic element to the riots, but this was no English Spring riots here. There was a criminal element in the UK riots in a big way. Cars were being stolen, people were killed who were simply defending their property, shops were looted. Beyond that, your average Arab could only dream of having the kind of welfare state the UK has.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    555. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Sure. Combine that with >90% taxes on income and capital gains for individuals in the top bracket, and >90% tarriffs on money leaving the country(so Mr CEO can't send his company to the US but receive a salary and pay tax in Antigua), and you have a deal.

      Corporations are in fact legal fictions. We really should be taxing the individuals.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    556. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Jhon · · Score: 1

      SSI is not a federal income tax. The idea of FICA is that you pay in to it now so you can pull out of it later (when OTHERS are paying in to it). It's supposed to be zero-sum.

      That "congress has been robbing the trust fund" (and I agree with you whole heatedly how WRONG that is) doesn't magically make it something it is not. It isn't the same as the funds aren't SUPPOSED to go in to the general fund.

      And if you get rid of the 110k limit on SSI, I'm there with you in full agreement -- if you likewise raise the payout upon retirement -- to be fair.

    557. Re:Tax planning and rich people by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      the past decades of tax cuts lead to reduced economic growth and reduced tax revenues.

      Be careful when changing multiple variables at one time.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    558. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Spoke · · Score: 1

      Read TheRaven64's comment above. Explains why sales tax only is highly regressive.

    559. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Mab_Mass · · Score: 1

      Huh? Your scenario is ridiculous. In what you propose, I would end up paying more taxes certainly, but the rest of your argument doesn't follow, especially since I would only pay taxes on the profit. If there is little profit, I pay little tax, but if I make a killing (most likely), I would end up paying a lot in tax, but I would also walk away with a big, fat wad of cash.

      Sorry, I still say that it isn't fair for the wealthiest to pay a smaller percentage of their income than the middle class (as it currently stands), and you have provided absolutely no argument to the contrary.

    560. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First, companies don't pay taxes. Their customers do. To put it simpler, when you tax a company, they raise prices to pay that tax. Customers pay those higher prices to cover that tax. Companies don't print money. They get paid by their customers.

      You're thinking of companies with a near monopoly or companies selling something for which there is a highly inelastic demand. In the real world -- as opposed to these ideal limits -- companies often have a variety of factors (such as competition, rate regulation, elastic demand) that limit those price increases, and if the owners of the company are making a healthy profit the optimum behavior might well be to not increase prices and just pay the increased taxes. This is especially true when a company is making a ton of high-margin revenue because of tax breaks.

      The exact same thing is true in the case of individuals, especially ones making over a million a year. Relatively few people make a salary of over a million a year -- most people with this sort of income make most of their money from investments. As you can see by simply visiting http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_gains_tax_in_the_United_States, Bush managed to cut capital gains taxes from being roughly on a par with income taxes to being well below the income tax rate. If fact, he cut the rate to less than 1/2 the income tax rate in the higher tax brackets on long term investments. The "idea" is that this provides an incentive for the rich to become richer by investing more of their surplus income in long term investments. Of course "long term" is a bit of a joke -- it is useful only to differentiate it from day trader income, providing a tax advantage to people who manipulate their portfolios (at least to some extent) over more than a year.

      Note well the operative phrase "the rich to become richer" -- the capital gains caps are almost completely useless to people in lower tax brackets, simply because they don't have any capital investments to speak of outside of instruments like IRAs, savings accounts, houses that are already tax-shielded, all of which are outside of the aegis of the law (so that no benefits accrue to those indviduals). It is of doubtful/marginal benefit to those in the middle brackets -- I'm at the upper end of the middle bracket, for example, and (like most families or individuals in this category) by far the bulk of my income is salary, not investment. The capital gains taxes only provide a substantial long-term benefit, on average, to people who make (say) 1/3 or more of their income each year from cashing in long term investments that are not already tax-shielded in some way (e.g. real estate for primary or secondary residence, retirement accounts, life insurance). And who are these people? Well, they have non-shielded incomes in excess of (say) $300,000 to $400,000, with only $200-$250 K of that coming from salary. That means that (practically speaking) they have 1 to 2 million dollars minimum in the bank, in addition to a substantial salary, or even more than that and a smaller salary or no salary at all. They are "the rich" compared to some 95% of all Americans.

      For them the benefit ranges from substantial to enormous. A person selling a property that has appreciated by (say) $1 million over a year or more pays a whopping $150,000 in capital gains taxes and is done. They make $850,000 in profit to add to the (say) $10 million dollar base upon which they realized this (say) 10% capital return. Compare that to somebody that works their ass off to make the same $1.07 million dollars in salary. First, they pay 14+% of it in social security off of the top (yes, I'm including the company's 7% share of that, because calling it "the company's share" only fools a complete idiot -- this is a straight up regressive income tax on everybody that works). This leaves them with $930K. They get to deduct a mortgage, an IRA, this and that, and perhaps knock another $130K off -- down to $800K, or even (if they a

    561. Re:Tax planning and rich people by gtbritishskull · · Score: 1

      Apparently Junior High is as far as you got (along with, it seems, most Republicans). We live in a globalized economy. The best example is Oil. If we tax oil extraction companies in the US at higher (fairer) rates, then they cannot just raise prices. Oil prices are set due to supply and demand on the Global market. They have to either accept reduced profits, or they can stop producing. Lower production might cause a slightly higher price, but the US produces such a small percentage of the Global oil supply that it would be a very small increase in price.

    562. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Warren Buffet suggests that people like himself aren't paying enough taxes, yet he does not do anything to pay what he says is his fair share, which leads people to suspect that he has an ulterior motive. You think that people who think he has an ulterior motive are conspiracy theorists. What conspiracy did I suggest? I suggested that Warren Buffet's motives for calling for higher taxes on the wealthy were that he would make money that way.
      Anybody who takes financial advice from Glenn Beck deserves what they get. On the other hand, it is quite clear from the things Glenn Beck has said over time that he is a believer in having a fairly substantial stake in gold. That is consistent with the positions he has taken on various financial issues. Positions which predate gold dealers advertising on his show. Glenn Beck has long been a sympathetic to the idea that the U.S. should return to the gold standard. I don't listen to Glenn Beck, but I occassionally did so in the past (enough to have a pretty good first hand idea of his ideology).

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    563. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They don't have to move to tax havens, all they have to do is put their money into tax free shelters... there are plenty of legal tax free places to park money. History is full of examples of the rich doing exactly this - they pay less taxes, the economy suffers from the loss in investment, and everyone comes out worse... but hey, you showed those rich bastards.

    564. Re:Tax planning and rich people by tompaulco · · Score: 1

      The top 1% pay 28% of the taxes amounting to 18% of their income according to the Congressional Budget Office.

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    565. Re:Tax planning and rich people by nbauman · · Score: 1

      Oh, and don't forget - right now, America puts virtually the entire tax burden on the upper middle classes, and the rest on the middle class. About 1/2 the population doesn't pay any taxes at all

      That Republican lie again. About 1/2 the population doesn't pay any taxes "at all" if you define payroll taxes for Social Security and Medicare to be "not taxes" (and ignore sales taxes, real estate taxes, and other local taxes that pay for schools, etc.)

      http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/31/opinion/the-new-resentment-of-the-poor.html?hp

      Editorial
      The New Resentment of the Poor
      Published: August 30, 2011

      The number of families not paying income tax has risen from about 30 percent before the recession to about half, and, suddenly, Republicans have a new tool to stoke class resentment.

      First, the facts: a vast majority of Americans have skin in the tax game. Even if they earn too little to qualify for the income tax, they pay payroll taxes (which Republicans want to raise), gasoline excise taxes and state and local taxes. Only 14 percent of households pay neither income nor payroll taxes, according to the Tax Policy Center at the Brookings Institution. The poorest fifth paid an average of 16.3 percent of income in taxes in 2010.

    566. Re:Tax planning and rich people by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Like I said. Providing you employ a private army, you can most certainly live in some place where law and order have collapsed, where civil society is in retraction. In other words, if you have the resources to become a warlord, you can keep your possessions. If you do not, then you lose your possessions, and if you're lucky, don't get killed in the process.

      To create a modern civil state requires a lot of resources. To get rich without basically having to be a warlord means that the underlying society has to be willing to live by the rule of law. So yes, even the richest people in the civilized world owe the underlying society a huge amount, simply for the fact that the society, rich and poor alike, have agreed to abide by rules that allow the acquisition of wealth within the necessity of the acquisition of huge amounts of political and military power.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    567. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Nursie · · Score: 0

      FYI I'm under no illusions about the fact that moneyed interests have effectively been running the show for the longest time, and would be the first to agree that the political status quo in the western world is abysmal.

      I don't even think large scale protest in the UK is all that unlikely if things carry on as they are (not that it would achieve much).

      I just don't believe that last month's crime spree was it, and I do think a lot of international commentators have been very, very keen to turn it into something it wasn't.

    568. Re:Tax planning and rich people by bezpredel6 · · Score: 1

      dividends and capital gains are double taxed

    569. Re:Tax planning and rich people by tmosley · · Score: 1

      The alternative minimum tax was passed with similar populist gusto. It was not linked to inflation. Now "normal" people well within the middle class are having to struggle to avoid paying it. I guarantee that within our lifetimes, we will all be millionaires, and many of us will be subjected to this or similar taxes, much to our dismay and ultimate impoverishment.

      Tax brackets should probably be based on what percentile you fall into instead. If you are in the top 1%, you pay X%, if you are in the bottom 25%, you pay nothing, if you fall between you pay some amount less than X%.

      The people at the top laugh at us as they, like jujitsu masters, redirect our populist rage back at the poor and the middle class as our nation crumbles around us. But we just CAN'T cut funding for our military empire. NO sir. Simply not acceptable.

    570. Re:Tax planning and rich people by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      That said, I completely disagree with Obama's approach on this. The focus is entirely misdirected. This is going to hit most of the top several percentiles hard, but the top 1% -- the super-wealthy, who control nearly 40% of the nation's wealth -- only weakly. The wealthiest Americans earn most of their money through capital gains. But naturally, nobody is going to touch the capital gains rate. :P

      Actually, that's exactly what this change does, in effect. What Obama is proposing is essentially a variation of the alternative minimum tax with a cap at a million dollars annually. The AMT includes income from all sources, including capital gains, and so would this.

      And (not in response to your comment) contrary to the ridiculous Slashdot headline, this change in the tax code is not a "wealthy tax". It's a fair share tax. The new law would make it abundantly clear that the purpose of lower taxes on capital gains is to help people save money for retirement. Right now, by contrast, the primary use of the lower rate of taxation on capital gains is for rich CEOs to hide most of their income from taxation. By paying CEOs in stock options, those CEOs pay a fraction of the taxes that they would otherwise have paid had the company paid them that same money as a cash performance bonus. That is clearly an unfair tax dodge. The proposed change in the tax code would go a long way towards eliminating that tax dodge, while doing so in a way that has minimal impact on people who are using the lower capital gains rate for its intended purpose—saving money for retirement.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    571. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      You got a house for nothing. How is that not entirely profit.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    572. Re:Tax planning and rich people by tmosley · · Score: 1

      The "rich" also have the ability to shut down operations to get into the lower tax bracket, or to relocate overseas.

      The "rich" are not your slaves. But neither should you be theirs. All corporate welfare should be immediately eliminated. That would save much more money than this foolish crusade.

    573. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Nursie · · Score: 1

      In which case that's a pretty low percentage, even though it accounts for a large chunk of tax.

    574. Re:Tax planning and rich people by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

      What's silly is someone with a degree in 16th century literature and a $100,000-$200,000 debt is upset that they cant find a job that will help pay their student loans... Sounds to me that they would have been better off picking a different major/career path. A little "expected income" research when planning a major would have helped.

      What's also silly is that we expect the market to magically assign the correct value to every job.

      I see 0 economic value in restoring ancient artifacts. I see HUGE social and cultural significance.

      Similarly I don't hear jack shit about some accountant in the 16th century's contribution to culture and society today. I would say the Mona Lisa has some cultural significance.

      Just because something isn't economically rewarded doesn't mean we shouldn't support 'unproductive' occupations.

      A lot of people scoff at artists but if you look at real-estate the effects of artists on a community has millions of dollars in eventual real-estate. Artists are like fertilizer for real-estate. It doesn't necessarily do anything but it transforms an area into prime-gentrification.

    575. Re:Tax planning and rich people by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      So I repeat my question. Name an economist who says that if you increases taxes, taxes will go down because rich people will avoid them.

      You've heard of tax shelters, right? Offshore accounts? Trusts, foundations, personal corporations? It doesn't take an economist to see that without an income tax or a death tax these are unnecessary.

      If you insist on hearing it from an economist, I bet there are some on here.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    576. Re:Tax planning and rich people by gtbritishskull · · Score: 1

      What about for oil? Is the whole world going to start paying more for oil equal to the amount that the US raises taxes on US oil producers? Or, does it just mean that US oil producers are going to have to pay their shareholders smaller dividends and if they want to be able to compete on the global market?

    577. Re:Tax planning and rich people by istartedi · · Score: 1

      If you only look at taxes in isolation (as might happen in theoretical examinations) then all of this might be true. The problem is that by not having a viable solution to the debt problem, we create inflation. The inflation is a defacto tax. Worse yet, it's regressive. It hits the middle class particularly hard since they're most likely to have cash savings. Note--those savings are now earning virtually no interest while prices rise. The low interest is due to actions of the Fed. The high prices are due to a lack of faith in the currency.

      OK. So you raise taxes, restore faith in the currency, decreaase commodity prices and suddenly it's like the middle class isn't being taxed so much. If we're back to paying $2/gal for gasoline because of that... just think of the stimulative effect to the economy! The irony is that it might not hurt the rich so much either. They pay more taxes, but what they lose in taxes gets returned in increasing share prices due to the stimulus effect.

      There's no telling if it would play out like this or not. It's just as speculative as your theory; but at least I'm pulling in more parts of the picture.

      The way I see it, it's simple. If one king had all the gold, what would be the price of gold? It would be essentially undefined. On the way there, if gold had been functioning as money it would become unreliable as it became too scarce to function as a currency. The value of gold would initially go up, but then it might ironicly decline as people turned to substitute currencies. Sound like something you know? When did the dollar peak against other currencies? True, we don't have one king owning all the dollars; but we're doing a pretty good job of approximating it.

      --
      For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
    578. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      The problem with graduated capital gains taxes is that with capital gains you aren't taxing people, you are taxing profits on investment. Why is my dollar of investment more special than someone else's dollar of investment, so much that it should be taxed at a different rate?

      If we graduate the capital gains tax the same way we do income tax, then rather rapidly only poor people will continue to invest.

      Does that sound like a good idea to anyone?

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    579. Re:Tax planning and rich people by sycodon · · Score: 1

      "low and middle class to at most half of what they currently are"

      How can you cut the income tax from 0%? Oh wait...I know...Earned Income Tax Credit.

      "the GREATEST ABILITY to pay their taxes,"

      Do I smell some "From each according to their ability..." here?

      You just don't have a clue, do you? The person who employees you is rich. GO ahead, tax him more. Maybe he'll lay you off.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    580. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Ihmhi · · Score: 1

      capital gains which are taxed (inexplicably) at a much lower rate than income.

      No, it's easy to explain. The guy busting his ass at a construction site or driving a truck doesn't have hundreds of thousands of dollars in stocks and bonds. It's a tax law that (unsurprisingly) caters to the wealthy.

    581. Re:Tax planning and rich people by gtbritishskull · · Score: 1

      Ok... so we get more of our cheese from France. While that may be an adverse result of the tax, it still invalidates your argument that the costs will just be passed to the consumer.

    582. Re:Tax planning and rich people by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

      You don't have a clue what you're talking about. The Laffer curve and supply side economics are about the impact that taxes have on economic growth. It has nothing to do with tax avoidance. Go find a conversation you understand and participate in that. Leave the tax policy to the grown ups.

    583. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Hatta · · Score: 2

      How about we do a truly fair tax system? Our Government is spending $3.7 trillion this year; every single person in the US - man, woman, child - now has to pay $11,746 in annual taxes. Everyone pays the same amount... That's fair, no class warfare, no BS.

      Sure, let's do that. What happens when half the country can't pay their tax bill? Are you going to throw them all in jail? But I thought you said "no class warfare"?

      Or are you going to spend less? Ok, what gets cut? Well the poor can't pay for the services they use, so that gets cut. Now we have a society owned by the rich, run by the rich. If you're poor, go fuck yourself. But I thought you said "no class warfare"?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    584. Re:Tax planning and rich people by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

      That doesn't mean tax receipts go down when you raise taxes on the wealthy.

    585. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Bardwick · · Score: 1

      Just real quick about the $50,000/year note.... 20% is a little high.. $50k with family of 4 is ZERO tax liability, so a little off there. Deductions, credits, loopholes. Please name the ones you want to eliminate. Not theories or whining, give me the rule, statute and a link. Give me that and I will support you 100%. Governments own numbers based on real life stuff in a spread sheet show that the wealthy are paying on overwhelming amount of the taxes in this country. So we distribute the wealth fairly by getting the rich to pay thier fair share. Where you going to come up with the other 85% of the money you need to continue current spending? Then I read these posts that say "rich" don't pay any taxes? It has to be one or the other folks... Is there some special tax code for people making a million or more? Nope.. guess what? If you invest money in GE, you to can get 15% capital gains. There is nothing the "The Buffet" is doing that you can't.

    586. Re:Tax planning and rich people by jnpcl · · Score: 2

      You went in the wrong direction with your Animal Farm quote.

      Try this one instead:

      "The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few."

    587. Re:Tax planning and rich people by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      There is an interesting point: In Entitlement America, The Head Of A Household Of Four Making Minimum Wage Has More Disposable Income Than A Family Making $60,000 A Year. (And that excludes benefits from Supplemental Security Income disability checks.)

      If the middle class is getting screwed, it's not just the wealthy that are "benefiting." The article refers to a "typical" family (whatever that means) in Mississippi, but one needs only visit the websites of these entitlement programs and plug in the incomes to see what the benefit is.

      The link to the original source is HERE, but I only get a blank page (well... I get the ads and menus and stuff, no article).

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    588. Re:Tax planning and rich people by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      A high minimum tax which ignores charity not only discourages charity

      There's very little actual evidence to back that statement up. You have "gut feelings," but almost nothing in the way of cold, hard data.

      If I were rich and I could afford to give 35% of my income to charity, I might elect to do so. I could not afford to give more than 35%, so that's the absolute maximum that I could give.

      With the tax write-off for charitable donations, however, that is not true. If I gave 35% of my income to a charity, I would get about 15% of my income back from the tax break, so the effect on my budget would be as though I gave only 20% of my income. Therefore, instead of giving 35% of my income, with the write-off, I could afford to give more like 55-60%.

      This really isn't contestable; it's simple mathematics. Those tax breaks mean that everyone, rich or poor alike, can afford to give nearly twice as much as they could otherwise afford to give. In effect, those write-offs are comparable to a government matching grant. Take away those write-offs, and with the possible exception of the *extremely* wealthy, those donations are going to drop roughly in half.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    589. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And don't forget about nonpersons being responsible so they don't need handouts. Nonpersons shouldn't be allowed to own patents either.

    590. Re:Tax planning and rich people by gtbritishskull · · Score: 1

      Fine. First I want the defense contractors and oil companies to pay me back for the Iraq War.

    591. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      trader sells some financial instrument, he's taxed on the proceeds at a much lower rate.

      I don't know much about investing in the US but don't traders have to pay various commission fees, marking prices and such? I have an unpopular idea! Lets introduce VAT and sales taxes to the financial transactions like this: the capital gain would be taxed (0,28+0,21+0,10)*gain, where 28% is the capital gains tax, 21% the VAT, and the 10% the sales tax.

    592. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The GOP just wants to cut spending on "entitlements", which is code speak for "cut assistance programs that the poor depend on."

      No, it's code for "cut the programs whose scheduled explosion in costs dwarfs even our currently unsustainable deficits".

      It's also code for "cut programs that were originally intended for the rare person who lived long enough to collect and was physically unable to work, but has since transformed into a decades-long vacation and health plan for able-bodied wealthy old people. It's a system whose burden is borne by an ever-shrinking pool of relatively poor young people to support ever-more retirees for longer and longer periods of time. (The ratio of workers to retirees used to be 16 to 1, we're now down to nearly 2 to 1).

      It's also a system that is generationally unfair. The people paying in are trying to raise children on wages that are likely among the lowest they'll ever earn. The people taking out have had a lifetime to save up for retirement. Between SS and Medicare, over their lifetime retirees receive twice as much in benefits as they paid in SS/Medicare taxes. The effect is that the US spends 6 dollars on retirees for every 1 it spends on children. Under current law the situation will continue to deteriorate. Does that seem like we're investing in our future?

      We're destroying the prospects of future generations by accumulating record debt and by allowing retirement entitlements (Medicare and SS) to consume an ever-larger share of the budget. This cannot continue (both morally and as a matter of basic mathematics). Reforming these programs to keep their costs manageable, and focused on those most in need, is not class warfare. Unless you consider the current system to be generational warfare against children.

    593. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Rockoon · · Score: 0

      The guy working at walmart pays no federal income taxes. Many people that work at walmart actually get back more than they pay in.

      Didn't you know that before you decided to open your maw?

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    594. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Mab_Mass · · Score: 1

      You got a house for nothing. How is that not entirely profit.

      If there is a mortgage on the house, the amount of profit may not be that much.

      If we discard the mortgage, though, I fail to see how you're arguing with me. Somebody gets a house for nothing, and you're claiming that we shouldn't tax capital gains like income because it is harder to make a lot of money on the house the person got for nothing.

      Let's stay on point here - the proposal on the table is to tax capital gains like income. Why shouldn't we?

    595. Re:Tax planning and rich people by budgenator · · Score: 1

      Not quite,

      the bottom 50%(69,980,290) pay approximately 2.70% and the cut-off income is $33,048, or about $16.52/hr;
        people in the 50th - 75th percentile (34,990,145) pay 10.96% of all income tax paid and the cut-off is $67,280 or $33.64 an hour;
        people in the 75th - 90th percentile (20,994,087) pay 16.40% of all income tax paid and the cut-off is $113,799 or $56.90/hr;
        people in the 90th - 95th percentile (6,998,029) pay 11.22% of all income tax paid and the cut-off is $159,619 or $79.81/hr;
        people in the 95th - 99th percentile (5,598,423) pay 20.70% of all income tax paid and the cut-off is $380,354 or $190.18/hr;
        people in the 99th or greater percentile (1,399,606) pay 38.02% of all income tax paid.
      Summary of Latest Federal Individual Income Tax Data

      but the fact is that there isn't enough "rich" people to put a dent in the federal deficit, based on income alone, they'll have to migrate toward a federal property tax or an insanely punitive inheritance tax to make any difference.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    596. Re:Tax planning and rich people by sorak · · Score: 1

      And for some people, it means complaining that their taxes are too low while somehow forgetting they have the option of paying more if they want to.

      By that logic, nobody should ever complain about welfare. Why should someone complain if his social security payment is too high, his food stamps are too generous, or his medicare covers too much, when he can always just pay the difference in additional taxes?

    597. Re:Tax planning and rich people by gtbritishskull · · Score: 1

      I find it difficult to argue with that logic.

      Thats why he isn't arguing with the logic. He is using an ad hominem attack on Warren Buffet (hypocrisy) to deflect away from the real argument which he knows he can't win.

    598. Re:Tax planning and rich people by i_b_don · · Score: 1

      "If a person pays SOMETHING, they are more likely willing to make responsible voting choices if they know that asking/getting MORE stuff from the fed will mean they will pay MORE in taxes. It's far too easy for someone who pays NOTHING to ask for more."

      This is a stupid talking point. So let's take your Yahoo article example. A family of 4 making 50,000. They still pay taxes, social security for example, just not Federal Income tax. So lets say they pay $10 in federal income tax. Is that enough? Does that change their attitude? No? How about $20? Do you want them to all pay NO LESS THAN $100 per household in order to qualify as feel invested? "But NOW they feel invested in the system!"

      This is totally stupid as it won't change anyone's opinion as to what should happen with the federal budget. And frankly, lets not pretend that the poor drive any political decision these days. A politician pandering to the poor? Laughable. Seriously, whens the last time you actually heard that? Name the issue... and it can't just be a talking point, they actually have to do something on the issue. Pass a bill, create a law. (Elderly don't count, they drive votes.) Even the middle class doesn't really count anymore.

      Here we are debating if the rich should pay another percentage point or two in their taxes. Back in the 1950's the top tax rate used to be 90%. Yet the idea of even talking about that is ridiculous, but "let um die!" is ok for people without insurance and defunding social security, no problem.

      Class warfare has been going on a long time. If you really want to talk about fair, lets talk about getting rid of the term "capital gains" and instead just call it income and tax that appropriately.

      d

      --
      all language nazi's will burne in heil!
    599. Re:Tax planning and rich people by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Here that bang. That's reality kicking down your door. If you think some poor family in Los Angeles is in the same class as some trust fund loaded family in the Hamptons, then your definition of "class" has no meaning whatsoever. Short of caste-based or feudal societies, class is almost invariably based on money.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    600. Re:Tax planning and rich people by i_b_don · · Score: 1

      Help me out here: How do capital gains drive investment? As I see it, this is primarily taxes on property. Not much value add there. I know this is the argument that has been used, but I can't come up with even a token argument where this is true.

      d

      --
      all language nazi's will burne in heil!
    601. Re:Tax planning and rich people by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      What we need to do is to make sure we tax all a company's holdings if they are on home turf, even if those holdings are registered elsewhere. Give a company a choice, either pay taxes on all your holdings, or you cease to be a domestic company, period.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    602. Re:Tax planning and rich people by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      That doesn't mean tax receipts go down when you raise taxes on the wealthy.

      Right, not necessarily - it's dependent on the rate - the setpoint of that curve is what Laffer was getting at. I think this has the data you're looking for:

      The individual income tax brought in 7.8% of GDP from 1952 to 1979 when the top tax rate ranged from 70% to 92%, 8% of GDP from 1993 to 1996 when the top tax rate was 39.6%, and 8.1% from 1988 to 1990 when the highest individual income tax rate was 28%. ...
      Using IRS data, Thomas Piketty of the Paris School of Economics and Emmanuel Saez of the University of California at Berkeley have estimated that realized capital gains accounted for just 13%-22% of reported income among the top 1% of taxpayers from 1988 to 2006, when gains were taxed at 28% â" but that fraction swiftly reached 29%-32% in 1998-2000, when the capital gains tax fell to 20%. ...
      The average tax rate of the top 400 fell to 16.6% in 2007 from 22.9% in 2002. Even though there was no stock market boom as in 1997-2000, real revenues of the top 400 nevertheless doubled again â" to $14.5 billion in 2007 from $6.9 billion in 2002. Instead of paying less when the capital gains tax rate went down in 1997 and 2003, the top 400 instead paid much, much more.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    603. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      Correct me if I'm wrong here

      OK.

      but I thought that only served a useful public purpose once, at IPO time.

      The useful public purpose is that there is a business due to investment, that it thus employs people, and that it both offers services or products to others as well as uses the services and products of others.

      Nearly all businesses start when someone borrows money, from a bank, for the purpose of starting it.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    604. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      You are also being asked to pay back to a system that has given you the opportunity for the success you enjoyed: one that created infrastructure projects such as the interstate highway system, the internet, and a lot of higher education using marginal tax rates which historically have been much higher than those at the present. Your attitude is worse than "may be the best man win," it's "I got mine, screw you."

      I wasnt "given" anything. I started from nothing after working for a decade as a pizza delivery guy and waiter. Needles to say I was high risk and no bank would look at me.

      I don't have a degree. I went back to school about 4 years ago to finaly get one and dropped out after 3 years when I realized what a complete sham the "higher education" system is. Unless you're going into a specialized profession like engineering or medicine then college is a complete joke. I spent a god-awful amount of money to learn nothing I hadnt already gotten from high school or taught myself.

      I failed twice in business before this success.


      The point is, you can bitch and moan all day about what isn't given to you (as you obviously believe is the natural order for those that succeed). Or you can decide you're going to do what is necessary and commit to success. It wasnt pleasant, and it wasnt easy. But I can now have some comfort after having put forth the investment in myself. Unless your argument is that there are too many stupid people who just arent capable of making that choice (which I dont happen to believe in the slightest) then you have no arguement.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    605. Re:Tax planning and rich people by i_b_don · · Score: 1

      In addition you have to consdier that the companies that the rich use to get rich, use the resources of the country at a far higher rate than a normal person. They make their money using tax payer funded roads, infrastructure, laws, legal system, etc. This is not all about the rich, this is about their money. You also have to factor in all the programs that support economy, public peace, and maintaining our standing overseas (i.e. military and diplomacy).

      So a rich person may sit in their mansion and never travel on a public road, but their money has US tax payer fingerprints all over it. That's why it should be taxed on par or greater than the money from people who actually work for a living.

      d

      --
      all language nazi's will burne in heil!
    606. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      i RTFA. I think it would be accurate to state that Americans that pay their taxes, willingly or not, are becoming more intolerant to those faceless ones that play games when it comes to taxes. When a prudent and reasonable person can not see an event like a check for a tax bill, then one can safely conclude that a corporation has become Rogue.

    607. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Any defense spending numbers that don't include the cost of overseas deployments and the CIA are laughably inaccurate. It's a bit disingenuous to talk about how much we spend without mentioning the nearly $1 trillion dollars we've spent on our two wars. You might also notice that in the link you provided, we're spending more than double the percentage of the next closest country, and that's before war spending is even considered.

      Military spending is the biggest drain on our budget. Other types of spending have a much greater positive impact on our economy, but military spending gets largely shipped overseas or pocketed by absurdly-rich war profiteers.

    608. Re:Tax planning and rich people by gtbritishskull · · Score: 1

      Sorry to burst your bubble, but Social Security is a Pay-as-you-Go system. You are currently paying for your parents and grandparents to retire. The "Trust Fund" is an accounting fiction (the money is not there, only IOUs). If the demographics of the country change (and they are) then Social Security has to adapt with reduced benefits or higher taxes. When it goes negative (as it is now) you have to raise income taxes to pay off the "Trust Fund". We are all in this together, everyone should contribute.

    609. Re:Tax planning and rich people by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Secondly, investing is a big driver in the economy, and higher capital gains taxes have often led to slowing the economy.

      I dare say that working is an even bigger driver in the economy (since ultimately it's all there is to it!), so by the same logic higher personal income taxes would slow down the economy even more.

      Two other points about Buffet: as has been mentioned, he's free to give what he thinks is his "fair share" to the government, but he chooses not to.

      Yes, and so do I and many other people. The problem with "voluntary tax" is that it's utterly meaningless if you're the only one who is paying it. Even if you contribute an extra million in the budget, it's just a drop in the bucket. But if everyone does, now that is a different matter. I wouldn't mind paying some more if I knew others were doing so as well - and so everyone including me enjoys the benefits brought up by higher taxes from everyone else.

    610. Re:Tax planning and rich people by sgt+scrub · · Score: 1

      There is nothing the "The Buffet" is doing that you can't.

      Except make $800,000 in interest while taking a nap. FTFY

      --
      Having to work for a living is the root of all evil.
    611. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      People who earn more than ten times I do in income pay less income tax than I do. You think this is fair? The problem is that salaries are taxed at a higher rate than capital gains.

      I understand that there is a political movement to have 0% tax rate for everyone, but we're not there yet. While we still have to pay taxes it would be fair if the tax rates were comparable.

      The best spot to start I think is to stop the tax loopholes. But even that sort of thinking is being shot down by the Republicans. The wealthiest tax payers are being treated with kid gloves out of a misguided fear that they'll take their billion jobs and leave. Actually it's not really about fear of losing our jobs instead it's about the fear of legislators losing their jobs by pissing off campaign donors.

    612. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Hatta · · Score: 2

      Hold on, I'm not done yet.

      Do you realize the top 25% pay 60% of ALL Federal revenues with just their income taxes and Social Security taxes? Yep - those evil rich pay the supermajority of all Federal revenues. Clearly not paying their fair share and waging war on everyone else...

      Do you realize that the top 25% includes those making more than $77K a year. It's remarkably disingenuous (read: you are a liar) to portray them as "super rich".

      The fact* is, the top 20% (not 25) owns 85% (not 60) of the wealth in the United States. Shouldn't the top 20% be paying 25% of the tax?

      * See here for citations.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    613. Re:Tax planning and rich people by element-o.p. · · Score: 1

      ...the rich seem to think that because they make millions, they don't have to contribute.

      [Citation Needed]

      In fact, I'll see your claim that the rich don't pay their share and raise you a citation of my own. If these stats are accurate, and yes, I know what they say about statistics, then the top 25% of wealth in America pays 85% of the taxes. Does that seem "fair" to YOU?

      What you don't realize is that there is no such thing as "fair". "Fair" is an arbitrary concept that is only defined within the context of the one who is using the term. To those below the poverty level, it isn't "fair" that they have to pay any taxes at all, because they don't have enough money to provide for their own needs, much less to contribute to the common good. To the rich, it isn't fair that the top 25% of income in the U.S. is paying 85% of the taxes -- they (presumably) worked hard for their money, so why should they have to shoulder the burden of paying to provide goods and services for the welfare class? My own personal opinion is that there should be a flat tax -- say 25% -- across the board for everyone above the poverty level. No credits, no loopholes, just a flat tax rate that applies to everyone. But that's not "fair" either, because those just above the poverty level ($11,161 in 2009) will feel that 25% hit (or $2790.25) far more than a rich person will. However, it isn't "fair" to the rich person (someone making over $250,000 per year, per Wikipedia and dailyfinance.com) either, because a 25% tax rate lightens their pocket by $62,500 -- over 5 1/2 times the ENTIRE SALARY of a borderline poor person. Is that "fair"?

      So, I'm not terribly interested in what people call "fair" because there's no such thing. If you think you can find some objective measure of what "fair" means, you are fooling yourself.

      --
      MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
    614. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Being a success is not about being greedy. The greed only comes in with the attitude that now that they've made their fortune that they should pay a smaller tax rate than the people who still have to work.

    615. Re:Tax planning and rich people by dballanc · · Score: 1

      Everyone should pay taxes. If they can't make enough money to live on and still afford to pay those taxes, then we need to fix the root problem of "can't make enough money". Increase the minimum wage, get rid of the subsidies. And to those CEOs who cry about increasing the minimum wage while 10x, 100x or even 1000x more per year than their lowest paid employee... sorry, you aren't getting any sympathy from me. If you are making that kind of money you've exploited someone somewhere... customers, employees.

      The typical democrat crys about disproportionate weath, corporate tax breaks, and how the common man is being exploited by the weathly. And they are right. The typical republican crys about taxes, excess regulations, and how jobs are created by businesses and not government. And they are right. The solution needs to come from common sense and self control on both ends of the spectrum, before those stuck in the middle wake up and decide we don't need either end of the spectrum any more.

    616. Re:Tax planning and rich people by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      I dare say that working is an even bigger driver in the economy (since ultimately it's all there is to it!), so by the same logic higher personal income taxes would slow down the economy even more.

      Not really... investments help companies expand and hire more people. The way you seem to want it, investors would become job takers instead of job producers. That's really NOT what our economy needs. If unemployment were below 5%, you might be able to make a case.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    617. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      You know, if you're going to throw out numbers, you should pick accurate ones.

      Fair enough.

      I don't have a good number for "average" anual income of the top 1.5% of Americans, but let us supose that is works out to be on the order of $10 million.

      You just claimed that 3M people earn an average of $10M per year. Thats $30 trillion per year from an economy with a GNP of only $14 trillion per year.

      Are you picking up what I am putting down?

      You want to get numbers right? Lets start with yours. Until you can make estimations that pass even simple scrutiny, there is no point discussing this issue with you. Obviously your bias is so extreme that you have estimated that 3% of the United States population earns more than twice the entire economic output of the whole fucking country!

      SIMPLY FUCKING AMAZING.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    618. Re:Tax planning and rich people by cartman · · Score: 1

      By the way - Germany's overall GDP is almost the same as the U.S., despite having a much smaller population,

      Are you sure about this. A quick check on google reveals that the US has a GDP about 4.2x higher than Germany.

    619. Re:Tax planning and rich people by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

      Collecting any interest on money used to be considered usury (that was the original meaning of the word).

      Simply because we have an entrenched system of doing things today, and it's been working for a couple hundred years, doesn't mean it's the only way. Nor does it mean the system isn't broken, and failing. It could even be on it's last legs, we wouldn't know until it had collapsed.

    620. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      We don't take taxes from people because people are evil. We take it because those people cost money to protect and enable to make the money they do.

      The rich are especially dependent on government expenses to make their money. Most of their income comes from corporations, which are state creations, and from equity trades of corporations, which are protected only by the state, and both of which cost loads in our justice system to protect from theft and fraud. Not to mention bailouts of their financial system, which they crashed when they got the way destroying regulations. And that's even before considering their huge haul from government contracts, especially in war profiteering and the energy exploitation that the government must pay per-gallon prices for, too.

      Of course the government can get far more than the $2.5T it currently gets from the people, of the $15T the people get.

      You Republicans have no credibility left when talking about debt, taxes, fixing problems, or "realistically".

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    621. Re:Tax planning and rich people by GrumpySteen · · Score: 1

      You're talking about a guy who gave $37 billion to charity.

      I think it's fairly obvious that his motives lie in some other direction than making more money.

    622. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      You argument seems to be that all taxes are bad. But we all have to pay them currently, so as long as we're being force to give back some of "our money" then why not do it fairly? Wealthy people pay a smaller percentage of their income in taxes than the middle class. Why is it always the richest taxpayers the ones that the anti-tax people snuggle up to first, and the ones with the biggest loopholes and smallest tax rates?

      If you're really poor you can get credits to help with taxes and end up paying little to none at the end of the year; if you're really wealthy you start with a small tax rate and then find the tricks and loopholes to end up paying little to none. So the middle class ends up being the biggest tax payers as percentage of income.

    623. Re:Tax planning and rich people by slamb · · Score: 1

      Their $600/year sales tax burden does NOTHING to reduce our 14 trillion dollar deficit. And if they pay nothing, they have no problems asking for "more" stuff.

      Sales taxes range from 5%-10%, right? You're suggesting that a family of four spends only $6,000-$12,000 / year? Even considering that sales taxes in many states exclude some necessities like unprepared foods, that sounds way too low to me. If they're really able to have a comfortable existence saving 60+% of their income (that includes a generous allowance for other state/local taxes), I'd agree with you, they should be able to cough up some federal income tax. But I don't think you're using realistic figures. The poverty level for this family is $22,500/year; I think you should expect they spend at least that much on taxable items and therefore pay at least $1,125-$2,250/year in sales tax alone. They probably also pay at least 10% of their income in state income tax, so add on another $5,000/year. Their total tax rate is at least 12.25% - 15%. Admittedly, this family could likely afford another 1% in federal income tax without problems, but of course you've picked the most outrageous example (beyond the income EIC covers...this is a different set of deductions); there are others who could not.

    624. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 2

      No, China has a lower tax rate. Because China's government directly owns industries, including farms and factories. And because China centrally plans its economy, which directs as much money from various incomes to various expenses, as the government chooses. That's Communism.

      But of course there are many other countries apart from the US and China. However, there's nothing you Republicans won't say, no matter how irrational, to derail any attempt at reasonably managing a country. You're corporate anarchists. You really should be talking about Somalia, or any of a number of other failed African countries. After all, your favorite corporations have been right there keeping them failed.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    625. Re:Tax planning and rich people by ultranova · · Score: 1

      This proposal is a milder, kinder version of Stalin's assault on the kulaks in the 30s.

      So, in your view rising taxes is on the same continuum as sending people to prison camps? Really?

      Is the right really this crazy?

      --

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

    626. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Everybody pays taxes. You're making it seem like only the rich people are having their money "stolen".

    627. Re:Tax planning and rich people by shentino · · Score: 1

      While as a rich man I might personally want to pay more, I'm not going to be very happy if when I step up to the plate to chip in everyone else holds back and I'm the one stuck holding the bag.

      I'd rather have me and everyone else in my bracket marched along in unison.

    628. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Of course it is, money is just how he keeps score. Once he has it, he doesn't need it anymore and can give it away.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    629. Re:Tax planning and rich people by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      He sells quite a lot of insurance (and reinsurance) - though a quick run through Google doesn't turn up any hard numbers. Life insurance, of course, isn't subject to estate tax.

    630. Re:Tax planning and rich people by element-o.p. · · Score: 1

      I haven't read what Buffet had to say about the tax situation for the rich, so I don't know how much he is -- or is not -- paying. However, I have read statistics that claim that the top 25% of the wealth in America pays 85% of the taxes. That stat dates from 2007, so things may have changed since then, but IF that stat is even remotely accurate, then saying, "To anyone who makes over $1M/year and claims that raising their taxes is unfair, SUCK IT UP....if you can't afford to live within yours, CHANGE YOUR LIFESTYLE." is at least somewhat over simplistic and naive.

      --
      MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
    631. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You had some resources, clearly, to fall back on when you failed. You may diminish them or deny them here, to defend your ideology. But whenever one pokes at these Horatio Alger stories, one finds a network of social capital behind it: family members, spouses, friends, couches, investors taking irrational leaps of faith, etc.

      And most importantly, you have the infrastructure of an entire society which makes the kind of business you have possible. You have an educated populace that can read; you have basic public health and transportation infrastructure; you have an economic system that produces money, protects investments, and so on. Without these things, you would be lucky to make it as a subsistence farmer. You are just so accustomed to the things that make your business possible - and will cover your ass if it fails (inc. limited liability) - that you take them as if they were part of the natural order.

    632. Re:Tax planning and rich people by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Actually, its a larger incentive to not even bother playing the game and relocate to china, russia, or anywhere else that provides less disincentives to operate.

      Given that both of those countries have proven they know exactly how to treat arrogant plutocrats with delusions of grandeur, I'd say good riddance.

      --

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

    633. Re:Tax planning and rich people by uncqual · · Score: 1

      If "labor" is confined to activities that generate high joules of output per unit time from human muscle, it's true that the owners "do none of the labor".

      By this definition, programmers also do very little labor compared to, for example, that done by an uneducated construction laborer w/no special training, skills, or experience. Perhaps, therefore, the former should get paid less than the latter?

      The owners risk their capital, sometimes losing money, to build stadiums (yes, I know, they usually get a lot of help from local governments whose voters foolishly pay a portion because, of course, a city without an NFL team has to be ashamed of itself for being small and weak -- but these tax dollars are voted by local folks and have relatively little impact on Federal budget). They hire/fire coaches and general managers and they generally manage the business. The most successful are the Steve Jobs' or Larry Ellison's of the football world. This is not "labor" by the "joules of output" measure -- but it's far more important. Successful NFL teams exist and do well decade after decade because of these "non laborers" - the "labor" comes and goes (and, BTW, is well compensated if they are great players) and only contribute to a team for a few years usually.

      --
      Why is there an "insightful" mod and why isn't it "-1"? If I wanted insight, I wouldn't be reading /.
    634. Re:Tax planning and rich people by MightyMartian · · Score: 0

      To be sure, even in Britain, the Guardian's editorial department was working overtime to try to compare this to the 1981 English riots, but at the end of the day, while there was no doubt some link to the riots being sparked by a questionable police act, all in all, these riots were just free for alls. It wasn't an English Spring, it was lawlessness. Freedom fighters, by and large, don't go marching out on to the streets to steel cars for joy rides or smash into shops to steal expensive footwear or home electronics. While the Arab Spring certainly had its incidents of lawless SOBs raping and looting, for the most part, when you looked at what was happening, you saw idealistic people overthrowing unjust governments, not trying to break into shoe stores to steal Nikes.

      In the end even the Guardian seems to have backed down from the "English Spring" nonsense, and while still insisting there is injustice in what the Coalition is doing, no longer seems to think that this was some outbreak of mass anger at the budget cuts. The first tip that should have clued people in that this wasn't the English version of the Arab Spring was just how many people at the bottom end of England's socio-economic ladder were as pissed off as the Middle Class at the lawlessness of it all. Only a few wanna-be Marxists so this as the underclass rising to take back their country.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    635. Re:Tax planning and rich people by atriusofbricia · · Score: 1

      And yet those 50% that pay nothing in taxes control 2% of the wealth. Fair huh?

      Surely you realize that the 50% the person above is referring to is the bottom 50%+ of people in this country who effectively pay zero federal and often zero state income tax, right? They weren't referring to the mythical super rich who pay no taxes.

      --
      I was raised on the command line, bitch

      "Nemo me impune lacesset"

    636. Re:Tax planning and rich people by jthill · · Score: 1

      Thank you, and I stand corrected. We could quibble over what 35 days should be instead -- seems to me it'd be fairer at double that, or maybe a sliding scale or something -- but, a $107K deduction? You're maintaining American citizenship and earning enough that the tax on the remainder seems extortionate to you? Look, fair or not, but: do you buy life insurance? The lucky ones (or, the careful ones who don't get spectacularly unlucky) subsidize the rest. At some point the laws and regulations have to just screw as few people as possible.

      --
      As always, all IMO. Insert "I think" everywhere grammatically possible.
    637. Re:Tax planning and rich people by cartman · · Score: 2

      BWAHAHAHAHAHAH. LOL. The vast majority of this income in this range is "Unearned Income."

      The term "unearned income" is leftist propaganda from the Marxist era, and it contains an embedded error.

      Income from investments is not unearned. It requires someone to save money in the first place (delay gratification), then evaluate investments and take risks. These activities are absolutely required by the economy, but are abhorred by the vast majority of people, who are totally unwilling to do them. Even delaying gratification is something 90% of the population would never do. In fact, most people take out loans for cars etc, and so are "anti-investing"; they don't even live on their present income or pay cash for their purchases, but instead use savings of others for consumption which otherwise could have gone to capital investment. Most people not only don't invest, but they anti-invest.

      Bear in mind that a person has to acquire money before investing it. They must delay gratification, evaluate investments, and take risks. If this were easy then many people would do it, because it's a compensated activity.

      Even when everyday people do start investing, they invariably fail at it.

      If the economy demands something difficult, and very few are willing to do it, then the income from it is not unearned. Just because something doesn't involve manual labor doesn't mean the income is "unearned."

      Granted, some people acquired their initial investment through inheritance. I suppose you could say that their income is "unearned," and you would be partly correct (their income was earned by their progenitors who gave it to them).

      The very term "unearned income" derives from the incorrect and easily-refuted notion that all value derives from labor. In fact, value derives from demand, in which case investment is earned income.
       

    638. Re:Tax planning and rich people by element-o.p. · · Score: 1
      I agree with your sentiment. However, I have to say, all of the things he mentioned are right on the money. The programs he listed* are certainly reason enough to claim that Obama is corrupt and should be removed from office.

      *with these possible exceptions:
      • SEIU (which I know nothing about, and therefore cannot comment one way or the other in good conscience);
      • TSA (which was started under Bush, as your sig correctly points out -- although it has gotten especially egregious on Obama's watch);
      • cash for clunkers (if you choose to include the bank and GM/Chrysler bailouts, then that also started under Bush, IIRC).
      --
      MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
    639. Re:Tax planning and rich people by ultranova · · Score: 1

      For example, if the government started taxing sodas, people would complain that the greedy PepsiCo is raising their prices, not that they are paying more in taxes.

      So don't tax sodas, tax PepsiCo's profits. PepsiCo already has incentive to maximize them - that's what it exists for - and taxing them doesn't change the soda can price point that maximizes them, thus it doesn't affect the price of soda.

      What you have given is actually an argument against sales taxes and for income taxes.

      --

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

    640. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      You have an educated populace that can read; you have basic public health and transportation infrastructure; you have an economic system that produces money, protects investments, and so on.

      Wait for a moment I thought we were talking about the US but clearly I am in the wrong thread.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    641. Re:Tax planning and rich people by afidel · · Score: 1

      No, successful NFL teams exist almost completely because of the TV market they are in. It's pretty hard to screw up an NFL franchise unless you try to punch way above your weight to prove something to your friends and business rivals. As to your comment about stadiums, in my market at least they got not only a 100% free stadium but they also get a portion of the revenue from the refreshment vendors.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    642. Re:Tax planning and rich people by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      Yes, but the thing about the Warren Buffetts of the world is that there are just so few of them that they don't matter when we talk about taxation in the US. You could tax them at 100% and it still wouldn't raise that much revenue. The entire Walton family fortune, if confiscated, could run the government for about a week.

      Taxes are paid by middle- and upper-middle-class professionals, just like they always have been, because that's where the money is. And they're the ones who are going to take it in the gut.

    643. Re:Tax planning and rich people by cartman · · Score: 1

      Even if everybody had the means to and greed to get a ... tailored suit ... and enough money to invest after that, society would fall apart if everybody were investors ... and no-one were workers

      Yes, but society would also fall apart if everybody were workers and no-one was an investor. There couldn't have been any capital investment, and so no factories, computer chips, cars, cement, buildings other than those constructed by their inhabitants, roads or bridges, etc. You may protest that roads and bridges are paid for the government, but they are paid for by issuing bonds and so couldn't be done without someone willing to save money.

      For that matter, society would fall apart if everyone was a plumber, or if everyone started doing any single activity. Society requires several tasks (like investment and various kinds of labor) and they are all compensated in proportion to their demand.

    644. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Nicolai+Haehnle · · Score: 1

      Some kind of progressive taxation is needed to keep the income and wealth distributions stable.

      Sales taxes are not progressive.

      Your move.

    645. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So instead of 'some', you yell "they pay NONE" because it plays better in the sticks, eh?

    646. Re:Tax planning and rich people by atriusofbricia · · Score: 1

      With nearly 50% of the US paying no federal income tax, they have no problem asking for "more". Want to be 'fair'? Get rid of the EIC -- or at least prevent it from giving back MORE money that was originally paid by the recipient.

      Now that's what I call class warfare. And so unlike raising taxes on people who can afford them, it is indeed rotten economics.

      Have you looked at the actual table? For a single person, the Earned Income Tax Credit isn't available if (s)he earns more than $13,460. That's comparable to the US Census Poverty Threshold of $11,344 (for a person younger than 65). If not for the Earned Income Tax Credit, people who have an income might actually starve, go homeless, etc. So when I say this is class warfare, it is only because it could actually kill the working poor.

      In contrast, the wealthy really can afford it without noticing. There was an interesting New York Times article on this recently, which linked to this Citizens for Tax Justice fact sheet. If you read through it, you'll see that the revenue from increasing the tax rate on the top 1% by income would be similar to that of raising it on the bottom 60% by the same percentage. I assure you, there will be enough left over to provide basic necessities of life! (In fact, I'm not in the top 1%, but I certainly could pay more taxes without great hardship. It might mean it'd take me longer to afford a house, but I'm not exactly homeless in my 2-bedroom rented townhouse.)

      If you're not swayed by arguments such as "don't kill people with taxes", then consider no taxes on poor people an investment. If they have all of a home, healthy food on the table, adequate medical care, a quality education, and available jobs, it's reasonable to believe that many of them will go on to become middle-class tax-payers: enough so to pay back your investment with far more than the nominal 1% tax rate you're suggesting. In fact, by effectively selling too soon, you're virtually guaranteeing you'll throw away what you put in with that government-provided K12 education and the like.

      I'm saddened by the fact that society has somehow gotten to the point where the "logic" of "he has more so we can steal it from him!" some how is both morally and ethically justifiable. Hell, why stop at 50%? By your so called logic we surely can justify taking 95% of what they earn. They can afford it, right?

      I believe the idea was at least to take away with is basically wealth redistribution at gun point. EIC is basically that. Take from everyone else, at gunpoint by way of threat of jail, and give it to someone else. Apparently if you do that as an individual, armed robbery, it is viewed as morally wrong. If you do it with the power of government then suddenly what was wrong is now right. How exactly can it be right for "all of us", in the form of the government, to forcibly take money from one party and give it to another when it would be wrong for any individual in that group to do so? How does the super class of "government" gain powers that the individual does not have?

      --
      I was raised on the command line, bitch

      "Nemo me impune lacesset"

    647. Re:Tax planning and rich people by element-o.p. · · Score: 1

      Don't be dense. If you want to look at it that way, people don't pay taxes either; they just pass their tax costs on to their employers...who pass it on to their customers...who work for someone else, and pass their tax cost on to their employers...wash, rinse, repeat. That's the problem with junior high school economics class -- it simplifies the concepts to the level that a 13 or 14 year old can understand. However, that process of simplification inevitably leads to inaccuracies in the economic model it creates; it is not a valid description of how things actually work in the real world.

      As the husband of a small business owner, I can assure you that corporations DO, in fact, pay taxes. Lots of them, actually. Yes, those taxes are paid from the profits of the business, and those profits come from the consumer. But don't fool yourself by saying that "tax costs [are passed] on to the price of [the] goods." There's a limit to how high you can raise your prices before people stop buying from you (supply and demand, right?).

      --
      MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
    648. Re:Tax planning and rich people by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      If your primary capital gain is an appreciation in property values, then you're not in the economic group we're talking about here.

      Long-term capital gains taxes are kept low in order to make investing in businesses a desirable option. After all, new businesses are riskier investments, considerably more risky than just going out and working a job for someone else. That doesn't mean that this isn't exploited, or that it doesn't induce some of its own disturbances in the economy, but there's the logic.

    649. Re:Tax planning and rich people by element-o.p. · · Score: 1

      Garbage indeed. I've seen stats that contradict your claims. Do you have stats to support yours?

      --
      MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
    650. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 2

      There's 1.4M people in the top 1%, according to your stats, who take in over $1.6 TRILLION, paying an effective income tax rate of 23.27% on it, leaving them with $1.3T. The Federal deficit was $1.17T in 2010. Based on income alone, just the top 1% could eliminate the deficit and have $130 BILLION left over (about $88,000 each - over double the gross median income). So your statement that there aren't enough is simply, mathematically and objectively false.

      But we don't have to take all their money to put "a dent" in the deficit. A 10% dent of $117B would require only 8.6 points more than 23.27%, or 31.86%. A 20% dent would be about 40%.

      It's perfectly obvious that the richest are sucking the money out of the rest of us. It's not quite as obvious, but still clear, that they're getting far more for their money out of the system than the rest of us. There's no need to get into the math to see that the richest, who have all the money, are where to go to get the money to pay for the system. But there's the math right there.

      You Republicans, er, "libertarians", of course, would rather we all hand over the other money we've managed to protect from the rich. Our Social Security principal you'd see evaporated in the stock market, along with the pensions the rich just destroyed in the past decade. Our paltry substitute for joint healthcare, Medicare and Medicaid, you'd see shoveled into the pockets of the wasteful, redundant, counterproductive private insurers - and the wasteful, greedy medical industry that partners with them. That's the kind of "savings" that costs more, by eradicating effective organization of pension and health expenses, and along the way makes no dent in the deficit.

      Of course, to really eliminate the deficit we'd have to cut the $1.5T war budget to something like the $300B max we require to actually defend the country. That $1.2T would turn the deficit back into the surplus Clinton/Gore gave us. But you Republicans will never give up the war pork barrel that keeps these richest people rich, or even the $4B a year in direct oil corp subsidies that is tightly integrated with the war pork barrel and the richest Americans. So of course you have to pretend the rich don't have the money. I just don't have to pretend to believe it.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    651. Re:Tax planning and rich people by element-o.p. · · Score: 1

      Corporations are only taxed if they turn profits.

      That's true ONLY if you neglect other taxes, such as licensing (you need at least a business license, and depending upon your business, probably other miscellaneous licenses as well), employee taxes (unemployment insurance, FICA, etc.) and so on. You'd be surprised out how many ways the government, from municipal all the way up to federal, can find to leach money out of corporations.

      --
      MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
    652. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      That's the first country you thought of, instead of all the countries much more like the US that prove you wrong, because you are indeed what that last post called you. And your followup post proves you're determined to prove it.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    653. Re:Tax planning and rich people by cartman · · Score: 1

      The super rich earn their entire living (in most cases) off of capital gains and dividends which are taxed at a flat 15%.

      This is not exactly true. Dividends are taxed twice--once when the company (which you own) is paying taxes on earnings, and again when you receive their earnings. Only the second part is reported.

      Also, capital gains are taxed for illusory gains caused by inflation.

      Most of the tax unfairness which favors the rich, in my opinion, is little-known write-offs for things like Yacht depreciation etc, which greatly reduces the tax burden of high-income individuals. These tax dodges aren't protested by the middle class because they are unnoticed by the middle class. Each one is buried in thousands of pages of regulation for unrelated laws. The rich can exploit these dodges because the rich hire tax accountants who do nothing but study the many obscure write-offs which were added. Of course the dodges are added explicitly to benefit high-income individuals who contribute to campaigns.

      However, taxes on capital gains and dividends are (IMO) reasonably fair because you must take into account double taxation of various kinds, caused by inflation (taxing illusory gains) and taxation on corp income both before and after disbursement.

    654. Re:Tax planning and rich people by uncqual · · Score: 1

      The "bottom 2/3rds" have roughly 2/3s of the vote (it's not quite 2/3 because, compared to the "top 2/3rds", a disproportionate percentage of this group is ineligible to vote due to being in prison or having lost their right to vote due to a felony conviction). It's absurd to say that they "have NO representation". If they choose not to vote or choose not to study the issues and candidates and vote intelligently (even if that is just to vote in their selfish best interests), that is their choice to not be represented. One has a right to chose to be unrepresented in America and that's the choice these folks made.

      Of course, the statement is false -- SOME of these (in fact, quite a few) of those in the "bottom 2/3rds" DO vote and sometimes the person they vote for win elections and are even a member of the controlling party in the legislative body they serve in.

      --
      Why is there an "insightful" mod and why isn't it "-1"? If I wanted insight, I wouldn't be reading /.
    655. Re:Tax planning and rich people by budgenator · · Score: 1

      Not even close, the top 10% paid 69.94% of the taxes on 45.77% of the AGI, 97.30% are paid by the top 50%, those making $33,048 or more. the Richest 10% are those with a AGI of $113,799 or more so the richest 10% aren't necessarily make that much money.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    656. Re:Tax planning and rich people by element-o.p. · · Score: 1

      Some rich people (and wannabes) always bring up the "they (yeah right) will leave and go to tax havens. I say good riddance.

      Great plan. I mean, we've already got more jobs in this country than we need, so moving those companies -- and their associated jobs -- overseas won't matter much, right? Right? <sound of crickets chirping>

      --
      MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
    657. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Especially when considering the first $15K everyone has to spend to live like a decent person (including costs of working, like commuting and wardrobe, and the higher rents/costs near most workplaces). After that's paid, most people don't have much left. People making $80K+ still have over $65K left. When you look at taxes as a fraction of discretionary income, beyond necessities, the rich pay a lot less share than the rest of us. When they should be paying a larger share. The system benefits them more, so they should pay a larger share.

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      make install -not war

    658. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      SSI is not a federal income tax. The idea of FICA is that you pay in to it now so you can pull out of it later (when OTHERS are paying in to it). It's supposed to be zero-sum.

      You do realize that "FICA" stands for Federal Insurance Contributions Act tax, right? https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/Federal_Insurance_Contributions_Act_tax

      It is a payroll tax, imposed by the federal government. Wordsmith all you like, but it IS a federal income tax. What something is supposed to be is irrelevant. What is is is all that matters.

    659. Re:Tax planning and rich people by sycodon · · Score: 1

      Ahem, the Republican House and Senate did this. That's their job.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    660. Re:Tax planning and rich people by spiffmastercow · · Score: 1

      Well the taxes are the lowest they've been in 100 years, and we have 9.X% unemployment. Sounds to me like thos "job creators" aren't doing so great at creating jobs, so let's have them help out some other way, i.e. by paying taxes.

    661. Re:Tax planning and rich people by tknd · · Score: 1

      It's not about paying for what you use - it's about paying for what Government wants.

      While you do have a point, I'm not sure the government can make it any more fair in this regard. Additionally, you're not just paying for services on the mainland, you're also paying for government protection of it's citizens via foreign relations and military. As long as you claim to be an American citizen, you're going to be paying American taxes.

      How are they not paying for road upkeep - they pay fuel costs...

      Actually there is a good amount of data showing that current gasoline taxes are not high enough to pay for road maintenance. So road maintenance gets delayed and that's why we have crumbling roads, bridges, etc. The reason why this is is because the gas tax is flat and hasn't been adjusted for quite a while. So while costs keep going up due to inflation, the gas tax covers less and less. Technology is also getting more efficient so people can actually buy vehicles that consume less gas for the same distance traveled (thus lower tax revenue).

    662. Re:Tax planning and rich people by cartman · · Score: 1

      And yet those 50% that pay nothing in taxes control 2% of the wealth. Fair huh?

      Usually it's fair, because wealth usually depends upon how much you save (except in cases of inheritance).

      The bottom 50% of the population has little wealth because most of them save nothing. In fact, most people in the middle and upper-middle classes also save nothing, or even save a negative amount. So it's fair that they have no savings.

      There might be unfairness in income, but savings are totally discretionary within any level of income.

      It's not true that they don't make enough money to save. Almost everyone in the US makes enough money to save something.

    663. Re:Tax planning and rich people by i_b_don · · Score: 2

      Ok... so you that's exactly where I started. It doesn't make sense to tax it as an income class that's taxed lower than standard income. If you want to help out new businesses, add something that helps new businesses specifically. Rewarding people who have all their money in stocks with a lower tax rate just appears to be a form of coddling the rich.

      So I agree with your premise. Raise or get rid of capital gains tax. And by "get rid of" I mean, treat it as normal income.

      d

      --
      all language nazi's will burne in heil!
    664. Re:Tax planning and rich people by RobNich · · Score: 0

      You asked for an economist who claims that, "The higher your make the tax rate, the more people will find ways to not pay it and you will generally collect less." The Laffer curve claims EXACTLY that: the higher the tax rate, the lower the revenue.

      --
      Hello little man. I will destroy you!
    665. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      We spend over $1 TRILLION a year, probably over $1.5T, on military/intel. We have a GDP that's about $15T. We might not be spending 50%, but we're spending something like 10%.

      We need to spend at most $300B to actually protect the country from actual threats. The extra $1.2T we spend on military/intel is more than enough to pay our $1.17T deficit, and leave a $30B surplus - $100 for every living American, about $300 per taxpayer.

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      make install -not war

    666. Re:Tax planning and rich people by cartman · · Score: 1

      Corporations can feel free to GTFO and make room for someone else who won't require us to race to the bottom with regards to our standard of living, environmental regulations and so forth.

      Standard leftist silliness. Do you seriously think that things like capital investment, assembly lines, factories, mass production, etc, (which are really only possible with corporations), has led the "race to the bottom" of wages? Without these things your wages would soon be about $500/yr, which is about the level of wages in places where corporations have never arisen or penetrated.

      Don't get me wrong, I'm in favor of a regulated economy, and I'm not proposing letting corporations do whatever they want. However it would benefit nobody if corporations would simply "GTFO."

    667. Re:Tax planning and rich people by BlueStraggler · · Score: 1

      Give yourself a million dollars in Monopoly money. Pick a few stocks to "invest" that money in.

      That's not investing, that's speculating. Odds are that the money you pay for those stocks are not going to the company in question to pay for capital costs or R&D. (Unless you're buying into an IPO or something like that.)

      Real investment is if you take that million dollars and use it to bankroll a startup, or finance an existing company's expansion/growth plans in exchange for an ownership stake. Usually that's not done via the stock market. But it's also even harder than playing the stock market, so your main point still stands.

    668. Re:Tax planning and rich people by euroq · · Score: 1

      "In other words, federal taxes aren't all taxes."

      Who claimed it was?

      You did implicitly, when you said It appears that somewhere along the line something flipped to where we have "Representation without taxation" for a hell of a chunk of our population. Even though you're saying it is just federal so the other taxes don't matter, that is incorrect: there hasn't been a federal income tax for over 50% of our country's history, and the phrase was still valid when there wasn't.

      Anyways, the argument that you are making is that it isn't fair for the lower class to receive more money than they pay from the federal government. Think about this: 99.999999% of the population of this planet either 1. get more from their government than what they pay for it, or 2. get less than from their government than what they pay for. It's impossible to make it perfectly even. As soon as you have another kid, or buy another car, etc. you've somehow tipped the scale in so many ways of what exact services you receive from the government than what you've paid for (schools, roads, shared defense, etc.)

      With all the caps it looks like you're yelling at me... I mentioned that I like your idea of at least a nominal tax which makes people invest in society.

      --
      Just because the U.S. is a republic does not mean it is not a democracy. Democracy/republic are not mutually exclusive.
    669. Re:Tax planning and rich people by RobNich · · Score: 1

      You're speaking of a national sales tax that doesn't exist. How can a trust be tax-exempt from it when the law hasn't been written?

      Secondly, "not buying anything" means that the money will be invested or saved and will generate revenue when it is loaned to someone who buys something with it. This is a good thing. The current income tax structure is designed to encourage savings and investment, which is why capital gains tax is lower than income tax.

      --
      Hello little man. I will destroy you!
    670. Re:Tax planning and rich people by jkauzlar · · Score: 2

      give almost all of what I make in large part to support those that never tried.

      This argument has always bothered me. In a sense, it's perfectly reasonable, however:

      1. * in order for you to have become successful, it's likely you once relied on the services that others' tax dollars once funded.. in-state tuition, public school, infrastructure, etc.
      2. *perhaps more importantly, in order for you to maintain your success, your business needs to exist in a healthy economy. Keeping the economy healthy SHOULD be what tax dollars are used for (while I know this is not often the case) and this is a team effort, in a way. We all have to pitch in. Not to mention we have societal obligations toward those who cannot work for a living.

      The second point is how I justify my view that the wealthy ought to pay much more in taxes. So much of their success comes from the strength of the economy that fostered them. It's an illusion that someone with a billion dollars has done 10,000 times the amount of work of someone with a 100,000 dollars. What makes this point so often overlooked is that while it's obviously true, it introduces so many variables that it's impossible to measure how much a wealthy person owes to the society that gave them their wealth.

    671. Re:Tax planning and rich people by TooMuchToDo · · Score: 1

      Standard leftist silliness. Do you seriously think that things like capital investment, assembly lines, factories, mass production, etc, (which are really only possible with corporations), has led the "race to the bottom" of wages? Without these things your wages would soon be about $500/yr, which is about the level of wages in places where corporations have never arisen or penetrated.

      Don't get me wrong, I'm in favor of a regulated economy, and I'm not proposing letting corporations do whatever they want. However it would benefit nobody if corporations would simply "GTFO."

      Supporting a reasonable quality of life for your country's citizens is not "leftist". If your company complains that it can't provide goods or services under the current regulatory scheme, get the fuck out and the vacuum will be filled by a competent organization that can.

    672. Re:Tax planning and rich people by RobNich · · Score: 1

      1. "Regressive" is not "unfair".
      2. The entire argument made is ignores the fact that in all proposals for a national sales tax, food and housing (for example) are exempted from tax.
      3. Someone saving their money in the bank or investing it is doing the economy a service, and that should be encouraged. I've mentioned the reason for this previously.
      4. Finally, if they spend all their life investing 50% of their money instead of spending it, when they retire and begin spending that money, it will be taxed as well. If they only live off the interest, that is also taxed.

      --
      Hello little man. I will destroy you!
    673. Re:Tax planning and rich people by dasunt · · Score: 1

      Ooh, a car analogy! Even better - gasoline and diesel taxes pay for road construction and maintenance.

      That's wrong. Gasoline taxes offset part of the cost, but nowhere near the full cost. The government ends up subsidizing the cost of roads. It gets worse, since the government often regulates the amount of parking per business, requiring a certain number of parking spots, which means that non-automobile customers of that business effectively subsidize those who drive. Yes, those who are too poor to own a car are paying more so others can drive.

      Local roads are often funded, in part, through property taxes. Which leads to non-obvious arguments, such as bicyclists (who still pay property taxes) cost the city less than automobile drivers (who pay property taxes, as well as a gas tax which comes nowhere close to covering the true cost per mile of roads).

    674. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      The bridge to nowhere was nowhere near Anchorage.

      You're a liar. A Republican liar.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    675. Re:Tax planning and rich people by RobNich · · Score: 1

      As NeutronCowboy pointed out, your entire argument ignores the fact that in all proposals for a national sales tax, food and housing (for example) are exempted from tax.

      Saving money in the bank or investing it helps the economy as much as spending it, because the money is loaned and spent and continues to move through the economy. The only savings that doesn't help the economy is burying coinage in the backyard, and that is punished by inflation. As a negative example, the current Federal Reserve policy of extremely low interest rates have damaged the economy more than anything else by making it cheaper for the banks to hoard money than to lend it out, which is why it's so difficult to get a bank loan at this time.

      Finally, regardless of how much money is saved to dodge the sales tax, the money will eventually be spent, and will be taxed at that time (unless, of course, it's spent on food or other necessities).

      --
      Hello little man. I will destroy you!
    676. Re:Tax planning and rich people by slamb · · Score: 1

      I'm saddened by the fact that society has somehow gotten to the point where the "logic" of "he has more so we can steal it from him!" some how is both morally and ethically justifiable.

      Taxes have never been voluntary, and the wealthy person benefits from the stability that comes from not having a huge number of desperate, homeless, starving people. I don't think anything has qualitatively changed in your lifetime; it's just the numbers.

      Hell, why stop at 50%? By your so called logic we surely can justify taking 95% of what they earn. They can afford it, right?

      Funny you should say that. In the history of the federal income tax, the top marginal income tax bracket peaked at 86.45%, according to this history of top rates in wikipedia. It was over 70% from 1936 to 1971. I don't know the full brackets to say exactly what rate someone who makes more than that would pay on his/her overall income, but I expect people who make twice that ended up paying more than 50%, and society didn't fail. One could argue that this created the most prosperous time in our nation's history.

      I'm not advocating rates this high. I'm just saying that it's worth investing in the poor for many reasons. fwiw, if I were to single-handedly set the federal income tax code, I might do something vey simple: your rate would be log(income/(people * per-person poverty level)) / log(c), capped at 0% on one side and m% on the other, with c and m chosen every year based on inflation-adjusted amounts of a 20-year exponentially weighted moving average of what it would take for 1% of people to hit the cap and the government to have no deficit or surplus. And I'd have sufficient social services for the poor to become not so poor if they're willing to work. Call it communism if you want, but there'd still be rich people, and it's not fundamentally different from how we've done things for generations.

    677. Re:Tax planning and rich people by jkauzlar · · Score: 1

      All apparently true, ignoring the middle paragraph, but you could add that Obama's most costly legislation in 2009 was in trying to prop up the economy after the banking fiasco. The total figure for this was about $800 billion. Whether you agree with this or not, it was a reaction that either party would've had in 2009, one which Bush had already started in 2008.

    678. Re:Tax planning and rich people by NiteShaed · · Score: 1

      Ah, but if you don't buy your cheese from Kraft, who do you buy your cheese from? The federal government can't just single out Kraft to tax. If they tax Kraft, they have to tax Kraft's competitors as well.

      No, I buy it from Bob's Big Cheese Company (sorry, I have no idea who the big competitors to Kraft in the crappy cheese market are, but I'll bet there are a few). You see, while Kraft decides in this scenario to pass that cost directly to the customer, Bob's says "Gee, we'll undercut Kraft, make a slightly lower (NOTE: lower, not loss) profit per unit, and pick up a bunch of Kraft customers". Nobody is saying tax corporations to the point where they can't make any profit, although that seems to be what you're implying will happen if they're taxed at all. As long as a company is still profiting, they're not going to just lock the doors and go out of business to spite the government over taxes.

      --
      Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
    679. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whose inscription is on the check that you pay income taxes with?

    680. Re:Tax planning and rich people by RobNich · · Score: 1

      Ack, I hate to reply twice, but I also want to mention that the direct income tax is also the reason that illegal immigration is such a problem--a large chunk of the population does not pay taxes. Also, those whose business is illegal don't pay taxes because they hide their income. Both of these are handled by a sales tax.

      --
      Hello little man. I will destroy you!
    681. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Darth+Snowshoe · · Score: 1

      I can point to transparent, legitimate reasons for most of these things you mention

      cash for clunkers => trying to generate car sales to help Detroit out so we don't lose this domestic manufacturing base
      ACORN => encouraging people to register and to vote, who are legal to and who have an interest in the outcome
      Solyndra => trying to jumpstart a domestic solar panel industry
      'Obamacare' => trying to make health care actually work for more Americans, which is what a lot of voters actually want

      I'd say, if you are going to accuse someone of a crime, it's up to you to prove they did it. 'Corrupt' doesn't mean he simply did something you don't like.

      P.S. none of this has anything to do with what the marginal tax rate should be. This is a simple pattern repeated throughout American politics - the left side makes legitimate, reasoned arguments ("The top marginal tax rate now is lower than it was during Reagan, lower than it was during Clinton - e.g. when we last had a balanced budget - and less than half what it was during the 1950s. We fought two major wars and the top wage earners were asked to make no sacrifices whatsoever.") The right, in answer, regurgitates a bunch of unrelated, unproven talking points from Drudge and talk radio.

      I guess we get the public discourse, and the government, we deserve. At least my side is willing to recognize we have problems big enough that we need to find some middle ground and work together on them. Partisanship is a luxury we don't have the bandwidth for right now.

    682. Re:Tax planning and rich people by arth1 · · Score: 1

      Society requires several tasks (like investment and various kinds of labor) and they are all compensated in proportion to their demand.

      That's the problem - investors are not compensated in proportion to the demand for them, they are compensated in proportion to the success of those who needed them.

      Plus, investors who don't buy at an IPO, but buy already issued stock, do not spit money into the companies, and aren't part of that equation at all. (Except for companies buying back their own stock).

    683. Re:Tax planning and rich people by imamac · · Score: 1

      Too bad the GOP Tea Party is completely against it.

      I'll bite. I'm a registered (R) and agree with much of the TP concepts and have never heard or read anything that says "we're against education". You may have heard "we don't think throwing money at the education problem is the solution", but that's not at all the same thing.

    684. Re:Tax planning and rich people by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      New businesses aren't the only ones that need capital, though. You may dislike treating long term capital gains as different from other income, but it actually does encourage investing in companies.

      There is also the issue of saving for retirement. Not all money goes in deferred accounts like 401k's and IRAs. Without the lower tax rate for long term capital gains, you're going to take a much worse hit on those savings (35% every time you turn it over, and remember it has to be held for 18 months to qualify for the lower long term rate rather than as ordinary income).

    685. Re:Tax planning and rich people by arth1 · · Score: 1

      Have you ever opened a savings account at a bank? Have you ever put money in a 401k or other retirement plan?

      Yes to the first, but not in a private bank.
      No to the second - I am an opponent of the stock market, and believe it's just another way for the haves to exploit the have-nots. As a principle, I refuse to hold stock.

    686. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Shark · · Score: 1

      How about the position that nobody (rich or poor) should pay tax on their income? I know, I know, you couldn't run a police state and worldwide military empire without income tax... But would it be such a terrible sacrifice?

      I know that the rich are supposed to be the evil villain bad guys, we learned that in the 80s movies where the poor working class boy gets the girl in the end. But wanting to keep what you earned isn't what I'd call greed. I think it's greedier to want to take what someone else has because you feel entitled to it. Which is precisely what all the failed wealth-redistribution experiments of our times are about. Governments might use charity and social justice excuse to take your money but let me assure you, for them the important bit is 'take your money', not 'and give it to the needy'.

      There's a point where one has to be honest with themselves and recognize that not all of it is in the 'unfair' category, there's a fair bit of envy too. It's entirely natural to feel it, but it's not a good basis for government policy.

      I'll grant you this though. Lately, the rich (and their corporations) have been getting a lot more welfare than the poor... But that's what happens when the government is in the wealth redistribution business, it eventually ends up in their friends pockets. And that my friend is what I think is most unfair.

      --
      Mind the frickin' laser...
    687. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you were a really good entrepreneur, you'd be rich enough to not have to worry about taxes. Looks like you're just another loser looking for a free ride, just like all the rest of 'em. Quit whining and be thankful you have a job, loser.

    688. Re:Tax planning and rich people by networkBoy · · Score: 1

      No, I was trying to point out the GPs post about equality being not all that logical.
      I am one of the lower middle class. I likely will always be one of the lower middle class.
      I'm simply fed up with all the entitlement programs, it's a positive feedback loop, and in engineering circles that is usually a very bad thing.

      Like I said in the follow up post, I'm not surprised by the downmod, just curious what part was the cause (the calling for the end of entitlement spending, or the critique of congress and POTUS)
      -nB

      --
      whois gawk date unzip strip find touch finger mount join nice man top fsck grep eject more yes exit umount sleep dump
    689. Re:Tax planning and rich people by jacob1984 · · Score: 1

      Such a false dichotomy. Nothing seems to be a middle ground for you. There is a better way than our oligarchy vs. communism.

    690. Re:Tax planning and rich people by cartman · · Score: 1

      Perhaps your original comment was too short to convey what you were getting at. It appeared that you were against all corporations.

      I agree that corporations can easily live within the current regulatory framework and even much more restrictive ones. What I object to is the oft-heard claim that corporations per se are bad and are reducing our quality of life.

    691. Re:Tax planning and rich people by vux984 · · Score: 1

      The guy working at walmart pays no federal income taxes

      And yet he likely pays taxes nonetheless.

      Sin taxes, Sales taxes, fuel taxes, property taxes, etc all eat up a chunk of his very meager funds.

      Many people that work at walmart actually get back more than they pay in.

      Hmmm... Perhaps then walmart should pay employees enough to make them eligible to pay federal income taxes.

      Did you think about that before you decided to open your maw?

      Look at the big picture:

      These people are "employed" but make so little money they can't afford to contribute to the running of government.

      Perhaps either...
      a) The wealthy people paying them should pay them enough that the employees can afford to pay taxes.

      or

      b) The wealthly people not paying them enough to qualify them for federal income tax, shouldn't piss and moan about paying more taxes themselves to make up for the fact that all the jobs they created don't amount to squat in terms of governement revenue.

      Perhaps "jobs creators" should only get tax breaks for creating jobs that create actual tax PAYERS. ??!

    692. Re:Tax planning and rich people by i_b_don · · Score: 1

      yeah... but I don't agree with your first statement. How does it encourage investment? If you invest and make money you get taxed on the profit. The key phrase being "you make money". You only pay taxes on the money you make. We're not talking corporate tax rates. We're talking individual profit rates. The person who is going to invest is going to put their money where it has the greatest returns. That means: cash interest earning bank account bonds stocks (generally speaking; ignoring risk levels). Changing how much tax you have to pay won't change where you put your money because you're still looking for the highest rate of return.

      Give me some examples where your statement is true and compare against what happens if the tax rate is lower or not. Show me situations where the lower cap gain tax rate will actually effect behavior. People will invest where it will earn them money.

      Also, keep in mind that if you don't place the tax burden here, you shift it somewhere else. They've moved the tax burden from capital gains to income so if we increase cap gains we can decrease income tax. At the moment it doesn't feel like that because we're so far in the hole, we're not looking at shifting, we're only looking at shoveling money back into the hole. Frankly I make much more money on income than on stocks so I have no problem switching over to the same tax rate for both. I don't see why they should be taxed differently in the first place.

      Savings where the *earnings* on those savings are taxed as income will still make more money than cash.

      d

      --
      all language nazi's will burne in heil!
    693. Re:Tax planning and rich people by budgenator · · Score: 1

      BWAHAHAHAHAHAH. LOL.

      The vast majority of this income in this range is "Unearned Income." People aren't earning nor working for multi-million dollar annual incomes, they are enjoying the benefits of others work by collecting dividens and stock profits.

      -Rick

      Actually they are enjoying a portion of the benefit of the work of others, normally the others find the arrangement mutually beneficial. The split between the top 1% incomes and the rest of us is a merely $380,354, multi-million dollar annual incomes are much rarer than you would imagine.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    694. Re:Tax planning and rich people by TooMuchToDo · · Score: 1

      I agree on both counts.

    695. Re:Tax planning and rich people by NiteShaed · · Score: 1

      She is more than welcome to put her money on the market, and pay the same amount of taxes on her returns.

      Because all risk is equal? I don't know what she makes, but let's say she's managed to save up a nice little nest-egg of $100k, and puts in $75k. She invests, and as is possible with risk, looses most of it, leaving her with a total of $25k. Now her boss on the other hand, let's say he risks his nest-egg of $50 billion. He also puts in 3/4, and looses. Wow, she only lost $75k, but Warren lost about $37.5 billion! Which of the two would you rather be though at the end of the day, the secretary with her $25k, or Warren with his $12.5 billion?

      Simply saying "Hey, you can invest too!" is meaningless if you even think for a second about the scales involved here. The people who make the most also have the ability to survive reversals that would financially ruin smaller players. Small investors would have to worry about paying their mortgage in a down month, not whether they're buying a new jet or just getting the old one detailed.

      --
      Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
    696. Re:Tax planning and rich people by budgenator · · Score: 1

      The top one percent of income earners pay an average of 23.27% average federal income tax rate, your social security and medicare withholding don't count, nor does your State or Municipal income taxes, if your earning between $67,280 and $113,799 your average should be in the range of 15.68% and 18.71%, and that should scare you. The top 1% is $380,354 per year, so how many nines in the percentile does it take to make someone super-rich?

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    697. Re:Tax planning and rich people by zotz · · Score: 1

      Well, there are other ways to get multiple houses. I did not know your tax code made that distinction. So no tax at all on your main house? Capital gains tax on others?

      I do think simplicity would help the situation.

      Note: I live in a different country where we do not have any income tax at all. That does not mean we do not have similar tax issues and questions though.

      --
      FreeMusicPush If you want to see more Free Music made, listen to Free
    698. Re:Tax planning and rich people by element-o.p. · · Score: 1

      You and are on pretty much the same page, although I don't think I agree that the rich are quite so evil as you are claiming, but that's a tangent). I'm with you 100% on the flat tax and the plan to reduce the budget deficit, though.

      --
      MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
    699. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Cryolithic · · Score: 1

      No, it's not.

    700. Re:Tax planning and rich people by zotz · · Score: 1

      Go and work for someone, and they owe you money, regardless of whether they made any themselves.

      Sure, unless they go bust and can't pay you.

      BTDT.

      drew

      --
      FreeMusicPush If you want to see more Free Music made, listen to Free
    701. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Jhon · · Score: 1

      "You did implicitly, when you said It appears that somewhere along the line something flipped to where we have "Representation without taxation" for a hell of a chunk of our population. "

      No I didn't. You are reading in to my statement information that isn't there. They are getting FEDERAL representation without FEDERAL taxation. The article is about FEDERAL taxes...

      "Anyways, the argument that you are making is that it isn't fair for the lower class to receive more money than they pay from the federal government"

      No, I'm arguing that they either pay nothing or get more back than they pay. It translates as they have no "stake" in the game such that they can say "give me more" without it impacting their federal tax burden.

    702. Re:Tax planning and rich people by tidepool · · Score: 1

      Just as a construction worker or other manual laborer may look at my job as a network administrator and say, "That's not working!", to someone outside of the industry, investing doesn't look like work...but I dare say that it's longer, harder work -- with more risk -- than you'd think.

      Coming from a carpenter who is also quite 'tech', I will dare say it is just a different type of work. You're at least absent from many physical (short term and different long term) risks that come with the trades.

      You should try it sometime.

    703. Re:Tax planning and rich people by budgenator · · Score: 1

      That is one of the most evil things I've seen on slashdot in a long time, I guess you would have us just submit to being slaves now.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    704. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 2

      You're right about the major criminal element that permeated the riots, and the massive welfare state in the UK. So that's great that there is a decent social safety net, but the situation in England is now such that living in poverty on welfare is the ONLY prospect for many of these kids, who would (like anyone) prefer to work and grow and make their own way - but those opportunities are vanishing, and the future looks very bleak for an entire generation of English.

      I think that situation had a lot more to do with creating an environment for unrest than any criminal element deciding they were just going to start rampaging in the streets. Yes, that element took advantage of the situation. But you make it sound like the entire incident was nothing but a bunch of disaffected hooligans deciding to get together and grab themselves some wide-screen TV's. While the scale was much smaller, it reminded me of the Watts riots in the 60's. Yes, there was rampant crime and looting - but it's a lie (or, at best, disingenuous) to claim that the riots were not sparked by legitimate social issues faced by the group involved.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    705. Re:Tax planning and rich people by element-o.p. · · Score: 1

      Yeah... the usual blackmail.

      That's not blackmail, that's simple economics. If it costs me X dollars to produce goods in the U.S., but only 0.25*X or 0.5*X or even 0.8*X to produce the same goods in ${Random_Third_World_Country} then why would I continue to do business in the U.S.? Claiming that the rich only levy that argument to blackmail us into giving them their way is disingenuous, at best.

      In other words, e.g. if you want twice as much, you gotta work 4 times as hard...

      I'm not quite following what you say here. The friction analogy makes sense, but I'm not sure if you're saying that's the way it is or if you are saying that's the way it should be. Regardless, my problem is this: For what reason do we want to make it even harder for companies (or individuals) to be successful? It's not like there is a limited amount of wealth, and once that wealth is used up, no one else gets any. Production creates wealth. Making it harder to be successful puts an artificial cap on the successful, i.e., the ones who are producing goods, creating wealth, providing jobs to others, etc. IMHO, being successful is a good thing for everyone involved.

      --
      MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
    706. Re:Tax planning and rich people by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      No, you just have to pay your fucking taxes.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    707. Re:Tax planning and rich people by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Britain, as it currently stands, is broke. You can apportion blame as you please, but one thing is clear, the British welfare state is not affordable.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    708. Re:Tax planning and rich people by andymadigan · · Score: 1

      Wow, I need to stop posting from /. at work....

      You're absolutely correct. I apologize to those who read that in confusion.

      Germany's GDP per capita is lower than the U.S., though I would still argue their standard of living is higher while leaving the poor in far better condition than they are here.

      --
      The right to protest the State is more sacred than the State.
    709. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Oxford_Comma_Lover · · Score: 1

      It really depends on what fairness is. If the government provides a fire department, the guy who owns the ten million dollar house may fairly be charged more than the guy who owns a shoebox. If the government provides a Defense Department, it may be fair to tax the guy who has more to lose if a war is lost more.

      The real question is, what justifies taxation? If you should tax consumption because people consumer resources, then someone rich may well pay much more in absolute terms, or even in percentage terms, than someone poor, and it may still be fair under your definition.

      But if you should tax wealth, not income or consumption, then fair may be proportional.

      Consider this--how is it remotely fair to give a rich person the same fine for speeding that you give a poor person? The rich person can then simply buy noncompliance with the law, because the tax for speeding is not adjusted for personal utility.

      Similarly, how is it fair that the rich have a disproportionate representation in Congress?

      --
      -- IANAL, this isn't legal advice, and definitely isn't legal advice for you. Also, Squee!
    710. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Jhon · · Score: 1

      "What's also silly is that we expect the market to magically assign the correct value to every job."

      What's silly about it? If there are 500 people who can do the same single job, the value of that job is dramatically reduced.

      "I see 0 economic value in restoring ancient artifacts. I see HUGE social and cultural significance."

      I agree with you 100%. But there are far more art history majors than there are positions to fill -- so the job goes to the lowest bidder. This should not be unexpected.

      "Similarly I don't hear jack shit about some accountant in the 16th century's contribution to culture and society today. I would say the Mona Lisa has some cultural significance."

      That's probably because you don't read much of history or economics, but like to look at pretty pictures. Sorry -- that was a bit rude, but I'll leave it in. I'd say Jean Colbert or Adam Smith (two very differed views on economy) which had HUGE impacts on our culture and society. While not SPECIFICALLY 16th century, I feel my point is made.

      "Just because something isn't economically rewarded doesn't mean we shouldn't support 'unproductive' occupations."

      I would agree with you somewhat. However, when there is a GLUT of --- Art History major's (to continue my analogy), why should we pay for more?

      Having the public: Pay for museums? yes. Pay for "the arts"? -- to a limited extent, yes. Pay for people to acquire skills already possessed in numbers that vastly outstrip need? No.

    711. Re:Tax planning and rich people by vux984 · · Score: 1

      For that matter, society would fall apart if everyone was a plumber, or if everyone started doing any single activity. Society requires several tasks (like investment and various kinds of labor)

      Society doesn't require rich people to invest in things. It just requires people to invest in things. There is no necessity for much of that wealth to be concentrated in one person.

      and they are all compensated in proportion to their demand.

      No. No they aren't. Not even close.

      Labour is coercive. You think the people at walmart are compensated in proportion to the demand for people to work there? Not hardly.

      The only reason any one does the work is because its even more dire for them if they don't. As in they starve and lose their homes.

      There aren't enough good jobs, and people have to take crappy ones at low pay to survive.

      In a perfect world, they would quit, and start their own business... but that's harder to do than say, and it usually requires substantial resources to get off the ground.

    712. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      That Republican lie again.

      Hahaha. Yea, if only we could get rid of all the Republicans and let the Democrats have full control, all our problems would be solved!!

      Nice sources - the New York Times and the Brookings Institute. Real balance there.

      Here's a clue for you: The US already has the most progressive tax policy of any first world country, bar none. That means the wealthiest already pay a greater share of the TOTAL tax revenue.

      The number of families not paying income tax has risen from about 30 percent before the recession to about half

      Bull Crap. It's a figure that's been steadily rising for decades. Here's another wake-up call for you: Oh, look, it seems the bottom 50% have been steadily paying less and less for at least 20 years!

      This class warfare "eat the rich" bullcrap is nothing but all-out war on the middle class. And when they're gone, do you really think the wealthy elites are going to care one whit about taking care of the poor??

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    713. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Jhon · · Score: 1

      Prick -- and you deserve to be called worse. Read the citation.

    714. Re:Tax planning and rich people by gatkinso · · Score: 1

      If it is part of the IRS regulations, it isn't cheating.

      Ridiculous liberals who think otherwise are beyond help.

      --
      I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
    715. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I'm in Belgium right now (and posting anonymously since my boss might run across this otherwise) -- and looking at remarkably similar figures to what LynwoodRooster posted (about $1000 difference in the gross). And I'd add, that you also still get to shell out for state income taxes. Wherever you lived before moving abroad is where you are considered domiciled for tax purposes. That's Maryland for me, where you also get taxed at the local level on income, not to mention the property taxes if you keep a home there. The reciprocity agreements between the US FedGov and other countries do not in any way mitigate your state income tax liability.

      The tax calculations and filing returns are so complicated you would either have to be a tax lawyer in both places, or completely high, to think you could do them yourself... there's another couple thousand bones down the drain for tax-related professional services. Real ones, not H&R Block. The completed forms for all that were over 70 pages, just for the US stuff. The Belgian forms will be a decently thick stack as well.

      It sounds like a lot of money, but since I'm getting fucked coming and going by THREE governments, I'm doing well to keep half of that. I could take a $30K pay cut, move back to the US and still come out way ahead depending on where I moved to. Probably will.

    716. Re:Tax planning and rich people by budgenator · · Score: 1

      Why do you think you don't? Legitimate business expenses are generally subtracted from revenues to get taxable profits, the instructions for IRS form 1040 schedule C goes into more detail. Things like home offices get touchy with the IRS and it usually cheaper to take the standard millage rate on vehicles than to account for every penny, so talk to your tax advisor. While I haven't played with the numbers lately, in the past rich people would be paying more taxes if corporation were not taxed , than the lost of tax revenues from the corporations would be.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    717. Re:Tax planning and rich people by raehl · · Score: 2

      Then you're actually in favor of a tax decrease for the wealthy. With our current tiered system, they pay a higher percentage than us.

      That's true, on AVERAGE, but not true for each taxpayer. A wealthy doctor, for example, has a marginal federal tax rate of about 33%, since he gets his income from working, most likely as profits out of their business.

      A hedge fund manager, however, has most of his income as carried interest and pays 15%.

      Now me personally, for example, depending how good of a year it is, my marginal tax rate is 40% to 43%, since I pay 25-28% income taxes and 15% payroll taxes. If I made MORE money working, that would go down to 33%. And if I happened to already have a few million dollars, I could get down to 15% federal taxes.

      So, I am absolutely in favor of a tax decrease for SOME wealthy people - the ones who actually work for a living and/or actually create jobs. I'm also in favor of a very significant tax increase for the wealthy who are paying close to 15% taxes while I'm paying close to 43%.

      The solution is simple: Repeal the 15% federal tax on jobs (FICA). Get rid of capital gains taxes, dividend taxes, and any other income-related tax other than the income tax.

      Every adult gets $15,000 of income per year tax-free. $30k for couples, toss in another $5k for the first two kids (after that, you want more, you pay for 'em.) Once you are past your tax-free zone, you pay 25% on the rest of your income. All of it - wages, interest, capital gains, dividends, lottery winnings, 25%. 10% of that goes to social security and medicare, the other 15% covers the rest of the federal government and cutting down on the debt. No earned income tax credit, no mortgage interest deduction for the million dollar mortgage on your vacation home, no deduction for $30k healthcare plans, no lower rate for investment income.

      Most Americans won't see their taxes change much. Except actual job creators will see their taxes go down a lot, and very rich people who pay 15% taxes on piles of income they get from not employing anybody will see their taxes go up a lot.

      The biggest factor in our unemployment rate is the 15% extra tax on income from wages (jobs).

      And once we get rid of that 15% tax on jobs, we'll get more jobs in the US, more Americans being productive and spending more money, and the rich will make more money as a result.

      Trickle-up economics.

    718. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      There's 1.4M people in the top 1%, according to your stats, who take in over $1.6 TRILLION, paying an effective income tax rate of 23.27% on it, leaving them with $1.3T. The Federal deficit was $1.17T in 2010. Based on income alone, just the top 1% could eliminate the deficit and have $130 BILLION left over (about $88,000 each - over double the gross median income). So your statement that there aren't enough is simply, mathematically and objectively false.

      Except that's only for one year, and after you do it once, it's over, because all that money will be gone, along with the homes, lifestyles, and wealth-creation activities of all those people. Talk about killing the goose!

      Your figures are off, too. I noticed that Wikipedia also made the $1.17T claim, so I added a [citation needed] tag to the entire. It's actually $1.293T, and the source reference is right here.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    719. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      You Republicans, er, "libertarians", of course, would rather we all hand over the other money we've managed to protect from the rich. Our Social Security principal you'd see evaporated in the stock market, along with the pensions the rich just destroyed in the past decade.

      The Democrats are planning to do EXACTLY THAT as soon as possible, only they are calling it the "Infrastructure bank". This will be all your retirement savings going into a "public-private partnership" (how is that different than Mussolini-style fascism), and it will bubble and then crash, just like Fannie, Freddie, and Solyndra.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    720. Re:Tax planning and rich people by raehl · · Score: 1

      Actually, its a larger incentive to not even bother playing the game and relocate to china, russia, or anywhere else that provides less disincentives to operate.

      Yeah, go ahead and relocate to Russia. See how well their CEO's are doing, the ones that haven't gotten shot for pissing off the russian mob or arrested for pissing off the russian government.

    721. Re:Tax planning and rich people by element-o.p. · · Score: 1

      Don't get me wrong -- at this point, I hate the left AND the right. I'm certainly not partisan. IMHO, both sides are corrupt, evil, scumbags who are trying to get their share before the whole country goes belly up. I also cast a jaded eye towards your claim that the left makes "legitimate, reasoned arguments..." If anyone on either side of the political spectrum were doing so, it would be a breath of fresh air, but that's a bunny trail for another time.

      Back on track...I have a "transparent, legitimate" rebuttal for each of the things you replied to:
      cash for clunkers and Solyndra: Government has no business telling businesses how to do business. If the business can't run without government subsidizing it, then you are saying the business is not competitive. Why sink money into a company that isn't competitive? If there is something in the legal environment that puts the company at a disadvantage to foreign competitors, then fix the legal environment. If the demand for the product is low, then don't waste my tax dollars trying to keep an unwanted product on the market. Furthermore, "domestic" manufacturing base is irrelevant in an international economy. Chrysler was one of the companies bailed out by the Feds...and Chrysler owns Mercedes. So how much of the money that was spent to bail out Chrysler went to jobs and factories in the U.S., and how much went to Germany? Furthermore, I recall hearing a while ago that Toyota (a Japanese company, mind you) has the largest manufacturing work force in the U.S. of all the major auto makers. So is the manufacturing capability really a concern if the Japanese auto makers are hiring more U.S. workers than the "domestic" corporations?

      ACORN: yes, and they got caught with their pants around their ankles. The ostensible purpose for ACORN may very well have been a good one, but some of their methods...not so much. I am not a Machiavellian; I don't believe that the ends justify the means. If you can't achieve your (good) purpose in an ethical manner, then you aren't doing good.

      Obamacare: there are indeed a number of problems with our current health care mess. Obamacare is an attempt to fix that, but IMHO, it's a misguided attempt. A monopoly is always bad for consumers, a government-run monopoly more so. I am extremely skeptical that government can run health care more efficiently, more fairly and more humanely than the free market. Unfortunately, once Obamacare is put in place, I won't have any alternative at all, whereas right now, if my employer's health care plan sucks (and it's about to, starting Jan. 1), I can always look for an employer that offers a better plan.

      I'll stand by my description of Obama as corrupt. When political decisions are motivated by greed and paying off those who helped put you in office, that meets my definition of "corrupt". Can I prove it? No. But I'm not charging him in court; I am stating my personal opinion. In my opinion, Obama is not doing what he thinks is best for the country. Rather, he's paying off those who put him in power, and he's saying what he thinks the voters want to hear so he can stay there for another term, and that is corrupt.

      --
      MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
    722. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

      But charity should be discouraged. It does what government is supposed to do with taxes, but only focuses on most PR-friendly kinds of spending.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    723. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      So your point is... he's able to take advantage of the system, so he's better than someone without the balls to take advantage of the system.

      Which ignores the underlying problem we're discussing, which is that the system is inefficient and/or deficient.

      Way to go. You've missed the point again.

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    724. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      That's the first country you thought of, instead of all the countries much more like the US that prove you wrong, because you are indeed what that last post called you. And your followup post proves you're determined to prove it.

      Two people have claimed that, and called me an "idiot" (yes, you did), claim that I'm wrong, and that there's proof!! and yet... nothing.

      I guess you feel if you keep repeating this lie, people will just eventually assume I'm wrong.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    725. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      Shipping from factory to retail store is almost entirely waste cost -- it would be much better if they shipped from the factory to the installation site.

      If you're going to be intentionally disingenuous, I can be too. (You should be comparing commute to shipping, not a weekend excursion to shipping).

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    726. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      Yes, but if you look at the budget, typically military/defense spending is going to be one of the top 3 categories.

      That's fine, but the total Federal budget is vastly different in terms of size than the GDP. They're two completely different things.

    727. Re:Tax planning and rich people by raehl · · Score: 2

      Then why does the US tax every dollar you make overseas, even if you are overseas for the entire year?

      Because you are a US citizen.

      If you do not like that deal, go to your local US consulate, renounce your citizenship, and turn in your passport. You'll never pay US taxes again.

      Just remember, if you get arrested abroad, or anything else happens to you, you're on your own.

    728. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      In fact, I'll see your claim that the rich don't pay their share and raise you a citation of my own [american.com]. If these stats are accurate, and yes, I know what they say about statistics, then the top 25% of wealth in America pays 85% of the taxes. Does that seem "fair" to YOU?

      Seems quite fair to me. After all, they own more than 85% of the wealth, which is a severe problem in our economy.

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    729. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Kind of like what your 401k does, but on a larger scale. My point being he wasn't genetically modified at birth to be rich. He chose his career route. I will give him credit for wanting to pay more taxes when he actually does. Your welcome to pay extra if you feel it's your due. His secretary risks nothing btw. She has a contract that says "i'm doing this work for this amount of pay". If he makes a bad call, he's down $800,000, oops. Trump has been bankrupted on more than a few occasions, but his name alone is worth millions.

    730. Re:Tax planning and rich people by element-o.p. · · Score: 1

      I am not a carpenter (or other construction worker) but I sometimes play one at home. I am well aware of the risks associated with manual labor, and that, as well as a typically higher salary, is why I chose a career in IT. But yes, it is "just a different type of work."

      --
      MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
    731. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      I'd say that consolidation of wealth is the primary cause of loss of opportunity, so I'd say you are both right.

      Whether wealth is finite or not... proportional control of wealth equates to power, and that is really what opportunity is about... access to the power to achieve. As long as the extremely wealthy accelerate their accumulation of wealth, it diminishes opportunity for everyone else.

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    732. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look up "to call a bluff".

    733. Re:Tax planning and rich people by element-o.p. · · Score: 1

      Did you actually look at the reference I cited? The graph states that 85% of the taxes are paid by the top 25% of the wealthy, but that same group only has 66% of the income, not "...more than 85% of the wealth..." as you claim. If you want to refute that statistic, that's fine, but back it up with sources.

      --
      MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
    734. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      Which is why the wealthy generally favor the progressive politics of the Democratic Party. They know that the policies of the Democratic Party help them consolidate ever more of the wealth of the country in thier own hands.

      Ah, there you are, assigning motive to beliefs without any kind of supporting evidence. A casual search of actual studies will find that the wealthy who prefer progressive politics do not do so for personal gain; much the opposite, in fact. So you're either being willfully ignorant by not bothering to do any research, or you're lying through your teeth.

      Then please explain why the share of federal tax revenue paid by the richest fraction of the U.S. population increases every time Republicans pass tax cuts.

      Because parallel to the tax cuts, there are two other factors making this happen, these are (among many others): (1) increasing income among the richest fraction and (2) a greater portion of the US population having no income.

      You shouldn't imply causation where it doesn't exist, that's intellectually dishonest.

      This is why it's frustrating to "debate" people such as yourself -- intellectual honesty is nowhere to be found, and your lies are easy to believe at a casual glance.

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    735. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Johann+Lau · · Score: 1

      why would I continue to do business in the U.S.?

      why would you be friends with someone, when somewhere in the world someone might be nicer to you?

      sorry, it's still blackmail. countries don't serve corporations, corporations serve the inhabitants of countries. they have no further validity beyond that. if a bit more profit elsewhere makes you move there, be sure to tell THEM why you moved there, so they don't even get friendly with you, but see you as the leech you are right away.

      if woman A wants to be treated like a human being, but woman B doesn't mind being a possession, why would I marry woman A? because I can fucking look in the mirror AND sleep at night, that's why. because I'm a human being, not some kind of disconnected scumbag in a suit. not everybody understands that, but that's the reason.

      in regards to the friction analogy, I'd say that's the way it should be. it obviously isn't that way, it's the other way around -- it's easier to make money when you already have money.

      For what reason do we want to make it even harder for companies (or individuals) to be successful?

      strawman. I don't want to make it harder for anyone to be successful. I just say, once you're successful, becoming ultra super mega successful should be very hard, if even an option. and the reason is simple: less gluttons, less starving people. I guess our definitions of "success" vary. being well fed and healthy is success, having a private jet means having said by to general humanity and deserving no further consideration from it. in my twisted little fantasy world at least ^^

    736. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      Ahem, the Republican House and Senate did this. That's their job.

      What, to increase the national debt?

      /rimshot

      //but Republicans do, indeed, act as if increasing the debt is their job. Despite their lipservice to the contrary.

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    737. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Your.Master · · Score: 1

      I'd say a tax system is fair that has the following traits, when taken as a whole (including income tax, and sales tax, and monetary policy, and and and...):

      1. For all possible pairs of taxpayers A and B, if A earns more money than B before taxes, then A should have more money than B after taxes (or at least, certainly not less than B).
      2. If A can live with a reasonable standard of living before taxes, then A should be able to live with a reasonable standard of living after taxes.
      3. If A cannot live with a reasonable standard of living before taxes, then something has gone wrong and this situation needs to be fixed until A moves from rule 3 to rule 2, regardless of whether the problem is "lazy bum" or "single mother working two jobs and still not keeping up with rent".

      I know a "reasonable" standard of living is ill-defined. It kind of has to be, at the macro-level. This does ignore the case of dependents and pooled incomes (most families) which complicates matters.

      This leads to a spread of possible fair tax rates, from which we can choose an ideal one for our purposes based on other criteria, like "how we treat our poorest citizens", or "average happiness", or "motivate people to high income", or whatever.

      A constant percent only fulfills this if the lowest incomes, multiplied by the tax rate, clears the minimal standard of living. A progressive system can have a little easier time of it.

    738. Re:Tax planning and rich people by i_b_don · · Score: 1

      WTF... I must have just run into the fox news talking point section. Which way to the door out of bullshit land?

      This is one of the stupidest lines of spoon fed nonsense to come out of the whole Warren Buffett episode. He can't argue that the system should be changed without putting up the money himself? And to what end? Nobody wants to pay taxes but adults realize that it goes toward running our country. I personally think my tax rate should be increased... you know why? not because I want to pay more money, but because I want our country to balance it's budget. But if I volunteered to paid more in taxes, I wouldn't have the money (which I don't want to lose) AND the federal government wouldn't balance it's budget (which I also want). However I still think Obama shouldn't have renewed the bush tax cuts for anyone.

      So why the fuck can't Warren Buffett argue that the tax rate on the rich should be increased while not giving away his money to the government? It is perfectly reasonable and logical to argue that he doesn't pay enough in taxes and argue the system should be changed for the benefit of the country! Because if it was changed for all, it might actually make a difference to the country.

      Attacking Warren Buffett just shows how fucking nuts the right is. A guy who made his billions from scratch and is giving almost all of it away before he dies.... but watch out, he's arguing that the rich should pay at least the same percentage as middle class folks so fox says he's eeeeeevil and that "he's a socialist too!!!!1111!!11"

      d

      --
      all language nazi's will burne in heil!
    739. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Johann+Lau · · Score: 1

      oh, and if you didn't catch that I'm essentially responding to blackmail with blackmail -- I did. "do this and I'll think you're a poopy head". that's my argument haha.

    740. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Money sitting in his bank account does ZERO for him, and ZERO for the economy. If people like him don't invest (venture capital), IPO, the whole ball crumbles in a hurry. I'm glad he invests huge sums of money and I don't fault him for profiting off his investment. I don't fault him for having more than I do, I have plenty. He can volunteer to pay additional taxes as he see's fit. Here is the nightmare scenerio, what if he (or people like him) wake up one morning and say, "you know what, it's just not worth the risk"? Startups get no capital, and little secretary is on monster.com. Economic devestation cause secretary certainly can't do it. Huge risk=possible huge reward. Think google would exist without the likes a high end investers?

    741. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is your patriotic duty to not pay fucking taxes you douche! You are just mad because they take yours and if you bitch about it your employer will just show you the door. People who create jobs have already paid their dues. Out of all this "debate" we just assume the government will take their money and do something better with it!? WTF!? I just want to smack the shit out of Warren Buffoon. When his fucking secretary creates a job, then you can start whining about how much taxes she pays. but as of right now all you have to do is show up to work (you don't even have to pay your fucking taxes, they do it for you!), collect your money and go home. The weekend comes, you go spend the money, it is that simple! You ever seen an entrepreneur at work? It is work, work, work, no vacation, lose a bunch of fucking money, work, work, finally start doing good, hiring employees---this is the point where the incentive to keep PRODUCING and INNOVATING, starts to drain away. You start making money and you have to start playing all kinds of games and hire people to figure out how to keep the government from sucking down the money you need to be productive and profitable. I have been around small businesses and entrepreneurs my entire life since I was a child. You fucking wage slave don't know what the fuck you are talking about. If you had to run a business for one week you would be dying for your pathetic ass job back--that is WHY you are a wage slave. Reminds me of the line from Troy, Slave boy: "that man looks big and mean....I wouldn't want to fight him." Archilles: "and that is why no one will remember your name."

    742. Re:Tax planning and rich people by arth1 · · Score: 1

      But wanting to keep what you earned isn't what I'd call greed.

      If you earn more than a fair share, and far more than you need, yes, greed is exactly what it is.

    743. Re:Tax planning and rich people by 2short · · Score: 1

      "Two people have claimed that, and called me an "idiot" (yes, you did), claim that I'm wrong, and that there's proof!! and yet... nothing."

      In considering the effects of public sector size (or anything) on a society, it is most useful to look at countries that are as similar to the US as possible in other respects. North Korea is about as different from the US as possible in about as many ways as possible. It is among the least useful examples you could possibly pick.

      If you cannot grasp this, it does not prove you're an idiot, just that you argue like one.

    744. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Maybe that's a fine end state. But currently we do have taxes and we can not just drop them all to 0% overnight. While we have taxes why not have them be fair instead of putting all the burden on the middle class?

    745. Re:Tax planning and rich people by nbauman · · Score: 1

      Nothing in that link shows that 50% of the population doesn't pay any tax at all -- if you include payroll taxes for Social Security and Medicare as "taxes."

      Nothing in that link contradicts my statement (and the NYT's statement).

      The reason that the bottom 50% have been paying less taxes over 20 years is that they've been making less money over 20 years (as the top 50% make more).

      At one time we had intelligent conservatives who actually listened to the other side's argument and admitted it when they were wrong. We even had principled Republicans who were more concerned with the good of their country than making a buck.

      Those days are gone.

    746. Re:Tax planning and rich people by mozumder · · Score: 1

      Keeping the money that you earned and worked for is cheating
      got news for you pal, the rich made their money because of government.

      ALL wealth comes from government. It is because of government that people are rich. Without government, they will be poor. The richer you are, the more dependent you are on government.

      Rich people depend on government to make roads so that their customers get their deliveries, they depend on government so that their employees have a high-school education needed to compete, they depend on government to maintain a military to protect their resources, and so on.

      Poor people don't need any of that, therefore, they don't need to pay as much for government.

      Without government, the rich would be nothing.

      This is why we liberals say the richer you are, the more you need to pay taxes. I'm surprised the tax rate isn't 90% for billionaires, as it should be.

    747. Re:Tax planning and rich people by 2short · · Score: 1

      "Dividends are taxed twice--once when the company (which you own) is paying taxes on earnings, and again when you receive their earnings."

      The company is taxed once, and the individual is taxed once. They are not the same. If you don't like it, don't form a corporation, form a partnership. Then you and the company are one, and you get taxed once.

    748. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      These people are "employed" but make so little money they can't afford to contribute to the running of government.

      They can contribute. The government decided to buy their votes instead of having them contribute.

      These are people with cable television, cellphones, and so on. Lots of discretionary spending. Now shut YOUR maw.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    749. Re:Tax planning and rich people by ZFox · · Score: 1

      I see 0 economic value in restoring ancient artifacts.

      Have you ever been to a Christie's auction? Don't we normally call ancient artifacts priceless? Is that because of their 0 economic value?

    750. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Could they be relocated to another position? I fear a bullet to the back of my head.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    751. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Can I opt out, somehow? Every neighbor of mine is an ally.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    752. Re:Tax planning and rich people by GrumpySteen · · Score: 1

      > Once he has it, he doesn't need it anymore and can give it away.

      I think you're missing the psychological aspect of this. If he doesn't need money any more and can just give it away, then he must not be trying to build a larger fortune. The conspiracy theory put forth is that his support for higher taxes is just a scheme to allow him to build a bigger fortune. The two statements contradict each other.

    753. Re:Tax planning and rich people by mozumder · · Score: 1

      Well, you don't have to, when the US and their allies have your back.

      I don't understand your point.

      Are you implying that his country needs the US to defend them?

    754. Re:Tax planning and rich people by mozumder · · Score: 1

      Seriously.

      The US hasn't won a war on their own since the 1800's.

      And without Russia, the world would be speaking German right now.

    755. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Problem is most of the countries the evil parasitic rich would care to move to have higher taxes than the US.

    756. Re:Tax planning and rich people by mozumder · · Score: 1

      You don't count your business expenses as a tax deduction?

      Sucks to be you.

    757. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not completely disputing the overseas argument, but even if you are overseas, you are still using the Embassies functions most likely, and having a strong government brings you certain privileges.

    758. Re:Tax planning and rich people by atriusofbricia · · Score: 1

      I'm saddened by the fact that society has somehow gotten to the point where the "logic" of "he has more so we can steal it from him!" some how is both morally and ethically justifiable.

      Taxes have never been voluntary, and the wealthy person benefits from the stability that comes from not having a huge number of desperate, homeless, starving people. I don't think anything has qualitatively changed in your lifetime; it's just the numbers.

      Hell, why stop at 50%? By your so called logic we surely can justify taking 95% of what they earn. They can afford it, right?

      Funny you should say that. In the history of the federal income tax, the top marginal income tax bracket peaked at 86.45%, according to this history of top rates in wikipedia. It was over 70% from 1936 to 1971. I don't know the full brackets to say exactly what rate someone who makes more than that would pay on his/her overall income, but I expect people who make twice that ended up paying more than 50%, and society didn't fail. One could argue that this created the most prosperous time in our nation's history.

      I'm not advocating rates this high. I'm just saying that it's worth investing in the poor for many reasons. fwiw, if I were to single-handedly set the federal income tax code, I might do something vey simple: your rate would be log(income/(people * per-person poverty level)) / log(c), capped at 0% on one side and m% on the other, with c and m chosen every year based on inflation-adjusted amounts of a 20-year exponentially weighted moving average of what it would take for 1% of people to hit the cap and the government to have no deficit or surplus. And I'd have sufficient social services for the poor to become not so poor if they're willing to work. Call it communism if you want, but there'd still be rich people, and it's not fundamentally different from how we've done things for generations.

      Saying that taxes have never been voluntary neither addresses nor changes what I said. Presuming that a person who is "wealthy" benefits doesn't make it morally correct to force them to give up their money/time/property at higher and higher rates simply because "they can afford it." You are correct that federal income taxes have been even higher in the past but that doesn't make it right then or now. I somehow very much doubt that taxing the hell out of "the rich" gave us those prosperous times.

      "Investing in the poor" has been the rallying cry for ever expanding government and ever expanding pubic debt for the last 100 years. How has that worked out for us? Have the poor been raised up? Surely after 100 years of social programs, welfare, public education the poor are now well off, right? Oh, they aren't? More people are on public assistance than every before and there are no signs of that changing?

      There is nothing wrong with a belief that helping your fellow man is good. There is nothing wrong with actually helping them. It becomes wrong when you put a gun, figuratively or literally, to a person's head and tell them they will give up their time, money and a portion of their life to do what you, in the form of the government, want them to do or we take you to jail or refusing that shoot you.

      Explain to me how it is moral for the government to do what would be immoral for you individually to do. If we have a government of delegated powers, then how can you delegate a power you yourself do not have?

      --
      I was raised on the command line, bitch

      "Nemo me impune lacesset"

    759. Re:Tax planning and rich people by mozumder · · Score: 1

      Wow, That statement alone scares me more than any other socialist diatribe.

      Don't worry, you'll get over yourself.

    760. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Jhon · · Score: 1

      "Sales taxes range from 5%-10%, right? You're suggesting that a family of four spends only $6,000-$12,000 / year? "

      $12k is about what our household spends on sales taxable expenses per year. I have a family of four. Granted, I excluded "big ticket" items such as cars because they, if purchased at all, are almost always purchased used and around every 5 years or so at the low end of the economic ladder... If it pleases you, add an extra $1000-$2000 per year for big ticket items.

      The point I think you are missing is that it doesn't matter HOW much other taxes they pay if none of it contributes to the Fed.

      And if you want to include all the other taxes that the "poor" pay, then I'm paying over 50%... and when I'm putting out more than HALF of what I've earned I get real antsy when someone starts asking for "more". Want to increase my federal taxes? Ok... fine... But everyone who currently pays NOTHING need to pitch in even a LITTLE... and if they want ME to pay more, fine -- they need to pay more at the same time. Even at a 3:1 ratio. Increase me from 30% to 40% federal tax? Ok, you go from 0%-4%. They are still paying an order of magnitude less than I am and are now invested in the system -- and hopefully, their VOTES will be for those who will spend our money (theirs AND mine) more responsibly -- and not just have them voting for people to spend MY money and not theirs.

      Want to argue that they are only going to tax those making 100k more than me (or some arbitrary "rich" amount)? It's still wrong if the representatives in office pushing this are voted in by people who aren't vested in the system and have NOTHING to lose asking for more "stuff".

    761. Re:Tax planning and rich people by mozumder · · Score: 1

      In this case you are saying that you owe society no matter what you did to earn money because if not for society, you couldn't earn money. But, earning money is not a side affect of society, it is the primary purpose of society to provide order and mechanisms for economic growth. All other benefits of society flow from that.

      In your diatribe you never actually refuted the point.

      Like we said, the rich benefit more from government than the poor, therefore, they need to pay a higher percentage in taxes.

    762. Re:Tax planning and rich people by mozumder · · Score: 1

      The average democratic constituents don't really need government, which is why they pay zero tax.

      It is the rich that need government the most, which is why they pay a higher tax rate.

    763. Re:Tax planning and rich people by thynk · · Score: 1

      I think what parent really meant was % of budget, not % of gdp. Either way spending 4,7% of gdp is very very high up in the ranking. This is more than 50% of the budget by any way you want to put it huge, unless you want to only compare the USA with 3rd world countries in civil war and dictatorships.

      Spending is currently around 23-25% of GDP, so 4.7% of GDP is in now way shape or form more than 50% of the budget. Yes, it's a lot. Yes, probably room to trim that back some.

      --

      Good judgment comes from experience, and a lot of that comes from bad judgment.
    764. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      All of the figures I cited are annual. And as I said, "according to your stats". Your stats, your link.

      "Wealth creation activities" - just more Republican propaganda. Like trying to change the stats after you put them out, when they work against you. And failing to recognize that all the numbers are annual.

      You Republicans aren't fit to argue about the most basic economics math, let alone actually set the laws governing them.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    765. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      That's not even wrong. The Infrastructure Bank isn't subject to investment, it's a way to reserve infrastructure budgets protected from the general fund. The general fund that you Republicans have robbed at every step, except when it's not in a "lockbox".

      Solyndra? You're a wind-up Republican blabberer. Goodbye.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    766. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      You should be comparing commute to shipping, not a weekend excursion to shipping

      Why? That's part of the point. The trucks that cause all the damage are always working, turning the gears of the economy - when they are not working, they are parked. So you won't get any "weekend excursions" to compare them with.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    767. Re:Tax planning and rich people by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      an effective income tax rate of 23.27%

      Hi Doc, I trust you and your figures, but fuck me 23% is unbelievably low for millionaires, no wonder the US budget is dripping in red ink. As a comparison here's the Aussie income tax rates, sales tax is 10%, and the top capital gains rate is 30%, there are no other significant taxes that normal people pay. Company tax is ~30% IIRC.

      So as a professional on $100K/yr I'm paying a total tax rate of ~35%. However, our budget is balanced, we have a strong economy with low unemployment and I enjoy a good standard of living in my beach house that's 30min from the city, so I have no complaints about paying it. In fact I would love to be on $1M/yr and pay the higher rate.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    768. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      You've shown that you're an idiot by using North Korea as any kind of comparison to the US, instead of the many countries that are comparable, like the UK, France, Germany, Italy, Australia... But those wouldn't support your completely wrong point.

      Then you proved you're an idiot by blurting that it was the first to come to mind, even though that's no defense. It's a good condemnation of you as an idiot, and you contributed it yourself.

      You're an idiot. You're the only one who can't see it, even when it's spelled out for you. Which proves beyond all doubt that you're an idiot.

      Goodbye.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    769. Re:Tax planning and rich people by vux984 · · Score: 1


      These are people with cable television, cellphones, and so on.

      Oh my, Cellphones and many of them are cancelling their land lines. And if you think having a phone is "optional" for someone looking to get a job... pull your head out of your ass.

      And cable TV? Good gracious... probably one of the cheapest entertainment options we have and its often bundled in some way with internet. (Which is also not really optional these days if you want to be part of society.)

      I don't look at a guy who has a cable internet and a cellphone as a paragon of wealth, anymore than if he has shoes, pants, or a 10 year old beater.

      Lots of discretionary spending

      Right. Because if they can afford a hoop to go with their stick they're not poor enough yet, right?

    770. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 0

      Still no proof that I am wrong, and more name-calling. You must be a socialist.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    771. Re:Tax planning and rich people by thynk · · Score: 1

      So? Is that supposed to mean that their life still doesn't royally suck here? And don't bring up any shit about 3rd world countries. We're one of the most developed nations in the world. We're not supposed to have any of that shit, and comparing us to countries that do is completely disingenuous. Compare the life of the poor here in the US to say, Germany, Sweden, or Norway.

      Any of what shit? Poor? So, a person who drops out of high school, or even graduates high school is entitled $20-30k a year job? Most of them have no marketable job skills. Life sucks when you're just starting out, the vast majority of poor people are not people with degrees, or 20 years experience in their field. When I was in college, I lived on a $10 a week food budget because that's all there was. Now, almost 20 years later I have a fairly comfortable life with a reasonable wage. I'm far from wealthy, but it's pretty rare that I eat PB&J because I have to.

      And yes, I agree... being poor does royally suck, just it sucks less here than in other places. We spend just shy of a trillion dollars a year on means tested assistance programs, outside of medicare/medicaid.

      --

      Good judgment comes from experience, and a lot of that comes from bad judgment.
    772. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      Nothing in that link contradicts my statement (and the NYT's statement).

      On the contrary. You claimed "The number of families not paying income tax has risen from about 30 percent before the recession" - the real figure is about 38%.

      At one time we had intelligent conservatives who actually listened to the other side's argument and admitted it when they were wrong.

      Well, I'm not really a "conservative", I'm a classical liberal. Waiting for you to admit you were wrong. I'll admit that the link only shows Federal Income taxes if you admit that the US has the most progressive tax policy of any first world country - people like you seem to run into a lot of cognitive dissonance when I point out that fact.

      Yes, and we had principled Democrats that realized the government can't spend more than it takes in forever. Yes, it does seem those days are gone.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    773. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      Can I opt out, somehow? Every neighbor of mine is an ally.

      If it were up to me, yea, you could. Really not any business of the US at all. Way too interventionist.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    774. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I did, and I do. I'm a business owner, and employer. I put my own ass on the line, and now I'm being told that I should give almost all of what I make in large part to support those that never tried.

      Nice bit of hyperbole there. In what way will you be giving almost all of what you make? Unless your net taxable income is over $1 million this proposal doesn't affect you at all. Even if your income is over $1M the rate won't be even that close to 50%.

      I've got another question. As an employer when have tax rates ever affected you decision to hire another employee? Isn't that decision predicated on enough demand to make hiring another employee to handle and increased workload? Have you ever hired an employee just because you had extra money sitting around?

    775. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 2

      The effective tax rates are in the page they themself cited.

      Yes, Americans are nuts - especially the non-millionaires who insist on a broken country so millionaires can have a few extra thousand bucks a year to spend. Mostly spent on making more money, in a perpetual motion machine. Or spent on robbing them and breaking their country some more.

      I mean really nuts. You can't show them proof, you can't ask them for compassion. It makes them bark at the moon, and wave their guns. They're wound-up suicide machines.

      I make a lot of money, and I'm expecting my taxes to rise. I welcome it, when it's buying civilization. When it's just subsidizing the miseducation and pandering that creates these nuts, I have to wonder whether I'm just trapped.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    776. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      That's not even wrong. The Infrastructure Bank isn't subject to investment, it's a way to reserve infrastructure budgets protected from the general fund. The general fund that you Republicans have robbed at every step, except when it's not in a "lockbox".

      I suggest you check into what the Infrastructure Bank is really all about. "Isn't subject to investment" is 180 degrees wrong! Should be easy to see what the proposals for this thing looks like.

      Solyndra? You're a wind-up Republican blabberer. Goodbye.

      I'm not a Republican at all (I mean, they eat puppies, right? and Democrats sing with Angels?), although you are obviously a douchebag - and an ignorant one at that. So pointing out rampant corruption in the administration of government is "blabbering". Got it.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    777. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      You Republicans aren't fit to argue about the most basic economics math, let alone actually set the laws governing them.

      Well I'm not a Republicans, but you Communists sure have killed a lot of people trying to implement your policies...

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    778. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Rockoon · · Score: 0

      I don't look at a guy who has a cable internet and a cellphone as a paragon of wealth, anymore than if he has shoes, pants, or a 10 year old beater.

      This is fucking poor, asshole

      You need to leave this country and experience the whole fucking world, because you've got no fucking clue how rich $7/hour part-timer workers in Americans are.

      To be quite explicit since you are fucking stupid and need your hand held on everything, thats over 600 million fucking people living on less than $1.25 per day, in India alone. Thats double the population of America that are far worse off than any American can possibly imagine, IN ONE FUCKING COUNTRY.

      Fucking liberal idiots... you've got no fucking idea

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    779. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shouldn't that be a master debater?

    780. Re:Tax planning and rich people by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Those trucks, that Mr. Millionaire is running, they are bringing something to the stores, right? So if there were no stores and no trucks, you'd have to drive from manufacturer to manufacturer to do your daily shopping, right?

      So who is getting a better deal and who is creating more efficiencies and who is allowing the road to be used much less, since there is none of this manufacturer to manufacturer driving?

      Hmmmm. Mr. Millionaire really needs you much less than you need him.

    781. Re:Tax planning and rich people by vux984 · · Score: 1

      You need to leave this country and experience the whole fucking world, because you've got no fucking clue how rich $7/hour part-timer workers in Americans are.

      And in context of this discussion what is your fucking point? Are you arguing that American's should be

      This is fucking poor, asshole

      Before they are tax exempt?

      Really? Because otherwise its completely irrelevant to THIS discussion how much worse things can get.

    782. Re:Tax planning and rich people by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      what we all know is that when Obama says: decrease in spending, the actual reality this means increase in taxes, and when he says: decrease taxes, he actually means increase spending.

      random thoughts after listening to Obama's latest idiotic speech:

      Also ending temporary spending measures, like "bringing troops home" is not a spending cut, unless the troops were supposed to be there forever in a permanent war.

      Another 'spending cut' Obama says will come from reduced interest rates. Too bad the emergency low rates of today are not going to stay this low forever. Political BS.

      Obama says: people who have done extraordinary well must do more... they are ALREADY doing more than anybody else. They are creating the wealth of the society.

      Obama proposes more taxes: this means the burden is going to be shifted disproportionately onto the rich, not the poor.

      Relying on poor and middle class is done by cutting spending, and Obama says he won't cut spending.

      Middle class won't be better off when gov't recycles money from others to them, it destroys investment and destroys economy in the long run.

    783. Re:Tax planning and rich people by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Of-course this has nothing to do with lifestyle, but has everything to do with cutting into investments. Any amount of money a rich person isn't spending on himself goes to the improvement of the economy, because that's the money invested.

      The only time money is benefiting the rich him/herself is when they actually spend it.

      The entire idea of taxing income needs to be abolished (as well as all of the government spending associated with it.)

    784. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Of course you're a Republican. That's who you vote for; that's who you are.

      The idea that you'd call me a "Communist" just proves what a Republican you are. Since it's your response to my showing you're not making any sense at all.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    785. Re:Tax planning and rich people by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      businesses don't pay taxes - individuals pay taxes.

      forget what they taught you in high school, here is a lesson:

      when Buffet complains about his taxes being 15%, he conveniently forgets to mention that his company is taxed 35% first, which is all his money, he is the largest shareholder, that's the money he didn't receive in dividends. So he is taxed at 35%, and then again at 15%.

      Companies don't pay taxes, all taxes are paid by people.

    786. Re:Tax planning and rich people by demonlapin · · Score: 1
      You can't ignore risk, though. It's a crucial part of determining what rate of return you will demand before you invest your money in something. Having lower capital gains tax rates encourages capital investments (as opposed to dividend-paying investments).

      Savings where the *earnings* on those savings are taxed as income will still make more money than cash.

      Well, unless they lose money. It does happen. Under the current regime, you can carry forward capital losses from year to year but can use them to offset only $3000/year of regular income (though you can use them in toto against any capital gains). Getting rid of the special taxation status of capital gains would encourage enormously risk-averse investing - and we want more money at risk, because those risky new projects are the ones we want to encourage.

    787. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Oh, I see - now any investment is automatically a scam. That's not very Republican of you. Except when it's a Democrat's plan for investment. I get it now.

      You are indeed a Republican. The big investors in Solyndra were the Wal-Mart family, the Waltons. Famously Republican, which is why they got Bush to approve the loan that Obama's administration carried over.

      You are a Republican. They don't eat puppies, but they lie and talk nonsense. Like you. Goodbye.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    788. Re:Tax planning and rich people by C10H14N2 · · Score: 1

      It has less to do with size of income than source of income. Someone earning $100k as salary will pay double the taxes of someone earning 100K as capital gains.

      Also, you have to get substantially north of $106K of salary/wage income before the effective difference in rate on discretionary income is notably less than anyone below them. $80-90K is the sweet-spot of being absolutely terminally screwed tax-wise as the vast majority goes to consumables (taxed) and the entirety is subject to payroll tax.

    789. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So all they did was give even larger incentive for rich people to start playing games with taxes. Remember that tax planning isn't illegal, nor is forming offshore companies...

      Er, root-cause analysis? Perhaps these things SHOULD be illegal. Perhaps when we realize that "tax planning" is simply a nice way of re-defining "tax dodging"...

      "Waaaaah! Playing by the rules let someone get ahead of me! Change the rules to they benefit me instead! WAAAAHHH"

      That's pretty much what I hear anytime some idiot says "[some_thing] should be illegal!" or "there ought to be a law!". Seriously, for a group supposedly so into personal freedoms and "do what ye will", you liberal assclowns sure do like to propose a lot of laws that would silence anyone who disagrees with your "progressive" attitude...

    790. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      You're right - only a Communist or Republican would resort to name-calling over a disagreement. I'm afraid you got under my craw associating me with the them. Almost as insulting as being called a Democrat.

      My apologies.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    791. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      And in context of this discussion what is your fucking point?

      I still have to hold your hand? Really?

      You are the same sort of fuck that says "the rich get richer and the poor get poorer" .. I know it.. you know it. The problem with your bullshit is that in this country, the poor got rich too.. BUT JEALOUS FUCKS LIKE YOU DIDNT NOTICE.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    792. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      Oh, I see - now any investment is automatically a scam. That's not very Republican of you. Except when it's a Democrat's plan for investment. I get it now.

      Don't you get it yet? Blinded by promises from your party or hatred for the other party?

      Where's the money? That's what they want (don't be a fool, it's Republicans AND Democrats). It's all sitting in private retirement accounts. Untaxed 401Ks, 403Bs, IRAs, etc. How do you get your hands on it? "Infrastructure Bank"!! WooHoo!! It's the answer to the IMF and the World Bank for America this time.

      The big investors in Solyndra were the Wal-Mart family, the Waltons.

      Really? I hadn't heard that. They lost a lot of money, then, didn't they?

      they got Bush to approve the loan that Obama's administration carried over.

      Whoa - wait a minute - I know Bush was a fuck-up, but I had no idea he was involved in this scam... Ah - found this. Of course, the guy never mentions in his detailed time-line the Obama "photo-op" visit to the facility, taking full credit for promoting "green companies". But then, he's shilling for the Democrats, as if they are different or something.

      Obama is just as bad as Bush, he's still pushing and promoting all the worst policies that Bush put in place, expanding and extending the Police State tactics, the foreign intervention, the market intervention, the crony capitalism, and on and on.

      The worst part of all this is the people that go around claiming if only the RIGHT PARTY were in charge, things would change.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    793. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      buffet is playing obama like a cheap piano - i don't believe him for one minute

      make my words - you'll see his 'creative tax dodges' soon enought

    794. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is nothing stopping Warren Buffet from giving the government as much money as he thinks he ought to pay. Why doesn't he put his money where his mouth is?

    795. Re:Tax planning and rich people by slamb · · Score: 1

      Explain to me how it is moral for the government to do what would be immoral for you individually to do. If we have a government of delegated powers, then how can you delegate a power you yourself do not have?

      Every government in history has used the threat of jail and violence to do things which advance the common good in violation of individual's wishes. Police, military, IRS, etc. It sounds like you're unsure about that basic principle. And specifically with regard to progressive taxation:

      The necessaries of life occasion the great expense of the poor. They find it difficult to get food, and the greater part of their little revenue is spent in getting it. The luxuries and vanities of life occasion the principal expense of the rich, and a magnificent house embellishes and sets off to the best advantage all the other luxuries and vanities which they possess. A tax upon house-rents, therefore, would in general fall heaviest upon the rich; and in this sort of inequality there would not, perhaps, be anything very unreasonable. It is not very unreasonable that the rich should contribute to the public expense, not only in proportion to their revenue, but something more than in that proportion

      That's a quote from Adam Smith, often called the father of modern capitalism. If you don't accept that argument, you're so far ideologically from myself or voters in our democracy that your best move is probably to move to this floating city and talk with its other inhabitant about Atlas Shrugged all day.

      "Investing in the poor" has been the rallying cry for ever expanding government and ever expanding pubic debt for the last 100 years. How has that worked out for us? Have the poor been raised up? Surely after 100 years of social programs, welfare, public education the poor are now well off, right? Oh, they aren't? More people are on public assistance than every before and there are no signs of that changing?

      You started with a pretty reasonable question, but I think you're oversimplifying the answer...

    796. Re:Tax planning and rich people by larry+bagina · · Score: 1

      Interesting theory. I believe Barry O wants to eliminate tax-free government bonds, though. That's probably not going anywhere -- municipal bonds offer a lower rate of return because they're tax free. Eliminate that advantage and interest rates will have to rise to match other bonds.

      Warren Buffet has complained about the corporate jet demagoguery. Perhaps it's because NetJets is a Berkshire Hathaway company.

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    797. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Well, what more supporting evidence do I need then the fact that most wealthy areas vote overwhelmingly for Democratic politicians and progressive policies tend to concentrate wealth in the hands of a few? I judge policies on the basis of actual results, not the proclaimed intentions of those who espouse those policies.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    798. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      The cost of living in Shanghai isn't much lower than that in Seattle, WA... It's not a cheap city. And the deduction ONLY applies if I spend less than 35 days a year in the US - AND I pay an equivalent amount (or more) in Chinese taxes than I would in the US on that first $107,000. At best, you only pay once for your first $107,000 - after that, you're paying twice on everything.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    799. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1
      Oh no - we're wrong - we're both sucking off the system and not paying our fair share... And don't you dare set foot in the US for 35 or more days each 12 month period - because then you lose your $107,000 "exemption". Yes - spend 3 days a month in the US and you get to pay full US income taxes on every dollar you make - and full foreign income taxes on the same amount.

      But we're the rich, we're the ones who aren't paying our fair share...

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    800. Re:Tax planning and rich people by sycodon · · Score: 1

      Isn't that what being modded -1 does?

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    801. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      So States are relying upon Federal dollars to provide local fire and police coverage? Seems pretty screwed up - how about just leaving those dollars with the State in the first place?

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    802. Re:Tax planning and rich people by slamb · · Score: 1

      $12k is about what our household spends on sales taxable expenses per year. I have a family of four. Granted, I excluded "big ticket" items such as cars because they, if purchased at all, are almost always purchased used and around every 5 years or so at the low end of the economic ladder... If it pleases you, add an extra $1000-$2000 per year for big ticket items.

      Hmm, interesting. I guess sales taxable doesn't include rent - I was thinking that it was just part of the check I write, but I was wrong - looks like there's no sales tax on rent in California. Okay, point taken.

      The point I think you are missing is that it doesn't matter HOW much other taxes they pay if none of it contributes to the Fed.

      I heard you, but I just don't think this matters so much. We all pay taxes, we all understand that programs are paid for with taxes, most people hope to some day be more prosperous than they are today and know that means they're likely to pay higher taxes (including federal ones), etc...

      I think it's crazy that only 50% of the country pays taxes, but I don't think making them pay taxes without otherwise changing their situation is the right answer.

    803. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      Nice straw man you set up and attacked there... Now go back and read what I wrote, and if you are actually honest and intelligent and not simply an ideologue you'll realize my statement was directed at the claim about the "rich" making 60% of the income. Which is provably false. If you want to now shift to a different subject (taxation of that income), then at least have the common courtesy to state as much,

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    804. Re:Tax planning and rich people by slamb · · Score: 1
      Grr, of course I meant to write

      I think it's crazy that only 50% of the country pays federal income taxes, but I don't think making them pay them without otherwise changing their situation is the right answer.

    805. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Money is still the way he keeps score. Additionally, the money he "gave" away went to an organization that he has significant say in how it uses the money. The fact of the matter is that Warren Buffett says that the government should take more of his money, yet he does not take advantage of the several methods available to him to give the government more money. If Warren Buffett took the opportunities he has to give additional money to the government, we would know that he genuinely believes that the government is spending tax money wisely and that it was deserving of receiving more money. Since he does not do this, one must conclude that he does not really believe that his tax bill should be higher and is making this statement for some other motive.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    806. Re:Tax planning and rich people by i_b_don · · Score: 1

      Well, unless they lose money. It does happen. Under the current regime, you can carry forward capital losses from year to year but can use them to offset only $3000/year of regular income (though you can use them in toto against any capital gains). Getting rid of the special taxation status of capital gains would encourage enormously risk-averse investing - and we want more money at risk, because those risky new projects are the ones we want to encourage.

      Nah... that doesn't quite pass the smell test. Capital gains are taxed at 15%... income at 28%. So the argument is that the risk of making this investment is oh so worth it when your take home is 85% of the profits... but "run away scary" when you get to keep *only* 72% of the profits. The numbers just aren't there to support the adjectives you used.

      So from an investment standpoint, a minor hit... from a tax standpoint... it's double the money coming in from some MAJOR streams of income. That's a big difference.

      d

      --
      all language nazi's will burne in heil!
    807. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't you think it's reasonable for corporations to pay taxes to cover the parts of government they use? After all they have access to courts at all levels, our military and police protect them, they use the highway system, they have a pool of potential employees educated for the most part by the public education system, and a myriad of other services. None of those things are perfect but the country we live in would be impossible without them.

    808. Re:Tax planning and rich people by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      Although I'd argue that doubling the tax rate (and actually, it's more than that - you may pay 28% marginal rate, but I'm paying 35% and soon to be more) isn't a "minor hit" (it's roughly 1/6 of ROI), that's not the point here. You keep assuming that everything makes money. It doesn't. The unique treatment of capital gains (can be offset by capital losses, e.g.) means that there is an incentive to put money into things (like new businesses) that will result in capital gains (as they get bigger). The alternative is a system in which dividends are tax-favored, which tends to support existing businesses that have already worked out how to provide dividends while harming those new ones that have nothing to offer to investors but equity.

    809. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      I never said anything about Democrats. You did. But you did vote for Republicans every chance you got. You're a Republican.

      Which is why the fact that Solyndra was a risk, not a guarantee, doesn't make any sense to you. Why Solyndra failing was a risk that the government took as it boosted a strategically important part of the US solar industry, a risk worth taking.

      You're a Republican. You voted those clowns the power that destroyed the country. Until they did, the Republican Party was "the right party" for you. Now you're eating up the BS they feed you, tagged with "Solyndra". I bet that a couple years ago all you could say was "Reverend Wright", and last year "death panels".

      But at least you looked at the Waltons role in Solyndra, even though you still don't understand the story at all.

      You're on your own. Try not to be such a sucker all the time. Turn off Fox "News", or Limbo, or whatever other corporate drivel you're drowning in. Goodbye.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    810. Re:Tax planning and rich people by lsatenstein · · Score: 1

      I guess you have not lived in other countries. Your tax system is very very progressive, but your deductions --WOW, what you can deduct is just amazing. In the end, bottom line, the rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer.

      --
      Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
    811. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Jhon · · Score: 1

      "We all pay taxes, we all understand that programs are paid for with taxes"

      No sales or state taxes pay for federal programs. No sales or state taxes pay for defense, medical, medicare, etc... No sales or state taxes in anyway help reduce this crazy 14 trillion dollar deficite.

      I must disagree with you in that *I* believe it matters quite a lot.

    812. Re:Tax planning and rich people by magarity · · Score: 1

      We spend over $1 TRILLION a year, probably over $1.5T, on military/intel.

      At least by putting 'probably' you are kind enough to alert the astute reader that you're pulling this number out of your butt. There's this amazing thing called the internet that lets one check the figures at the CBO and OMB directly. OMB puts 2010 actual defense at 510B and defense intelligence at 130B.

      It would make far more sense to eliminate the many MORE TRILLIONS (is it really more effective in all caps?) wasted by Social Security, Medicare, Medicare and the Depts of Education/Labor/Agriculture/Energy/Health and Human Services/Housing and Urban Development since all of those are a heck of a lot more than military spending and none of the federal government's business in the first place.

    813. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      I had nothing to fall back on. Nothing. My family was absent, and my friends were drunks. I saved up $150 for an electronics assembly class. That's how I got out of pizza and bars. When I failed, I went back to pizza and bars until I saved enough to try something else.

      Again, you can either whine about your situation, or you can do what it takes to change it. I chose the latter, and I have limited patience for those to continue to do the former. I sure as hell dont think anyone is incapable of improving their lot in life, and I dont see why I need to make sure they never have to.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    814. Re:Tax planning and rich people by ichthus · · Score: 1

      Facts absolutely matter. Let's hear them. Tell me, what are your facts on Solyndra? What are your facts on Fast and Furious? I see a lot of cover-up. No facts are coming from the White House -- everything factual is coming from FBI raids and secret recordings.

      --
      sig: sauer
    815. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 1
      We're excatly on point, and its a point that you brought to the table.

      Well, then it's great that nobody is saying anything like this. The specific proposal from Obama is that millionaires should be the same rate as the middle class. This is done by changing capital gains tax to match income tax.

      Put aside all of the rest of the rhetoric and tell me how that one, specific suggestion isn't a good idea.

      You wanted to know how the proposed legislation could possibly have a negative impact. I gave you a pointed argument. You inherit your family's home, and because of taxes you can neither keep it nor sell it and retain any appreciable value from it. I fail to see how that is a benefit to society, other than to say that you have too much (your birthright) and the government is going to take it and give the value to others.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    816. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      Ok, let's shoot for the middle-ground then. If every person is gauranteed to get the medium reward regardless of their level of effort, they will strive for the medium output.

      A society of mediocrity does not inspire me.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    817. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Savantissimo · · Score: 1

      The US government has cracked down hard on overseas accounts, shell corporations and all the other dodges. Basically if you are a US citizen or legal resident or a corporation or trust anywhere in the world with a US citizen who owns any significant fraction or amount of the corporation or who is a beneficiary of the trust, you have to file detailed accounts with the IRS, and they are getting pretty ugly with those who don't comply. So the usual dodges just don't work anymore - nobody overseas wants to do financial business with Americans anymore if they can avoid it. Even those who have been US citizens any time in the last 10 years have to file the same as citizens. The $1M/yr. club is not going to be able to get their money out easily, it's essentially back-door capital controls for everybody but the biggest of big US banks.

      Obama's proposal makes sense. For 2007 (more representative than 2008, and statistics after the rebound of the rich aren't yet available), those declaring over $1M adjusted gross income were 0.28% of returns, but made nearly 16% of all income (about 14% of all after-tax income, counting state and payroll taxes). Their average federal tax rate was less than 25%.

      Even after adjusting for an estimate of all taxes (12.4% SS and 10% state,sales,excise&fees on all income to $100K, 2.9% medicare on all income, 5% state,sales,excise&fees above $100K), they pay about 43% of their gross income in taxes, compared to a minimum of over 25% tax for those making less than $10K/yr. If we assume that people need to sleep indoors and eat, and budget a bare minimum of $10K for that, and express the total tax rate as taxes paid divided by the income left over after paying for $10K in necessities, we find that the tax rate actually declines continuously with increasing income, from 125% for those making $9-13K to 44% for those making $75-$100K, and after that the effective tax rate stays constant to within 1.5% for the next six brackets, all the way out to $5M-$10M income, before dropping to 40% for the $10M+ bracket.

      The rich aren't paying more than their share. There is clearly room to increase their effective federal tax by 5% or more without causing them the least bit of inconvenience or driving them abroad.

      --
      "Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?" - Patrick Henry
    818. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      If I put in more effort than is my fair share, why have I not earned the right to claim a greater profit?

      I'm pretty tired of putting in all the extra hours and all the extra stress to be told I should feel guilty about getting a bigger paycheck. Particularly when my extra hours and stress enable others to earn a paycheck they might not otherwise get at all.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    819. Re:Tax planning and rich people by williamhb · · Score: 2

      Any dollar earned in the US is subject to taxation - regardless of the domicile of the company. The only benefit to forming an overseas shell corporation is to defer US taxation on money earned abroad; that's what Google, Apple, Microsoft and the like have foreign offices - they can keep the earnings overseas without paying US taxes. But for money earned in the US - regardless of the country of incorporation - there are US corporate income taxes to be paid. And if you're a US company, you also have to pay US taxes on money earned overseas. Thus you can see why companies set up overseas offices and subsidiaries.

      You miss the point of the accounting. The companies also have overseas offices in order to charge the US parent company fees to lower the US company's taxable profits. "We earned $1 in the US, but we had to pay $0.99 in licensing fees to our Irish subsidiary. This was a necessary cost of doing business to earn the $1 so is deductible from out taxable profits. Accordingly we should only be taxed on $0.01 in the US, and the subsidiary should be taked on the $0.99 in Ireland... except it in turn has to pay some fees to another subsidiary..." Via accounting techniques called the "Double Irish" and "Dutch Sandwich" profits are relocated to tax-free regimes such as the Cayman Islands. Google's effective tax rate on its US earnings after this accounting in one recent year was a whopping 4%.

    820. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      Thats a horseshit arguement. You might as well say, "Do you think it's better that the wealthy pay more? Or should we all eat babies instead?"

      The burden is almost entirely on the wealthiest already with 70% of the taxes being paid by the highest 10% of earners. There is no possible argument to suggest that the middle class is the most taxed.

      That being said, I believe the middle class to be highly over-taxed, but that's due to governement spending that is completely out of control on entitlements, pet projects and waste.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    821. Re:Tax planning and rich people by smellotron · · Score: 1

      Dividends are taxed twice--once when the company (which you own) is paying taxes on earnings, and again when you receive their earnings.

      Not if you're investing in GE! Yuk yuk. But seriously, I can't stomach that (theoretically reasonable) argument knowing that large US corporations are so effective at tax avoidance.

    822. Re:Tax planning and rich people by williamhb · · Score: 1

      Now, there are other types of taxes. Estate taxes, tariffs, capital gains taxes. Those are charged at different rates. Capital gains are charged at a rate ranging from 0 to 15%, Note that rich people pay a higher rate on gains than poor people, also. However, if a person makes 90% of his income from capital gains, and you average together the different types of taxes he pays, the overall tax burden on the rich guy might be lower.

      This is deliberate. Capital gains taxes are low on purpose, because those drive investment.

      Fundamentally what this means is that if you invest money (as only those with money are able to) you are taxed at a low rate but if you invest labour (as those without money are required to) you are taxed at a high rate.

      The problem is then compounded because it is relatively easy for the wealthy to transform their salary into a capital gain (the reason tech CEOs often take $1 salaries is because salary is the least tax-efficient kind of remuneration, whereas getting paid in options has only a 15% tax rate).

    823. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      1) The tax rate in China is meaningless because (a) you cant run a business at all without government clearance and all the fees associated, and (b) because China manipulates its currency distorting any attempts at economic evaluations.
      2) The workers are paid little more than slave wages, and China should be brough before the UN for crimes against their citizens.
      3) "China's government directly owns industries, including farms and factories".... And because of it they can tell every citizen to shut up and take it. Who else are they going to work for or get a wage from?
      4) "Coporate Anarchy" is a contradiction. Capatilism and corporations rely on stability and predictability. Anarchy is the anthesis of stability. Ackward.....
      5) There's nothing that a Democrat wont say about the benefits of a communist or socialist system while trying desperately not to use either title, because any rational person can show how both systems have historically led to nothing but mass death and oppression. 6) I'm not a Republican; Registered Independent.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    824. Re:Tax planning and rich people by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      Yeah - you try that. Go ahead. Charges for overseas expenses that are "outside of industry norms" are not allowed, and will not only get you a solid audit but fines and penalties. That's a lot of what Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway is disputing right now with the IRS - those kinds of overseas "expenses" that BH claims isn't owned, but the IRS insists is - to the tune of a little more than $1 billion.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    825. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      Obviously, you don't know me at all, but of course it's easy to hate when you put people in a box, huh? Solyndra is, of course, a minor issue, but indicative of the rampant corruption of Washington and politics in the US in general. When you get tired of shilling for some party or another maybe you'll gain a little independent perspective. For now, you just seem too small-minded to even try to educate about the realities of the real world.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    826. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      So your logic then, is that I should continue to invest myself, my time, my money and my effort into businesses that employ people and pump money into the economy with smaller and smaller returns on that investment and feel fulfilled in the knowledge that what I've done is enrich those who have never risked anything?

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    827. Re:Tax planning and rich people by smellotron · · Score: 1

      You should be happy that [Mr. Millionaire] lets you use his road.

      "His" road? I would think that the goal of a republic is to avoid a feudal society. Corporations are not Lords, and besides it's pointless to talk about "who needs who" more—everyone benefits with division of labor. Let's call it "our road".

    828. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      I guess you have not lived in other countries. Your tax system is very very progressive, but your deductions --WOW, what you can deduct is just amazing. In the end, bottom line, the rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer.

      Very true. I don't think there's any debate about that - and perhaps even worse is the shrinking middle class, and the middle class jobs that have now probably disappeared forever. That situation leaves the poor in an even more hopeless situation.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    829. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      Right now they pay a lower total tax load percentage (23% for the "near wealthy" and under 18% for the top 400 families).

      Meanwhile the total tax load on the middle class is running 40%.

      The total tax load on the "poor" and retired is running about 30%.

      Google "who pays taxes" for the state and local taxes (12% on the poor, .03% on the wealthy).

      Google "tax top 400"

      Google "total tax load by income bracket".

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    830. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      Bill Gates will beg to differ. As would Steve Jobs, or Warren Buffett. In fact, of the wealthiest Americans the majority built their own fortunes. And those people are responsible for tens of thousands of jobs.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    831. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      And you manipulate the conversation by attempting to label anyone the "idle rich". Those who have amassed their fortunes have sacrficed more and commited more than you are probably capable.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    832. Re:Tax planning and rich people by smellotron · · Score: 1

      You inherit your family's home, and because of taxes you can neither keep it nor sell it and retain any appreciable value from it.

      First of all, the property taxes aren't at issue here. Having to sell your inheritance because you can't afford to inherit it does suck, but the property taxes aren't capital gains. Second, If the property taxes are $45,000 annually, then how much is the house worth? Some Googling shows me ~1.15% property tax, meaning the house is worth roughly $4.5 million. Whether the capital gains tax is 15% or 35% on that, you're still going to take a healthy profit. If the house is truly an heirloom house, then your grandmother likely purchased it for much cheaper (even adjusted for inflation), and appreciation during her lifetime is not factored into capital gains from your sale.

    833. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      You still pay gasoline taxes or cigarette taxes or tolls or booze taxes or cell phone taxes.
      If you rent- you still pay property taxes (plus a markup). And as a poor person, you spend most of your income so you pay a lot of sales taxes.

      Many of the people "paying no income taxes" are retired and on social security and making less than the $25k limit.

      Other than a half dozen exceptions who may pay no taxes in a particular year, the super rich pay a total load of under 18% (including state taxes- incluiding sales taxes).

      So we need to state it another way... instead of "50% pay no taxes", it's "Let's raise taxes on poor families and retired people who already pay about a third of their income in state and local taxes."

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    834. Re:Tax planning and rich people by scotch · · Score: 1

      You can't get rid of social security without getting rid of the social security tax. Or put another way, it's unfair to compare social security expenditures with defense expenditures for absolute dollars in the budget. In fact, I'm taking great offense at your words "wasted by Social Security" as that system, however flawed is paying out money to people who already paid into the system. Really, I just want to tell you, Perry, Bachman, and all the other short-sighted tea party idiots to quit fucking up the GOP for sane people.

      --
      XML causes global warming.
    835. Re:Tax planning and rich people by smellotron · · Score: 1

      Warren Buffet suggests that people like himself aren't paying enough taxes, yet he does not do anything to pay what he says is his fair share, which leads people to suspect that he has an ulterior motive.

      The first thought that jumps to my mind is simply that Buffet believes the situation to be immoral but inescapable. If he voluntarily pays more, he will suffer unduly when his competitors do not. This is about the same as a playground tattletale who is afraid to break the rules, yet sees others doing so and wants them to stop.

      Or maybe Buffet just has a conscience, and he genuinely believes that what he sees is wrong. His appears to be first-generation wealth, surely he hasn't forgotten all of his upbringing.

      That being said, the "ulterior motives" theory sounds more sensible than batshit. It's just... Occam's Razor and all that... seems too convoluted to be the answer.

    836. Re:Tax planning and rich people by smellotron · · Score: 1

      no, they should control *no* wealth if they pay *no* tax for it to be fair...

      Surely that would lead to violence, as then the poorest 50% of the population would now have nothing to lose?

      It is time to get rid of every single one of them [congress and POTUS]. by any means possible.

      Surely you're not advocating violence?

      I think the GP has it right, everyone pays taxes, even if it is a nominal amount, I'd settle for 0.5%, just for respect's sake.

      Hmm, I'd also support a token tax for all brackets, provided that you could remove the bulk of regressive taxes from the system as well. That's no taxes for (non-luxury) food, clothing, and household staple goods, for starters. Probably also for regular unleaded gasoline and non-luxury vehicle purchases, since this is admittedly a nation built on driving and even most cities have awful public transportation (that's a fight for another day).

    837. Re:Tax planning and rich people by 2short · · Score: 1

      I haven't called you any names, nor am I a socialist. I'm not sure what you're looking for proof of. That you are wrong about whether North Korea is a useful example here? North Korea is not a useful example here. It's an idiotic one. Nobody is going to try to prove that to you; because you already know it, you're just being intentionally obtuse.

    838. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For example Google does a insane amount ($60 BILLION) of tax dodging.

      That is not at all what that article says. The $60B quote is total for *all companies* per year. Google is lowering it's tax burden by an average of $1B per year. It is also only applying this to overseas income, not US income, on which it pays the full rate. From the article you linked:
      "Google Inc. cut its taxes by $3.1 billion in the last three years..." (no where near $60B)
      "...helped reduce its overseas tax rate to 2.4 percent..." (overseas=not USA)
      "Such income shifting costs the U.S. government as much as $60 billion in annual revenue..." (generality with the weasel words "as much as")
      "International income-shifting, which helped cut Google’s overall effective tax rate to 22.2 percent last year..." (22.2% >> 2.4%)

      So if the overseas income rate is 2.4%, but the overall one is 22.2%, that means Google is paying quite a bit in US taxes on US income. At an average of $1B per year, you are also overstating the "problem" by 60x.

      Also, while I like revenue for my government, but why should overseas income come back to the US for a multi-national anyway, when they can spend it where they earned it, such as by building datacenters in the EU?

      If anyone is getting "cheated" here, it is the EU since they are the source of this income and that is where the taxes should be paid. Of course the fix is simple, if the EU would like to, it can fix its own tax laws. The US can cry all it wants, but it was never "our" money in the first place, just money earned by a multi-national which happens to have started out as a US company, income that our government would like the company to repatriate for no particular reason other than to pay taxes on it. Paying extra taxes for no reason is something shareholders would rightfully be annoyed about.

      GE on the other hand, is relocating US-earned income, which does bug me. Still, I fully expect them to do that (serving their shareholders) until the US closes the loopholes they are using via legislation. That is where the solution must come from -- after all, as individuals when was the last time you overpaid your takes purposely? No, we only pay the taxes that are legally required of us, and no more. Companies will do the same. So just like with the Buffet rule, you need to change the tax law to effect the change you want.

    839. Re:Tax planning and rich people by 2short · · Score: 1

      That sentence isn't on the page it links to.

    840. Re:Tax planning and rich people by 2short · · Score: 1

      "What I meant was that there have been proportionally fewer job losses in that sector than in the better-paying skilled jobs."

      What you said was entirely different, and wrong. What you are saying now is misleading at best, and to the best of my knowledge, also wrong.

      From the page you helpfully linked below:

      "The overall unemployment rate is 8.8%, but the rate remains especially high for those with limited education, Hispanics (11.9%), Blacks (15.5%), teenagers (24.5%), those aged 20-24 (15.0%), veterans who’ve served since 2001 (10.9%), and persons with a disability (15.6%)."

      Do those sound like categories that correlate with higher paid jobs? Unemployment in this recession has disproportionately hit those at the bottom. The unemployment rate for those with a college degree is significantly less than for those without.

      "Low-wage and just above (service and labor jobs) are plentiful" is just ridiculously contrary to the facts.

    841. Re:Tax planning and rich people by smellotron · · Score: 1

      Warren Buffet's whole article was disingeuous. He knew full well that most people would not notice the fact that in order for the tax code to be changed to increase his taxes to close to the same percentage as the middle class, it would require changing the capital gains tax rate, yet most people would think of it in terms of the income tax rate.

      Yeah, well, you know, that's just, like, your opinion, man[1]. Warren Buffett's conclusion doesn't mince words:

      But for those making more than $1 million — there were 236,883 such households in 2009 — I would raise rates immediately on taxable income in excess of $1 million, including, of course, dividends and capital gains. And for those who make $10 million or more — there were 8,274 in 2009 — I would suggest an additional increase in rate.

      (emphasis mine). If he intended to hide the "loophole" of long-term capital gains, he could have just deleted the statement in bold and gone on his merry way.

      [1] http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0118715/quotes?qt=qt0464776

    842. Re:Tax planning and rich people by smellotron · · Score: 1

      You may dislike treating long term capital gains as different from other income, but it actually does encourage investing in companies.

      I think that given sufficient education on the topic, most people do support lower capital gains taxes on supplemental investment. Most of us pay income tax, and then every once in a while we get a windfall from a speculative investment such as real estate or buying into the IPO of AAPL or GOOG. These behaviors are naturally riskier than our day jobs, which is why it makes sense to offset capital gains against capital losses.

      The problem arrives when someone figures out how to bypass the "inconvenience" of income tax by converting all income into capital gains somehow. What's doubly nasty is that sufficiently diversified risk from capital gains (which requires lots of capital) can be practically as safe as regular working income. It's eating your cake, and having it too.

    843. Re:Tax planning and rich people by smellotron · · Score: 1

      cellphones

      Where I live, a land line costs $30/mo and my cell phone bill is marginally higher. Given that employers pretty much assume you have a phone number (so they can at least fire you when your lazy ass sleeps in one too many times), it's hard to justify that this is discretionary. A new smartphone plus unlimited texting/data is another beast altogether, I won't defend that.

    844. Re:Tax planning and rich people by smellotron · · Score: 1

      There is nothing the "The Buffet" is doing that you can't.

      I read a book somewhere that estimated the odds of someone doing as well as he did, given the existing population of fund managers and tycoons that have risen (and fallen) in the world. The gist was that while it is possible to have been as successful as he has been based on random selection, it is likely that he is genuinely a very good decision maker. Most people are not.

    845. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Electricity+Likes+Me · · Score: 1

      Nevermind that the entire example is saying "screw everyone else, I want even more money at the expense of the country". Welcome to the modern American aristocracy.

    846. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Electricity+Likes+Me · · Score: 1

      It's almost like supply-side economics is complete crap.

    847. Re:Tax planning and rich people by jayveekay · · Score: 1

      If one buys gasoline in the USA, then one pays the Federal gas tax.
      If one has phone service, then one pays the Federal Universal Service 'fee' tax.
      If one earns any income, then one pays Social Security and Medicare Federal taxes.

      Those are 3 that spring to mind off the top of my head. Federal income tax is not the only federal tax out there.

      Regardless, you seem concerned that someone would get to vote when they did not pay taxes. Suppose there was a nominal 1 cent federal tax that all Americans of voting age had to pay, would that address your concern? Or should there be some greater payment required to be eligible to vote? Or perhaps the more you pay in taxes the more votes you get?

    848. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Electricity+Likes+Me · · Score: 1

      Clearly then we should raise taxes on all these people until they have a comparable standard of living.

      I mean is this your goal: if you hadn't noticed, rich people don't go and live the high life in India either. In case you hadn't noticed rampant poverty tends to have other, follow on effects, which make life worse for the non-impoverished as well. I mean, I guess you clearly must pull in enough money to afford some private security and a bulletproof SUV in case their's a kidnapping attempt on your way to work.

    849. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Electricity+Likes+Me · · Score: 1

      You have just advocated supply-side economics.

      Some problems with it:

      American taxes, especially on corporations, are the lowest they've been in 50 years. Yet unemployment is now at one of the highest levels in recent history. Despite the Bush tax cuts, the unemployment rate did not appreciably drop - and despite the Bush tax cuts, unemployment now remains high.

      If taxes are preventing job creation, then lowering taxes by any amount should reduce unemployment since some jobs which were formerly unprofitable will now be profitable and ergo companies will hire people to fill them.

      Yet this has not happened. Why?

    850. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Olorion · · Score: 1
      Bill Gates ... Steve Jobs ... built their own fortunes

      As I said (I am the poster you responded to), the rich people you love so much consider you a useful idiot. And you have just proven it. You didn't really understand, did you, when I wrote that "most" of them are idle.

    851. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Olorion · · Score: 1
      And you manipulate the conversation by attempting to label anyone the "idle rich".

      You really don't understand what I wrote, do you? I said that "most" of the truly rich are idle, and showed why.

      Those who have amassed their fortunes have sacrficed more and commited more than you are probably capable.

      I respect those who made their own fortunes. That, however, describes a microscopic minority of the rich. The overwhelming majority of the wealthy are trust fund babies who inherited their money and do basically nothing with their lives.

      You are a useful idiot indeed -- useful to the rich, even as they sneer at you for being such a fool as to do their public relations for them while they are robbing you blind.

    852. Re:Tax planning and rich people by jandersen · · Score: 1

      I'm saying that portraying people who are financially successful as the root of our defecit problems is either dillusional or outright dishonest. I'm saying that focusing on that area of our economy is focusing on a pimple on the elephants butt.

      Are you by any means one of those pimples? You sure sound like you have more than your fair share of wealth that you don't want to give up. I have little sympathy with the "plight" of the wealthy when there are people in real, desperate need.

      The amount of waste in our goverment both through pet projects and inefficiency is unbelievable

      I agree. And as others have pointed out many times, one of the biggest areas of waste is health care. The reason American health care is so obscenely expensive, when other countries - like most of Europe - are able to provide excellent health care for far less, is smiple: in America health care is business, whereas in Europe it isn't (or certainly not to the same extent).

      What I have always found puzzling is that anyone can buy in to the argument that private companies would able to, or indeed willing to, provide the best for the least amount of money, when they have what in practice amounts to monopoly. It doesn't work that way in any other industry; when you have a monopoly, people get to pay through their noses for basic crap, and that is the situation you have in the US. And that is one of the reasons why the government can't keep the budget under control.

    853. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      $10 20 years ago doesn't buy the same amount of food that it buys now. Except for the face rape, it's better living to be in a prison than in the US educational system.

      You need to visit other countries to realize how bad the US has become. It's sad.

    854. Re:Tax planning and rich people by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      Oh right, because an economy that pushes everyone to seek a career based on expected income rather than "maximising their talents and interests" and completely ignoring "value contributed to society as a whole" is really working for the people.

      Nevermind that philosophers are among the most important people in our society - it's they who set the bars by which we will live in the future (and even they who determine what the scientific method actually IS so that science can progress), yet if that's what you wish to study and pursue you accept that you'll be spending your life in academia earning very little.
      Nevermind that writers who create stories are probably the most important single educational system in all of human civilization - yet most of the people with the passion and the talent to go there and try to contribute to that system (by studying literature) will struggle to make ends meet their whole lives - not because there isn't money, but because it's distribution is hugely unequal and not truly representative of quality.
      Sure not everybody can write a Lord of the Rings or a Stranger in a Strange land but to get the Tolkien's we have to have the people who will at best write a half-way decent spy thriller (and we need those written as well).
      Trouble is, for a million books that barely cover their costs (or don't even get printed because they are TOO good - remember "Gone with the wind" was turned down by 14 publishers !) - we end up paying billions to the women who wrote Twilight and Harry Potter instead...
      About the best thing we can say about either is that they may have somewhat increased the propensity of the current young generation to read at all.

      That's a systemic issue - and it's why historically most writers had some other way to pay the bills. Many of the best books were written by people who were technically journalists or teachers - and ironically it's one of the few fields where women had historically had better odds.
      A massive proportion of the books on our shelves were written by housewives - because it's much easier to bare the cost of the first "I have no contract yet" book when your spouse is paying the bills so you actually have time to write.

      I studied English literature myself (co-major with computer-science, hey I liked both) and I remember sitting through course orientation for hours hearing how it's structured to maximise our ability to earn in language related fields after university... until I piped up and asked : "So what if we want to be authors or poets ? Did we choose the wrong major ? Because I thought we were here to study the masters of those crafts and hone our skills by learning from how they did it !"

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    855. Re:Tax planning and rich people by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      >How does the super class of "government" gain powers that the individual does not have?

      Like the power to print money ? Make Laws ? Incarcerate Criminals ?

      Sorry - the super class government consists of nothing BUT powers the individual does not (and should not) have ! While there are arguments supporting your conclusion that are worthy of consideration (despite being generally false) YOUR argument is of the variety I like to call "fucking idiotic".

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    856. Re:Tax planning and rich people by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      The usual argument here is that they are performing a more useful function by putting that money in new ventures than merely collecting interest on longer-term corporate and muni bonds. There's a different one that I think is more explanatory: rich people will control any form of government, because they have the most to lose. You can have the rich run government directly, as in aristocracy/monarchy. Or you can accept that anyone who goes into government will end up rich, as in the US today. Someone with their hands on the levers of power can and will use their power and knowledge in ways that work to their own benefit, and not all such actions are illegal. Given that, the country as a whole is better off if we figure out how to make their money do good things for the rest of us. Low capital gains taxes are merely one such method.

    857. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      progressive policies tend to concentrate wealth in the hands of a few

      Citation, please. This is claptrap that I see repeated very often by simpleminded folk, but I've yet to see academically (or even logically!) rigorous explanation for this theory.

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    858. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Red+Flayer · · Score: 2

      I said wealth, not income. Don't try to confuse the terms.

      As for citations, Here you go. And that's through 2004. Data through 2008 shows that the wealthiest 10% own an astonishing 84% of the wealth in the US. Add in the next decile, and they own well over 90% of the wealth in the US.

      And they're accumulating more of the nation's wealth as we speak.

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    859. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      You're missing my point. If they're undergoing wasteful transport, that's not really 'turning the gears of the economy'. It's a wasted cost.

      As for being parked when they're not working... that's not true at all. Plenty of trucks are empty on the road, either dong return trips or going to pick up a different load.

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    860. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Really? Wow, who would have thought that a party doesn't want to commit political suicide by saying they're against something everyone in his sane mind is for?

      I doubt anyone would say that he's against education. It's a no-brainer. But saying "we don't want to throw money at it" while not offering a counteroffer is basically taking a position against education. We won't throw money blindly at it, but we also have no alternative strategy. What's the result?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    861. Re:Tax planning and rich people by psihodelia · · Score: 0

      In Germany and Finland we pay a capital gains tax equal 25% and 30% respectively. Where a personal income tax in Europe is usually about 30% (a corporate one is about 25%).

    862. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      If he voluntarily pays more, he will suffer unduly when his competitors do not.

      If he can afford to give 30+ billion dollars to charity without suffering unduly to his competitors, surely he can afford to give an additional billion or two to the government without suffering unduly. HIs publicly stated logic for giving the large sum to charity was to encourage other billionaires to give large sums to charity, wouldn't the same logic apply to taxes (publicly overpay his taxes in order to encourage other wealthy individuals to do the same).

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    863. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Well, let's see. How about we look at the U.S.? The U.S. has steadily implemented more and more progressive policies starting in the early 20th century, over that same time period, progressives have been constantly harping about the increasing concentration of wealth in the hands of the few.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    864. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      It was from an analysis of the data. I wanted to link to the actual source, the same figure are there, just not summarized the same.

      The link did point this out:

      Good Jobs Lost During the Recession Are Being Replaced By Low-Wage Jobs The National Employment Law Project released a report that shows that while the recession’s job losses were concentrated in higher-wage industries (especially construction, non-durable manufacturing, finance/insurance, and information), the limited job gains since have come disproportionately in the low-wage industries (temporary jobs, retail, administrative support, and the service sector).

      Which is the point I was making - the low-wage jobs are coming back (there are actually new jobs to be had), but the good-paying middle class jobs are not, and are probably gone forever. This is not only bad for the people that had those jobs and now can't find work, but also for low-wage earners who aspire to get better jobs. Training and education won't help, because the jobs just aren't there.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    865. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      I was responding to Doc Ruby, sorry.

      The "proof" thing was he and s73v3r claiming that there were countries that "proved me wrong", but didn't really explain what they meant.

      Yes, there are countries with proportionally larger public sectors, probably none other than China with one actually as large. But with the vast amount of power the US Federal government currently has, the massive intervention in foreign countries, the massive domestic police state (the DHS is now the largest organization in the US outside the Defense Department), and rampant economic tyranny, when I think of it getting larger, I have a hard time of finding anything positive about it.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    866. Re:Tax planning and rich people by RingDev · · Score: 1

      You are correct, it was a bad guess on my part and I should have continued investigating before posting it.

      Although as I'm reading more reports on the proposal, I think it's becoming less of an issue, as that $450B also appears include the rollback of the unearned income tax breaks that Bush put into play. If that is true, those tax changes likely have far more impact on the $450B than the changes to the income tax brackets.

      To look at it another way though, the top 1% controls roughly 35% of the wealth in the country. Which could be correlated to about $5T of the GDP. So to get $448B out of them would require an effective tax hike of about 9%. Seeing as how over the last 10 years they've been enjoying a 4% income tax cut and a 15% unearned income tax cut, that doesn't seem out of line at all.

      -Rick

      --
      "Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
    867. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Reservoir+Penguin · · Score: 1

      Oh this brings back some memories. In Soviet Union "Unearned Income" was a criminal offense, I swear Slashdot has the largest population of wacko socialist and Communist sympathizers outside of North Korea.

      --
      US-UK-Israel: The real Axis of Evil
    868. Re:Tax planning and rich people by smellotron · · Score: 1

      If he can afford to give 30+ billion dollars to charity without suffering unduly to his competitors, surely he can afford to give an additional billion or two to the government without suffering unduly.

      You do have a point there. I did some brief searching to see what the Internet consensus on the topic (voluntary overpayment of US federal taxes), and it appears that everybody simply wants to avoid taxes. Seriously, I've never seen such bizarro search results. Maybe it's simply that charity (the word) is associated with more positive feelings than voluntary tax payment. Maybe it's that he feels that a charity (in which he probably has more influence) is money better spent to his ends than tax dollars.

    869. Re:Tax planning and rich people by TheLink · · Score: 1

      Yeah, look at all those people replying to my post without even reading anything :).

      I linked to that exact url, and the idiots replying with crap get modded up.

      --
    870. Re:Tax planning and rich people by jwilso91 · · Score: 1

      Warren Buffet wants wealthy people (like himself) to pay at least the same percentage of their income as the middle class do in taxes. I find it difficult to argue with that logic.

      If he's concerned about the state of the U.S. Government's finances (and what fine upstanding pillar of the community would not be?) and can afford extra taxes, he need not wait for Congress to get around to levying them. He can most certainly write a check and send it to the Bureau of the Public Debt (www.treasurydirect.gov, hear they'll be taking Paypal soon!) Impress us by handing it over to your local congresslut during a press conference on national TV, with all the zeroes visible to everyone.

      Or perhaps he's only interested in someone else paying extra.

      Kick in some of your pocket change, Buffet, or shut up.

    871. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      And that is my point, there are a lot of rich guys calling for rich guys to be taxed more, yet there is no evidence that any of them put thier money where their mouth is.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    872. Re:Tax planning and rich people by spiffmastercow · · Score: 1

      The issue at hand is that Buffett makes most of his money in investments, and is thus taxed via capital gains taxes, which top out at 15%. Even with no deductions or tax tricks, he pays a lower percentage than his secretary. Granted, this is not exactly what Obama is talking up right now, but it IS what Buffett was talking about.

    873. Re:Tax planning and rich people by phorm · · Score: 1

      In some cases. But unless it's a well cared-for "classic", then any particular vehicle tends to depreciated with age, rather than appreciate.
      Sure, new cars may cost most, but there tends to be a fairly noticeable difference in terms of features and design over the decades. Very few people are going to want a car that's 30 years old, but a 30-year-old house has still gone up considerable in price (a good portion of that being attributable to land-value, etc).

    874. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The U.S. has steadily implemented more and more progressive policies starting in the early 20th century, over that same time period, progressives have been constantly harping about the increasing concentration of wealth in the hands of the few.

      A boy of nine was watching the news. He saw that one of the houses in the neighborhood was on fire. He noticed a couple of firemen on the scene. A few weeks later he was watching the news and saw that there was a major inferno. Whole city blocks were burning. The boy saw that there were dozens of firefighters combating the flames. The boy says to his dad, "They should put the firemen in jail. The more firemen there are, the bigger the fire!" The boy's father says to the boy, "Yes, but why should they go to jail?" The boy say's, "There is no firemen here and there is no fire. There are lots of firemen there and a big fire. They must be causing the fire!"

      The point of the story is that correlation does not imply causation.

    875. Re:Tax planning and rich people by captjc · · Score: 1

      The primary purpose of humans (and life in general) is reproduction and self-perpetuation. Would it not be logical that a society (being a collection of humans with certain shared beliefs) would have the same primary goal of self-preservation?

      --
      Slow Down Cowboy! It's been 1 hour, 47 minutes since you last successfully posted a comment
    876. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Jhon · · Score: 1

      "Oh right, because an economy that pushes everyone to seek a career based on expected income rather than "maximising their talents and interests" and completely ignoring "value contributed to society as a whole" is really working for the people."

      I would argue that if people do plan their careers based on how they would like to live vs. what they like to do it WOULD work for people. Instead you end up with people with degrees in English or Art History and gobs of student loan debt they cannot repay. Is THAT really working for people?

      "Nevermind that philosophers are among the most important people in our society - it's they who set the bars by which we will live in the future (and even they who determine what the scientific method actually IS so that science can progress), yet if that's what you wish to study and pursue you accept that you'll be spending your life in academia earning very little."

      How many philosophers does a society need? Do we pay for ANYONE who wants to study philosophy? If so, why? When a PhD in Phil finishes his scholastic career and is $150k in debt, how can they hope to repay that? Is it fair to ask society to pay when there are already so many that they cannot find employment in their field at a rate which can repay their loans?

      For me, Philosophy and History (history in particular) are deep rooted interests of mine. I made a choice to pursue a major that would afford me a reasonable level of comfort to live and raise a family and keep me interested. It has. I also have pursued my interest in History on my own time and dime. I've consulted for more than a few doctoral candidates on where they can find source material for their research -- at no charge (I'm very well versed on Colonial American History and 15th-17th European history). This is my "passion". And I didn't ask ANYONE to pay my way. BTW, I hold no degree in History.

      I make my money as a DBA/Data Analyst -- and I've been cited as a source for a few medical research papers. It's a stimulating job that cost me little to pursue scholastically and has paid far better than a career in Philosophy or History would have.

      "and it's why historically most writers had some other way to pay the bills. Many of the best books were written by people who were technically journalists or teachers - and ironically it's one of the few fields where women had historically had better odds."

      Great! Why change a system that appears to have worked in the past? Having them focus scholastically on something that wont allow them to "pay the bills" doesn't appear to be working, does it?

      An interesting side-thought came as I was writing this... If society managed to flip the bill for anyone who wanted to be an artist/writer, would we even NOTICE something great through the the "noise" of the flood of mediocre and bad? If Van Gogh didn't suffer, would he have painted? And even if he had, would he have ever been noticed? I'm not attempting to make any argument here other than just thinking out loud (or in type).

    877. Re:Tax planning and rich people by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

      Fuck you. And get an education.

    878. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      I asked for a citation. You give me falsehoods with neither a citation nor a logical argument.

      You're useless.

      Progressive tax rates, and progressive policies, have steadily reduced wealth concentration. Erosion of progressive policies has led to increase wealth disparity.

      Again, I ask for any kind of academically or logically rigorous supporting for your ridiculous assertion.

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    879. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Jhon · · Score: 1

      Amazing. You've no idea about supply side economics and the laffer curve -- or that tax avoidance *IS* one of the mechanisms that reduce tax revenue as tax rates go up. Yet you hurl insults at others and refuse to acknowledge your mistake.

      You're wife must love you... if you're not divorced yet, that is.

    880. Re:Tax planning and rich people by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      If you have profits of a million dollars per year, calling your business "small" is a bit disingenuous. Hell, most businesspeople I know don't even have revenues that big, let alone profits.

    881. Re:Tax planning and rich people by tbannist · · Score: 1

      2) The workers are paid little more than slave wages, and China should be brough before the UN for crimes against their citizens.

      That's not generally true. In China the workers are actually paid a comparatively handsome wage. China is building huge cities filled with people who are becoming affluent enough to buy millions of cars. As a rule, slaves don't own cars.

      3) "China's government directly owns industries, including farms and factories".... And because of it they can tell every citizen to shut up and take it. Who else are they going to work for or get a wage from?

      The could do that, but generally they don't. The Chinese Communist Party would like to remain in power, telling their citizens to shut up and take it works about as well as telling them to "eat cake" if there's no bread. The Party is deeply worried about their future because they know what's keeping them in power right now is wealth creation. When that ends, China will slip from their grasp.

      4) "Coporate Anarchy" is a contradiction. Capatilism and corporations rely on stability and predictability. Anarchy is the anthesis of stability. Ackward.....

      That would be an oxymoron like military intelligence, yet both still exist. Specifically, the op called you a corporate anarchist, in that he believes that you desire a world with no laws except for those enforced by corporations. More or less, the point was that you'd prefer a world resembling Japanese Zaibatsu .

      5) There's nothing that a Democrat wont say about the benefits of a communist or socialist system while trying desperately not to use either title, because any rational person can show how both systems have historically led to nothing but mass death and oppression.

      Actually, it tends to be the dictatorships that lead to mass death and oppression. The communist revolutions are just the tools used to put the dictators in power, exactly like Libertarians wish to put themselves in power in the name of freedom.

      6) I'm not a Republican; Registered Independent.

      You must be one of those "independents" the Tea Party people are always talking about. You hold a wide assortment of typically Republican views that have no relationship to reality, for all intents and purposes you are a Republican, whether or not you've registered with them.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    882. Re:Tax planning and rich people by 2short · · Score: 1

      "Yes, there are countries with proportionally larger public sectors, probably none other than China with one actually as large."

      None other than China? Canada, Austrailia, Israel, Brazil, and pretty much the entirety of Europe, just to name the ones that seem like obviously better comparisons to the US than North Korea and China. If you need someone to lay out what they "prove": Many of these countries are not considered hellish distopias, so your apparent contention that a large public sector is a terrible thing does not appear to fit the evidence.

      The list of countries with smaller public sectors than the US includes mostly third world countries as well as (irony alert): China. To be fair, I would have guessed China's public sector was bigger than ours too. On the other hand, I didn't guess; I looked it up.

      "the DHS is now the largest organization in the US outside the Defense Department"

      The Defense department is the largest employer in the US, but second is Walmart and third is McDonalds. I've only memorized the top three, and DHS is no doubt big. So I might try to figure out what measure of "largest" you were using, if I had any suspicion you weren't just making stuff up to fit you conclusion like every other "fact" you've thrown out.

    883. Re:Tax planning and rich people by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Fight back against the rich getting off paying HALF the percentage of taxed income I do, that's what.

      Governance isn't cheap, but you can't have society without government.

    884. Re:Tax planning and rich people by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      First, forget about the state and local and excise taxes -- they're an offtopic red herring. The subject is Federal tax. And warren Buffet pays half the percentage I do. I have no idea what your income is, but if you're affected by the Obama legislation, you're earning over a million bucks a year and REALLY should quit whining!

      Do you realize how stupidly insensitive a millionaire bitching about taxes and food stamps and medicare sounds? You should be ashamed of yourselves.

      And if you don't earn over a million per year and you're bitching about this, you have really poor math skills.

    885. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Jhon · · Score: 1

      None of these are income taxes. None of these are being discussed as part of the "raise taxes" talks -- it's all INCOME tax.

      Lets look at your three examples:

      Federal Fuel Tax: It's around 18 cents/gal IIRC (more for diesel). It's also about ready to expire which would be a boon for the economy. Raise that rate higher than it is, and EVERYTHING costs more. It hurts the economy and fails to address the problems I described. It also wasn't meant to go to the general fund, but the Highway Trust Fund -- in other words, it's purpose is to offset the cost of maintaining infrastructure, not Defense, The Dept of Education, NASA, HUD, etc.

      FUSC tax: Similarly, this tax pays for a narrow purpose.

      SSI/Medicare: Again, narrow purpose None of this funds Defense, roads, DoE, HUD, etc etc etc.

      People who don't pay income tax are unaffected by a raise in income tax. None of these really address the out of control spending that both parties are responsible for that got us to a 14 trillion dollar deficit. They have no reason NOT to ask for more programs, more spending, more whatever is it doesn't hit them in the wallet at all.

      "Suppose there was a nominal 1 cent federal tax that all Americans of voting age had to pay, would that address your concern?"

      No. 1%, yes. And tie it to the highest income rate -- even at a 3:1 or 4:1 ratio. So that if the highest rate is 35%, the lowest mandatory rate is 1%. If income taxes increase on the "rich" from 35% to 55%, then the "poor" will increase from 1% to 4%-5%. At $20k income, someone would pay a minimum of $200 per year (less than $17/mo) income tax. They'll be a lot more likely to responsibly spend "group" money (by way of their voting for representatives) if it means their taxes will rise to pay for "more stuff". This is why I believe they need to be invested in the system.

    886. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      You didnt show why at all. You made a statement and expected me to accept it as fact. I know you wish that I'd just take what you say as gospel, but the facts say otherwise.

      Unfortunately for your arguments the fact checks are coming in quickly today on the "Buffett Rule". Seems that the arguments that the rich are being taxed less than the low or middle class is complete horseshit. This marks one of the very few times in the last decade that the reporting groups on the left and the right are in agreement, with this data being discussed on a myriad of programs last night.

      http://money.cnn.com/2011/09/20/news/economy/buffett_rule_milllonaires/index.htm?iid=RNM
      http://news.yahoo.com/fact-check-rich-taxed-less-secretaries-070642868.html


      And for fun I ran through the first 100 or so people on the Fortune 500 list. Almost all were self-made. More holes in your arguments...

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    887. Re:Tax planning and rich people by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      It's not "not contributing", its not contributing their fair share. Do you really think Buffett's secretary should pay the same dollar amount as Buffett? That's stupid.

      If I pay 40% of my salary and you pay 20% of yours, and you earn twice what I do, you're paying the same dollar amount. That's fair? You people amaze me.

      If the top 5% do in fact pay 40% of revenues and they're taxed at half what normal people are, doubling their taxes would go a LONG way to easing the defect.

    888. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      And only in America can someone twist "I want to keep my family home which I inherited, or sell it and keep the majority of the money instead of lose it all because of overburdensome taxes" into "screw everyone else, I want to giggle as the country burns as a result of my greed".

      Is your position so shallow that you have to be that dishonest to argue it?

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    889. Re:Tax planning and rich people by tbannist · · Score: 1

      Let's be honest here, Government is a collection of services the primary goal of which is to secure a safe and stable society in which people can generate wealth. The rich have forgotten that they owe practically all of their wealth to government programs to create a stable and prosperous society. It's not a matter of keeping what you earned or not, it's a matter of paying for the programs that keep the companies they invest in running safely and securely. An environment they have clearly been exploiting for all it's worth. All you need to do is look at the wealth distribution to determine that wealthy are not, in fact, paying their share of the bill.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    890. Re:Tax planning and rich people by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      "Risk?" An investor risks nothing but money. Take two middle class guys earning $75k/yr. One is a roofer, one gambles the stock market. The roofer, working off the sweat of his brow and the skill of his trade is risking his very LIFE. Risk? Investors know nothing of risk, and there's no valid reason he should pay less in taxes.

    891. Re:Tax planning and rich people by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      If Buffet can choose to "donate whatever he wants" than why am I not allowed that privilege? Either raise his taxes or lower mine. Seeing as how we have a huge deficit, I say raise his and stop this stupid "well he can choose to pay" nonsense.

      This is slashdot, we're a bit smarter than the tards at Yahoo's messageboards and you're not going to fool us with your false logic, red herrings, and straw men.

    892. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, I didn't guess; I looked it up.

      Wikipedia?

      Probably an okay starting point, if anything there is inaccurate, you can point it out (and consider updating the articles, please).

      Total Government spending in the US, sited for the 2010 fiscal year, was $5,798.8 Billion, or 39.97% of GDP.

      I couldn't find an adjusted $/Yuan figure for Chiner, but it's listed as 20.8% of GDP. I really don't think that's an accurate depiction of the "public sector" for China, though, since so much of its industry is state-owned and state-run. It's difficult to find anything specific, but it looks like state-owned enterprises still account for just under 50% of the GDP. So "government spending", in this case, is not really a good comparison for "size of the public sector." Of course, the US government owns shares of Chrysler and GM (AFAIK), and Fannie and Freddie are lien holders of quite a bit of real estate. There are also a lot of municipal and state controlled enterprises such as airports, utilities, and others. It's all a difficult comparison to make.

      Sweden and France probably provide some good lessons. Both have larger public sectors and both have struggled with social entitlements that grew too costly to support. They took radically different approaches to deal with the issues. France instituted austerity measures, and Sweden introduce industry deregulation to attract business and raised personal income taxes significantly to maintain the social safety net programs.

      These are the types of things US policy makers need to be looking at, instead of lying about "cuts" (slower growth) and acting like they can continue to run deficits in perpetuity, or that they can levy heavy taxes on businesses without hurting consumers.

      So I might try to figure out what measure of "largest" you were using

      Should have said "government organization".

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    893. Re:Tax planning and rich people by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      So why not compare apples to apples next time and not apples to oranges.

      Because the apples are taxed at half the rate of the oranges and they're both fruit. Capital gains ARE income and should be taxed as such.

    894. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Toonol · · Score: 1

      No. If you base class on money, then class has no meaning other than as a synonym. For the concept 'class' to have any validity, there needs to be something else involved in the definition. Some societies have laws or hereditary privileges based on class, for instance. America does not have those. We are not class-based.

      Regardless of whether I make more or less money than you, I am not in a different class than you. In America, the poorest inner city kid, Bill Gates, and ME are all in the same class: Citizen.

    895. Re:Tax planning and rich people by sycodon · · Score: 1

      Buffet most likely pays more in taxes than his secretary makes in a year even if he is paying the Capital Gains rate of 15%. After all he is one of the richest men in the world.

      Second, there is no way that anyone's salary is twice your salary and paying half your rate.

      Third, well, I'll let the AP say it.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    896. Re:Tax planning and rich people by lsatenstein · · Score: 1

      Come to Canada and live freer and better. Bring some skills

      Canada is looking for skilled Americans.

      --
      Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
    897. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I said wealth, not income. Don't try to confuse the terms.

      You're the one who's attempted to confuse the issue by bringing up wealth when we're talking about income tax.

      You obviously know that they are not the same thing, but you can't seem to differentiate between the two when you're talking about income tax. And you claim to think that's "fair". Are you being intentionally dishonest?

    898. Re:Tax planning and rich people by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      Horseshit. You brought up North Korea because you wanted to make some half-assed point. Had you actually been thinking, you'd have brought up one of the other first world nations that the US is actually comparable to that does have a large public sector.

    899. Re:Tax planning and rich people by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      Yes, there is a lot of proof that you're wrong. For one, your choice of a totally non-comparable country in your comparison, which makes it completely invalid.

    900. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      Come to Canada and live freer and better. Bring some skills

      Canada is looking for skilled Americans.

      Tempting - how's the craft beer? Can I still make my own?

      Downside is the cold. I was raised in the Louisiana Bayou - not sure I could handle the winters there...

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    901. Re:Tax planning and rich people by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      No, it's not. Although I don't see you bringing anything to the contrary. Praytell, what did happen to those that didn't have any family, and lost their retirement savings?

    902. Re:Tax planning and rich people by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      So everything is just black and white? No middle ground?

    903. Re:Tax planning and rich people by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      And yet, the Tea Party is fighting to cut funding for education, and is fighting to teach creationism in schools. How is that not anti-education again?

    904. Re:Tax planning and rich people by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      If that's how you decide to paraphrase anything that I've said, you're either not reading my posts or you're completely missing the point. Nothing I've said even approaches this twisted viewpoint you claim I've espoused.

      That is exactly what your viewpoint is showing. You are pushing for this "austerity" bullshit which is balanced on the backs of the poor, and stating that the rich owe absolutely nothing to society, despite the fact that it is our society that allowed them to flourish.

    905. Re:Tax planning and rich people by lsatenstein · · Score: 1

      Beer You can make your own, or drink Canadian or BUD, I look Coors light.
      We also have sleemans and others.

      As for cold, first year is perhaps an adjustment, thereafter you take it in stride. You can go out in all but the rainy weather. That is, snow is ok to go out and to walk in if dressed warmly. Rain will soak you.

      We are metric, which will take you a day to adjust to,

      I believe that today we have more freedom than you Americans, no guns, except for police and bad guys, and low crime rate.
      And we have universal medicare. It works, we have medical triage in that booboos are not urgent, but fever, cancer and heart, etc, are top priority. We have top universities at non-bankrupt fees (for locals), or if you get landed immigrant status, McGill, Univ of Tor, UBC, and other top universities are under 3k per semester.

      --
      Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
    906. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I've been defending the middle class from further erosion by misguided policy

      You have been arguing against a tax increase for people who making a MILLION dollars a year in income (and as you yourself admitted, has nothing to do with any capital gains these people might have)

      So you're saying people who make a MILLION dollars a year in income are middle class?

    907. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      If that's how you decide to paraphrase anything that I've said, you're either not reading my posts or you're completely missing the point. Nothing I've said even approaches this twisted viewpoint you claim I've espoused.

      That is exactly what your viewpoint is showing. You are pushing for this "austerity" bullshit which is balanced on the backs of the poor, and stating that the rich owe absolutely nothing to society, despite the fact that it is our society that allowed them to flourish.

      Meh - I hear this meme all over the place from the Left. Of course, by "society" you mean "government", and by "absolutely nothing" you mean "nothing more than the 40% of tax revenue on the 20% of the earnings that the top 1% already contribute."

      Fine, I'll grant you all the tired hyperbole you want to spout, and acknowledge that these figures do not include state and local taxes, payroll taxes, consumption taxes, or any of the other taxes people pay without consideration of their income.

      At least stop putting words into my mouth, it is disingenuous and unnecessary based on anything I said, even the North Korea crack. I have no interest in austerity, only in fiscal responsibility, and do not believe that granting a greater share of American's resources will suddenly prompt demonstrably-irresponsible-for-decades hegemony in Washington any new-found sense of fiscal restraint. There are plenty of ways to get back to firm financial standing without cutting anything from the most vulnerable in the country, but there are very few than I see even suggesting the measures necessary, and even less that I trust to follow through.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    908. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      While I've been defending the middle class from further erosion by misguided policy

      You have been arguing against a tax increase for people who making a MILLION dollars a year in income (and as you yourself admitted, has nothing to do with any capital gains these people might have)

      So you're saying people who make a MILLION dollars a year in income are middle class?

      No, not really. The proposals include a significant hike on anyone making over $200,000 a year, which is decidedly middle class (upper middle class, sure, but still middle class) - that's where most of the revenue is coming from. The vast majority of those folks are working for what they earn, usually working quite a lot.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    909. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      Would there be people that worked 15 hours a day, 7 days a week, and were perfectly happy recieving exactly the same rewards as those who work 8 hours a day, 5 days a week? Probably, but they'd be in the vast minority. There'd be a hell of a lot more people who were lazy, and did as little as possible in as few hours as possible because their reward remained a constant regardless.

      You can wish for people to want to do the right thing, but you assume that people actually care. There are millions who will take everything and provide nothing if given any oppurtunity to.

      And yes, I fully anticipate the "Republicans are the ones that want to take and give nothing in taxes" remarks. It's a lie, and anyone being honest accepts that.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    910. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      anyone making over $200,000 a year, which is decidedly middle class (upper middle class, sure, but still middle class)

      [Citation needed]

    911. Re:Tax planning and rich people by 2short · · Score: 1

      Wikipedia? Probably an okay starting point..."

      Which is why I checked the citation: A joint report by The Heritage Foundation and The Wall Street Journal. Are you going to suggest they are socialist shills pushing a big government agenda by falsifying easily checked data?

      " 'So I might try to figure out what measure of "largest" you were using'
      Should have said "government organization"."

        By employment, the second largest government organization is the Postal Service. Do you ever look things up? I'm not sure how this is relevant in any case. The public sector in this country employs vastly more schoolteachers than DHS goons, the fact that one is organized as a single group and the other split between myriad districts doesn't strike me as supporting any particular point you were making.

      I could point out that the lesson of Europe is that austerity makes things worse, or argue with your premise that social entitlements were their problem, but frankly, you're not making it worth my while. You'll just say you meant something different and throw out more made up, easily disprovable stuff to support your new tangent.

    912. Re:Tax planning and rich people by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Income is income, whether it's salary or dividends, and should be taxed the same. Actually, seeing what happened when Reagan lowered the capital gains tax, they should be taxed at a higher rate. There was a flurry of corporate takeovers, attempted takeovers, layoffs and hours cut. It was a disaster for working people.

      Why should a roofer, risking his life and health in the boiling sun for $75k/yr pay twice the tax on his income as some guy "earning" the same amount gambling on the stock market in air conditioned comfort?

    913. Re:Tax planning and rich people by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Indeed, and often the government will provide something 'for everyone', but in reality it's only some providing a bedrock that only corporations (Owned by the rich) can build on.

      Like air travel, for example. How much the government spend on that? The entire FAA, licensing pilots, matching funds for airports, all of that.

      Now...who owns airplanes? Rich individuals, corporations owned by rich individuals, and commercial airlines owned by rich individuals, who are so graciously willing to let buy seats on them.

      The entire FAA is operated in order to control objects that cost millions of dollars.

      Likewise, there's a section of the FBI dedicated to bank robberies. And one for art crimes.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    914. Re:Tax planning and rich people by 2short · · Score: 1

      "Which is the point I was making - the low-wage jobs are coming back (there are actually new jobs to be had)"

      That's a different point, also wrong. We have added low-wage jobs, but generally not as fast as we have added workers seeking them. Unemployment remains high, and highest among low-skilled workers. Number of applicants per job opening is also highest at the low end. This recession has been and is hardest on the less skilled. The total number of jobs at the very lowest end may have gone up more than at the higher ends relative to the previous number of jobs, but if the number of looking workers is still higher, "There are actually new jobs to be had" is misleading at best. If you are looking for a job, you're more likely to get one if you are a higher skilled worker.

        If that is the point you were making, you said the exact opposite. Maybe you misspoke when you said "Low-wage and just above (service and labor jobs) are plentiful", but in that case you probably shouldn't keep arguing with people who point out you are wrong. And when your misstatement results in something so obviously ridiculous, you probably shouldn't get offended when people question your intelligence.

    915. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To be fair, she pays very little, if any depending on family. He pays hundreds of thousands, if not millions in taxes. As an individual, he contributes significantly more. If we were all secretaries, we wouldn't have roads or defense. What your asking is for him to pay more. Fine. By the way, show me a tax bracket where someone making 50k is taxed at 36%. That bracket is for folks with salary in excess of 300k. Buffet lied and a lot of folks bought it. Run the numbers for her income, he pays more percentage wise...

    916. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      Are you just being contrary to be contrary? I never said there was anything wrong with the Wikipedia stuff - I used it myself.

      Yea, I was wrong about the DHS. It's the "third largest cabinet department" behind DOD and Veteran's Affairs. Serves me right for repeating something without checking it out, I guess. Still, it's not really fair to compare them to the entire public school system - you would have to include all the local and state police, sheriffs departments, prisons, rangers, etc. And considering the US has the world's largest prison population and really lousy results from the public schools (compared to other first world countries), I can only guess that the police-state size is likely bigger and better funded.

      Why would you assume I'm advocating austerity, or that social entitlements are Europe's biggest problem (although it is among the issues - not sure how you can deny that)? In fact, several places - Sweden and France come to mind - have already dealt with that and took entirely different approaches to find a solution.

      The US, I think, is in a really bad position right now, and there doesn't seem to be much hope that the politicians in Washington are willing to do the right thing. Very few even talk about real solutions. And, no, I don't think "austerity" is one of them, and neither is massive tax hikes on the 5%'ers.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    917. Re:Tax planning and rich people by PaladinAlpha · · Score: 1

      Hi! I share a habitat and a life with a PhD-seeking Economist who claims exactly that, because it's simple math.

      Here, look at it like this. At a tax rate of 0%, the government makes no money. Obvious, right? As you increase taxes, the government makes more money. Also obvious. Here's the part that requires thought: at a 100% tax rate, the government makes no money because no one has any incentive to work. Seriously -- are you going to do your job for free, while all the money goes to the government? Of course not.

      So, since we know it starts at zero, rises from there, and eventually ends at zero, that means that there is absolutely a point at which it turns downward. QED, etc.

    918. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      Okay, I get your point. And, yes, with more unemployed there are more people in the low-income / poverty level. Plus people that started the recession at low income and lost their job obviously had a hard time, since they are much less likely to have any saving or support system.

      If you are looking for a job, you're more likely to get one if you are a higher skilled worker.

      No, that is not true at all. If you have at least a bachelor's degree and some experience, then it's true, otherwise it's false. If you don't like that source, check out the report from the Center for American Progress on the "Polarization of the Job Market". Or this article from HuffPo

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    919. Re:Tax planning and rich people by euroq · · Score: 1

      "You did implicitly, when you said It appears that somewhere along the line something flipped to where we have "Representation without taxation" for a hell of a chunk of our population. "

      No I didn't. You are reading in to my statement information that isn't there. They are getting FEDERAL representation without FEDERAL taxation. The article is about FEDERAL taxes...

      Uh yeah, I understand you. That's what I read, and the second sentence was addressing exactly your response. The income tax in the United States was only introduced in the 20th century. So, before there was an income tax there was federal representation - that didn't change with the introduction of the federal income tax.

      "Anyways, the argument that you are making is that it isn't fair for the lower class to receive more money than they pay from the federal government"

      No, I'm arguing that they either pay nothing or get more back than they pay. It translates as they have no "stake" in the game such that they can say "give me more" without it impacting their federal tax burden.

      Yes, that's exactly what I just said. I don't know of any society in the world where you can make it perfectly even - everyone gets exactly what they paid for. If you needed the police 3 times this year, but someone else didn't - both of you could have theoretically paid the same amount of taxes, but you got more service than the other for the same amount of money. If this is such a problem, I don't know of a solution that doesn't involve anarchy (no government at all). Even given a theoretical perfect free market solution, such as health insurance, you still won't get exactly what you paid for - it's insurance for in case something goes wrong, and if it does, the other people paying money into the pool end up paying for the few.

      To your point, you are saying that they didn't pay anything, which is especially dubious in your mind... but I argue that it is impossible for the poor to pay for society. If poor paid for society, you'd have a 3rd world country. If you expect the society that Americans enjoy, you need middle class and rich people to pay for it. The poor simply don't have anything (monetarily) to offer, at least not of any worthwhile substance.

      --
      Just because the U.S. is a republic does not mean it is not a democracy. Democracy/republic are not mutually exclusive.
    920. Re:Tax planning and rich people by euroq · · Score: 1

      1%, yes. And tie it to the highest income rate -- even at a 3:1 or 4:1 ratio. So that if the highest rate is 35%, the lowest mandatory rate is 1%. If income taxes increase on the "rich" from 35% to 55%, then the "poor" will increase from 1% to 4%-5%. At $20k income, someone would pay a minimum of $200 per year (less than $17/mo) income tax. They'll be a lot more likely to responsibly spend "group" money (by way of their voting for representatives) if it means their taxes will rise to pay for "more stuff". This is why I believe they need to be invested in the system.

      This is not a bad idea. In order for it to work, the tax code has to be simplified - there are thousands of pages of "loopholes" as they're commonly called, otherwise the increases will simply be offset in the higher income brackets by loopholes. The proposal by the administration seeks to close some of these loopholes - how and how much, I do not know, but I know it's a start.

      --
      Just because the U.S. is a republic does not mean it is not a democracy. Democracy/republic are not mutually exclusive.
    921. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Jhon · · Score: 1

      "but I argue that it is impossible for the poor to pay for society."

      Not asking for them to pay for society -- asking for them to pay a nominal amount. 1%. which is tied to the highest tax rate such that if they raise the tax rate at the highest level, it raises all levels, but at a smaller ratio -- say 3:1 or 4:1. So, if the highest rate is 35% and you want to raise that to 55%, the lowest rate jumps up 3% or so...

      There needs to be an incentive to have the entire electorate WATCH what our representatives spend. Right now, with nearly 50% paying no federal income tax, there is no incentive.

    922. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Respond to what was said, not to what you wish was said.

    923. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Jhon · · Score: 1

      While I don't necessarily agree that closing the loopholes is necessary, it certainly should be part of the national conversation.

      And if we allow loopholes, only allow deductions that would take the tax filer down to the lowest manditory rate (not get MORE money back than they actually paid in taxes, certainly, and to need to PAY the minimum 1% (or whatever that rate is)).

    924. Re:Tax planning and rich people by 2short · · Score: 1

      "Yea, I was wrong about the DHS. It's the "third largest cabinet department" behind DOD and Veteran's Affairs."

      You were wrong twice in a row about a fact whose relevance I can't imagine.

      I'm not being contrary to be contrary, I'm being contrary because there is no point discussing your conclusions because I can't even figure out what they are, but I assume they proceed from your premises, which all appear to be wrong.

      "Why would you assume I'm advocating austerity,"
      You keep making ridiculous suggestions about a large public sector meaning China or North Korea. I assumed the use of such disingenuous arguments was motivated by a belief that a large public sector was bad. Do you favor a smaller public sector but oppose austerity because you fail to understand they are the same thing?

      "Still, it's not really fair to compare them to the entire public school system - you would have to include all the local and state police, sheriffs departments, prisons, rangers, etc. And considering the US has the world's largest prison population and really lousy results from the public schools (compared to other first world countries), I can only guess that the police-state size is likely bigger and better funded."

      No! You can do more than guess! You can look it up! I myself had no idea, but based on experience guessed that your guess would be wildly wrong. But I didn't stop there, I did a whole 20 seconds of googling, and: there are roughly 700,000 law enforcement personnel in the US and 7 million teachers. Will this data cause you to reconsider your conclusion that the US is a distopian police state? I'm not holding my breath.

    925. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      Do you favor a smaller public sector but oppose austerity because you fail to understand they are the same thing?

      Well, they are not. They certainly have a relationship, but no, they are not the same thing.

      there are roughly 700,000 law enforcement personnel in the US and 7 million teachers.

      Citation needed.

      According to the the FBI, it's closer to a million (you weren't counting the administrative staff). That also doesn't include prison guards (public and private), the 210,000 DHS employees, or the coast guard (they are considered military, but do plenty of law enforcement duties, and much of it directed at US citizens. Not sure if these numbers include all sheriffs (in many jurisdictions, they primarily act as jailers), but it certainly doesn't include the various jurisdictional courts and those employees.

      According to this source, the total number of public school teachers (which we were discussing (or at least you brought up)) is 3,219,458. Less than half the figure you quoted.

      Will this data cause you to reconsider your conclusion that the US is a distopian police state?

      Even though your numbers were incorrect, I will indeed concede that the US is not a distopian police state. These numbers combined with the enormously disproportional incarcerated numbers, and the declining education results compared with the rest of the first world, mainly just indicates that law enforcement in the US is significantly more efficient than the public education system.

      Will you concede that these thing indicate some serious issues with law enforcement and education that should be addressed in some way? Would you consider any proposals that do not involve spending increases? I won't hold my breath, either.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    926. Re:Tax planning and rich people by smellotron · · Score: 1

      And that is my point, there are a lot of rich guys calling for rich guys to be taxed more, yet there is no evidence that any of them put thier money where their mouth is.

      I thought your point was this:

      What conspiracy did I suggest? I suggested that Warren Buffet's motives for calling for higher taxes on the wealthy were that he would make money that way.

      I just don't see the support for that argument; it really does sound like a conspiracy theory.

    927. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      You need to learn the difference between a conspiracy (which is a group of people secretly plotting to do something--usually something illegal) and a group of people working together to accomplish some goal, each for his, or her, own reasons. Just because I believe that Warren Buffett and other wealthy individuals support increased taxes for ulterior motives does not mean that I believe they are conspiring to raise taxes in order to make more money.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    928. Re:Tax planning and rich people by tbannist · · Score: 1

      If I put in more effort than is my fair share, why have I not earned the right to claim a greater profit?

      Indeed you should, but you should also feel proud that you are contributing some of that profit back to the system that allowed you to make the profits in the first place. Let's say your making $2,000,000 is an year, is paying an extra $30,000 to maintain that prosperity really so bad?

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    929. Re:Tax planning and rich people by tbannist · · Score: 1

      Following that logic dividends and wage income are both taxed an infinite number of times.

      1) Twice when the wage earner gets it. (Income + Payroll)
      2) Once when it spent with a company (Sales tax).
      3) Once when the company gets it. (Corporate Income Tax)
      4) Once when the investor gets it (Dividend/Capital Gains tax).
      5) Once when the investor spends it (Sales tax).
      6) Return to step 1) or to Step 3)

      That's the way the system works.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    930. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      I do. I contribute a higher percentage of finances to the economy already. Turns out that the President's claims about the tax rates are complete horseshit (shocker).

      http://news.yahoo.com/fact-check-rich-taxed-less-secretaries-070642868.html

      Not to mention that I do this for my business, my personal income, and again on my investments.

      So what's another $30,000 this year going to matter?
      How about next year?
      How about the year after that?
      When is enough, enough? When will you feel that I have contributed my "fair share"?

      Regardless, for every [insert arbitrary number] that shouldnt matter that you say is fair for me to add, there's a decent probability that I don't make an investment in something (helping a business who hires people expand?), or don't make some luxury purchase (which supports a business and jobs), or contribute to a charity. You assume I give nothing extra to the community, and you again assume that it is more appropriate for government to choose where that extra contribution goes....

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    931. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      You're being deliberately obtuse.

      My argument is that it's fair for the wealthy to pay more of the tax burden in the US than their share of income, due to the amount of wealth they have.

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    932. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When is enough, enough? When will you feel that I have contributed my "fair share"?

      About the same time you felt you've done "enough" working and investing and helping businesses. Basically, as long as you feel like living your life (preferably for the better)

      They just use a different method than you in obtaining a better life. You can think their method is wrong or even destructive in the long run, but you can't stop them from using this method or trying. It's one of the things you have to live with when you're living in a free society

      Don't blame me for this. I'm only the messenger. I would've preferred an not-so-free autocracy with me at the top (for life) ;p

    933. Re:Tax planning and rich people by tbannist · · Score: 1

      Your "investments" are most likely in stocks. The money you invested goes to other investors, not to the companies. So your "investments" do nothing to generate wealth, they're just part of a giant wealth transfer system designed to make stocks more liquid. However the main function of the stock market now is as a casino where people bet on winners and losers.

      I make no assumptions about what you do with your wealth because it doesn't matter. The truth is that the government supplies a host of services that shelter and support your business. Do you whine so self-righteously when one of your suppliers raises prices?

      I'm not saying the government is perfect or that it even spends tax money wisely, just that government is a cost of business. And just like every other cost it has to be paid. Without government your business would likely be destroyed either by looters or the lack of armed customers willing to brave the rioting to reach you.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    934. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My argument is that it's fair for the wealthy to pay more of the tax burden in the US than their share of income, due to the amount of wealth they have.

      Well, it isn't. And you saying it is doesn't make it so. Wealth is already taxed. It's called property tax, and non-property wealth simply isn't taxed. You don't tax someone's wealth using the income tax. You tax their income with the income tax.

      Pro-restitution black people would think that it's fair for the whitey to pay more of the tax burden in the US than their share of income, due to the white skin they and their ancestors have. Doesn't make them right either.

      In fact, let's generalize it. Everyone seems to think that someone else should pay more of the tax burden than their share of income. They always seem to think it's "fair" when they want someone else to pay.

    935. Re:Tax planning and rich people by scubamage · · Score: 1

      I currently make 67k a year, and in Pennsylvania, I am taxed at 25%. And that is only federal. linky

    936. Re:Tax planning and rich people by ashvin213 · · Score: 1

      Of course they have to contribute.

      But I challenge you to come up with any sane argument that anyone should pay more to the government than anybody else.

      Simple: Taxation is a extortion mechanism by the government to make sure that nothing happens to you are your property. You pay based on how much you own. If you own a lot, you need to pay more, since a street riot is more likely to loot your house than someone who is living under $2/day

    937. Re:Tax planning and rich people by budgenator · · Score: 1

      That is your tax bracket, not your tax rate

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    938. Re:Tax planning and rich people by hierofalcon · · Score: 1

      I think most of the major riots that come to mind in the U.S. have occurred in the projects of major large cities - not quiet suburban enclaves.

      Most local services are paid for by property taxes, and those do fall more heavily on the wealthy than the poor, although even the poor are paying them since part of their rent covers those expenses of the property owner. The extortion you speak of, if anything, is at the local level and not the federal level.

    939. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think most of the major riots that come to mind in the U.S. have occurred in the projects of major large cities - not quiet suburban enclaves.

      Ah, but doesn't that prove his point? Since the rich paid more taxes, their neighborhoods are protected better, so they don't see many riots happening ;p

      Anyway, I wouldn't call it extortion, but more like insurance, where you're paying even when there is no real threat (why else do some people dodge taxes... and get away with it?), but you're just scared "just in case" something happens ;p

    940. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      You're assuming far too much about my opinion. Stop making straw men. And stop generalizing, especially using an assumption that I would support your bad generalization.

      Specifically, I believe that the extreme concentration of wealth we're undergoing is lowering the standard of living for most people and inhibiting the opportunity for people to rise from poverty or near-poverty. I also believe the concentration of wealth is one of the primary causes of our lagging economy.

      In order to maintain a stable and growing economy, in order to ensure opportunity for all, I believe that the wealthy must be taxed in such a manner as to ensure they do not further concentrate wealth.

      You don't think this is fair. I do. We'll never agree on this -- that being the case, please stop making disingenuous and specious arguments.

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    941. Re:Tax planning and rich people by 2short · · Score: 1

      Do you favor a smaller public sector but oppose austerity because you fail to understand they are the same thing?

      Well, they are not. They certainly have a relationship, but no, they are not the same thing.

      If, in this context, "austerity" means something other than "reduced government spending" or "size of the public sector" means something other than "total government spending", you should provide whatever (weird) definitions you are using.

      there are roughly 700,000 law enforcement personnel in the US and 7 million teachers.

      Citation needed.

      I gave one: 20 seconds of Googling; they are just the first numbers I found. Not a great citation, but the amount of research I'm willing to do in response to your doing none is limited. Now you've done more, and found numbers that say you were wrong by a factor of 3 instead of 10. Well, OK. Personally, I think total spending is a better measure than employees, so this: http://www.usgovernmentspending.com/year2011_0.html tells me total spending on Education is more than twice total spending on "Protection", which includes the things you worried were left out and firemen to boot.

      Will you concede that these thing indicate some serious issues with law enforcement and education that should be addressed in some way?

      I'll concede there are problems that ought to be addresses in both our criminal justice and education systems. Indeed, I have never argued otherwise.

      Would you consider any proposals that do not involve spending increases? I won't hold my breath, either.

      You won't have to hold it long. Certainly good ideas that will improve things should be done even if they don't cost anything. Of course, when your economy is deeply depressed due to shortfall of demand, and particularly when monetary policy is exhausted by the zero lower bound, what you desperately need in the short term is for the government to spend more on something. So solutions to societal problems that do involve spending increases would be particularly welcome, especially temporary increases. Personally, I'd go for infrastructure improvement, (because you can do something useful with temporary increases) and an enhanced social safety net (goes away when the economy recovers, automatically comes back next time). Education wouldn't be temporary, but, in my opinion, good solutions are likely to involve spending increases (the other countries that you point out we are doing worse than tend to spend more). I wouldn't go for criminal justice because I don't think the things that are wrong there need spending to fix.

      But frankly, if I wanted to have a serious public policy discussion, I wouldn't pick someone who uses North Korea as an example of what a larger public sector would look like, or who says "low wage jobs are plentiful" about today's economy. Sometimes I just take guilty pleasure in pointing out that other people are saying something inane. But I've got my fix now, so I think we're done. Next time, if you want people to take your ideas seriously, don't start off by saying something stupid. By the time you get to "What I actually meant was this totally different thing."... nobody cares. HTH.

    942. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      My investments are not in stocks. I believe in supporting my local economy rather than investors or major corporations. Not that I begrudge anyone who does, I just choose not to.

      If what I do with my wealth doesnt matter, then why are we having this conversation....

      I do not whine when my suppliers raise their prices. They do so either out of necessity (because of their costs) or because they believe they have a higher quality of service than their competitors. It's up to me to decide if the latter is true or find a new supplier. I must reconcile with myself that they have a business, and like me they have every right to whatever profit from it the market will bare. Likewise, I do not whine about paying taxes. I understand and respect the lawful purpose of government and that it is necessary. I argue the logic of people who are never satisfied with what my tax rate is or how deeply the government becomes embedded in every single aspect of my life and that of my family.

      Do you have the foggiest idea how many business are forced to hire their own security forces? Or how much they spend on security systems, or other prevention systems like fences, locks, security glass for windows, etc? Do you know how much that drives down the profits?.... Even though they pay exponentially more dollars in taxes than your average citizen they must subsidize their security because they know full well that the police (that they pay for in taxes) will not be reacting to a crime against them quickly enough to prevent it, nor succeed in identifying the culprits an appreciable portion of the time.

      That's just one example of the only partially true notion that society provided and provides all of the base for the businesses to function. There's certainly some truth in it, but not nearly as much as you'd like to think. It's very common for a business to be required to build, rebuild or expand roads around their business in order to obtain the required permits from the city or county so that their business can be opened. They are often required to fund egresses or traffic lights, or crosswalks, or sideways. Sometimes its as crazy as being required to build a new playground at the closest school or erect a statue at the local firehouse or something just to grease the skids on permits.

      There's a case here right now where 7 businesses on one side of a highway are being told that they must pay for rebuilding and expanding a multi-million dollar overpass that connects to the town on the other side. The logic is that the businesses are the reason for the congestion on the overpass. The reality is that the overpass is one of 3 exits from the highway that are the only 3 arteries from the highway into the town of 250,000. The overpass is used by thousands of commuters daily who get on the highway and go to work in other towns. The congestion doesn't have a damn thing to do with those 7 businesses (none of which services more than 20 people a day), but the city council is peddling the same kind of crap you are about the evil businesses soaking up resources and trying to milk them for the funds rather than using the taxes those companies and those thousands of commuters pay. But they managed to find the funds for a $7million dollar bike trail that sees about 50 bicycles a week.....

      This kind of extortion and manipulation isnt remotely new, and it's the same kind of crap that people like me already chalk up to "the cost of doing business" that people like you are completely clueless on. We complain some, yes. But obviously not that loudly because it's a foreign concept to almost anyone that doesn't own a business. The volume of the "pay your fair share" bitching sure isnt reduced over time though.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    943. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's up to me to decide if the latter is true or find a new supplier. I must reconcile with myself that they have a business, and like me they have every right to whatever profit from it the market will bare

      And it's up to the *me* (each individual of the public) to decide if you're paying your "fair share" of taxes. The public are your "suppliers" of society (if the public isn't there, who's going to buy your goods/services?), and they're saying they want to raise prices (your tax). If you don't like the "price" you can leave the country and run your business elsewhere

      And whining works man (and in case you didn't notice, you're doing it: whining about people whining, and me too: whining about whining about whining, etc.). The rich whines to get laws passed their way. The poor whines to get laws passed the other way.

      Whining is simply another form of marketing. You should understand the importance of marketing, being a business owner and all

    944. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      There is no rampant poverty in America, dumbass.

      Even the minimum wage walmart worker IS FUCKING RICH.

      Get a fucking clue you lack-of-perspective bleeding-heart fuckbag that is so wrapped up in feelings, that even if it requires being completely fucking dishonest with yourself, your going to feel good no matter fucking what and that means caring about the "lower class." You don't even fucking know that having a cell phone, cable television, a fucking car, AND A GOD DAMNED WEIGHT PROBLEM is not a sign of being poor. Its a sign of SERIOUS FUCKING WHOLE-SCALE PROSPERITY. There arent "poor" people here.. there is only the lower class.. WHO ARE FUCKING RICH TOO.

      Moron. I'm sure this went in one ear and out the other, because you don't give a fuck about honesty or integrity.. you just want to feel good so you need a cause to feel for... fucking pathetic EMO

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    945. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      No, it is not up to "you". It's up to "us". And "we" havent voted on it to decide with the majority of "us" actually think.

      "You" are naive about what I contribute to society. "You" find it far more simple to demonize something you have no practicle experience with, and it's far more convenient for "you" to take the word of career politicians who are practicing gamesmanship.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    946. Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it is not up to "you". It's up to "us". And "we" havent voted on it to decide with the majority of "us" actually think.

      Reading comprehension and context is your friend. I only said the "public" (which in this context is not talking about the majority, but the segments of the public who feels this way) ***wants*** you to pay more, not that we have voted to pay more.

      A tax is basically the public raising their prices on business owners. If you don't whine when your suppliers raise prices, it's hilariously hypocritical that you're whining about a *possible* raise in taxes now, even before it's actually reality

      "You" are naive about what I contribute to society. "You" find it far more simple to demonize something you have no practicle experience with, and it's far more convenient for "you" to take the word of career politicians who are practicing gamesmanship.

      Funny, because you're the one demonizing ME as someone who is "naive", have "no practicle[sic] experience" on the subject, and "takes the word of career politicians who are practicing gamesmanship".

      When all I did was point out that your logic goes both ways. The best part is of course, your reaction is one I would expect from a "career politician".

  2. Honest Question by recoiledsnake · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Once the wealth accumulates to the top only, how will the economy survive without spending by the middle and lower classes? Won't a lot of business just shutdown because people don't have money to spend?

    --
    This space for rent.
    1. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The question may be honest but irrelevant. Nobody with power cares about "the economy". Saying you do just sounds better than "I got bribed to prevent taxes for rich people".

    2. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Once the wealth accumulates to the top only, how will the economy survive without spending by the middle and lower classes? Won't a lot of business just shutdown because people don't have money to spend?

      Well, doesn't that sound eerily familiar to what is going on out there...

    3. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It is not a zero-sum game. A healthy economy produces new wealth which is the main reason why GDP is not a constant number and why you can have a rising standard of living in general while producing more "rich people." Transferring wealth from earners to non-earners just makes the economy contract as less money is put to accomplishing real work. Economics is fascinating, but most people are completely ignorant of how it works.

    4. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Once the wealth accumulates to the top only, how will the economy survive without spending by the middle and lower classes? Won't a lot of business just shutdown because people don't have money to spend?

      Usually each member of the upper class buy a share of the lower class (there will be not middle class by that time) to subdue another upper class member -- killing lots of lower class members and destroying lots of upper class property. Once this is over everyone will have lowered their expectations from life and there will be a lot to be rebuild -- allowing a group of skilled people to rise from the lower class and form a middle class again.

    5. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Once the wealth accumulates to the top only, how will the economy survive without spending by the middle and lower classes? Won't a lot of business just shutdown because people don't have money to spend?

      You assume that there is a fixed amount of wealth. Businesses create wealth. Think of a business as an electric generator, you need to create a potential difference for the electricity to flow. Similarly, you need entities that create and amass wealth so that money will flow. When you think about it that way you understand why redistribution of wealth ALWAYS destroys an economy. It is the same as trying to get electricity to flow in a circuit with no potential gradient. It just won't work.

      By the way, didn't we already have a tax like that... The Alternative Minimum Tax... As I recall, because of inflation, that sort of "Go after the rich" tax has been a failure because now it targets the middle class.

    6. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A lot of smaller businesses will. Larger businesses will just reopen the company store and take credit.

    7. Re:Honest Question by rufty_tufty · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I'm more worried that this taxes people on their way to becoming rich.
      I'd rather they taxed those who were already rich and living off their savings/company. I'd rather tax those who are sitting on trust funds than those who are aggressively making lots of money, as they are quite likely to be the wealth creators rather than the fat cats doing nothing but sucking money out of the system.
      Tax wealth not income, otherwise all you do is keep those who are already rich rich and make it harder for those who are up and coming to get somewhere.
      But i doubt you'll get those in power supporting tax on wealth precisely because they know this, it is in their interest to raise the barrier to entry to the upper class.

      --
      "The weirdest thing about a mind, is that every answer that you find, is the basis of a brand new cliche" -
    8. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, that's one of the major problems with a service sector economy -- it's more trivial for people to cancel service spending than it is spending on goods. I can go forever without Starbuck's; I can't go forever without replacing clothes, refrigerator, washer/dryer, leaky roof. By outsourcing everything we have reduced our country's core competencies (yes USA centric author); now we have GenY who have the following core competencies: Barista, Waitress, Programmer, Subway Sandwich Artist ... All of those provide services which can be either skipped forever with no recompense.

      I heard a new clip this morning wondering if Obama's next stimulus or jobs proposal is Economic Policy or Political Positioning. Both economics and politics are confidence games -- so why would it be both. To wrap around to the OP, follow the money.

    9. Re:Honest Question by itsenrique · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I call bullshit. Wealth transferred to non earners is quickly spent, and usually ends up very quickly back in the hands of the wealthy and large corporations (and the government itself). The rich and corporations on the other hand, are known to hoard wealth, and send it out of the country respectively. Also, "non-earners" vs "earners" is bogus, people go back and fourth if you are measuring annually. Unless you are already rich....

    10. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The poor will have to keep working to survive. There are a lot more Jumbos that can be bought so that daddy's little girl can fly to go shopping in Paris. If you think rich people are decadent now, you ain't seen nothing yet. We're heading for "voluntary" servitude.

    11. Re:Honest Question by DaMattster · · Score: 1

      That is a possible theoretic outcome and we have begun to see this with the closure of Borders and other businesses. If 10% hold all of the material wealth, that leaves 90% of people with all of the power to either keep the wealthy at their present status or break them. If all of the sudden everyone said, "We are not buying iPads," Apple's infrastructure would collapse. If everyone stopped shopping at Wal Mart and grew some of their own food, the Walton family would be decimated quickly. I advocate a return to microeconomics where the economy centers around a town and people are largely self sufficient. All the poor have to do is start realizing that they have power and start re-learning long forgotten skills, they can be largely self-sufficient. What gives us bills and expenses is, essentially, we look for the easy way out so we pay someone else to do what we do not want to or are unable. I have a friend in Alaska that lives off of the grid. In the summer he grows vegetables and hunts for food. He has a small cabin that he built on his own from materials that he purchased using the proceeds from a 401K cashout. He hasn't had an occupation in over five years, he works at his own pace, and he makes his own clothes.

    12. Re:Honest Question by rickb928 · · Score: 1

      "By the way, didn't we already have a tax like that... The Alternative Minimum Tax... As I recall, because of inflation, that sort of "Go after the rich" tax has been a failure because now it targets the middle class."

      That's not a failure to the people who are so desperate to tax the rich. They are similarly intent on taxing everyone except the 'poor'. And often, but not always, themselves.

      We are well on our way to having NO middle class.

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    13. Re:Honest Question by skids · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Transferring wealth from earners to non-earners just makes the economy contract as less money is put to accomplishing real work.

      I have a sneaking suspicion that your definition of an "earner" would turn the stomach of any fair minded individual.

    14. Re:Honest Question by Kjella · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What's happening right now is not unlike many third world countries where the rulers grab millions from foreign aid while the people live on a dollar a day. Most of those have a somewhat working economy, they just live in separate worlds where you buy and sell products and services to other equally poor people. I don't think we're heading for a permanent jobless economy, just one with much bigger class separations again with an overclass that can be even more lavish with servants and luxuries. Because their money work for them, it's still diverging even if they're spending big.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    15. Re:Honest Question by skids · · Score: 1

      It is the same as trying to get electricity to flow in a circuit with no potential gradient. It just won't work.

      Neither will an electric circuit work when there is no path to ground.

      A more apt analogy: We are trying to run a 100 Ohm 3.3V logic circuit off a 120V supply with a 100MOhm resistor between the supply and the load. Do the math.

    16. Re:Honest Question by Empiric · · Score: 3, Insightful

      To quote Ayn Rand in a manner neither she nor the Tea Party she's apparently taken over the role of economic authority for would probably like...

      "Americans were the first to understand that wealth has to be created. The words 'to make money' hold the essence of human morality."

      To put it simply, the fact you have money does not mean you created value represented by that money. Managers qua managers do not create wealth. Investors do not create wealth. Engineers create wealth, by multiplying the value of labor and materials.

      Engineers, predominately in the "middle class", create, and thereby -earn-, money. For derivative forms of acquisition of money, which is the means of the majority of the "upper class", it is much more accurate to say they "get their hands on" money than they "earn" it.

      This is the premise that the Right in the U.S. will only accept insofar as it's a tautological definition where they simply declare "I happen to have this much money, therefore I earned proportionately that much more". No, absolutely not. You simply have a zero barrier-to-entry in the business processes you participate in, by virtue of already having money, relative to those who don't have it at equivalent scale. This will be discovered soon enough in the U.S. when we have plenty of people still willing to move money around, and move people who create money around (as long as it pays sizable dividends for marginal actual personal value-add), and nobody actually creating the value without which money is meaningless.

      The delusion that "having money = earning money" is presently being refuted in America in the most direct, manifestly-obvious way.

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    17. Re:Honest Question by DontBlameCanada · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Increased taxes for high income earners are *not* barricades to becoming rich. It's a recognition of the fact that you don't need $1M to survive.

      A family of 4 earning $1M and paying $500k in taxes is still *very* rich. A family of 4 earning $22.5k/year (poverty line) who pays $1k in taxes, is technically *living in poverty* as their net income is below $22.5k. Heck, that family of 4 earning $1M could pay $750K in taxes and still go home with $250k in their pocket.

      Once family income exceeds 10x the poverty line, they rest is just gravy. That money gets spent (if its not just horded, as is common) on trips overseas and fancy foreign vehicles that do very little to contribute to domestic jobs. There is a misconception that the rich are job creators. The real job creators are the middle class that can't afford lavish trips abroad or expensive goods manufactured offshore and instead spend their money closer to home.

    18. Re:Honest Question by Grizzley9 · · Score: 1

      ...are quite likely to be the wealth creators rather than the fat cats doing nothing but sucking money out of the system.

      I'm not sure I understand this. Say a obese fat cat wants caviar delivered by his private airplane to his second house in the Southwest. If he's spending money that goes into the hands of companies and people providing those services which is defined as "in the system". Sucking money out of the system, to me, means just sitting on the money letting it grow, without spending it. But even then it's getting used as loans and such to businesses and banks to help others create wealth. So explain to me how money gets sucked out of the system by the wealthy? If anything they should be wanting money coming into the system.

    19. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Neither will an electric circuit work when there is no path to ground.

      A more apt analogy: We are trying to run a 100 Ohm 3.3V logic circuit off a 120V supply with a 100MOhm resistor between the supply and the load. Do the math.

      Is that your way of saying that there is already too much government regulation (resistance) to allow the money (current) to flow through the economy (Circuit)?

    20. Re:Honest Question by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Gov't caused the wealth to accumulate at the top, with all the inflation, regulations, subsidies and bailouts and taxation that creates monopolies and destroys competition and causes capital to leave.

      The reality is that without middle class normal economy and society cannot exist, but the government is not capable of creating the middle class by any actions. The only action that can create the middle class is disassembling most of the government and allowing the market to restructure the debt and repatriate the capital, which will then be used to restart manufacturing.

      For a really excellent primer on this, here is a Congressional committee hearing about the Jobs Act.

    21. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You need to add some other qualifiers to the premise, because as you've written it, there's one boring (though also awesome) solution that makes it too easy to answer.

      Once the wealth accumulates to the top only, how will the economy survive without spending by the middle and lower classes?

      By 100% of the population being upper class, with the elimination of poverty and a new era of ubiquitous wealth. ;-) e.g. the kind of situation you get with cheap cold fusion, matter replicators, etc.

      Yes, I know futurism is not the intent of your question. Just one last word before we abandon that, though: remember that it's the goal. We will have the strongest economy in history, when unemployment approaches 100%, the tax rate is 0% and there are no businesses to tax anyway. Any concept you have of an economy, which requires low unemployment, lots of businesses and transactions, is flawed. Those things aren't what the economy is about; they are current strategies for attaining a certain type of economy. Futurism aside, if you don't recognize that, then you just might have a biased view of 2011 too.

      Now back to 2011...

      You want to posit a situation where lower classes still exist and are somehow denied the ability to .. wait, exactly what is it that they're not allowed to do? I think the premise is that they're not allowed to be the upper classes, but more specifically, what is the constraint that keeps that from happening? Not saying it doesn't exist or anything, just wanna pin it down.

      Because one way or another, they're going to do something and the idea that they aren't part of the economy, is going to be unrealistic in any scenario I can possibly imagine. Poor peoples' days have as many hours in them as rich peoples', so unless you decide that they have to work as slaves, they're going to pursue their interests, whatever those interests may be. They're going to be a major part of the economy even if they barter rather than use dollars, down own government-recognized stock in their own businesses, etc.

    22. Re:Honest Question by mcgrew · · Score: 2

      I'm more worried that this taxes people on their way to becoming rich.

      This is about people earning over a million per year.

      Tax wealth not income

      So I pay taxes on what I earn this year every single year afterwards? No, thanks. Property tax is possibly the most unfair there is.

      For the record, I earn about median for the US, a "wealth tax" hits homeowners and renters.

    23. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BS. You give a poor person $100 and it immediately goes right back into their local economy as they buy the food and stuff they need to live. You give $100 to a rich person and it gets thrown into a bank account. All this talk of the rich "investing" or "putting their money to work" is completely shit...they're not investing any money in this country at all, they're investing it all in companies that send the money overseas. That's kinda like the whole problem we have today, we can't FORCE the rich to invest in America and hire American workers because we're not willing to be slaves, so we need to raise their taxes to make up for it.

      How about we eliminate all the tax cuts they get that aren't tied directly to investing here in the US, either through hiring or investment in their operations here in this country? You hire someone here, you get to write off a portion of their paycheck for X months. What's unfair about that? It rewards those that actually put their money to work to better THIS country, and those that don't, well, fuck 'em, they can pay higher taxes.

      The rich want to live in a government free paradise with no taxation, they can get on a plane and go to Somalia if they want to. They want to enjoy the benefits of living in a first world country, they're going to have to pay for it.

    24. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. Wealth accumulates to the top.
      2. Middle and lower class spending cannot cover as large a part of what could be produced as before (demand drops compared to production capacity).
      3. It gets less profitable to invest in companies that actually produce something.
      4. The reward/risk-ratio of production drops below the reward/risk of financial speculation (such as lending money to people who may not be able to pay back).
      5. Middle and lower classes (at least middle) gets an n-th mortgage and continues spending (for a while).
      6. goto 1

    25. Re:Honest Question by JackieBrown · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I like hearing about how it is evil for companies to "hoard wealth" and then hearing from the same group how irresponsible companies are that didn't when they suffer an economic fall and don't have the reserves to survive without bailouts.

      I save money wherever I can in case something happens such as job loss or other unforeseen hardships. My household includes my wife (who has MS and whose treatments cost a small fortune) and a 12 year old daughter and our household income nets less than 50,000 but I manage not to "easily" spend all my money.

    26. Re:Honest Question by Jhon · · Score: 1

      I question your assumption. It appears you assume that "wealth" is a finite resource.

    27. Re:Honest Question by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      I call bullshit. Wealth transferred to non earners is quickly spent, and usually ends up very quickly back in the hands of the wealthy and large corporations (and the government itself).

      But it's usually spend on low-grade production, rather than creating new wealth.

      You presumably believe that the country would be much better off if the government paid half the unemployed to dig holes and the other half to fill them in. All that money will end up back in the hands of corporations and governments, right?

    28. Re:Honest Question by maxume · · Score: 1

      All this does is subject people with 7 figure capital gains incomes to a slightly higher effective tax rate. It only dings a few tens of thousands of people. People that are already massively rich by any reasonable definition.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    29. Re:Honest Question by rwv · · Score: 2

      Tax wealth not income, otherwise all you do is keep those who are already rich rich and make it harder for those who are up and coming to get somewhere.

      This exists. It commonly goes by the name "inflation". Businesses typically give their middle-class employees "inflationary" raises each year to retain their continued commitment of loyalty. Governments build inflationary increases into their social welfare programs to maintain a steady support for the lower classes they support. As a result, prices generally go up every year or three so low and middle class people can't actually buy more stuff. As a secondary result, any business owner sitting on a pile of cash worth $x Million is now sitting on a pile of cash worth ($x Million - ($x Million * Inflation Percentage)).

      Historically, inflation runs at a rate that chops the value of money in half every 18 years.

      On the other hand, wealthy people can easily move their money into the stock market to avoid investing it into projects that create real value. Historically, the stock market rises at a rate greater than inflation. I believe the non-inflationary increase of stock market invested money is supposed to double every 12 years. I suppose if inflation and the stock market both behave according to these models, the true timeframe it takes money invested in the stock market to double is 36 years.

      Surprisingly, investments in real estate rise at a rate very close to the value of inflation once you factor in things like lowering interest rates, interest rate subsidies, and the baseline housing values. This trend goes back to the last time interest rates were higher than 18% (contrasted with current 4% interest rates).

      In any case... knowing how to make rich people pay fairly is indeed a difficult challenge. In the olden days of medieval times, the landlords had to keep the peasants happy or face a revolt. In modern times, it's hard to say whether revolting against the richest people in the world would be possible and/or accomplish anything.

    30. Re:Honest Question by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Simple Solution, though it will get panned here on /. ... REMOVE money from Government by limiting what Government can do.

      I mean, the latest excuse for Soylient Green Solar Company is that "we needed to give half a billion to the company or else it would have folded" is exactly why Government should NOT be in the business of business. Where are all the lefties decrying the Big Business, Rich getting Richer types on that scandal? Oh, it was "green" energy, not Big Oil (tm) so that makes it okay, right?

      At least Big Oil pays taxes, unlike all of Obama's friends like GE (green energy) Don't you all get it? Government is evil by its very nature. It doesn't matter if it is (D) or (R) or whatever. If you excuse the excesses of government because of some limited good it might do (debatable) then you're just evil disguised as a pragmatist.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    31. Re:Honest Question by sycodon · · Score: 2

      I call bullshit on your bullshit.

      The economy works only when money is flowing. Your end game scenario would have all the "rich" sitting on piles of cash and not spending it. At that point, it's worth less than a sack of warm manure. Money is made and spent. If it's not spent, it can't be made. You don't need a degree in economics to understand that.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    32. Re:Honest Question by AngryDeuce · · Score: 1

      At the end of the day, we're going to end up a global Neo-Feudalist society with megacorporations and keiretsu standing in for the nobility.

    33. Re:Honest Question by ArcherB · · Score: 2

      I call bullshit. Wealth transferred to non earners is quickly spent, and usually ends up very quickly back in the hands of the wealthy and large corporations (and the government itself). The rich and corporations on the other hand, are known to hoard wealth, and send it out of the country respectively. Also, "non-earners" vs "earners" is bogus, people go back and fourth if you are measuring annually. Unless you are already rich....

      Really? So is poor people who live in mansions, drive exotic, expensive autos, eat at fine restaurants and take vacations that don't involve loading up the station wagon? Wow! And here I thought these people were rich.

      I always believed that wealthy people invested their money so that they might make more of it so they could buy more nice things. Who knew that they were living in $20/night hotels with all their cash stuffed into duffle bags stuffed under their beds.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    34. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      fuckin communist

    35. Re:Honest Question by cptdondo · · Score: 1

      This is based on the premise that the middle class does not exist. Taxes from the wealthy do not immediately disappear down some "welfare recipient" black hole. Instead, they go to improve infrastructure - bridges, roads, etc, pay for gov't employees, most of whom actually do real work, etc.

      The GOP fantasy world consists of the uber-wealthy and the wetbacks, with no one else of consequence. In their minds the middle class has already been reduced to irrelevance.

      The real job creators are the middle class; we're the ones who go and actually buy things, go out for dinner, travel, and so on, and actually keep money flowing. The uber-rich shift money from one overseas shell corporation to another, which has nothing to do with job creation.

      You want jobs? Screw the rich, bring back the middle class.

      Oh, and the whole "cut taxes and regulations that are strangling the economy" - How's that working out? I see cutting taxes and regulations on banks has really improved the economy, so we need to do more of that, eh?

    36. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you make $1,000,000 a year or more, you're already rich.

    37. Re:Honest Question by rufty_tufty · · Score: 2

      "Property tax is possibly the most unfair there is."
      See there I disagree.
      If any tax can be fair then it exists to either provide for common services (such as defence, road and law) or to provide social responsibility for a society (look after the sick, poor and otherwise disadvantaged). In the first case the costs scale with some function of population and land area, if you own a lot of land you need more roads. If you have an expensive property you'll more likely need to call out the police, etc. In the second case then it is a conscience question of how much burden do you want to put on those with to provide for those without; again fair would imply that you tax proportionate to the amount you have. Taxing someone more who has a lot of stuff has to be better than asking for the same amount from someone who doesn't have that much stuff.
      In all those cases of fairness I don't see why property tax isn't fair.
      Now it's also easy to say that all tax is unfair and really the current system is about milking the proverbial cow, how can government get the most out of society, but that's a different discussion...

      --
      "The weirdest thing about a mind, is that every answer that you find, is the basis of a brand new cliche" -
    38. Re:Honest Question by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      The rich and corporations on the other hand, are known to hoard wealth, and send it out of the country respectively.

      I have never gotten a loan from a bankrupt company, and when I've sought seed money for a new company I've never turned to poor people. Chances are the company you work for was funded by those same hoarders, who simply used their own money to bankroll the venture you now work for...

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    39. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's liberal nonsense. Low taxes and no regulations are all businesses need in order to thrive and hire lots of employees. Customers are irrelevant.

    40. Re:Honest Question by trout007 · · Score: 1

      You have a basic misunderstanding of economics. This is not your fault as the media does everything it van to confuse you.

      First don't mistake money for wealth. You are right that money is accumulating at the top because those at the to control it's creation. Fiat money which we have today can be created out of nothing. Heck it used to at least be paper which could be burned for fuel when it became worthless enough. Today it's just bits on computers. The Federal Reserve is creating money in order to bail out it's favored companies, people, and governments. The effect is like all counterfeiters the value of your money goes down. Notice fuel and food prices? More dollars chasing less goods. Because right now most people mistake dollars for wealth they use dollars as a store for wealth. This is dangerous as it allows the Fed and banks to steal wealth by creating dollars. Since 2008 there has been a massive tansfer of wealth from the average person to the connected using this method.

      What is wealth then? It is an attempt to measure things you have that people in society value. This is why you can crewte wealth. You can create wealth by doing something or making something that didn't exist before or transforming materials from a less desirable form to amore desirable form. Like turning or into steel or steel into cars. Each of these processes crests wealth. Digging a hole where someone desire it creates wealth because they valued a hole where you dug it. Also trading creates weath. The store values your money more then the goods it trades your for amd you value the goods more than the money. Both parties are wealthier for the trade.

      The solution is simple. Try to keep your wealth in things that other people want and cannot have value stolen by counterfeiters. Gold, silver, iron, land, oil, lightbulbs, cars. Even stocks should have their value based on things the company owns but this too is subject to much manipulation. Air is harder for the rich to come and steal your land although they have been known to do it.

      --
      I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
    41. Re:Honest Question by RogerWilco · · Score: 2

      There is a misconception that the rich are job creators. The real job creators are the middle class that can't afford lavish trips abroad or expensive goods manufactured offshore and instead spend their money closer to home.

      This is very true. The wealthy can simply afford to hoard their money, the middle class and lower can't, they live much more hand-to-mouth and are a much bigger boost to the local economy.

      It's not the middle class and low income workers that have an estimated 5 Trillion stashed away in Switserland (The number was in the news because of UBS).

      --
      RogerWilco the Adventurous Janitor
    42. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Why make you think that you have the right the make such a judgment? When the time is right, someone will do this to 10x 5x and 2x poverty lines. You should really go to Russia in 1930s or China in 1960s.

    43. Re:Honest Question by Lumpy · · Score: 1, Insightful

      It's more insidious than that.

      Middle class and lower have to spend 75% or more of their income for basic survival. rent/mortgage payment, utilities, food, taxes... no car payment because they cant afford anything but a dangerous wreck.

      While the rich can do a one time purchase and avoid paying rent/mortgage, electric is significantly reduced as they can afford to buy a $25,000 solar+wind system, well for water, etc...

      If someone made $22,000 a year had 1 wife and 1 child they could easily survive on that if they did not have to drop $12,000 of it into rent alone with another $2500 in heating and electric and $5200 in food assuming spending a very low $100.00 a week for groceries. this does not count gasoline and expenses for working. Gasoline alone for someone that owns a worn out 1993 subcompact that get's 35mpg is $2080 if you buy 10 gallons a week.

      Suddenly that person CANT MAKE IT. They are spending more than they take in without accounting for taxes alone. they are not buying movies, or cable TV.
      The above numbers are real numbers.

      The rich in the country are greedy idiots with their heads in the sand. EIC is desperately needed for the above family of which there are a huge number of. Some of the rednecks blow it on beer and a big screen tv, some on spinner rims for their hoopdie... but most of them spend it to do silly things like... Dental care for the kid who has 2 rotten teeth that need root canals because the free school lunches are 60% sugar, a set of tires for the car and replace the brakes that have not worked for 3 months,. Just those 3 can wipe out a $5500 tax refund check.

      The non earners spend every single dollar they get because they have to. they do not have an option to save anything at all. Mostly because the Rich that hold the rental homes gladly rape people with ridiculous rents like $1000.00 a month for a 2 bedroom in a neighborhood that is mostly safe.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    44. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Increased taxes for high income earners are *not* barricades to becoming rich. It's a recognition of the fact that you don't need $1M to survive.

      Who wants to just survive?

    45. Re:Honest Question by whereiswaldo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      How about a tax scale that accounts for the current unemployment rate? Higher unemployment = higher taxes for corporations and rich, lower unemployment is lower taxes for corporations and the rich. Hell of an incentive to create jobs.

    46. Re:Honest Question by bigsexyjoe · · Score: 1

      The answer is yes, you are right. This is why the Great Depression happened.

    47. Re:Honest Question by sycodon · · Score: 1

      Taxing income IS THE barrier to entry to the upper class.

      But on the other hand, once you have been taxed on money and you put it away, is it fair to be taxed on it again and again and again until it's gone?

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    48. Re:Honest Question by rufty_tufty · · Score: 2

      I'm not saying they aren't very rich.
      But if your aim is to tax the uber-rich then I think you'd be better of taxing those with assets of say more than 1 billion, say an extra percentage point ftax for each billion owned or some such formula.
      I have no problem with the uber rich, I have MASSIVE problems with family oligarchies where once you are rich you will stay rich (because your dad pays to get you into Harvard and then you get a job at the family company, all expenses are company expenses, cars and houses are given to you etc).
      Now maybe I'm trying to fight a none existent/small scale problem, but I'm not convinced. Isn't the American dream that anyone can become one of the super wealthy, well one way to do that is to make sure that it's easy to climb up, but also don't you need to make it hard(er) to remain at the very top.
      As an outsider now I look at the old-rich(i.e. more than 2 generations of wealth) as I look back at the French royalty/nobility, so look for anyway to limit their power.

      --
      "The weirdest thing about a mind, is that every answer that you find, is the basis of a brand new cliche" -
    49. Re:Honest Question by Hatta · · Score: 1

      A family of 4 earning $1M and paying $500k in taxes is still *very* rich.

      Inflation may change all that very soon. Bernanke is dumping dollars on the market like there's no tomorrow (there very well may not be). Not that I disagree with this rule, but perhaps it should be stated relative to the mean, instead of as an absolute value.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    50. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (if its not just horded, as is common)

      What, like under the mattress? Rich people invest their money in company stock. Companies use that money to grow, buy equipment, hire and pay workers, etc. Even if rich people just put money in a savings account, banks still lend that money to people to buy cars, homes, start businesses, whatever.

      A great book to read is Basic Economics by Thomas Sowell

    51. Re:Honest Question by elloGov · · Score: 0

      Money, as the direct representation of wealth, is one supply that everyone demands. When the wealth is accumulated at the top, the top can demand more for their supply of money which we all want. They can demand that your kids of proper age start working as well to be able to get by as a family. They can demand more servitude and more degrading conditions of employment. Just like in a oligopoly, they have the supply cornered and they can make heavy leveraged demand. Use your imagination.

    52. Re:Honest Question by rufty_tufty · · Score: 1

      "is it fair to be taxed on it again and again and again until it's gone?"
      Yes, if you're not doing anything with it.
      Easy analogy: You're a land owner in medieval England, does your family have the right for dozens more generations to sit on their posterior while peasants work the land and fetch you lunch while you add nothing to the system?
      Okay the modern equivalent to that is sitting back and living off the interest on a lump sum in the bank, frankly that's not the sort of lifestyle I think a society wants to encourage, but if you choose to do that then realise it's not something you'd be able to do for generations. A society that has a significant number of people doing that is not healthy. They should all be contributing something.
      Now if we're talking about pensions that's different, but you're specifically saving for yours and your partner's old age only there, which obviously is good for society.

      --
      "The weirdest thing about a mind, is that every answer that you find, is the basis of a brand new cliche" -
    53. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They'll move more manufacturing to China so the top 0.3% can pocket even more money and further shrink the middle class. Most rich people that I know don't give a shit about anyone other than themselves.

    54. Re:Honest Question by bugs2squash · · Score: 1

      The rest of the world needs employment as well. I have no issue with investments being made to create additional wealth on a global scale. What I object to is the stockpiling of unearned Money. Perhaps there should be a "capital inventory tax" whereby anything more than, say, $10MM in assets are taxable at around 2% per year. That way any money not being aggressively invested will gradually be whittled away.

      --
      Nullius in verba
    55. Re:Honest Question by grep_rocks · · Score: 1

      I like it - the top 0.1% of the population of the country owns 40% of the nations wealth the top 1% owns 60% and the top 10% owns 80% of the wealth. So the top 10% would pay 80% of the taxes... (by the way the bottom 50% have _negative_ wealth) Just like you pay taxes on your home to protect it (police, fire dept, streets) you should pay taxes on your assets, after all the government is the system that allows you to keep your assest from being taken and provides a stable currency so you should pay to protect those assets.

    56. Re:Honest Question by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      the fact you have money does not mean you created value represented by that money

      - if taken out of context, then having money cannot be said to mean absolutely anything.

      Managers qua managers do not create wealth.

      - why, are things managing themselves?

      Investors do not create wealth.

      - of-course they do. Have you ever saved portion of your income and then after that have you invested the saved money into a business?

      If you have, then you might have ended up with more wealth than you have started, if you are lucky/good (or you could have lost it, if you are not very lucky/good).

      Savings are the only legitimate investments, as opposed to for example currency counterfeiting, which is what the Federal reserve is busy doing. Savings is underconsumption.

      Once you earn your paycheck, you may consume it all or you may under-consume, sacrifice something and save the earnings. Eventually you may invest your earnings into a business. Whether you started the business with your earnings or you invested into somebody else's business, if the business ends up generating profit, this means you HAVE CREATED WEALTH.

      Without your investment that business would not have existed. Managing capital, land and labor is what allows a bunch of separate resources to be put together in a meaningful way in order to extract value from it. Having an engineer sitting on a street does nothing to increase wealth, but saving some money, hiring that engineer and paying for rent of an office/utilities, and then paying for a sales team may in fact generate wealth, if you applied your savings correctly and the engineer was able to create something.

      Engineer can just as well create something without an outside investor, engineer can be his own investor.

      So here I am, working on my own product line for 2.5 years, using up my own money to do so, there comes you and says: you are not creating any wealth with your investments.

      Hello. How else do you think wealth is created? By government decree?

    57. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sure that if you worked 80 hours a week to achieve 1M a year you'd be pretty upset that 75% of it was being taken away and most likely being wasted.

      On principle alone, your logic is ridiculous.

    58. Re:Honest Question by couchslug · · Score: 1

      Once the wealth is ALL at the top, there is no logical reason not to take it back by any means necessary.

      The tacit agreement in ALL societies is that the MASTERS allow the SERFS sufficient that the serfs don't kill and eat them. The fiction of "moral" obligation not to eat them is nonsense. The divine right of kings is now regarded as fiction, and it is to be hoped religion itself will follow for it is a lie to perpetuate self-enslavement,

      I expect to be paid off. So should the rest of us. The rich OWE us nothing, and we OWE them nothing. The relationship is one of power, so act with power to intimidate them into paying for their mastery. They can remain masters, but they can feed the cattle too.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    59. Re:Honest Question by TheTyrannyOfForcedRe · · Score: 1

      I'd rather tax those who are sitting on trust funds than those who are aggressively making lots of money, as they are quite likely to be the wealth creators rather than the fat cats doing nothing but sucking money out of the system.

      The only wealth creators in any economic system are the workers. The guys who own everything are not creating wealth. They gather all of the wealth created by their slaves/workers and pretend it's theirs.

      --
      "Liechtenstein is the world's largest producer of sausage casings, potassium storage units, and false teeth."
    60. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Increased taxes for high income earners are *not* barricades to becoming rich. It's a recognition of the fact that you don't need $1M to survive.

      A family of 4 earning $1M and paying $500k in taxes is still *very* rich. A family of 4 earning $22.5k/year (poverty line) who pays $1k in taxes, is technically *living in poverty* as their net income is below $22.5k. Heck, that family of 4 earning $1M could pay $750K in taxes and still go home with $250k in their pocket.

      But why should the family making the $1M a year have to pay more (as a percentage) than the family making $22.5K? That doesn't seem vary fair. But let's not even argue that.

      Let's look at the fact that penalizing someone for making more money leads to people having less desire to bring in more income. If I make $750K a year, and taxes bring me down to $500K a year, why on earth would I want to spend more time and effort away from my family to make $1M a year, and have it brought down to $650K a year?

      Granted, these numbers are completely made up, but there is a line somewhere that bringing in more income doesn't become worth the effort, as the tax man will simply take a larger chunk. What happens when people start hitting that line, and stop trying to make more? Are we just going to lower the line through more taxes? What happens when we start lowering that line all the way through the middle class?

      Would it really be such a bad idea to start by getting rid of all the tax exemptions, credits, and (I feel dirty for using this term) "Loopholes", and make the tax code easier to understand, easier to enforce, remove the incentive to spend more money on avoiding taxes than you end up paying, and see where that takes us?

    61. Re:Honest Question by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      You've fallen for the usual class-resentment/eat-the-productive cognitive dissonance and ill-logic trap. Your entire rhetorical question is built on the premise that the economy is a fixed pie, and that everything involves changing the slice-size per capita. That's a completely false model of how economic growth works, but it's certainly a favorite meme among people who see the world as owing them personally something for having been born.

      There is no "the wealth" like there is "the available spectrum."

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    62. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd rather tax those who are sitting on trust funds than those who are aggressively making lots of money, as they are quite likely to be the wealth creators rather than the fat cats doing nothing but sucking money out of the system.

      This statement leads me to believe that you are part of the group that is aggressively working their way up to lots of money. Seems that people tend to want the increase with anyone making more money than they are while leaving their tax rates alone or lowering them.

      I wouldn't consider myself to be "aggressively making lots of money", but between my wife and I, we are doing fairly well off (about $150K combined). We complain about how much goes to cover taxes, especially when we think back to about 10 years ago when we had a combined income of $40K. Even at this income level, I feel percentage based taxing to be annoying even when looking at other family member that make closer to the $50K level. I'd consider that we use approximately the same public services yet I put in a much larger share compared to my youngest brother and his wife. At times it feels as though you are punished because you worked harder to provide better for your family. I don't know what a "fair" tax really is though since I'm sure we all have different ideas and none of them will satisfy everyone. My only real complaint at this point is what I perceive as wasted spending by the government.

      Mij

    63. Re:Honest Question by pnuema · · Score: 1

      Once you get to a certain income level, it gets difficult to spend more money. When you have enough money to literally satisfy your every whim, what else is there? You start saving it, or gambling it in the stock market, or putting it in hedge funds where it doesn't get taxed. If you were to spread that wealth out to people who can't satisfy their every whim, then it will flow back into "the system".

    64. Re:Honest Question by gambino21 · · Score: 1

      He didn't say it is "evil" for companies to hoard wealth, he only said that they did it. The point was simply that people who don't have a lot of money tend to spend it locally when they get it, compared to weathly people who don't spend it and often invest it overseas.

    65. Re:Honest Question by Gorobei · · Score: 1

      So I pay taxes on what I earn this year every single year afterwards? No, thanks. Property tax is possibly the most unfair there is.

      Why? Hanging on to a big chunk of wealth requires police, courts, lawyers, etc, or the private version of the same. 500 years ago, you would be paying a bank to hold your money. 5000 years ago, you'd be maintaining a city-state just to protect your wealth.

      Don't like it? Just hold cash: you pay income tax on the interest earned, you're not consuming much. You want a $1M pleasure garden for your private use? Expect to pay a bit more.

    66. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. Do the firms that create goods directed at higher income brackets not deserve to sell their products? I'm assuming people make these products and not aliens from a different planet.

      2. How do small companies get start up funds if everyone making over a million now doesn't have money to give them?

    67. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As much as being self-sufficient would dethrone the large businesses, a lot of your suggestions aren't feasible because not all of the United States has the same resources. If you lived in Texas, Arizona, or New Mexico, living off the grid is much eaiser, but growing vegetables is much more difficult. If you live in an urban area, most of this is impossible.

    68. Re:Honest Question by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Inflation may change all that very soon. Bernanke is dumping dollars on the market like there's no tomorrow...

      Then why aren't either short or long term interest rates soaring? If there were even a sniff of inflation in the air, the interest rates should be going through the roof. Sadly, models and facts have this odd way of contradicting your morality-based economics.

      --
      That is all.
    69. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If all of the sudden everyone said, "We are not buying iPads," Apple's infrastructure would collapse.

      But I love my iPad, and want the iPad 3 when it ships.

      If everyone stopped shopping at Wal Mart and grew some of their own food, the Walton family would be decimated quickly.

      Grow my own food? Have you SEEN the back yard in my townhome? We'd starve.

      I advocate a return to microeconomics where the economy centers around a town and people are largely self sufficient. All the poor have to do is start realizing that they have power and start re-learning long forgotten skills, they can be largely self-sufficient.

      Go live on a kibbutz, commie!

      I have a friend in Alaska that lives off of the grid. In the summer he grows vegetables and hunts for food. He has a small cabin that he built on his own from materials that he purchased using the proceeds from a 401K cashout. He hasn't had an occupation in over five years, he works at his own pace, and he makes his own clothes.

      So even you don't believe any of what you wrote. You have a friend who does it. But you don't?

    70. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you know, dumbshit, that money gets spent on the poor guy who works at the ski shop, and the waiter at that fancy restraunt. I'd rather those folks get paid than one more do-nothing in washington.

    71. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [sarcasm]Yes, that's what we need, a massive deflation, to get out of the recession. Let everybody hoard money (gold, cows, chickens whatnot). That'll definitely get the economy moving again.[/sarcasm]

      Do you come up with this after smoking something strong or just on your own? Either way, get help. ASAP.

    72. Re:Honest Question by sycodon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      1. Stay in school and at least get a H.S. degree.
      2. DON'T have kids if you can't afford them. The cause of pregnancy is well known.
      3. DON'T blame your problems on others.

      And don't give me any crap about "disadvantages". See Herman Cain.

      Your life is what you make of it.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    73. Re:Honest Question by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

      Getting laws to pass that are tied to anything is going to be hard enough. Tying the alternate minimum tax to inflation for example. $250K was supposed to be "rich". And it was, when they wrote the law. With a bit of inflation, well, that creeps down. Personally, $250K still seems plenty rich to me.

      Anyway, this sort of idea is great, but it requires congressmen to give away control and power. As men of power, they HATE that. If they had things like, say, a sense of duty, ethics, belief in the greater good, or if they cared more about the nation then they did about their own career, then maybe I could seen them limiting their own power. But in today's politics? With these politicians? Nawwww, ain't happening.

    74. Re:Honest Question by Kjella · · Score: 1

      If life was so simple as you suggest, every engineer should go independent and just take all the value he produces for himself rather than funding all these people contributing "nothing". What a load of bullshit. All the other people there actually do a job to find out what exactly it is that'd give value, garner interest, hook up the customers with the product, direct the whole team. It's like trying to claim the conductor of an orchestra isn't adding any value because he's not making any sound. Or that the only people with value in football are those who make touchdowns, not everybody else who enables them and shields them. It doesn't have value until it's in the hands of a customer who values it.

      As for investors, yes they're not contributing anything other than money that you could have contributed yourself. So why do so many work for a paycheck, and not for stocks or shares of the profit? Because there's risk and a delay between investment and making a return on it. If you want that risk, take it. Don't blame the investor who offers you a fixed paycheck to take both the risks and then also the rewards. The investor has bought you out of your own labor, he's no longer earning interest on the money but on the value added by you and all the other employees. That work for hire and possibly not domestic but quite real. The very same in fact, except you're not doing it for yourself.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    75. Re:Honest Question by roman_mir · · Score: 1
    76. Re:Honest Question by Nursie · · Score: 2

      "But why should the family making the $1M a year have to pay more (as a percentage) than the family making $22.5K? That doesn't seem vary fair."

      Because they can afford to. The gubmit needs money, and these folks can afford to give up a higher percentage without suffering.

      Is it fair? Hard to tell. Someone earning a million is not doing so in a vacuum, and needs the infrastructure of society and other people around to get into that position (in most cases). OTOH you're right, it doesn't seem 'fair' at a gut reaction level.

      It's a tough area to resolve.

      But I know for a fact that I'd rather be left with $500K than $20,250, even if I'm paying 50% tax compared to the other guy's 10%, or even if the other guy paid none at all.

    77. Re:Honest Question by HeckRuler · · Score: 0

      You're TRYING for an insightful answer, which is good. But you're missing. Let me help you with that.

      The simple solution you're going for is to remove money from the rulers. Since that's the example that's the grandparent post was talking about. Now, you see, your first mistake is associating third-world rulers which are usually the government figures with the rulers of the united states, which is largely run by corporations.

      You're also trying to throw around a lot of right-wing propaganda talking points in a hope that it'll somehow convince people to hate Obama. Stop watching Fox News. It'll rot your head.

    78. Re:Honest Question by pedropolis · · Score: 2

      Great idea. Now where were you when Bush Co. went to war in Iraq and decided to lose about 1.5 trillion dollars? 10 billion dollars in cash was stolen off pallets in Iraq. Gone, vanished. No one has any idea where it went. That's just one example. Routinely every years the Pentagon comes out and tells us 40 billion in military spending is completely unaccounted for. The money has been flushed down into a Military Industrial Complex sewer and is gone. For good.

      So Obama Co. tries to prop up a green company as he tries to ignite a new driver for the economy. The company fails and goes bankrupt.

      Which scenario do you prefer? Losing 20x as much overseas, and likely funding/fueling/creating terrorism, or losing 1/20th to an American company?

      Big Oil doesn't pay taxes either. Please.

    79. Re:Honest Question by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

      Inflation... caused wealth to accumulate at the top...
      Think about that for a while. Inflation, which causes accumulated wealth to decrease in value, caused wealth to accumulate somewhere.

      Now, you actually may have a point with the creation of monopolies and such, but inflation is not one of those things that makes the rich richer.

    80. Re:Honest Question by Hatta · · Score: 1

      What morality based economics do you think I possess? Do you think I'm a tea partier, just because I'm uncomfortable with the behavior of the Fed? I assure you I am not. I'd appreciate it if you limited your rebuttals to thinks I've actually said.

      I don't have answers to your questions, and I would disbelieve anyone who claimed to have the answers to your questions. I have some potential answers though. It may be that banks are hoarding the dollars Bernanke is putting on the market. That would keep inflation low, until the economy turns around. Then we have a nice surprise waiting for us.

      Alternatively, short and long term interest rates are low because the Fed's rate is low. How is a bank going to charge high interest rates when money is so cheap? If a bank triest to charge a lot of interest, a borrower can just go to the next bank over.

      Is any of this actually the case? I don't know. I don't believe Bernanke knows either. Economics is not a science.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    81. Re:Honest Question by mh1997 · · Score: 1

      10X of the poverty line might be gravy, but higher taxes at that level might also be a disinsentive to produce more wealth - and more jobs.

      Why 10X the poverty line, why don't we just tax everything above the poverty line since that is the place that you can survive?

      Taxes on income punish a person for producing (earning) no matter the level. Have you ever seen the articles that show a family of 4 earning roughly $20K actually has more disposable income than a family earning $50K? It takes a considerable amount of money (percentage wise) to go from welfare to taxpayer - so much so, that it isn't always worth the effort.

    82. Re:Honest Question by roman_mir · · Score: 2

      Of-course it makes the rich richer, because who do you think gets the FIRST STAB at the money that is being printed by the Fed?

      Those who get the money directly are the real benefactors, they get to gamble with all that counterfeit currency, while they are gambling they are making profits on money they never actually saved to be investments, and then the higher prices hit YOU, not them, they don't care, they can shift their consumption elsewhere.

      However there is another little problem with inflation: it creates the bigger DISPARITY between the really rich and the really poor, which ends up benefiting the rich more, as now they have more poor people as cheap resources.

      Of-course this used to be a problem with revolutions and such, but today the world is very mobile, the money moves around the globe with the arm of the clock, so you can't even touch it.

    83. Re:Honest Question by Petron · · Score: 2

      There is a misconception that the rich are job creators. The real job creators are the middle class that can't afford lavish trips abroad or expensive goods manufactured offshore and instead spend their money closer to home.

      While it's true that not all rich are job creators, but more job creators fit in the "Rich" side of things than you think. For many businesses, the business income and assets count towards personal income.

      If you want to make sure the rich pays their taxes, remove ALL loopholes, but on the other side, make sure everybody pays taxes. I prefer a fair tax system like a flat-tax, or national sales tax. No loopholes. Everybody pays the same percentage. The sales tax is sounding better to me every time I hear about it - Internet sales would get taxed. The trust-fund babies would get taxed. People vacationing here from abroad would get taxes. Heck Illegal Immigrants would get taxed. Everybody pays something, with no loopholes. The rich would have to pay more since they go through ivory back-scratchers and Audi's every week. And it would stop the situation where the people who get taxed nothing, or the least, choosing what other folks should pay. If you want to raise taxes, you raise it for everybody.

      --
      if (it != oneThing) it = another;
    84. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "That money gets spent (if its not just horded, as is common) on trips overseas and fancy foreign vehicles that do very little to contribute to domestic jobs." As a percentage of either net worth or income, do the rich spend most of their money on travel and consumer good or do they save it? How do they save it, in big bags of cash buried in the backyard or in banks which take their money and loan it out to businesses (which hire employees to make money) or perhaps they invest in businesses (which hire employees to make money) directly?

    85. Re:Honest Question by roman_mir · · Score: 2

      inflation is a way for governments to spend what they don't have by taking away your purchasing power through currency counterfeiting, that's why they hate real money.

      deflation hurts the government, because it's the biggest debtor AND in deflationary environment the nominal salaries/prices go down, which decreases the absolute number of dollars that can be collected as taxes, while the debt becomes more difficult to deal with.

      That's why government love inflation, hate deflation and they push this propaganda into your heads through the bought academia and MSM.

      As to inflation - the people with real money understand how to save the purchasing power by buying the necessary assets that go up in value in inflationary times, and you, with your fixed income end up paying more and more of your after-tax income for the basic necessities.

      Do you realize that $25000 in 1957 was enough for a man to have a family, with stay at home wife, 4-5 kids, paid out house, maybe another property, a couple of paid out cars, no debt, with vacations, etc.? Today that's just above the poverty line and you are talking about inflation helping the middle class and the poor and hurting the rich?

      IF INFLATION HURT THE RICH, YOU WOULDN'T HAVE IT. It would be just as terrible an idea in terms of propaganda, as deflation is today.

    86. Re:Honest Question by Courageous · · Score: 1

      Surprisingly, investments in real estate rise at a rate very close to the value of inflation once you factor in things like lowering interest rates, interest rate subsidies, and the baseline housing values. This trend goes back to the last time interest rates were higher than 18% (contrasted with current 4% interest rates).

      Somewhat true. However, not entirely true. You forget the pressure of a growing population versus desirable land. So some of the appreciation is from the demand-supply equation. The effect is real, particularly in coastal areas, which tend to have a 2% advantage on inflation, or so.

      C//

    87. Re:Honest Question by Amouth · · Score: 1

      irresponsible companies are that didn't when they suffer an economic fall and don't have the reserves to survive without bailouts.

      my only comment on that - is there never should have been a "bailout" to the same companies that created the mess they can't survive.

      the fact that they where loaning 200-300k$ to people making minimum wage - they should have to eat that loan.. if they don't have the cash they need to look at all the extra cash they gave them selves and pay the company back out of their own damn pocket because they where wrong to take it in the first place.

      --
      '...if only "Jumping to a Conclusion" was an event in the Olympics.'
    88. Re:Honest Question by Migraineman · · Score: 1

      Property Tax causes a fundamental shift in society. All "property" becomes property of the state, and you merely lease it rather than own it. If you fail to pay your taxes, the state will terminate your lease on said property, will re-claim said property, and lease it out to another party. Real estate in the US is already subject to this kind of lease-from-the-government structure.

      A universal Property Tax hearkens back to medieval societies where all property grants (real estate, cows, shovels, etc) were issued by the king.

    89. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, how did you determine 10x the poverty line? Arbitrarily I bet since it "looks" like rich to you. Problem is "rich" is a matter of perspective. To someone making $22.5K, someone making $100K looks "rich". To someone making $100K, someone making $200K looks "rich". And so on. Problem is your 1 size fits all arbitrary measure doesn't work for high cost areas like NYC, LA, etc. $250K does not go far in those areas for a family of 4.

    90. Re:Honest Question by knewter · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This is so fucking ignorant I don't know where to begin.

      People that bring home more than $250k probably don't put money into the stock market or anything to allow new businesses to be formed. They probably don't directly fund startups that create jobs.

      People that make $250k or more do *not* hoard it, or spend tons on trips overseas and fancy foreign vehicles in my experience. I run a software development shop and I've seen those people join together to provide funding to help a startup form. They do this in the hope that they can make more money later, and leave a legacy for their children. They do this at great risk (most startups fail). If you curtail the possible reward, they will *absolutely* do less of this - there's more guaranteed benefit from hoarding their money than there is from reinvesting it at that point.

      I can't get on the internets without getting furious at people these days. I worked my ass off (far greater than 80 hour weeks much of the time) to get where I am today, which is only just barely getting close to your magical rich man line, from making $18k/year or so at the beginning of my career. I now employ 14 people that make on average $60k/year. If I had known that people that make $250k/year would be bad mouthed by the time I got here I wouldn't have fucking done it, and those 14 people would be without a job (or at least without as good of a job as I provide them). My services wouldn't have helped some 70 people start the businesses they wanted to start.

      A market is a complex beast. People need to stop acting like they can control it. A family of 4 earning $1M EARNED A FUCKING MILLION DOLLARS THAT YEAR and there's no reason they should have $750k of it taken from them just because they did well. You're encouraging people to not try to do that well. Don't you understand that? If the nation continues down this path then earners WILL take their businesses elsewhere, and you'll be left with a bunch of people dependent on government, and no one to tax.

      Fucking hippies. :)

      --
      -knewter
    91. Re:Honest Question by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

      About the only way to make sure that your money is out of "the system", and positively ensure that it can't be used to hire contractors, pay workers, do capital improvement or invest in some R&D, is to stuff it in your mattress. Literally.

      What do you think banks do? What do you think the stock market is?

    92. Re:Honest Question by michaelwigle · · Score: 1

      I understand where you are coming from and used to feel the same way. Let me share what changed my mind and let you come to your own conclusions about property tax. I own a home. The main reason I bought a home is that I don't want to pay rent for the rest of my life. It's not a financial investment, it's there to lower my living expenses when I get older. Last month my payment was $558.99. $137.70 went to pay down the debt. $182.16 went to pay interest. $228.28 went to pay taxes and insurance. About $200 of that was taxes (I don't have an exact amount for that portion). So, I'm paying close to the same amount for capital and interest as I am in taxes. I've already been taxed on the income that I earned to buy the house. Why should I continue to be taxed for as long as I own the house? If I want to give my children the house, they are going to have to have enough income to pay the taxes on it as well. Many families end up having to sell family homes and business when there is a death because if the value of the property is high enough, then you have death taxes on assets. This has led to the failure of many family farms.

      Here's another way to think about it. During all of this crisis with people losing their jobs. Pretend, for a moment, that someone owned their house. Does it not seem reasonable that they should be able to keep their home until they find work again? Because they might lose their home as it is now because they have to keep paying taxes on the value of the house. Property taxes force people to continue to find ways of making money in order to keep the things they already bought. It puts great hardship on the middle class and on the lower class who are trying to improve their financial position.

      Now, I realize we can look at larger corporations and see how they misuse land they buy and sit on it but they will afford to do so regardless. When we look at taxation we need to be careful that we don't unintentionally build our own walls between the classes and make it impossible to move up.

    93. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure and grandma who's living on SS but in a house that was paid off fifty years ago will get forced out of her house because she can't afford the taxes on it.

    94. Re:Honest Question by jthill · · Score: 1

      Or they could reinstitute the WPA, set people to work at things of lasting value -- you know, actual wealth.

      --
      As always, all IMO. Insert "I think" everywhere grammatically possible.
    95. Re:Honest Question by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

      So I pay taxes on what I earn this year every single year afterwards? No, thanks. Property tax is possibly the most unfair there is.

      No. A wealth tax is the only fair tax that there is. You tax based upon what someone has, not what someone has earned.

      Property taxes as they currently exist are unfair, though, because they tax based upon the value of a property rather the ownership interest. If you've got a $450,000 property and a $400,000 loan, you should be taxed upon your $50,000 net worth of the property. The person or persons who own the loan should be taxed at the present net value of the loan which may be more or less than $400,000. There doesn't need to be any corporate or business tax. The corporations and businesses are owned by people who would pay taxes based upon the value of their investment.

    96. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So income 10x the poverty line is "just gravy"? Who determines 10x is the correct amount? You? Job creators are people who build businesses. Consumers don't create jobs.

      And also $500k net income does not make you *very* rich if you have a family of 4. It all depends on where you live which of course the Federal Government doesn't take into account.

    97. Re:Honest Question by GlobalEcho · · Score: 1

      move their money into the stock market to avoid investing it into projects that create real value

      The stock market is is exactly where that money can create real value. The stock market is not some wormhole shooting food and iPads into the sun, you know. Using $1 to buy stock in, say, Netflix puts another dollar toward video streaming technology, with all the rewards to society that come from that, including network admin jobs, computer equipment orders, lowered distribution costs, etc.

    98. Re:Honest Question by WesternActor · · Score: 1

      What the hell business is it of yours or the government's what anyone needs or doesn't need to survive?

      --

      --Matthew
      "If the lights of Broadway blind me, I won't mind..."
    99. Re:Honest Question by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      High inheritance taxes are a great place to hit them. Leave heirs enough to live comfortably, say a couple of million, then take the rest.

    100. Re:Honest Question by microbox · · Score: 1

      Tax wealth not income

      Sounds to me like you want to see a return of the estate tax (aka, death tax).

      People building businesses don't stop working because they are paying higher marginal tax rates.

      --

      Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
    101. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let me try an 'honest answer'.

      1. I don't know when it happened... but somewhere along the lines, people began thinking of 'consumers' as being the main part of an economy. People feel righteous about being consumers. Apparently Greeks should get bailed out and be given free money so they can then keep the German economy going by purchasing German goods. Of course, we see the piper still needs to be paid. Germany via its banks lent Greece money... and Greece produces virtually nothing of value except some tourism... so they can never really pay back the German banks. If Germany wants to stimulate its economy, why not just bypass Greece anyways and just give each German citizen a new BMW. You see the same thing when people talk about China needing US consumers. So the first part of my honest answer... being a consumer is easy... being a producer is hard.

      2. You assume rich people just enjoy the feel of money or seeing the 0s accumulate on their monthly balance. While that might be true for such shrewd people like Warren Buffet, many rich people actually... spend their money. Some like Bill Gates do it via charity. Some like larry Ellison are a bit more flamboyant. These flamboyant people are actually more useful to society than a Warren Buffet. They buy high end goods, take high end vacations... they can actually afford to be consumers.

      3. I'm a bit of a gloomy person when it comes to the 'economy' as you would commonly perceive it. What we think of as economic growth is largely a product of the industrial revolution. Once a society is industrialized, it's not really going to grow very much. Certain export oriented societies aside... but not everyone can be an exporter. The industrial revolution was unique in that:
      a. It produced goods and services people were willing to bust their hump over. To get a house, electricity, running water, roads, a car... dramatically improves you life. It's why people left the farm life and toiled for 12 hours a day in factory. We see the pattern in China today.
      b. It involved mass numbers of people in society. Just think of it... back in the day... you actually needed a person to switch telephone calls.

      The modern economy is missing both of these. Computers and automation reduce the need for human labor. For the things the government wants to promote, people really don't value them them same. People say they value healthcare... but I guarantee you people aren't going to toil 12 hours a day in a factory to pay a doctor 300k a year to get better healthcare. Ditto for education...

      All these people trying to prop up the economy and economic growth are fighting a losing battle. Economic growth is great when it happens.
      So the economy as we know it (big banks, constant money money making, having faith that you will make more money in the future to pay down current debt....) is down for the count.

      This is not to say all hell is going to break lose. You can live a very good high quality life without it. I recently visited Iceland... which as you may know gave the big banks a big finger. People live a high quality of life there, but most still do productive work. They fish, farm... live a decent life.

      4. Who wants to work? The waiter in the restaurant, doesn't want to be there on Friday night serving you drinks. I'm sure they'd rather be at home. The whole system that you desire... is actually predicated on keeping us people working hard... so the rich and stay rich... earning money. There is no natural reason you should just be able to dump your money in the stock market and except it to have positive returns. This has been the greatest fraud perpetuated on society. In a stable currency, you could save your money and use it in old age. In the modern world, the banks and government take that away from you and force you to play the stock market and investment game just to keep your purchasing power. You don't win at that game... but the finance folks do. People are out there ranting about jobs. But in

    102. Re:Honest Question by Anthony+Mouse · · Score: 1

      Increased taxes for high income earners are *not* barricades to becoming rich. It's a recognition of the fact that you don't need $1M to survive.

      In this case I agree with you -- $1M is about the right number. The problem is that before they were talking about raising taxes on anyone who makes $250K, and that's where you run into trouble. A family of five living on $250K in certain parts of the country is not saving anything. Three kids in private school or college are consuming $100K of that money just for tuition, because nobody who makes that much gets any financial aid. Around $50K is already being paid in taxes. You then have $100K left for the living expenses of five people. That is far from nothing, but it's only $20K per person. That family can easily spend that and have nothing left over. In other words, they will never break into the investment class, because they still consume all or very close to all that they earn. And for that reason I don't like the idea of raising their taxes.

      On the other hand, someone making $1M/year could without significant sacrifice live the same life as the $250K/year family and quickly save up a multimillion dollar retirement account. Which means that if you make more than that, the government is not causing you any material hardship to deprive you of half or so.

    103. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But I know for a fact that I'd rather be left with $500K than $20,250, even if I'm paying 50% tax compared to the other guy's 10%, or even if the other guy paid none at all.

      Of course your would, but when does the amount you take home start to be worth less than the effort put into making that money? Once enough people hit it, the distribution starts to pool there, and then they need to be taxed more, which lowers that line, which causes everything to pool at that line. Downward and downward we go.

      People that can afford more should pay more, but that's where a flat tax, or something else that's so simple the lay man can figure out what he's putting in, keeps things fair. When I have to pay someone to figure out how much I need to pay the government, or someone needs to pay someone to figure out how to pay less to the government, something is wrong.

      And it's not a gut reaction thing. If I have a pie twice the size of yours, should I have to give up 75% of my pie, while you only have to give up 50% of yours, based solely on the fact that I have more pie? Giving up half of my pie, because I used the same oven and ingredients as you did makes sense, as we're both giving up the same rate... but just because I was able to make more pie than you doesn't automatically mean I should give more pie, as a percentage, up than you do.

    104. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is exactly why Buffett talks this way. If you are in the ruling rich cabal you are setting the rules and your account team knows what is coming so you can adjust your investments accordingly. The entrepreneur is the one who suffers. Plus the ruling rich cabal can pit the lower classes against each other to keep the masses distracted.

    105. Re:Honest Question by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      Why would you have a higher likelihood of needing to call the police if you have expensive property. Property crime rates are much higher in low-income neighborhoods than rich ones.

    106. Re:Honest Question by trout007 · · Score: 1

      Our money supply now is based on credit. So when the housing bubble burst and all of the mortgages defaulted and foreclosed on we were going to have a massive deflation because we have been accustom to the money supply. Why didn't we? Because the Fed created Trillions of dollars out of nothing and gave them to the banks to prop them up, along with enriching their friends along the way. When you are creating Trillions a few Billion is easy to lose track of you know.

      But as we know you don't get something for nothing. Who got hurt? The savers and those on fixed income. Their savings is being wiped out. Actually not wiped out, it's being stolen.

      Deflation isn't a problem. There is just less money and it's more valuable so prices and wages are forced to drop to adjust to the new money supply. Who does it hurt? Those who are in debt because they have a loan that they have to pay off while making less money. It also hurts the bankers since more people who can't pay their loans will default on them.

      But those that lived within their means and saved do better since the money they have is worth more.

      So who does the government and the Fed help the responsible little guy that never got into huge debt or the banks and those that borrowed every last cent?

      You guessed it.

      --
      I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
    107. Re:Honest Question by uvajed_ekil · · Score: 2

      Kids have kids because they did not have the benefit of a good upbringing or a quality education. They make a few poor decisions, and another generation is locked into the same misery. It is very easy for you to say "just don't do that," when someone told you what to watch out for. Not everyone had that. And staying in school for a high school degree (generally called a diploma) is far, far from a guarantee of success. Life is what you make it, indeed, but if you don't have any tools you probably aren't going to build much no matter how bad you want to. I'm glad everything seems so simple to you, but your simplistic answers are not cure-alls for folks who had rough starts in life. That's where civilized, successful people like us come in - we can do a little better to help others, can't we? If not, we are not that smart, and not that civilized afterall.

      Or due you just think minorities choose to be poorer, more often incarcerated and have higher teen birth rates on average?

      --
      This is a hacked account, for which the owner can not be held responsible.
    108. Re:Honest Question by Duradin · · Score: 1

      Possibly because the police don't patrol dangerous low-income neighborhoods as much or as well as the rich burbclaves and the rich don't have to resort to physical criminal means to take someone else's property.

    109. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't this how it was 50 years-80 years ago? Everyone had a black nanny / maids (USA) and now where are we? No maids. No nannies. My parents got a white woman to clean though. If that counts. Middle class America everybody has someone to clean. It would seem to me we are heading downward direction though. :) I'm one of the lucky few who seem to be heading in an upward momentum. Although I don't yet have anybody to clean for me... or own even a condo. Although my business is looking more and more successful everyday and the money is rolling in.

      Yesteryear only the fathers worked. Now you got two people working and without the nanny / maids in middle class America.

      I live in one of the top 10 wealthiest areas of the country. Nobody falls below the poverty line here. Actually. Maybe some of the Mexicans do although I'm doubtful of even that. If you hit the poverty line here you wouldn't be able to live here.

    110. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not only that, but if he had invested 10M of his own money into a new business venture with the hope to eventually make 1M a year and lose all of it, he'd realize that the risks taken with one's own money in a business are much greater than regular employment, since you stand to lose all of it not just the potential income.

      It's not like these people just go to some work place 8 hours a day and get millions. They risk their own money, large sums at that. When you think that an investment of 1M-10M is in fact a small business, you realize what you're quashing with all the "wealthy" rhetoric.

    111. Re:Honest Question by RobNich · · Score: 1

      This. When a person keeps money in the bank or invests it, it keeps moving and is used to hire people, who buy food, etc. The money never stops moving, unless they just bury it in vaults. Which they won't do, because it doesn't earn anything that way (and inflation eats at it too).

      --
      Hello little man. I will destroy you!
    112. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I'd rather tax those who are sitting on trust funds than those who are aggressively making lots of money, as they are quite likely to be the wealth creators"

      Front-line Workers and inventors tend to create wealth.

      People who are aggressively making money tend to be "skimming the cream off the top"

      witness the day-trader who trades stocks so often they are sometimes held for less than 5 minutes, and pockets profits whose origins lie in the sweat of some factory or farm "slob"

      did the day-trader add value or create wealth when he made half a percent on his investment by holding that stock 5 minutes? quite likely

      was he taxed as high as the factory/farm worker who actually milked the cow or turned the milk into cheese? again, ha. not a chance.

      did he, by trading 50k worth of stock twice in 5 minutes make as much as that farmer/factory-worker does in a week? you betcha

    113. Re:Honest Question by crunchygranola · · Score: 1

      I'm more worried that this taxes people on their way to becoming rich.

      Anyone bringing in more than a million dollars every year is already rich, and the taxes being discussed are simply the same net tax rates that the middle class already pays on incomes less than 10% as large. Aren't you concerned about the middle class earning a decent living, send their kids to college, and be able to retire?

      Tax wealth not income...

      I'd be fine with that. The concentration of assets to the top of the pyramid is even greater than the concentration of income. This would shift the burden of taxes far more heavily on to the rich.

      --
      Second class citizen of the New Gilded Age
    114. Re:Honest Question by rwv · · Score: 1

      Can they tax inheritance sitting in offshore bank accounts? Can they prevent rich people from transferring huge amounts of money into their child's offshore bank account before they die? It seems like these are two off-the-top-of-the-head loopholes that you'd want to close before having the "tax them when they die" discussion.

    115. Re:Honest Question by RobinEggs · · Score: 1

      I'm more worried that this taxes people on their way to becoming rich.

      Considering it only taxes income in excess of a million dollars I'd say that's not a problem. A million dollars is already rich. It's already 22.2 times the median income. Already in the top 1% of Americans and the top 0.001% of the human race.

      I realize that inflation catches up with everyone, and that a million dollars is no longer an inconceivably large amount of money, but to say that people making >$1 million a year are merely "on their way to becoming" rich is downright insane.

    116. Re:Honest Question by c · · Score: 1

      > Tax wealth not income

      You do realize that wealth is essentially just accumulated income, right?

      --
      Log in or piss off.
    117. Re:Honest Question by RobNich · · Score: 1

      In the US, property tax doesn't pay for defense, roads, or law. It doesn't pay for the sick, poor, or otherwise disadvantaged. It pays for schools, police, and firefighters.

      Roads are paid for by gasoline taxes.

      The state and federal government provide the rest of your list, and are funded by income taxes.

      So to complete the original thought, property taxes are the most unfair form of taxation. You don't use more school resources based on the size or value of your land. Also, to address your point, your use of roads is not related to the value of your home, on which property tax is based. The size of land itself is not a factor, only the overall value of the property, which is mostly based on the value of the improvements.

      --
      Hello little man. I will destroy you!
    118. Re:Honest Question by Nursie · · Score: 1

      You miss the point.

      If you have enough pie for 8, you won't starve if the government takes half of it, or even 75%

      If I only have enough pie for 2 then we're getting close to the mark at the same tax rate.

      My preferred solution (and I suspect yours too) would be to make significant cuts to the scope of government such that it didn't need so damned much pie in the first place. But absent that pipe-dream ever coming true the person with 8 pieces of pie will necessarily find themselves taxed at a higher rate, regardless of perceptions of fairness.

    119. Re:Honest Question by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      Oh no tax them when they live, but tax them when they die a lot more. As long as the kids have plenty to live on, who's to complain? This "offshore black hole" isn't nearly as opaque as you think either, if large amounts of money goes missing, the taxman will want to know where. And I hope the kid never wanted to spend it, because then mister taxman will know where, and will take his cut plus penalties that will make the original bill look like a tip in your local restaurant.

    120. Re:Honest Question by firewrought · · Score: 1

      Property tax is possibly the most unfair there is.

      Your property does not exist without the ongoing functions of government (probate, traffic & sanitation, environmental regulations, police/fire protection, etc.) for both yourself and your vicinity (you need to supplies, right?). Civilization isn't a one-time service, so you don't pay a one-time price.

      --
      -1, Too Many Layers Of Abstraction
    121. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what's the incentive to work harder if your extra work is 'rewarded' by paying a larger chunk if your income in taxes? The logic here seems off to me...as if it's an OK notion to have a 75%(or higher) tax rate.

    122. Re:Honest Question by RobinEggs · · Score: 1

      Once family income exceeds 10x the poverty line, they rest is just gravy.

      Try 2.5x.

      I've read countless times that studies show little or no increase in happiness or health with increasing income past the $60,000 a year mark, which is only 30% more than the median and not even 3x the poverty line. $60,000 or $10 billion; an emotionally stable person is just as happy with either one. I certainly realize that said person might like to vacation more than they do presently or give larger gifts to their alma mater or larger inheritances or whatever, but that person won't be unhappy without more money; part of being emotionally stable involves recognizing limits to your desires. In almost all cases it's only people with a serious mental or social disease who *cannot* be completely happy with 60k. And I mean true contentment, not resignation.

    123. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a perfect example of misinformed opinion by someone who has a very limited financial view.

      Once you consider all the investments the "rich" make into start ups and other ventures, your argument falls flat. What would happen if the "rich" were taxed to the point where they could not invest in all these fancy companies we see eg. google.com anyone? Most of you blokes would not have a fucking job

      I consider myself middle class yet I am extremely frugal and have been building an investment portfolio since I was 13. This legislation would punish me for all my sacrifice and hard work because some of the spoiled brats that don't have enough or don't understand simple principals of economics

      Well i have news for you. Most of you on this thread are considered wealthy by world standards and as soon as they are done with the super rich, they will be coming after you.

      As for me, I have relocated my company and my earnings outside the grasp of people like you. I am thankful I have worked myself into a position that I have the freedom to do so. Now I get to watch you dragged down by the mess you created.

    124. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      An honest answer - Your response is ridiculous and shows you don't know how the majority of businesses and thus jobs are created in the US.

      Most business are what is known as "Subchapter S" corporations. This allows anywhere from 1 to 100 shareholders (see http://taxes.about.com/od/scorporations/qt/scorp_criteria.htm). This also means that those corporations are not "double taxed", because share dividends are distributed directly to the owner (shareholder), as [i]personal[/i] income (as opposed to "C" corps which get dividends taxed at the corporate rate, and are then taxed again at the personal level, when distributed to the shareholder).

      Consider this - how many millionaires in the US? And how many jobs pay $1M or more as a salary? Not damn many - not near as many as there are millionaires - and due to the "death taxes" in the US, unless someone has a LOT more than $1M, they aren't passing along much to their heirs. My father-in-law has way more than a $1M farm (land, buildings, machinery) - that will have to be sold when he passes along, since none of the kids can pay the taxes necessary to keep it. A few of us may wind up with 40 acres or so, but nothing like the 1000 acres he currently owns. (Disclosure - I'm not making $1M a year, not even $100K a year, and I think this plan is ridiculous. Why? All the jobs I've had over the last 30 years have been via entrepreneurs - those SubChapter S corps. You take away that income, and those guys are going to rethink having a business or not, or how many employees or not to have - guarandamnteed).

      Your example and plan does precisely what most conservatives say it will - reduce jobs or simply put businesses out of business, since they have become economically nonviable, and most of those millionaires are businesspeople.

      And, genius, how long do you think it will be before someone decides they aren't going to work that hard to simply have it taken away, and decide they'll live on $100K a year? Ignore the fact that you [i]think[/i] they are overpaid/have too much money, what's the next tax structure when the number of millionaires drops? Making more than $250K a year is too much? $50K a year? Who decides what the magic number is?

    125. Re:Honest Question by sycodon · · Score: 1

      First, government should always help those who can't help themselves.

      Second, government should help out those who have, through no fault of their own, run into problems...disasters, etc.

      Third, any other help should be predicate on those being helped doing something to help themselves.

      While my simplistic answers are not cure-alls, they sure as hell will cut down dramatically on all the misery. In fact, I would feel comfortable saying that the vast majority of misery and poor would be eliminated just by people pulling their heads out of the ass and NOT doing something stupid.

      Poor decisions are just that...decisions.

      There are plenty of things to guide someone at a decision point. Look at your surroundings...are you about to do something that hasn't worked out well for others? Have you done it before and suffered the consequences?

      How many 20 year olds are on their third kid, no father in sight, and yet they still haven't learned? How many 18 year olds have two grand theft convictions and they still look to steal cars?

      You can't help being poor when you are 5. You can help it when you are 25.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    126. Re:Honest Question by sycodon · · Score: 1

      You just argued against Social Security.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    127. Re:Honest Question by GreatBunzinni · · Score: 1

      I'm more worried that this taxes people on their way to becoming rich.

      Taken FTFFSoTA (From the fucking first sentence of the article):

      Barack Obama, the US president, is expected to seek a new minimum tax rate for the wealthy to ensure they pay at least the same percentage as middle-income taxpayers.

      Do you actually believe that paying the same income percentage as middle-income taxpayers will tax anyone on their way to becoming rich?

      --
      Slashdot, fix your code or at least hire someone who is competent at it to do it for you.
    128. Re:Honest Question by JustSomeProgrammer · · Score: 1

      I call bullshit on you wouldn't have done it. There has been no time in history where people better off did not get bad mouthed by poorer people. It has also always been something to aspire to. The low taxes at the top are what is new not the proposal to say hey rich people pay at least as much as that guy paying 50k. A government and economy cannot be balanced by the poor which is what regressive tax demands. (Sales tax is regressive).

      People that are poor are unable to go on vacations even domestically. I grew up in a family where going to an amusement park for one day in the summer was considered the family vacation and we came back home at the end of the night because we couldn't afford a hotel. I worked hard too and got into a better situation. I make 100k+ now and I want to pay a higher tax % than my mom does making
      You'll never convince me that people will stop trying to make more money if there's a higher % income tax at higher income levels. Because the % will never even out the income where the person making 250k lives as comfortablly as the person making 25k or even 50k.

    129. Re:Honest Question by Shadow99_1 · · Score: 1

      The reality is most people who start out making 18k/year (or less) never make it up to even 100k/year, let alone a million... Regardless of how much they work. 98% of the GDP of the US goes to 1% of the population. Which part of the GDP would you like to tax? the 99% of people and the 2% of the money or the 1% of people and 98% of money? The obvious answer is that 1% needs to foot a larger part and it's always going to be that way unless we could manage the 25%:25% (25% of people making 25% of GDP) mark that economists like to toy with. I can tell you now though that any such attempt will rule out 'the rich' all together.

      --
      we are all invisible unless we choose otherwise
    130. Re:Honest Question by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 1

      I don't think we're heading for a permanent jobless economy, just one with much bigger class separations again with an overclass that can be even more lavish with servants and luxuries.

      Sure, and to troll a bit... why do you think the conservatives/Republicans are going nuts to lower spending on education, health and welfare; blasting that teachers are "under worked" and "overpaid", proposing "privatizing" of Medicare, Medicaid (which will really only help the private companies - see Medicare "Advantage"), and that Social Security is an illegal "ponzi" scheme? Keep the working-class poor, uneducated and dependent on whatever jobs and pay the upper class deems them worthy with limited possibility for advance means more money, power and control for the already rich.

      Don't believe me? Research how badly the rich are doing in this economy vs. the middle class and poor. The rich are doing just fine.

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    131. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The bigger misconception is that the "rich" are the ones "earning" $250,000, even though they are often small business owners who must report the earnings of their businesses (as sole-proprieterships) on their personal returns. That $250,000 (or even a million for that matter) goes away pretty quickly once you factor in business expenses and supporting a family. And yes, if they can keep more of their earnings and have more certainty in the tax code, they can and will hire more employees.

      If all we focus on is what people need to survive, we lose sight of what this country is all about. Stop punishing those who are successful, especially if you aspire to be so someday.

    132. Re:Honest Question by JustSomeProgrammer · · Score: 1

      Wealthy is a respective term. I mean it is impossible to have an even distribution of wealth throughout an entire group and consider any part of that group wealthy with respect to the group. One group can be wealthy when considered against another group, but inside the group the only way someone is wealthy is if they have more wealth than someone else.

      This very statement requires wealth to be finite. Even if more wealth is added to a pool of wealth it comes from somewhere. The environment, the poor, the government, the rich, other planets etc. Wealth is transferred from one group to another.

      Through out history there have been two classes of people. Haves and Have nots. The only way to become wealthy is to take wealth from the have nots.

    133. Re:Honest Question by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      Yeah everyone earning 250k+ is starting a startup. You're a fucking idiot no wonder you get angry at the internet.

    134. Re:Honest Question by tmosley · · Score: 1

      In my experience, those with a lot of land are not serviced by a lot of roads, and poor neighborhoods employ the police much more than the rich neighborhoods.

      The fact is that old people on fixed incomes have their homes taken from them because they can't afford to pay property taxes. Property taxes mean there is no such thing as ownership of land, which is utterly disgusting.

      No-one ever thinks about the consequences of their interventions in the free market, and then they blame those consequences on the market, rather than their hamfisted interventions.

    135. Re:Honest Question by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Let's take your example here. Basically your saying that a tax rate of 33% leads to fair results. So a guy making 750,000 has to pay out 250,000 in taxes. So let's look at the guy that makes, say, 20,000, now pays out about 6,600 bucks. The guy who has 500,000 in his pocket after taxes by any measure is far better off than the guy left with 13,400 bucks. So what we've determined is that flat tax rates do not create a fairer system, save in a purely abstract and mathematical sense.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    136. Re:Honest Question by Bacon+Bits · · Score: 1

      Once the wealth accumulates to the top only, how will the economy survive without spending by the middle and lower classes? Won't a lot of business just shutdown because people don't have money to spend?

      Let's put it this way: Not the gun stores.

      See also France, circa 1790.

      --
      The road to tyranny has always been paved with claims of necessity.
    137. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Shhhhhhhhhh............you're making sense and you're going to scare them. Hippies should never be startled with facts.

    138. Re:Honest Question by pnuema · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm sorry, but history does not bear this out. the tax rate during Eisenhower was 90%. People still became millionaires. The tax rate during Reagan was 50%. People still became millionaires. I call bullshit. You worked hard because that is who you are. You would have done the same no matter what the financial rewards. If you really want to take your business elsewhere, go for it. There are plenty of people willing to compete for your customers. Don't let the door hit you in the ass on your way to China.

    139. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I really doubt you believe all that bullshit you are spewing.

    140. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, no worries. Nobody said anybody wanted to take 3/4 of your income, that was only an example to show that high earners can more than survive even if something as crazy as that were done.

      Most of the taxes that are being talked about are merely letting the tax margins go back to what they were in the 90s. That's not a massive increase and you will still benefit personally from all of your hard work. The difference is that the government won't default on its debt and someone might fix the pothole down the street that has taken out the axle in your car and about 300 other cars last month. The bills need to get paid and the rich are the least hurt by a tax increase.

    141. Re:Honest Question by gfxguy · · Score: 2

      But your second point is heresy!!!! Why should only rich folks be able to procreate? Of course, the question answers itself with any thought put into it, but still... it seems cold, so you must be some sort of eugenics supporting Nazi.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    142. Re:Honest Question by SlappyMcInty · · Score: 1

      1) It's not about survival - it's called capitalism. If you want socialism / communism, go elsewhere.
      2) It is about keeping what you earn, and not being robbed by the government to buy themselves votes.

    143. Re:Honest Question by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 1

      I like hearing about how it is evil for companies to "hoard wealth" and then hearing from the same group how irresponsible companies are that didn't when they suffer an economic fall and don't have the reserves to survive without bailouts.

      Perhaps that's because private, small companies are the only ones capable of actually hoarding the amount of wealth necessary to survive an economic fall? The larger ones are generally forced by stockholders to reinvest that wealth into stock. And since the same economic fall that causes the large company's stock to tank also causes all those investments to tank as well, then at least on paper large companies can quickly become undercapitalized. Worse, a bad stock market discourages the sort of recapitalization that's necessary for the company to keep going. Finally, large companies are large, clear places where short-term, government investment can be used to gloss over a short-term economic downturn or recession. Hence, small companies have to be wise and large companies get to ride on the coat tails of their own size.

      I save money wherever I can in case something happens such as job loss or other unforeseen hardships. My household includes my wife (who has MS and whose treatments cost a small fortune) and a 12 year old daughter and our household income nets less than 50,000 but I manage not to "easily" spend all my money.

      The real question is, what percentage of that money is spent (and not simply, say, reinvested into stocks, bonds, a savings account, etc) vs a person making $1 million/year. And what of the person that makes net than 20,000 a years? I'm pretty certain that increasing the salary of a person from net 20,000 to 30,000 per year would increase their spending (by percentage and overall) a good bit more than a person net 1,000,000 to 1,010,000 per year. I also assume the inverse is true, that cutting net from 20,000 to 15,000 per year would decrease their spending (by percentage and overall) a good bit more than a person net 1,000,000 to 995,000. Having said that, I agree with the general point that people could save more if they wanted to. But the point at hand is what one can reasonable expect without much consideration of personality of people of an income bracket based upon salary.

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    144. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You need to realize that the only reason you could have done what you did is that you have the infrastructure to support that kind of job creation. Your employees were educated, you have roads and telephone wires and sewers and fire hydrants and police and fire and all sorts of other aspects of living in a civilization where your next door neighbor isn't likely to kill you for some food.

      Now you need to contribute back to that infrastructure. You definitely earned your money, but you need to realize that, as I paraphrase Shark from Any Given Sunday, For every celebrity out there, there are a 100 motherfuckers who did their jobs to get that guy to where he is. And when you lose sight of that, then those 100 motherfuckers won't help you anymore, and then, where will you be?

      Or do you think that the trash just picks itself up magically from the street?

    145. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, I know I quit my job IMMEDIATELY when Clinton raised taxes in the '90s, and I haven't looked back. Good thing I didn't waste my time. I just hope that all the rich entrepreneurs can successfully create legacies for their job-creating progeny without interference or we're all screwed.

    146. Re:Honest Question by gtbritishskull · · Score: 1

      They are not evil for "hoarding wealth". But, if you accept that they do "hoard" their wealth, then lowering taxes on them will not stimulate the economy. It will just give them more wealth to hoard (and refutes the supposed "trickle down effect"). If you give more money to the poorer people, then they will spend it (because the don't hoard it) and it will be a more effective way of stimulating the economy.

    147. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can work your ass off for 20k too, and people do every day. They work hard, all week, their whole lives and get shit for it. Makes me furious that people pretend that the vast majority of laborers don't exist, that there is only success or laziness.

    148. Re:Honest Question by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      Actually, you've got Rand all wrong. I'm not a big fan, I definitely disagree with a lot of what she wrote, but she never, ever, insinuated that simply being wealthy was akin to being a producer, and she was very much a proponent of producers as opposed to moochers, who fit what you're describing as "managers;" people who make money off the productive efforts of others. In many of her stories, it's the wealthy that are the "moochers" and "looters," not just poor people. In fact, she holds poor people who believe in working for a living in high regard... it's the mob of poor people demanding someone else take care of them she holds in disdain.

      But where you're wrong is that managers most certainly can be productive by their decision making, allocating of resources, and very often the fact that they often are doing some of the work themselves. More importantly, they are the ones who take responsibility for the production they oversee, the decisions they make, and in Rand's world that means the manager would be responsible, and therefore necessarily be considered part of the "productive" class every bit as much (and more) than the engineer.

      Now it's true that a lot of middle management is unnecessary and worthless, but they aren't all like that, and companies don't run themselves. In Rand's world, the people owning and running the company are people that worked their way up and paid their dues if they weren't already the people that created the company to begin with.

      And no, I'm not a manager.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    149. Re:Honest Question by PCM2 · · Score: 2

      A family of 4 earning $1M EARNED A FUCKING MILLION DOLLARS THAT YEAR and there's no reason they should have $750k of it taken from them just because they did well.

      But nobody is suggesting that, and to claim that they are is disingenuous.

      We have a tiered tax system. If I make $100,000 and you make $1,000,000, you will pay the exact same amount of tax as me -- on your first $100,000. The only part where you pay a higher tax rate is the part where you make significantly more than me (or the vast majority of Americans). And this new tax that's being proposed wouldn't affect you at all. It would only raise the amount of taxes owed on income in excess of $1,000,000. How you can seriously imagine that this is unreasonable is beyond me.

      Your example of taxes discouraging people from starting businesses is bogus, too. Business expenses are tax deductible, even for sole proprietorships.

      --
      Breakfast served all day!
    150. Re:Honest Question by jafac · · Score: 1

      Um - let's THOROUGHLY discuss the subsidies and tax breaks that have gone to BP, Exxon, Shell, (etc) for over a century, before we even begin talking about this other company. And you mention "Obama" - and conveniently ignore the FACT that this company began receiving subsidies under the Bush administration. I smell a rightwing troll.

      Renewable energy would easily be competitive with fossil fuels if fossil fuels had to pay for their external costs, and did not receive subsidies.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    151. Re:Honest Question by CityZen · · Score: 1

      Of course the money goes "into the system" one way or the other (unless it's just stuffed under a mattress). The question is where into the system does it go? The government just wants a bigger piece right now since it's tapped out. Of course, the government will still tend to get a piece even when the money doesn't go to it directly (via sales taxes & such), but right now they don't want to wait for that supposed "trickle down" to take place. Money going into the government is also going into "the system", since the government doesn't sit on it either. But if the government shuts down due to lack of funds, then lots of circulation channels shut down as well. So the question is never whether "the system" gets enough money, but rather, like a human body, if all the important organs are getting enough to stay alive.

    152. Re:Honest Question by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      Well said, knewter. I'm not uber-wealthy, nor particularly wealthy at all. I don't own my own business, and definitely want to make more money - I know it often takes something I don't have to really "make it," but I realize it's my own short-comings and lack of will to take risks that causes me to be where I am right now. At least I'm realistic about it. For that reason, I don't hold people like you in disdain, I have the utmost respect; one of my friends started his own hosting company and sold it for millions, and I was never jealous or anything but happy for him.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    153. Re:Honest Question by 517714 · · Score: 1

      Big oil pays no income taxes. They have effectively a negative income tax, a tax offset, which they use to reduce the other taxes they pay and royalties owed to the government for drilling on public lands, and fines for their malfeasances. The industry would have you believe that royalties are taxes, they are not, they are a cost of doing business just as postage is to Amazon.com. So, yes, they pay taxes, but a whole lot less than they claim. I would like to see tax offsets eliminated. So if you owe -$1M in income tax and owe $1M in royalties, the bill is $1M instead of $0. The government sucks at business and should, as you suggest, stop picking winners and losers.

      --
      The US government have made it clear that we have no inalienable rights; any we do not defend vigorously will be taken.
    154. Re:Honest Question by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      Libertarian Troll to be exact.

      Government should not be subsidizing ANY company. ALL taxes should be levied equally and without any favoritism by anyone, (R) or (D).

      This is the problem with our current government that if you are big enough, you can lobby for whatever tax breaks you think you deserve. See also UNION exemptions for the new Obama Health Care. Unions who lobbied for it, are now wanting no part of it, I wonder why?

      It all sucks, both (D) and (R) are corrupt beyond repair.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    155. Re:Honest Question by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      I disagree, too. "Use" tax is about the fairest tax there is - your property taxes pay for police and, usually, fire protection. The more you have to protect, the more you should be paying. I realize that "life" is more important than "stuff," but a property tax for such things is about the fairest way to earn revenue for those services.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    156. Re:Honest Question by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      It is not a zero-sum game. A healthy economy produces new wealth

      Money exchanging wealth does not produce wealth out of thin air. What produces wealth is work. Who do you think works more, per dollar - a person earning $20k, or a person earning $1m?

    157. Re:Honest Question by Khashishi · · Score: 1

      Rather, wealth accumulates to the top _in spite of_ inflation. (Regulation works both ways.) If you ignore all government influence except for establishment of a stable currency, wealth will accumulate automatically due to the time value of money. Pretty much anyone who has positive net worth is accumulating money. Anyone who is in debt (say, with a mortgage) or is renting is paying money to those with positive wealth. You'd have to try pretty hard to not play this game. (Don't have any bank accounts.) Money begets interest. Land begets rent. Stocks produce gains. Inflation works against wealth accumulation.

    158. Re:Honest Question by ToastedRhino · · Score: 1

      If I had known that people that make $250k/year would be bad mouthed by the time I got here I wouldn't have fucking done it.

      Right, I'm sure you would have just kept working that $18k a year job forever. I mean, who wants to be comfortable or well off if you can't be obscenely wealthy, right?

    159. Re:Honest Question by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      A family of 4 earning $1M EARNED A FUCKING MILLION DOLLARS THAT YEAR

      That depends on what they actually did to get that money, no?

    160. Re:Honest Question by couchslug · · Score: 1

      "Americans were the first to understand that wealth has to be created. The words 'to make money' hold the essence of human morality."

      No prior art on this one, nope, none at all.

      Silly pandering cunt....

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    161. Re:Honest Question by Khashishi · · Score: 1

      Money isn't a finite resource, but wealth is. There's a finite amount of useful stuff that can be generated on planet Earth.

    162. Re:Honest Question by garyebickford · · Score: 1

      There is a misconception that the rich are job creators.

      - it's no myth. Read the literature. I haven't kept up with the specific figures recently but the great majority (>70%?) of all new jobs are created by small business. Fortune 500 companies grow by buying smaller companies and cutting costs. As a result the big companies are responsible for a net loss of jobs in most years.

      Or, as a friend told me on Friday night, "I've never had a job that wasn't provided by a rich guy. Poor guys don't start companies, and they don't hire people."

      The vast, vast majority of folks taking trips overseas are solidly middle class - that's why cruise ships and tours nearly all cater to the two-week-vacation crowd. There's a reason why the cruise ships are getting bigger - more clients per trip with only slightly larger operating costs adds up to lower cost per passenger and much larger market base.

      Or, think of it this way - if you had $1 million, would you blow it on trips and cars, or would you try to make something interesting? Most people who get that money by effort (i.e. not the lottery) are already motivated to make interesting things, and so they try it again. The start-up thing is challenging and actually kind of addictive.

      Take my own case in point - the numbers are slightly different because it was a while back, but in early 1992 I sold $200,000 worth of stock in a company I helped start but had since left. (IMHO $200,000 back then was pretty equivalent to $1,000,000 today with inflation.) This was enough to pay the taxes and use the remaining money to hire two people in the new consulting company I was putting together. I had hired one person, and things were going OK. Then Clinton pushed through a retroactive tax increase and several changes in tax law, which ended up costing a lot more taxes - including everything my total tax bill was over $120,000. (My case was a bit unusual due to the circumstances - most people weren't hit that hard.) As a result we had to borrow money on the house to pay the tax bill, I had to lay off the one worker and could not hire the other. I was then unable to continue with the business as originally planned - it sputtered along as a one-man company for a couple of years but I was never able to get enough cash to really do what was necessary to start growing.

      So Clinton's 'soak the rich' scheme cost the nation at least two, and arguably three jobs in that year and some unknowable number after that. Adding up, if I had succeeded for just two years, I and my employees would have paid more taxes than Clinton's plan collected. Everything after that would have been gravy for the government. That's the real point.

      At present the top 5% of income earners pay just about 1/2 of all the income taxes, while the bottom 45% pay zero or actually negative taxes (they receive money from the government instead of paying taxes.)

      --
      It's easier to be a result of the past, but more fun to be a cause of the future! http://www.spacefinancegroup.com/
    163. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      none of the posters on this thread have a clue....

      If you raise taxes on the rich, what keeps them here? Why wouldn't they just move to the Caribbean or some other tax haven. Also, if you take their income, then who does the investment to create new jobs? Those are jobs you are destroying.

    164. Re:Honest Question by MYakus · · Score: 1

      That was tried in the US in 1937and it didn't work out well at all. First off, the Buffet exercise is misleading. Warren Buffet earns roughly $100,000 a year in salary. The rest of his income is in long term dividends and capital gains. If you start taxing dividends and capital gains at an even higher rate, history has shown that it will dampen economic activity. Look at the boom President Clinton enjoyed when the rate was dropped to 20%. This proposal isn't talking about taxing dividends, they are talking about taxing earned income (salary). The folks most affected will be the middle class, not the wealthy; and there isn't enough money in that to satisfy the deficit anyway (President Obama's proposed relief is over 10 years and amounts to less than one year's deficit).

      Our government simply spends too much vs. what the economy can actually produce. Revenue is roughly $2.2 Trillion per year (last time I looked):

      Federal Budget
      2008 - $2.9 Trillion
      2009 - $3.1 Trillion
      2010 - $3.55 Trillion
      2011 - $3.82 Trillion

    165. Re:Honest Question by QuantumRiff · · Score: 1

      Heck, I'd be happy if the percentages were even the same.. Say, Everyone pays 20%.. (Or even better, the fair tax).. Some people get really mad, and say the rich should pay more, but many of them don't seem to realize that having them pay the same would be a huge boost (and at least a great start). Currently, they don't even pay as much as those that are poor.. I've worked for a large tax accounting firm, the people that can afford to hire out teams of people to figure out how to get out of taxes is just mind-blowing... I love to hear people talk about the "33% bracket".. if your actually paying that much, you should fire your accountants.. because NOBODY with money pays that rate..

      --

      What are we going to do tonight Brain?
    166. Re:Honest Question by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      I'm more worried that this taxes people on their way to becoming rich.

      Until wealth stops being the primary determining factor in who makes the laws that govern the world, I'm all for anything that keeps people from becoming rich, or at least makes it *very* difficult to a) become and b) remain rich. That said, anyone should be able to earn a decent living with an honest job, and a degree of financial freedom along with it as long as they spend responsibly, and if you disagree with this statement then I'm going to give you a nice big "fuck you, your attitude is part of the problem."

      The problem with large concentrations of wealth is the distorting influence they have on both the economy and the government. The system of political influence has piggybacked itself onto our economic system, but the biggest problem with that is that very, very few people have access to that system of political influence. And the stronger, more entrenched that system becomes, the fewer people have access to it, because those in power continue distorting the system in their favor.

      Now I don't believe that the people in power are necessarily greedy, evil megalomaniacs who want to rule the world; they're just using the system in their own rational self interest to promote their own agenda, which is exactly what libertarians claim is what guides the 'invisible hand.' The problem is that over decades and centuries of tweaks to this system, along with the effects of compound interest and the ability to use money to make money, the entrenched system we have today is clearly broken and heavily weighted in favor of those already extremely wealthy few, and any calls to attempt to shift the power back are met with shrill cries of "class warfare!"

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    167. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, even more incentive to move your company to China?

      The main problem I see is that taxes _now_ are directly based on indicators _now_. That produce the kind of self-reinforcing behavior I just described, but it also causes bubbles. More sensible measures will base current taxes on past indicators as well. An even bolder measure might be to base taxes on future results. Promise to add 1000 jobs next year, put down sufficient collateral, and pay this years taxes next year. Given the persistent "next quarter" thinking in companies today, that will create quite a few jobs in exchange for a few percent lost interest.

    168. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Government is evil by its very nature.

      You're an idiot.

    169. Re:Honest Question by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      What are you talking about? The inflation kills any incentive to invest, it's over 11% (again, my count says 13).

      You can't invest in these insane conditions and expect a meaningful return! NO. A smart rich person is investing abroad, into various vehicles that keep their value during inflationary periods of time.

      I have almost entire essays on these topics here, and they come in handy, because retyping the same thing over and over is tiring.

      US stocks are only going up due to inflation, and they are really nowhere at all compared to commodities in the last 15 years by the way, but the US currency has gone down dramatically (as all of the above links indicate.)

    170. Re:Honest Question by stdarg · · Score: 1

      Things like "saving for a down economy" are not deductible expenses, all that money gets taxed so it takes longer to save for any purpose. Of course our economy and government heavily encourages borrowing beyond your means and deducting the interest (wow look at that savings) so that may not be an important point to many people.

    171. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This. As someone who came to America from a 3rd world country, I see the same pattern emerging. A society of have's and have-not's. The amusing thing for me is the have-nots conviction on "not taxing success", on placing their fate (in case of health care their very lives) in the hands of business rather than the elected government.

      As an outsider, it is just amazing. It would be amusing if I did not see it extract such a heavy toll on the poor. But honestly, I blame them. Just like I blame my countrymen for not thinking rationally and placing clergy above science and tribal/ethnic loyalties above self-interest

    172. Re:Honest Question by DeadDecoy · · Score: 2

      1. Stay in school and at least get a H.S. degree.

      Agreed to some extent. Though I think we've become a society obsessed with having the right piece of paper. Nowadays a B.S. is the new GED.

      2. DON'T have kids if you can't afford them. The cause of pregnancy is well known.

      I actually have a problem with this statement on many levels. The first is that poverty sometimes isn't predictable. A family could be getting by with a 50-100k income until one of the members loses a job. At this point you can't un-birth a child and separating the family purely based on income is a horrible idea, at least for those who have children.
      The other aspect of your comment that is troublesome is your belief that only a couple of sufficient means can have children. Or to put it another way the economically challenged aren't allowed children. In this case, their only purpose is to act as a labor class. You are essentially taking away peoples' fundamental rights just because they are poor. If their is a structural inequality such as the employment and tax problem we are experiencing now, you essentially crate a slave labor class, though in a more socially acceptable context. Sure there are no whips and chains but bankruptcy and a judicial system can be equally binding.

      3. DON'T blame your problems on others.

      Most of us are not grumbling due to failures we've made but rather to the unprecedented transfer of wealth from the poor to the rich over the last couple of years. The rich get tax breaks and the banks get bailed out on tax payer money. Meanwhile the middle and lower class citizens are required to give up their social nets such as medicare/medicaid and social security to pay for these bailouts while corporations are firing mass quantities of workers to survive the current economic times.
      As things currently stand, it's our social responsibility to bitch and whine about the current distribution of wealth, lest things get worse.

    173. Re:Honest Question by rjstanford · · Score: 1

      Why should I continue to be taxed for as long as I own the house?

      Depends. Do you want someone to maintain the fantastically expensive street that leads to that house? The police officer and fire fighters who protect it? Even the code enforcement people that make sure that your neighbor's new house doesn't fall over onto it?

      That's why.

      --
      You're special forces then? That's great! I just love your olympics!
    174. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Libertarian Troll to be exact.

      Government should not be subsidizing ANY company. ALL taxes should be levied equally and without any favoritism by anyone, (R) or (D).

      This is the problem with our current government that if you are big enough, you can lobby for whatever tax breaks you think you deserve. See also UNION exemptions for the new Obama Health Care. Unions who lobbied for it, are now wanting no part of it, I wonder why?

      It all sucks, both (D) and (R) are corrupt beyond repair.

      "See also UNION exemptions for the new Obama Health Care. Unions who lobbied for it, are now wanting no part of it, I wonder why?"

    175. Re:Honest Question by DontBlameCanada · · Score: 1

      Capitalism is not about not paying taxes. No where in any definition of the free market system is "no taxes" mentioned.

    176. Re:Honest Question by swb · · Score: 1

      The problem is, property valuations are driven just like the realtor said, by location, location, location.

      I've seen houses of a similar style and size to mine on a large recreational lake in the metro area, and their property taxes are 5-10 times what mine are because the desirable location drives up the price.

      The thing is, their house doesn't use more services than mine does -- the state DNR manages the lake resources and the lake is open to public boating, so presumably all of those costs are spread among all the possible lake users.

      Yet they face extremely high property taxes because their property is considered more valuable. How is this fair? They don't get or consume more services.

    177. Re:Honest Question by Nicolai+Haehnle · · Score: 1

      Once the wealth accumulates to the top only, how will the economy survive without spending by the middle and lower classes? Won't a lot of business just shutdown because people don't have money to spend?

      This has already happened, actually. Over the last thirty years, the income distribution has gradually shifted towards the rich, who have a lower propensity to spend. The real income of the lower quantiles in the income distribution were left out in the cold. The only reason that the recession of two years ago hasn't happened earlier was that consumption spending was propped up by pushing ever more debt onto the average citizen. The savings rate was actually negative in the US for some time! Needless to say, this was not sustainable, and was ultimately going to crash and burn.

      Modern Monetary Theory economists predicted that a long time ago, but nobody listened.

    178. Re:Honest Question by bitt3n · · Score: 1

      that seems like a disincentive. if there were mass unemployment, why would boss moneybags invest in a new factory? in such a situation the economy would likely be lousy, so that his factory would have a hard time covering costs. if on the contrary it turned out to be successful, his profits would just get taxed away. he'd be better off waiting until other chumps take the risk of hiring enough workers that the tax rate goes down.

    179. Re:Honest Question by sycodon · · Score: 1

      It's hard to tell the real thing from sarcasm on Slashdot sometime.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    180. Re:Honest Question by Skarecrow77 · · Score: 1

      In the first case the costs scale with some function of population and land area, if you own a lot of land you need more roads. If you have an expensive property you'll more likely need to call out the police, etc.

      I've always found this argument to be ridiculous, but it pops up again and again. Are you suggesting that the roads in your average billionaire's neighborhood get repaved every 6 weeks instead of every 5-20 years like the rest of the country? Or are you suggesting he can somehow drive 17 cars simultaneously 24 hours a day on those roads around his house?

      As for more benefit from police coverage? You mean the guy with the fence around his property, with private security and an extensive camera network on his property? The guy who lives in a neighborhood full of people of similar means? Man I bet the police are out there -all the time-. I mean, I can't tell you the number of episodes of COPS that feature prominently sherman oaks and beverly hills. Maybe they have problems with the guys from Oceans 11 pulling heists, but that's about it.

      I doubt that that his kids are getting a better education at the local public schools since chances are he's sending them to a private school anyway.

      I also don't suspect that should the US ever get invaded, an entire platoon of marines will be dispatched to guard his property.

      The rich get no more real benefit from taxes than anybody else. If anything, they get -less- benefit from taxes on a per-dollar basis than any body else. Really, the rich get government benefit from hiring lobbyists, not from taxes.

    181. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How do the wealthy spend money aside from giving it to people in exchange for services?

      The answer to your question is: Economics 101.

      It's going to be tough for the wealthy to give you any money, though, once they've moved their money out of the country. I guess that's the part you liberals don't get about free transactions.

    182. Re:Honest Question by sycodon · · Score: 1

      Would you knowingly and intentionally bring a child into this world that you are unable to care for?

      Would you then expect others to provide for that child?

      I think you are missing the fact that by putting off having children, a person is able to better focus on raising themselves out of poverty and achieving the income level that would enable them to support a child.

      But what I find disturbing is that you seem to believe that people should avail themselves of the "right" to have children and then expect society to pick up the cost. What kind of thinking is that?

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    183. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a horrible idea, how is this "insightful". At most the tax rate would change yearly, so it would lag way way behind what the company is actually doing. Why would you hire when you would still need to pay high taxes that year AND all the cost of new employees?

      Not to mention you would just be punishing all companies for what is decidedly NOT the fault of most. If you are a small or medium sized business, normally you dont have huge swings in emplyees. If national unemployment goes up, you have to pay more taxes? When you have not contributed to unemployment, and due to being small, its not like you can contribute much to helping the unemplyment either.

      And now for the post up a level: It is fundamentally silly to say well if you make $1m and were taxed at 75%, 25ok is still great money. That might be true, but in most cases, to get the 1m you did risky thing - a new venture where you put up your capital to start it, you invested in some market and did it well and you made money (you could have lost a substantial portion), you invented something or started a company and sold it to Google etc. For each one of those stories there are many that did not work at all. Why punish this?

      Most people with a lot of money do not just "sit on it". Sitting on it would be burring it in the backyard and ignoring it. No one does this. They invest in stocks or bonds (AKA, investing in businesses), they buy things (even if its foreign made, what percent of things poeple that make $22k a year and shop at Walmart come from China?), they may start another small business, or employ people or local businesses - home or yard upkeep, etc. Why is this SOOO horrid?

      And how is the middle class the "real job creators"? Most middle class people make somewhere in the 50k or 70k range.. maybe a bit less. That person is in no way in a position to create a job. Jobs are created by companies, or by those with capital to take a risk. Not by me and my middle class salary.
       

    184. Re:Honest Question by monkyyy · · Score: 1

      "I got bribed to prevent taxes for rich people"

      but they will surely get all the "at lest hes honest" votes

      --
      warning pointless sig
    185. Re:Honest Question by bitt3n · · Score: 1

      Whether or not one needs the money is irrelevant. A rich person has a choice between remaining idle and keeping his capital safely out of danger, or continuing to work and putting his capital at risk. If you tax him sufficiently that going to work and putting his capital at risk is not worth the extra cash, he's not going to do it (or he's going to move somewhere else). Telling him "that extra money was just gravy" will have no effect.

      As for "the real job creators," you seem to have as cartoonish a notion of the rich as a financier out of central casting might have of the poor.

    186. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's not how the economy works. Higher taxes for corporations means less capital that can be used to hire workers.

      In all honesty, the corporate tax is a pretty silly and redundant tax. It only makes up a small percent of government revenue and it's essentially double taxation. Corporations are nothing by groups of people. Currently, we're taxing the corporation's revenue and then taxing the employees and shareholders who are paid from that revenue. We'd do better off eliminating the corporate tax and adjusting the capital gains and income taxes to make up the revenue.

    187. Re:Honest Question by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      So, you agree?

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    188. Re:Honest Question by zildgulf · · Score: 1

      That is a legitimate concern. However we have a tax structure now that those earning tens of millions of dollars do not have to pay, in percentage, what most of us pay. The math shows that neither just increasing taxes nor just spending cuts will slow down the red ink of our government, both things will have to be done.

      Unfortunately those that can "afford" higher taxes will have to pay more. I just wish it came from Capital Gains. Higher taxes on Capital Gains forces those that want to sit on money to find more profitable endeavors to offset the taxation. The risk is increased and so if investment is fledgling companies.

    189. Re:Honest Question by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      That may sound good to a typical communist propagandist, but it's just not true. Without Entrepreneurs all the labor in the world would whither with no direction. How many wheels would get mounted if there wasn't a manager to tell the workers to do it? How many managers would there be if there wasn't investors and planners building the factory to put wheels on cars at some point. I'd give you a hint, the number is shaped like a goose egg. Eventually the workers will only do what feeds themselves if they are even able to do that.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    190. Re:Honest Question by NEW22 · · Score: 1

      You are honestly expecting me to believe you would give up $250k/year because there are some people who would... "bad mouth" you? Are you actively dismantling your wealth as we speak, so you can live a happy "bad mouth" free existence? Am I to believe that your wealth is a burden you bear now, only out of a sense of responsibility for other people who need the jobs you create? I can understand wanting your taxes to be less, but the whole "why should I even try to earn money?" thing strikes me as hyperbole, as a cry of "Well then... maybe I'll take my ball and go home! Huh?!?" For every dollar you pull down, you are going to be at least, like, $0.65 richer. I don't even know what it is now, probably more than that, even.

    191. Re:Honest Question by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      Including the guy that employees you. Sorry to make up for it you get laid off and everyone else has to work harder to make up for you not being there.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    192. Re:Honest Question by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      Sure, and to troll a bit... why do you think the conservatives/Republicans are going nuts to lower spending on education, health and welfare; blasting that teachers are "under worked" and "overpaid", proposing "privatizing" of Medicare, Medicaid (which will really only help the private companies - see Medicare "Advantage"), and that Social Security is an illegal "ponzi" scheme?

      My first guess would be because we have a huge sovereign debt problem and those programs you mentioned not only eat well over 50% of our current annual taxes, but are projected to eat exponentially more in the near future?

    193. Re:Honest Question by kevinNCSU · · Score: 1

      How about a tax scale that accounts for the current unemployment rate? Higher unemployment = higher taxes for corporations and rich, lower unemployment is lower taxes for corporations and the rich. Hell of an incentive to create jobs.

      I don't think that would work how you think. Say your technology company is just getting by making a small profit but not at the point where you can afford to hire another worker to increase business. Now the real estate market blows up. That's OK, your not in that sector of business, so your still chugging along helping the economy. But wait, now your corporate taxes shoot up because nation-wide unemployment is higher and you have to lay people off while getting the same amount of work done in order to not go bankrupt? Repeat this story across the country and suddenly your looking at a tremendous feedback cycle of economy wreckage.

    194. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A tax is nothing more than theft by a group of people. The simple fact is the money is not yours to steal, and how much someone makes is none of your business. Until you are willing to respect someone else's property, don't expect others to respect your property. It won't end with millionaires; it will end with you - someone stealing your hard earned money. Ultimately, you have no respect for other people's property. But, why should I expect any better from an ignoramus like you.

    195. Re:Honest Question by cartman · · Score: 1

      Managers qua managers do not create wealth. Investors do not create wealth. Engineers create wealth, by multiplying the value of labor and materials.

      No, no, no...

      Managers, investors, engineers, and laborers all create wealth, and all collaborate to do so using prices and wages.

      Look at it this way. If nobody ever saved any money (investors) and nobody every coordinated activities (managers) and nobody worked in factories (laborers) then would Engineers really create wealth all by themselves? Would they each draw a separate diagram, then those things would suddenly materialize moments later, requiring no saving of money, or labor, or coordination? No wealth could be created if any of those functions listed (management, investment, engineers, factory workers) were absent.

      This will be discovered soon enough in the U.S. when we have plenty of people still willing to move money around, and move people who create money around (as long as it pays sizable dividends for marginal actual personal value-add), and nobody actually creating the value

      You're claiming that the savings and investment rates are too high in the USA and that we have too few employees? This claim is contradicted by all the evidence, and the evidence isn't even trending in the direction which you suggest.

    196. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wish I had mod points to put this up at +5. That is a beautiful proposition.

    197. Re:Honest Question by knewter · · Score: 1

      Welcome to the internet. I'd have the same customers. And China isn't exactly the bastion of capitalism I'm looking for, thanks.

      --
      -knewter
    198. Re:Honest Question by knewter · · Score: 1

      If they'd be better off working for a better boss they'd leave, and I'd be happy for them to have found a better job. This is one of the great things about an open market.

      --
      -knewter
    199. Re:Honest Question by knewter · · Score: 1

      No sir, re-read the sentence. It was a tautology. Those are not conditional.

      --
      -knewter
    200. Re:Honest Question by limbodog · · Score: 1

      "If I had known that people that make $250k/year would be bad mouthed by the time I got here I wouldn't have fucking done it" Really? You'd settle for one of those $60k jobs and a life of making ends meet to avoid some verbal barbs? Because I hate to break it to you, we middle-class guys still get insults hurled our way.

    201. Re:Honest Question by knewter · · Score: 1

      Doctors routinely invest their money in fledgling companies. They aren't starting a startup, but they're enabling an entrepreneur to.

      Where the fuck do you think jobs come from? Congress?

      --
      -knewter
    202. Re:Honest Question by Asmodae · · Score: 1

      What are you talking about? Stock issuance is the only stock transaction that invests money in the company. Normally buying stock just gives the previous holder some cash for his stock. The company and industry sees nothing of that transaction. They get no money. High stock value means they might be able to issue some more stock to raise some cash, but affects the actual day-to-day operation of the company not one iota.

    203. Re:Honest Question by pnuema · · Score: 1

      Again, feel free to get the fuck out. We know you won't though, because you want to live here. So I feel completely comfortable calling your bluff.

    204. Re:Honest Question by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      No taxes are "fair" when you scrutinize them too much - which is why I said "fairest." Isn't it even less fair to tax income for your local police protection? Besides, nobody is forcing people live in those "high rent" areas; unlike income taxes, "use" tax is, by and large (even if not completely), optional. People are choosing desirable locations and, therefore, paying a premium. If their homes are worth more because of it, then they are paying to protect something that is worth more. If it's merely the tax rate that's higher, then they take it up with the local politicians - it's another example of why most governance should be done at the local level.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    205. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That money gets spent (if its not just horded, as is common) on trips overseas and fancy foreign vehicles that do very little to contribute to domestic jobs. There is a misconception that the rich are job creators. The real job creators are the middle class that can't afford lavish trips abroad or expensive goods manufactured offshore and instead spend their money closer to home.

      Where is the money hoarded that you speak of? How about it is saved in banks (which then lend the money to businesses to buy buildings and machinery and hire people). How about it is used to buy companies' stocks or bonds (so the company can buy buildings and machinery and hire people).

      And, their is no misconception that the rich are job creators - they are the ONLY job creators. The poor and middle class do not have enough savings combined to finance the more than $7 trillion of factories, buildings, machinery and equipment that have been built to date in the entire history of this country. It are THOSE assets that allow people to work in a modern economy. Even spending money on "foreign" goods creates millions of jobs IN THIS COUNTRY - it is called the "import" industry which employees hundreds of thousands of dock workers, import agents, ships and planes and trains (and the people that build, design, and operate those ships and planes and trains) that transport those goods to market shelves IN THIS COUNTRY.

      In summary, you are completely wrong because you do not understand how our monetary and investment system works. Money NEVER stops moving - it goes from buyers to sellers to other buyers and sellers; and from savers and investors to borrowers and businesses. It ONLY stops if you literally place it under your mattress which is unlikely if you have millions of dollars.

    206. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's called a recession. Notice how the rich never suffer much in a recession? And extra taxes on the wealthy will only make one other profession rich, tax lawyers and accountants as they work out how to save millions of dollars through offshore loopholes.
      Just like with jury duty, only those not smart enough to avoid it will be caught.

    207. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      prisoners dilemma etc

    208. Re:Honest Question by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I think it would make more sense if your first "earned" was quoted. The point is that we have some people earning money through their labor, and other people "earning" money simply by virtue of having money in the first place and lending it to others who labor, with interest (it's what investments ultimately are). For some reason, the first category today pays way more than the second. Obama's plan is not about jacking up personal income tax rates - it's about raising capital gain taxes to match.

    209. Re:Honest Question by Empiric · · Score: 1

      Since it seems to answer much of the preceding responses as well...

      would Engineers really create wealth all by themselves?

      Yes.

      On a smaller scale given a particular time-frame, true, but it is inevitable. The value is intrinsic, not extrinsic. For example, the Cotton Gin -objectively- created wealth, and if no one involved with it in the types of roles you mention did as they did historically, it still -inevitably- would have done so, with a different set of ancillary facilitators. Similarly, Apple made huge monetary profits off of the Unix derivative of which they in fact themselves provided a tiny percentage of the actual work involved. However, BSD was -intrinsically- of value, and it was not necessary for Apple to be the particular company to commercially exploit that value.

      All the value is created by the Engineer. Scaling and marketing increase its short-term payoff, for which the other participants receive compensation, but there is no extrinsic limitation other than people (pretty much interchangeable) and money (completely interchangeable). It is merely by the happenstance that an investor happens to have money that the Engineer does not, that the investor is credited with any relevance to the process at all.

      Wealth is not dollars-per-unit of time provided by the market. Wealth is, again, at base, specifically and only the multiplier made possible to the value of the source time, materials, and labor. "Profit", which is not "wealth", is a distant cousin which is derived primarily, if not exclusively, from differentials in knowledge of a market from the Engineer at a given moment in time, between the producers of wealth and those who manage to put themselves in the position of getting their hands on some of the results of the production.

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    210. Re:Honest Question by Spoke · · Score: 1

      Simple Solution, though it will get panned here on /. ... REMOVE money from Government by limiting what Government can do.

      Great - let's start by going after the big wastes in spending - namely cutting defense spending significantly. Once that's done, we can worry about money spent on trying to accelerate development of renewable energy resources.

      http://www.greentechmedia.com/articles/read/solyndras-loan-guarantee-vs.-military-boondoggles/

    211. Re:Honest Question by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      They come from many places not all of which require rich people. I would also say demand more than money makes a business so creating something for all those crummy poor people to buy is a key incentive for a lot of business. Throwing money at something that will never make money itself isn't a business it's at best a charity.

    212. Re:Honest Question by pnuema · · Score: 1

      What do you think banks do? What do you think the stock market is?

      I think banks suck money out of the system through things like front-running the market. I think the stock market is largely a casino for the mega rich.

      Yes, when a corporation makes a stock offering, they are raising money that will hopefully create jobs. Once that initial money is raised, however, the stock market's function as a job creating vehicle is greatly reduced. If a company's stock price goes up 10%, the value of their holding may be valued more, and they may be able to borrow more on margin, but this is negligible compared to the amount of money raised during an IPO. Moreover, that increase in value will ONLY create jobs through capital expenditure. Banks also make money loaning money to businesses, who then in turn use that money in potential job creation. However, businesses only make large capital investments like this when there is unmet demand that they see can be exploited. When there is unexploited demand in the marketplace, money comes out of the woodwork to capture that market segment. I promise you there is no business in the US that is lacking for investment funds to satisfy demonstrable unmet demand. In short, in our current economic climate, there is no unmet demand. No amount of capital investment can create demand; capital investment creates supply. This is why economists refer to your views as supply side economics, trickle down, or my preferred term, fucking voodoo. The solution to our economic woes are to increase demand. That means putting money in the hands of people who will spend it, not people who will invest it. For further information, I suggest picking up any high school level economics book. Supply and demand should be well covered.

    213. Re:Honest Question by DeadDecoy · · Score: 2

      Would you knowingly and intentionally bring a child into this world that you are unable to care for?

      No...What I was saying was that the ability to take care of a child may not be constant. For most people who are not super wealthy it's impossible to guarantee that they'll be gainfully employed 100% of the time for when the child needs it, or that some emergency won't completely eliminate their funds. Given the recent streak of layoffs, that's not an unreasonable assumption to make.

      Would you then expect others to provide for that child?

      Not completely, but for some basic necessities, yes. Even if the child is not mine, I may still benefit from that child's education or well being. Hence, I don't mind if my taxes go to a public school system to ensure their education or some rebate to ensure they're are clothed. I personally think society benefits as a whole if we have an up and coming generation that is educated and industrious. The alternative might be that they drift into gangs or unsavory/unproductive employment because they're expected to make do with absolutely no resources.

      I think you are missing the fact that by putting off having children, a person is able to better focus on raising themselves out of poverty and achieving the income level that would enable them to support a child.

      That works if there is an actual employment ladder to climb. Some professions like teaching, cooking, cleaning, etc are useful to society but provide little opportunity to escape poverty. Especially if individuals in those jobs need to work double time just to say afloat, instead of obtaining an education.

      But what I find disturbing is that you seem to believe that people should avail themselves of the "right" to have children and then expect society to pick up the cost. What kind of thinking is that?

      What I mean by fundamental right, is that people have the capacity to perform such an activity regardless of economical or governmental pressures for or against. It simply happens. It is not granted or revoked albeit it may be encouraged or discouraged. I am not expecting anybody to pick up the cost. I'm simply suggesting that more benefits are to be had from sharing the burden rather than the opposite.

      It's certainly a bit of a left-ish stance and I suspect that by the standard arguments you role out that you have a very conservative point of view. Consequently my arguments are probably falling on deaf and somewhat agitated ears, so I'll just leave my point of view where it stands.

    214. Re:Honest Question by TheSync · · Score: 1

      I'd rather they taxed those who were already rich and living off their savings/company.

      Yet that is the problem with our recovery. Personal consumption has returned to pre-crash levels, but private investment has not. And evidently, that lack of investment is keeping companies from hiring. People are scared to invest right now. Do you really want to give them more reason to not invest?

    215. Re:Honest Question by cc_pirate · · Score: 1

      I call bull***t on your defense of Big Oil. Aside from singlehandedly trying to kill every sustainable energy technology, Big oil ALSO gets BILLIONS (~$5B/year at this point) of dollars in government SUBSIDIES that basically mean that they pay close to zero taxes ($5.7B in taxes roughly).

      All government IS evil... but the GOP is far, far more evil (if you aren't rich), than the Democrats are.

      --

      "There are laws that enslave men, and laws that set them free. " - Sean Connery as King Arthur

    216. Re:Honest Question by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      How the fuck is that a simple solution? You say the solution to the wealthy raping the American people is neuter the only organization with the power and responsibility to protect them? That my friend is some grade A bullshit. You are taking after your namesake angel, a vile servant to an evil and malevolent god.

    217. Re:Honest Question by CentTW · · Score: 2

      I'm in the software business myself, currently in the process of working my ass off to eek out a little niche for myself. I've told people the same thing you're telling them: It doesn't matter who you tax, it's going to have some serious consequences. It will make funding even harder to come by, and right now, it is very hard to get (I'm living off of savings, and hoping I'll manage to put together a little income/find funding in the next 6 months or I'll probably have to move on to something else). Most investors that I've talked to are currently only interested in companies that are already profitable.

      The big problem right now is that the government needs more revenue, and it doesn't have a lot of options on where to get it. Generally speaking, in America right now there are three groups of people to potentially tax: the poor, the middle-class, and the rich. The poor have so few resources that if you took 100% of what the bottom 50% of the country earns, you'd barely notice the extra revenue. The middle-class is rapidly shrinking (becoming poor), and about the top 2% of earners (the rich) are progressively becoming richer.

      So I guess what I'm saying is: I agree with you, it sucks. Money taxed from the rich doesn't come without consequences... especially for me. Nobody should be happy about taxing anyone, as it doesn't matter who you tax, it's going to damage everyone in the economy to some degree. Ideally, we wouldn't ever have to tax anyone, and the services that keep our country running, our air and water safe, etc. would just keep running based on goodwill and unicorn farts.

      In the real world, the government needs the revenue, and the only viable group they can get it from right now is the rich. Feel free to argue that it doesn't need the revenue, but be sure to include examples of the economy getting out of depressions without increasing government spending, or how you plan to increase spending without increasing revenue, while also managing a crippling debt.

    218. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Looking for the "+1/Like" button.

    219. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I keep seeing this argument about the masses "allowing the rich to make money". Logically it seems to be quite the opposite. "The rich" can afford (and do have) their own private security. They can afford and have their own transportation. If trash doesn't get picked up, they pay someone else to do it. Just like they pay someone to tend their yard and house. One would be a fool to think "the poor" are the enablers for any of the things you describe.

      In fact, "the poor" benefit a lot more. To start with, the infrastructure you talk about has been built with the money coming from who ? taxes paid by the poor ? right. Did those 100 motherfuckers work for free or got paid for it ? Do "the poor" maintain social stability out of the goodness of their own hearts ? "the poor" benefit a lot more from a stable society than the rich. Try looking around for other countries with unstable societies and tell me if "the rich" are doing worse. Then look at how "the poor" are doing there.

      So yeah.

    220. Re:Honest Question by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      I agree. Raise capital gains taxes to the top bracket, not a lowered one. Give the Paris Hilton Tax some teeth (hey, if one side can call estate taxes "death taxes" I can call them Paris Hilton taxes, after all, that's a good roll model for the people that should be targeted, those who take and take and give nothing of value to anyone - no production, no jobs, no value to her life at all, other than consume as much as possible in a conspicuous manner). Put the estate tax back at $1 million with a 50% tax and 80% on amounts over $10 million.

    221. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the federal government is not in the business of encouraging savings, to do so would be to discourage economic growth. If you want growth you need people spending money, not putting it in a savings account for a rainy day. Why would the government give tax breaks on an activity that does not stimulate the economy?

    222. Re:Honest Question by cc_pirate · · Score: 1

      Wrong. You are correct that wealth naturally flows to the top in capitalism and even more so in American capitalism. However, the ONLY method of keeping that wealth in the hands of the middle class and poor is for the government to tax the super-rich at high rates. Otherwise the super-rich get super-richer every year and the middle class and poor get poorer. This can be shown empirically. Look at the last time the US had a growing middle class. What was the max tax income tax rate on the rich?

      Reagan started the destruction of the middle class when he simultaneously cut the max tax rate from 70% to 35% and also reduced the max income to trigger the max tax rate from ~$1.1M in income to ~$330,000 in income back in the 80s. This was a brilliant move, because it grew the number of people affected by the max tax rate by an order of magnitude, and hence gave the super rich a bunch of allies in the upper middle class to help them fight any higher income tax.

      Obama is just trying to reverse this, which makes LOT of sense. If we continue at the rate we are now, the middle class will continue to shrink while wealth continues to concentrate in fewer and fewer hands until we look (wealth-wise) like a 3rd world country.

      --

      "There are laws that enslave men, and laws that set them free. " - Sean Connery as King Arthur

    223. Re:Honest Question by maxume · · Score: 1

      Right, because people with ~$20 million of equity in a company paying 5% annual dividends (or capital gains) are really gonna sweat that $100,000, and they actively run their businesses in such a sloppy manner that they are paying people less than they actually earn for the business. Sure.

      The sane argument for arguing against a tax like this is that you think the private sector does a better job of investing in the economy than the government. Blathering about how some relatively small increase in the marginal rates of a few of the wealthiest people in the world is jobaggeddon is just ridiculous.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    224. Re:Honest Question by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      You can't tax assets. Sure, you can pass a law taxing them, but unless you re-structure all corporations and trusts and anything else that lets a person control something they don't own, you'll have people with $1 in voting stock (the only voting stock in the company) controlling a billion-dollar family company, and trusts a-la Paris Hilton so that the children will have guaranteed income for their life without having any assets to tax, it's all in "trust."

      As a theoretical exercise, taxing wealth is the most fair, and taxing income is less fair, and taxing spending is the least fair of all. But the practical matter is that the ease of administering the systems is the opposite order.

    225. Re:Honest Question by swb · · Score: 1

      But what's valuable isn't the house, it's the land under the house.

      When they pay more for property taxes, what additional police protection do they get for the land? Does it require constant police vigilance to prevent someone from stealing the land from under their home?

      Considering the lots are typical suburban lots with actually fewer trees than most lots because of the views, there's not even an increased fire protection demand.

      Their kids don't get additional school services, either, so there's no greater consumption of services there, either.

    226. Re:Honest Question by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      If I had known that people that make $250k/year would be bad mouthed by the time I got here I wouldn't have fucking done it

      I think you are lying. You are so worried about what some random anonymous stranger might say 20 years later that you'd sabotage your own success? You are either lying, or such a fucking moron that you can't have a successful company (and thus are lying).

      A family of 4 earning $1M EARNED A FUCKING MILLION DOLLARS THAT YEAR and there's no reason they should have $750k of it taken from them just because they did well

      To get to the point of making that million dollars, they relied on a number of government services for a number of years. They pay $750 because they can afford it and others deserve the same chances they had.

      Don't you understand that? If the nation continues down this path then earners WILL take their businesses elsewhere, and you'll be left with a bunch of people dependent on government, and no one to tax.

      You are wrong. The earners won't leave. People don't make $1,000,000 from working. They make that from sitting on their lazy asses on their boats and hiring a money manager to make $1,000,000 for them. The only exceptions to that are CxO levels who got their jobs based solely on who they know, and not their abilities. Losing all those people to other countries (where do you suggest, a libertarian refuge like Nigeria?) will not decrease the productivity of the USA at all. Instead we have the uber rich clamoring to get in, Rupert Murdoch is a naturalized American. So you are wrong on every point. You just seem bitter that the poor might get $1 more than you think they deserve.

    227. Re:Honest Question by Ozlanthos · · Score: 1

      IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII like it! However, I'm more a fan of flat taxes. I figure up to 10% total between state, fed, and SS.... ZERO EXEMPTIONS!!!! You make money and are a US citizen? 10% of your accrued wealth for the year goes to tax.No class warfare, no candling, no penalizing success, or other politics....You are an American, you pay 10%! Before you know it, unemployment would sink faster than a whale turd, and we would be well on our way to technological and social superiority once more! With this action though, we would also need to cut some of our permitting and licensing fees. If CDL's were free we'd never have a need for skilled truck drivers.

      -Oz

    228. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well you worry is needless how much untaxed capital gains income do you have.
      What i thought.

    229. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nobody makes them live there.

    230. Re:Honest Question by Altus · · Score: 1

      If the guy that employed him could make more money by firing him and magically getting more productivity out of the rest of his workers, he would have done it a long time ago and it wouldn't matter what his tax rate was.

      If you honestly believe that isn't true then you have never had a real job.

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    231. Re:Honest Question by Khashishi · · Score: 1

      What you said is not inconsistent with what I said. When I said stocks produce gains, I didn't necessarily mean US stocks.

    232. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, smaller government only causes more problems. The second we started deregulation and attempting to make government smaller, the wealth gap only grew.

      Your argument died in the 80s, we're just trying to convince the rest of society that it doesn't work, but randomly shouting freedom works better than logic.

    233. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know of many saying it's ok, but you should be aware that the the loan was first pushed by the Bush admin and represents ~1.3% of the DOE loan portfolio.

      I'm curious what your non-gov't standard is if 1.3% bad loans qualifies as "excesses of government" .

    234. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "There is a misconception that the rich are job creators. The real job creators are the middle class..."

      You have confused consumers with Job creators. I've never gotten a job from someone poor or middle class. It is always someone that has risked a lot to build a business and is successful enough to hire others. They become successful by finding a way to build a product or perform a service better than others. Job creators are those that truly do create the jobs by hiring others, and do so because their idea, product, or service has become valuable.

      Your statement "Once family income exceeds 10x the poverty line, they rest is just gravy". So take everything that anyone makes that is over 10x poverty level. That is what the National Socialists did in Germany in the 30's. Now when the Government has blown all of that cash we can just reduce it to 9x poverty. Then 8x...

      Go ahead and stick it to the rich and especially those eeeevil oil companies. Tax the snott out of the oil companies since they have a secret stash of cash, right? Oh wait, they get their cash from selling gas to us. Tax them and our pump prices go up.

      Atlas is shrugging.

    235. Re:Honest Question by Ragun · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but from the perspective of an individual rich person, its the 'economy' that will take care of that, while you play it smart. If your tax rate goes up, it wasn't your fault, you were just a drop in the bucket anyway.

    236. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah this exactly, except this means you don't know much about anything related to economic theory and practice. Big Oil gets massive subsidies, declares itself subject to favorable regulations on drilling platforms and pays a pittance versus profits. Government isn't evil, we need regulation to limit what companies can do and what it can't do but not to the point that it creates disincentives, the market can't handle everything and shouldn't. You know where government needs to stop being? In the business of protecting entrenched business interest and allow for disruptive technologies... kind of like green energy. Government investment isn't anything to be afraid of, it alleviates risk in risky sectors to promote expansion. You want to know what would cause a massive explosion in profits and help people, roll back copyrights and business process patents and declare the internet requires competition and isn't an information service. Also raise taxes back to the Clinton era, you remember the last time we weren't in a recession don't you?

      Libertarian is radical, cruel and against human nature. It promotes the ethos that sociopaths are the prime form of humans and that starving children and premature death are somehow noble and good. We already had the wild west, we still have Somalia. If you want to see what society with strong government looks like I suggest you catch a flight and get off the government created internet or the socialist world wide web.

    237. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They'll just go to other countries that don't engage in such nonsense.

      Checkmate.

    238. Re:Honest Question by NeoMorphy · · Score: 1

      Are you saying it's possible to "honestly" earn $20 million/ year? Are CEOs 200 times smarter than an engineer or are they 500 times stronger than the laborers? People who earn that kind of money do it at the expense of other workers salary. They resist giving workers decent raises and take the difference for themselves and then they rationalize that they are special and deserve to make that much money.

      Personally, I'm sick of special people! Tax em till it hurts, maybe they'll have to give up one of their insanely expensive yachts or maybe they'll have to give up one of their private jets. They're not buying a million toasters or 100,000 televisions, they don't need to earn more money than 10 families. The people who work just as hard should be able to spend money too and they can't when these special crooks hoard all the money for themselves and then whine whenever someone wants to tax them more.

      What really kills me is that if the government is going to pull a set amount of money from the people, and the poor can't pay much in taxes, and the rich find loopholes to pay less taxes, then that means the middleclass have to pay the difference. So...., should we squeeze even more money from the middleclass, or should we get more money from the rich? When the middleclass can barely make ends meet, do you think they are going to help the economy by running out and purchase lots of product?

    239. Re:Honest Question by Anthony+Mouse · · Score: 1

      How about a tax scale that accounts for the current unemployment rate? Higher unemployment = higher taxes for corporations and rich, lower unemployment is lower taxes for corporations and the rich. Hell of an incentive to create jobs.

      The incentive is too diluted. A company that creates (or declines to create) 10,000 new jobs will barely put a dent in the national unemployment rate one way or the other, which means that they won't individually make any decisions based on the overall outcome.

      If you want to do something like that which would actually work, create an 'employee tax credit' (not deduction) of substantial size (say 60% of the employee's salary up to $40,000) -- that will get companies hiring people. Of course, then corporations will pay no tax because of all the tax credits they're getting and people will complain about it. But they would be complaining about it while they're employed.

    240. Re:Honest Question by Ragun · · Score: 1

      Its nice that the rich fund startups, but why on earth would I make a start up in this economy? Most people are doing their best to keep up with that smart phone market they unwisely expanded into, and aren't really looking for new luxuries.

      Jobs are not created by the rich. The rich are 'capital providers' and create jobs when paired with 'customers' to sell to. The capital is ready to go, but we are at a bottleneck with customers. Costumers need help right now, and the majority of customers do not make 250k a year. If we continue to balance the deficit by reducing programs, without splitting the cost to the wealthy, it will further hurt demand, and everyone suffers, rich and poor alike.

    241. Re:Honest Question by Ragun · · Score: 1

      Yes, it will get panned, not just because people disagree, but because its the most 'from the book' republican dribble I have ever heard. (no, I don't care that you think you aren't republican) I couldn't have asked for a better attack rant from hanity himself. Nothing in this is orignal, clever, or even simple. It only seems simple because you haven't really even thought it through.

    242. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh... You mean the other way around? If you've ever taken a level 1 economics course, the kind given to 12-13 year olds, you'll know that a hired employee costs much more than the salary you pay them - approximately 2.5x that amount total, in fact. That said, taking money away from the people who will not create jobs unless they have extra money is...flatly stupid.

    243. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      See also UNION exemptions for the new Obama Health Care. Unions who lobbied for it, are now wanting no part of it, I wonder why?

      Politifact Rating: Pants on Fire!
      http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2011/may/23/crossroads-gps/unions-dont-have-comply-obamacare-says-crossroads-/

    244. Re:Honest Question by Pstrobus · · Score: 1

      Because there is a large pool of money chasing safety. When there is a high demand with limited supply, the price increases. In the case of fed bonds the price increases causes the interest rate to decrease. This is because the rate is determined by the amount paid at purchase relative the the value returned at maturity. At one point the rate was actually negative (you paid more for the bond than you got at maturity). As lending rates are tied to the fed rates, none of the US rates are going up (i.e. the price for the bond relative to the money at maturity is still close to 1:1 or 0% interest).

      --
      "The conduct of neither [party], if strictly examined, will be irreproachable." -Elizabeth Bennet
    245. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good idea, but the unemployment rates are already bogus numbers due to a variety of problems in measuring them (mostly, we actually measure unemployment claims as a proxy for this and forget about anything else).

      Once this affected tax rates, politicians would find ways to screw with the numbers even more, I fear. Say, but cutting unemployment benefits....

      The main problem with having standards which people are expected to live up to is dealing with the creative ways they find to cheat, technically complying but causing other problems that didn't exist before.

    246. Re:Honest Question by LibRT · · Score: 1

      How, exactly, do people (wealthy or not) "hoard" money? I'm asking seriously. Because, other than taking cash and putitng it under your mattress, it is impossible to "hoard" money.

      Under the fractional reserve banking system, if I have a million dollars and put it in a bank, that million turns into ten million in loans to people wanting to buy homes, businesses wanting to expand, etc. If I put it in the stock market, I am contributing to the supply of capital and helping to raise the value of things like pensions, etc. If I invest it in any way whatsoever I am contributing to the economy.

      In short, unless wealthy people withdraw their money entirely from any investments (which the vast, vast majority do not, because they want their money put to work), they are contributing directly to the economy and the growth of jobs to the benefit of the non-wealthy.

      It's fun, I suppose, to posit that a "success tax" of the type proposed by Obama et al will "punish" the "haves" to the smug satisfaction of the ostensibly "have nots", but in reality, the "have nots" are entirely shooting themselves in the foot by embracing anti-success measures like this.

      Additionally, the "wealthy" pay a disproportionaltely high portion of taxes already. The top 2% of all earners fund more government taxes than the bottom 50%.

    247. Re:Honest Question by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Good luck here, /. has been hijacked by basically what amounts to a league of Marxist followers. They want everything, they want to pay for nothing. They want companies to pay all the taxes, they want "poor" to produce nothing and yet to be fed and clothed by someone.

      Big Oil pays more taxes than any other industry obviously, and the liberals here would have you believe that Big Oil just came and stole their SS check.

      Well, AFAIC there should be no income taxes at all, no SS checks, no wars, no Medicare, no Medicaid, no corporate welfare, no gov't propped monopolies or bail outs.

      But you wont' find support here. Vote Ron Paul, that's the only way.

      Primaries - that's where it matters. If he takes primaries, then it's almost a done deal (of-course they'll try assassination).

    248. Re:Honest Question by HungWeiLo · · Score: 1

      Really, the rich get government benefit from hiring lobbyists, not from taxes.

      But the rich certainly benefits from overseas diplomatic missions / protection, military protection of high value private assets, foreign interventions, airport security, etc...i.e. things that represents a much higher benefit per tax dollar than your average Joe (and which the average Joe aren't likely to use).

      --
      There are a huge number of yeast infections in this county. Probably because we're downriver from the bread factory.
    249. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "At least Big Oil pays taxes"... please take a look at http://money.cnn.com/galleries/2010/news/1004/gallery.top_5_tax_bills/2.html . Last year Exxon did pay $15B taxes... but none of it end up in US treasury (actually Exxon filed for $156M tax refund on they Fed Taxes).

      "Government is evil by it very nature" ... You may manage to live without relaying on Government if you move to middle of nowhere and start living like people did in 18th century. The fact that you post on /. makes it hard to believe that this is what you do. So please use your head next time before posting about "evil government".

    250. Re:Honest Question by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      Yes, when people own more valuable houses they tend to have more valuable things in it. People also tend to build better quality/more valuable houses on more valuable property. In addition, you darn well better believe public schools in areas with nicer, more expensive homes are a damn site better than schools in areas with lower property values, and typically with better equipped police and fire departments, as well. Houses on lakes often have lake houses or docks, as well. I know what you're saying, but I say it again - you may think it's "unfair," but a "use" tax is more fair than most other taxes.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    251. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would it get panned? Plenty of other libertards on slashdot to upvote this response. Of course you'd all be the first whining for regulation and government intervention when the invisible hand of the free market decides it's you it wants to fist this time round. You think government is evil, it's nothing compared to the corporate protection rackets that would abound in your half-witted ideal.

    252. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Increased taxes for high income earners are *not* barricades to becoming rich. It's a recognition of the fact that you don't need $1M to survive.

      A family of 4 earning $1M and paying $500k in taxes is still *very* rich. A family of 4 earning $22.5k/year (poverty line) who pays $1k in taxes, is technically *living in poverty* as their net income is below $22.5k. Heck, that family of 4 earning $1M could pay $750K in taxes and still go home with $250k in their pocket.

      Once family income exceeds 10x the poverty line, they rest is just gravy. That money gets spent (if its not just horded, as is common) on trips overseas and fancy foreign vehicles that do very little to contribute to domestic jobs. There is a misconception that the rich are job creators. The real job creators are the middle class that can't afford lavish trips abroad or expensive goods manufactured offshore and instead spend their money closer to home.

      So the family that earns that much money somehow doesn't deserve to keep it simply because they brought in more than someone else? I suppose you think Comrade Obama should "redistribute" that wealth to everyone else?

    253. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're entitled to your paranoid delusion.

    254. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      one is due to luck and the other a lack of brains - bush admin rejected that green energy company because it was a loser.

    255. Re:Honest Question by prisoner-of-enigma · · Score: 1

      There is a misconception that the rich are job creators. The real job creators are the middle class that can't afford lavish trips abroad or expensive goods manufactured offshore and instead spend their money closer to home.

      You've obviously never profiled the average investor or venture capitalist. Jobs are "created" when new businesses are created or new markets are exploited. Both of these activities entail risk and require capital. Your reviled "rich person" is usually the person that takes his or her money and, far from "hoarding" it, *invests* it with a hope of a return on said investment. The greater the risk, the greater the potential reward must be to entice the investor. Remove or regulate that enticement into oblivion and you remove the investor, which stagnates growth, which leads to fewer jobs, lower tax revenues, and declining social services standards.

      Look, Bill Gates is worth billions, but those billions are not sitting in some vault somewhere where he cackles with drooling, maniacal glee over gold bars all day long. Those billions are out there *invested* in all manner of things, creating jobs and opportunities for countless thousands -- perhaps millions -- of people. Poor people don't create jobs. Middle-income people may create some jobs, but not a lot. The "rich" are the only ones left in the equation with the capability to do it.

      The whole argument can be put in even simpler terms: rich people *spend* more money than poor or middle-income people. Anti-capitalists may hate their huge mansions, their megayachtsm and their corporate jets, but how many people have *jobs* because someone had to build those mansions, maintain those yachts, and fly those jets? Imagine how many people are *indirectly* employed just on what Bill Gates spends. Now imagine if Bill Gates was taxed or regulated to the point where he ceased that activity or, worse, chose to spend his billions in some other nation without such onerous taxes and regulations. The latter is definitely not the ideal situation for people already employed domestically.

      --
      In the end they will lay their freedom at our feet and say to us, Make us your slaves, but feed us. - Fyodor Dostoyevsky
    256. Re:Honest Question by prisoner-of-enigma · · Score: 1

      This is very true. The wealthy can simply afford to hoard their money,

      How silly. Rich people don't "hoard" their money; they *spend* it. That's what identifies them as rich in the first place. A rich person who never spends their money is effectively a poor person. Money is only valuable if you *do* something with it, and I challenge you to find anyone who can reasonably considered to be "rich" that doesn't spend their money. And, by spending said money, they provide jobs and wages for countless businesses who employ countless others.

      --
      In the end they will lay their freedom at our feet and say to us, Make us your slaves, but feed us. - Fyodor Dostoyevsky
    257. Re:Honest Question by prisoner-of-enigma · · Score: 1

      How about a tax scale that accounts for the current unemployment rate? Higher unemployment = higher taxes for corporations and rich, lower unemployment is lower taxes for corporations and the rich. Hell of an incentive to create jobs.

      Yes, because we all know the reason corporations aren't creating jobs is because taxes are too low.

      Jeez, do you even *think* about what you're saying before you post it?

      --
      In the end they will lay their freedom at our feet and say to us, Make us your slaves, but feed us. - Fyodor Dostoyevsky
    258. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, now that makes TWO conservatives on SlashDot. Welcome.

    259. Re:Honest Question by cartman · · Score: 1

      On a smaller scale given a particular time-frame, true, but it is inevitable. The value is intrinsic, not extrinsic. For example, the Cotton Gin -objectively- created wealth, and if no one involved with it in the types of roles you mention did as they did historically, it still -inevitably- would have done so, with a different set of ancillary facilitators.

      This just means that the investors and laborers are delayed, that they step in later ("inevitable" in your words). If there were really never any investors or laborers (ie the cotton gin was invented but never implemented or used) then it would not have value.

      It is merely by the happenstance that an investor happens to have money that the Engineer does not, that the investor is credited with any relevance to the process at all.

      It is also merely happenstance that the engineer has understanding of engineering when the investor does not. Thus it is only happenstance that the engineer is credited with any relevance to the process at all.

      Of course it's possible for the engineer to save his money and do the investment himself. He could also rent machine tools, and build his creation himself, without laborers. But this doesn't mean that only engineers create value. This means only that one person is acting in all three roles (engineer, investor, laborer) at different times. It would also be possible for an investor to go to engineering school so he can realize his business idea. These scenarios mean only that all functions are necessary but one person has chosen to perform all of them.

      Wealth is not dollars-per-unit of time provided by the market.

      We're speaking about economics here, so "wealth" refers to something which you own and which has a market price. And the term "value" means something for which consumers are willing to pay money and has greater worth to them than the cost. "Wealth" can involve something that doesn't require engineers at all; for example, diamonds. "Value" can refer to things which are transient, like food.

      When you buy a PC with an Intel processor, you are attaching value to investment and management. You didn't just buy an engineering diagram made by a single person. The fact that the processor could not have been made without a $4 bn investment in capital equipment, and that you and many other people buy it, implies that investment has value. Of course engineering and labor also contribute value.

      No single one of these activities (labor, investment, engineering) is fundamental, however. They are all required since lacking any one of them would mean that there is no resulting product. Of course you could bring up an example of some kind of Robinson Crusoe economy where a single person grows his own food and stores it for the winter, etc, but this means that a single person is performing a primitive form of all these functions. He designs simple tools, he performs labor, he anticipates winter and stores food.

    260. Re:Honest Question by Lucractius · · Score: 1

      Why do people say taxing spending is the least fair?

      If you tax spending and then provide well structured deductions & exemptions it works VERY well... look at the number of countries with a GST/VAT and how much simpler the system is.

      The fairness comes into play with reductions in other taxes... you reduce the basic income taxes since they are spending everything they earn... you ramp the income taxes up so that once your into the 'i make so much i can throw it away' zone, then your losing wads to cash...

      No system is foolproof or perfect... but it can be a lot better than it is.

      Look at it this way... with a tax on spending... every time a trust fund brat goes on a shopping spree from her tax free trust... the government gets its fair cut.

      --
      XML - A clever joke would be here if /. didn't mangle tag brackets.
    261. Re:Honest Question by jawahar · · Score: 1

      I second it.
      Impose tax on idle cash.

    262. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Reinvesting is not take-home income. You can always reinvest money in your business without paying a bunch of taxes. Paying even up to 90% on money over $1m, means 90% of the amount OVER $1m. Thus, you'd still have the 10% rate on the first portion, 15% on the next, etc, etc.

      If you get off on growing your business, then that has always been tax free. Get a decent accountant.

      I run my own business, and have worked with nothing but startups, and I definitely think we should have a 90% tax on everything that is personal income above $1m in 2010 adjusted dollars.

      I also agree with an earlier comment about taxing wealth.

      We're talking about a tax on money that is being used for nothing more than toys, blatant consumption, or hoarding in order to see a big number in your bank account.

      The big businesses use more of the public commons in order to "make" their money, and enjoy huge government protections raging from limited monopolies (copyright and patents) to generous protections in bankruptcy law. All of that paid for by taxes.

      Pay your share.

      Fucking short-sighted stingy bastards. :)

    263. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You'll never convince me that people will stop trying to make more money if there's a higher % income tax at higher income levels.

      You are saying that you are closed-minded. I hope you don't really mean it.

      Because the % will never even out the income where the person making 250k lives as comfortablly as the person making 25k or even 50k.

      The question isn't whether the person making 250k is more or less comfortable than the person making 25k or 50k. The question is whether a person making 250k is going to bother to take on an additional 10k worth of consulting work when they will only end up earning 1k after state and federal taxes. Maybe they will, maybe they won't, but it is obviously less likely than if they got to take home 7k instead of 1k.

      This is the reality of the 91% tax bracket that people around here keep throwing around so lightly. People can and do make these calculations. They would be fools not to.

      One real-world example: "Anyway, the money, in addition to what the books are bringing in, would put me in a tax bracket where I wouldn't see much of it." -- Rex Stout

      Don't get me wrong. This doesn't mean that high marginal tax rates are a bad idea. There are benefits and drawbacks. But the disincentives to high-end earning should be completely obvious.

    264. Re:Honest Question by choke · · Score: 1

      It's easy to spite success.

      --
      "No good deed goes unpunished"
    265. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you rich? Do you think you will ever make $1M/year before you die? Why are you worried about someone who will not give rat's butt about you?

    266. Re:Honest Question by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 1

      My first guess would be because we have a huge sovereign debt problem and those programs you mentioned not only eat well over 50% of our current annual taxes, but are projected to eat exponentially more in the near future?

      Sure, though perhaps those that can are not actually paying their fair share. Now, I don't blame them for taking advantage of the tax code, I blame Congress and the lobbyists they allow to help write the tax code. For example, the issue of SSI solvency could be solved by eliminating the SSI tax limit at $106,800 - meaning, that at present only the first $106,800 of *earned* income is subject to SSI withholding. Eliminating the Bush tax cuts would also go a long way to reducing the debt over time; and please don't try the argument that raising taxes on the rich will stifle jobs creation, the upper tax rates have been lowered for *years*, yet where are the new jobs? Hint, those monies saved have gone into savings and dividends for the company and share holders. Also don't mention the desired "tax holiday" that would allow corporations to in-shore profits earned over seas; the last time Congress allowed that, the monies also went back into the company coffers and to shareholders and not, as the companies promised, to create jobs here in the USA The "debt" crisis is only so because the Republicans chose to make it an issue. Notice that Wall Street simply yawned when the debt ceiling was raised - big business doesn't really care about that.

      But you're correct that something should be done. I'm not sure that cutting funds for services that many, many people rely on is the best solution especially when others can afford to chip-in a little more - seriously, letting the Bush tax cuts expire would restore the highest tax bracket from 35% back to 39%, but Republicans and "the rich" would rather slash insurance programs (and other stuff they're too rich to need) than pay an extra 4% in income taxes.

      Of course, we all could just wait for the tipping point and pray things don't turn into a US version of French Revolution. If memory serves, that didn't turn out so well for the rich - though I hear that cake is yummy.

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    267. Re:Honest Question by Savantissimo · · Score: 1

      "Then why aren't either short or long term interest rates soaring?"

      1. The Fed is loaning money to the banks at even lower rates, which they put into treasury bonds because it's risk-free, makes their balance sheets look good, keeps the regulators off their backs and does not have the risk of loaning money to the private sector when they already have so many bad loans on their books.

      2. The Fed is likely selling options on treasury bonds to manipulate the market. A few years back this is what the head of the Fed trading desk told the FOMC would be the plan if other tools were exhausted, and all the other tools he listed have been used. If rates do rise past where those options were sold, the Fed will take huge losses, which amounts to putting more dollars in circulation. It could snowball catastrophically. (And the federal budget would be screwed, too. If average interest rates rose to the levels of the early 90s, we might have to cut spending by a factor of two or three to avoid default - and rates could go much higher than that.)

      3. Rates really aren't low for consumers. What is the effective rate if you can't get a loan? Sure, you can get a nice rate if you have lots of equity in your house, few other debts, high and long-term confirmed income... but how may people have that now? No, the real rate for most consumers in the credit market today is the 29.99% credit card penalty rate.

      Inflation is a worry - commodities prices reflect that. Shopping at the grocery store or buying gas reflects that. That the official figures do not (as much) shouldn't be surprising, given how easy they are to manipulate and how much not incentive, but absolute necessity there is for the government to fudge the inflation numbers down. But there is no wage inflation, and ability of consumers to borrow is now quite limited, so that is holding inflation back from the brink. If the economy does recover, wages and spending will increase, and borrowing will multiply the effect. The velocity of money will increase sharply (it is the velocity times the money supply that determines inflation, not either by itself), and there will be no opportunity to reduce the huge increases in the money supply that have taken place over the past few years (M3 before the crisis, converted to M0-M2 after). Inflation will go wild, interest rates will follow and real incomes will lag. A recovery would paradoxically potentially mean financial armageddon for the Fed and the federal government, while at the same time the recession is slowly bleeding them to death, and it is clear that the only way to deal with the federal debt is to gradually inflate their way out of it. It's going to be a tricky tightrope for them to walk.

      --
      "Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?" - Patrick Henry
    268. Re:Honest Question by phanhatman · · Score: 2

      You seem to believe that investments in companies is the only way to create jobs? Who would buy those wares that the startup creates, also those in the money? If you created a startup company from your hard earned money, would you rather invest into a market that sells to those without money or those with loads of them? Who is the most likely to have the money to buy something new? How about redistributing money to the poorer in order to increase their buying power and thus create a bigger marked to sell stuff to? In that case your hard earned money could be investing into a much safer and broader market. I believe you would find, if you looked through statistics of yesteryear, that with greater equality comes a bigger market. As you say, a market is a complex beast.

    269. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Income tax brought in to fund world war one and never left. The problem is the rich are in power, they make the laws that's the problem. Really you'll never get a sane and fair tax system as long as the average joe in the street or the 98% of society cant have a say in the laws of the country. We live in an age where we can vote people on and off tv, but some how we need "someone" to represent us to make the laws to rule our lives? Society appears unjust because it is.

    270. Re:Honest Question by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      Not only is inflation a killer, but the west has been hemorrhaging wealth in the last 20 years overseas. Trickle-up and trickle-down philosophies are pointless because we've been facing a trickle-out of money. Welcome to global economic equilibrium. We're just going to have to get used to living with a lower standard of living until the rest of the poor and competing nations catches up. Fortunately, China is almost there. But their supply of human labor and resources are almost unlimited. India too. There's no way our federal government can remain solvent. No way no how. I just don't see it happening with the vast amount of debt we have.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    271. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We will have a repeat of 1929. Back then the only people who didnt see it coming were those who were too greedy, everyone else already knew it was coming, or were feeling the effects well before 1929.

      Seriously, that's essentially what happened.

      What we face today is the same crap we faced in the '20's

      concentration of wealth among, then the less than 1% of the nation.

      it's like having a pyramid built on stilts and expecting it to not collapse.

      Though this is a power play to win the upcoming elections, the wealthy have been using loopholes and lobbying to allow laws to make them wealthier without circulating *THEIR* money back to lowly commoners like ourselves. Yes even today there are people who look upon those who work in sheer and utter contempt as they use money. As they see the world, that money others' hold is rightfully ALL THEIRS.

      It would be nice to see a law that essentially tells these people "hey, actually pay taxes like the rest of us do for once"

      Sad when the secretary (sorry, ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT) of a CEO pays more in taxes and barely gets by while their boss is living the high life, in a mansion, and living in extreme security and comfort, while not paying shit.

      Something very wrong with that picture.

      Essentially we're fighting yet another battle between the greedy and powerful megalomaniacs vs. everyone else.

    272. Re:Honest Question by Solandri · · Score: 1

      How about a tax scale that accounts for the current unemployment rate? Higher unemployment = higher taxes for corporations and rich, lower unemployment is lower taxes for corporations and the rich. Hell of an incentive to create jobs.

      Unstable positive feedback loop. Unemployment goes up, causing taxes to go up, leaving companies less money, leading to layoffs, causing unemployment to go up even more, causing taxes to go up even more, etc. Or unemployment goes down, causing taxes to go down, leaving companies with more money, leading to more hiring, causing unemployment to go down even more, causing taxes to go down even more, etc.

      Unstable systems like this are very brittle, and tend to overreact wildly to changing inputs. Remember, the overall goal behind market manipulation like this is to stabilize the boom/bust cycle of economics, not exaggerate it.

    273. Re:Honest Question by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Why do people say taxing spending is the least fair?

      Because so much spending is unavoidable. Additionally, the "rich" get to hoard money for free that will never be touched. Not taxing wealth or income lets the rich gain wealth exponentionally vs the poor who won't amass anything. That's why it's least fair.

    274. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The difference is that in the third world economies, the rich get taxed the most.

    275. Re:Honest Question by Solandri · · Score: 1
      Note: I am fiscally conservative and pro-free market.

      Once the wealth accumulates to the top only, how will the economy survive without spending by the middle and lower classes? Won't a lot of business just shutdown because people don't have money to spend?

      That won't happen. What's been going on is that the upper class has been grabbing a bigger share of the economic pie, but not so big as to upset middle class voters. They've been letting just enough of the economic growth trickle down to the middle class to keep them content enough not to revolt. The gini coefficient for the U.S. shows the same thing happening.

      Essentially, the upper class has applied market principles to voting patterns, and come up with a fairly optimal solution to "how do I keep more money, without getting poorer people upset enough that they vote to take it away from me?" That solution requires the middle class continue to be well-paid, just not as well as it could be.

      For that reason I'm in general agreement with Mr. Buffet and support raising the upper bracket tax rate. The ideal solution IMHO would be overhauling our tax code and simplifying it - get rid of the gazillion exemptions and special case tax breaks which have been bought by special interest lobbies over the years and inflate it to over a thousand pages. That will help put small businesses (the group I most identify with) on a level playing field with big businesses. But absent such an overhaul, beefing up the alternative minimum tax to a higher rate and having it apply to all income over $1 million regardless of source, as this legislation does, is a good second.

      That said, if you pour over the IRS tax statistics, you'll realize pretty quickly that:

      (1) There isn't as big a difference between the effective tax rate as Obama is making it sound like. The effective tax rate goes from 6% at $30-$40k, to 11.9% at $100k-$200k, to 24.4% at $500k-$1M, to $25.3% at $1M-$1.5M. From there it climbs slowly to 25.8% at $2M-$5m, before dropping to 22.6% at $10M or more. These people are already paying a higher overall effective tax rate than anyone under $500k. While they can certainly afford to pay more, the argument that they're paying less than you and I just isn't supported by IRS statistics. Maybe Mr. Buffet is paying less since his income is investment-heavy. But on average they already pay more.

      (2) People making over $1 million/year represent only about 0.3% of the population, and less than 11% of total income. You could tax them at 100% and you'd only collect about $550 billion/yr in additional taxes. They simply don't have enough aggregate income to offset the huge deficits we're running. To pay for the deficits, you realistically will have to increase the tax rates all the way down to $50k-$75k (upper middle class). Either that, or cut spending. Obama's promise not to raise taxes on anyone making less than $200k is simply unrealistic if you also want a budget close to balancedt (I pointed this out during the election too).

      So while I'm for the idea, I'm under no illusions that it'll have a significant impact on our deficit. Even if he raised their tax rate to 50%, it'd only generate about $200 billion in additional revenue. Far short of what's needed to balance the budget.

    276. Re:Honest Question by nine932038 · · Score: 1

      Wealth is infinite in the same way that Gmail has infinite storage. The foundations of wealth have always been in production, whether industrial or intellectual, and there's a finite limit to how much stuff can be produced at one moment. And not only that, but wealth is also being destroyed, most simply by consumption, but for a wide variety of other reasons.

      So while you're right on a theoretical level - in that probably more wealth is being created at any given moment than is destroyed - on a practical level, you may as well say that there's a finite amount of wealth.

    277. Re:Honest Question by nine932038 · · Score: 1

      Your question is actually fairly complex, and the answer depends on which ideological lens you favour.

      The right wing people would likely submit that the richer classes will invest or otherwise use their money, and thus employ many other people, in the so-called 'trickle down effect'. I don't think this actually works very well in practise, but in theory, that's the idea.

      The left wing people, on the other hand, might say that your hypothesis is entirely correct: as the people at the top begin to concentrate and accumulate wealth, the nation as a whole becomes impoverished, much like England in the late 1800s. I tend to agree with the left wing people; I think that this situation in the US is actually very worrisome and almost entirely due to excessive hoarding of wealth by higher classes.

      The actual answer is probably somewhere between the two, though I favour an answer that's a little closer to the left wing response. No doubt, there are wealthy people who invest sensibly to create jobs, especially entrepreneurs and business owners, but I also suspect that a lot of wealthy people are only stock holders, and I'm not sure how trading stock (after the IPO) is directly beneficial to the economy.

    278. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would support slightly higher taxes for the super rich if those who want to go on social support have to work to get it just like I did to earn my money in the first place. Until that sort of implementation is in place I am opposed to increasing taxes on the rich.

      @Ruffy_tuffy

      I just want to clarify your comment. When someone is WEALTHY and has worked their ass off to make their millions and then retires you feel that because they are no longer on their way to becoming rich that they should be taxed more? If you were to tax wealth and not income what items/assets should the country deem as wealth? Property? Cash in the bank? The whole purpose of income tax is to have a sliding scale which accounts for income levels (which those living off of investments have a great deal of as well). Perhaps the more appropriate method to achieve what you're looking to do is to add another top tier to the tax system which will tax the really high earners just a little bit more. Which from what I can tell is what Obama is suggesting.

    279. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry pal - but a family of 4 'earning' £1 million have rarely done anymore actual work or value to society than a family of 4 (all working) who earned ~$50k - They definitely haven't provided 20x as much work or value.... so I don't understand your definition of 'earned'?

      As long as we're talking about relative value and 'work is worth what people will pay', we're also living in a world where it can all be taken off you in tax because you couldn't have 'earned' any of it without the Government that created the country and keeps it running, or the people who exist within it. Tax is paying back for the opportunity to 'earn' that wealth in the first place.

      IF you want a 'completely fair' or justified system - then lets quantify exactly what X amount of work of Y type is worth, and you'll get paid exactly what you've 'earned', as will everybody else.

           

    280. Re:Honest Question by seantide · · Score: 1
      That does not change the fact that it is THEIR money, and the government has no right to just take it because they make a lot.

      All of you guys posting in favor of this are painfully naive if you think taxing the rich is going to benefit you: it won't. It will increase your taxes, cost of living, and lower your buying power. Its easy to target someone because they have a lot of money, but our illegal IRS has no more right to their income than they do to yours.

      If I were wealthy I'd avoid taxation too: the code is grossly unfair and over complicated. If it were fair and simple, I'd not bother and just pay whatever the rate was (this is without addressing the fact our current tax system is illegal).

      But as soon as you start taxing me heavily to pay for loans you cannot pay and were not authorized to assume in the first place, of course I'm going to avoid paying: it is not your money, it is not my obligation to pay for your stupid errors, nor do I owe the banks who made idiotic loans any money.

      Taxing the rich or whatever other socialist bullshit comes up next is not going to solve the root problem, which is that our government is spending more money than it has. Its not legal for them to do that, nor is it necessary. Just like any other entity, it has a responsibility to live within its means and operate legally. It does neither, and taxing people to cover those errors is not solving the problem, it only makes it worse.

    281. Re:Honest Question by seantide · · Score: 1
      What happened to the concept of right and wrong. Just because it is "reasonable" for a wealthier man to pay a higher percentage than a poor man, does not make it right for the government to forcibly take that money from him. It is his money. It is not yours, it is not the government's, it is his. How you can seriously think that kind of theft is right is beyond me. If I make $1 million, it is up to me to determine how that should be spent and where.

      The reason we are being told we must raise taxes is because our government is spending more money than it makes and more than it has been authorized to spend. Its really simple: if you have $10, don't spend $15 and then try to force someone else to make up the $5 shortfall by claiming that, well, they can afford it. Just because they can afford it does not give you the right to take it from them.

      Wasteful and idiotic government agencies, budget laws that make no sense at all (budget cannot be altered if you need less in one period, etc), crippling and ineffective over-regulation, and massive waste caused by people not having any economic reality checks... that is why we have a huge government debt burden. Heavy taxation will not fix this or make it go away.

      I have run a small business for years, and my taxes just kept going up steadily. I'm having to give up, I just can't make enough money to justify running the business. The net result is that the government is going to lose far more than they gained in increased taxation, and the local area and the people I could employ lose everything.

      Business expenses are tax deductible? What gave you the idea that somehow stops high taxation from killing small business? Heavy taxation cripples small business. In the 1970s small business was over 95% of the US GDP, now it is something like 75% and falling rapidly. This is grass roots destruction of the US economy.

    282. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why not change the rules so the 40% of the lower income workers who pay zero taxes and actually get credits back now, pay their fair share to?

      If you penalize the accumulation of wealth, there's no incentive to strive for anything and those who have it will leave the country to keep it. Then you're left with no top and no way to generate jobs and income for anyone whose left. The US used to be a country where everyone strived to get ahead. It's become a country of entitlements and taking from those who have worked hard and gotten ahead. There's nothing wrong with paying your fair share. But that is not what is happening right now. When was the last time any politician mentioned everyone is going to have to pay for our mess?

    283. Re:Honest Question by seantide · · Score: 1

      Just because I own more land does not mean I need more roads, and in any case I will be paying for those roads, not the government.

      Its somewhat possible I might have more need to call the police if I have expensive property, but that's fine because I'm already paying more money than someone who is at a lower income level.

      Property taxes are not just unfair, they are ethically wrong. Once I have paid for something it is mine and you should not be able to take it from me or force me to pay continuously to keep it. I worked for it and earned it and paid taxes along the way. It is morally corrupt if think it is OK to take that from me.

    284. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That would be true if thats how wealthy people held on to there money. Fortunately there are alot more variables involved. In fact our economic data shows when we lower taxes and regulation ( which is rarely enforced when needed ) the US actually takes in more money. It also shows that the lives of everyday Americans improve as we ened up making more money partly due to the new investment that is made by wealthy Americans. One thing is for sure jobs are not created by the middle class or the poor. When you single a group of people out because they have more than others that is what is known as class warfare. Regardless of how much or little one has it is discrimination at its finest. That is not what the US was founded on. You can tax the rich till they are poor and you will not reduce the deficit without massive spending cuts. If the gov't is not cut no amount of tax revenue will help/

    285. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why tax more ? Why not cut Gov't ? I have never understood why the Gov't should not be cut when revenues are low. The reason revenues are low are due to an economic down turn. The last thing that would make for good business and to spur economic growth is to increase more taxes. People already understand we have lost many jobs to over seas competition and all that raising taxes will do is send more of them over seas. Cut the Gov't and reduce the burden on tax payers. Get us out of Iraq and start reducing our military to a post war amount. Reduce entitlements as they should be reduced. Cut politicians and Gov't employee benefits as they are way out of line. Its time people start using there brains instead of being spoon fed garbage by the main stream media. This is not hard people its very simple. When you do not have the revenue and unemployment is high what do you do ? Would you run your house hold or business as the Gov't does ?

      Simple steps to improve our revenue income and start having the ability to open opportunities for Americans.
      1. Cut your Gov't spending to match your income.
      2. Set a positive atmosphere for business. Don't demonize it.
      3. Create stability for business to believe that there is a future by reducing regulations that trully have shown that they have not lived up to expectations.
      4. Set a flat tax. Everyone Poor, Middle class, Rich pay the same. No tax write offs for anyone.

    286. Re:Honest Question by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      So is poor people who live in mansions, drive exotic, expensive autos, eat at fine restaurants and take vacations that don't involve loading up the station wagon? Wow! And here I thought these people were rich.

      Rich people don't take vacations in the USA, they go overseas. That doesn't bring any tax money into the US. They also buy foreign-made cars, so the only tax there is the sales tax, whereas buying a domestic car would pump a lot more money into the economy through network effects.

    287. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (IMHO $200,000 back then was pretty equivalent to $1,000,000 today with inflation.)

      Maybe $1,000,000 feels to you like about the same as $200K in 1992, but inflation is not a matter of opinion, no matter how humble yours is. $200K in 1992 would cost between $308K and $325K today, depending on whose numbers you most trust. No matter which ones you pick though, you're a long way off.

    288. Re:Honest Question by Phoghat · · Score: 1
      --
      Think of how stupid the average person is, and realize half of them are stupider than that.
    289. Re:Honest Question by rufty_tufty · · Score: 1

      Erm yes, what you seem to think is really unfair to me just seems common sense.
      So hang on:
      Let's say you had a veritable hermit. They had their own farm, they are totally self sufficient, they want nothing from anyone else, but likewise they don't want to give anything to anyone else. At first inspection it seems quite right that they should be able to do this. Except that the state is already doing lots for them, providing them with law so that no-one breaks into their property and kills them and steals their land. Even if the hermit had guns the state provides the national guard and rest of the armed forces to protect against those with larger arms. Even avoiding that what if our hermit's neighbour started a mine that cut off our hermit's water supply. He could go to the state to get them to respect his land rights to have that stream. This is all assuming that the hermit plays by the rules of his isolation and never gets really ill and relies upon the state welfare system and therefore uses the resources of the state.
      This property tax that you describe is the price for the state granting property rights, otherwise you'd have anarchy where the person with the largest guns wins. Now that might be romantic in a wild west sort of way, but it's not civilised. Poperty taxes sound to me like a fair exchange for the enforcement of property rights.

      --
      "The weirdest thing about a mind, is that every answer that you find, is the basis of a brand new cliche" -
    290. Re:Honest Question by Skarecrow77 · · Score: 1

      But the rich certainly benefits from overseas diplomatic missions / protection, military protection of high value private assets, foreign interventions, airport security, etc...i.e. things that represents a much higher benefit per tax dollar than your average Joe (and which the average Joe aren't likely to use).

      please explain how?

      this argument is always presented as if it is self evident. It most certainly is not. A particular wealthy individual -with influence- may benefit from a specific instance of foreign intervention or diplomatic protection, but is usually the sort of thing that causes controversies and charges of abuse of power, not the sort of thing that every wealthy individual can expect simply by paying taxes.

    291. Re:Honest Question by rufty_tufty · · Score: 1

      But isn't that really the way of the world? You only own the things you do because those with more power let you.* The only reason I have my car outside the house still is because if someone stole it some men with big guns would go looking for the person who stole it and got it back.
      When you look at government as one big mafia like protection scheme the whole system becomes a lot more simple. Is it right? I'm not sure, it's certainly not nice, but I can't come up with any coherent system that accounts for human failings that does not end up with it devolving into something like the current system. It is at least at the moment just, in that by and large there are no favourites; just those with money and those without and a path** between the two. This is at least an improvement on previous systems.

      * Yes I know there's the argument that people don't take power, they are given it and while that has a lot of merit it only seems to apply for Seldon like masses, or the very very powerful which is not much use to you and I.
      ** it may not be as easy a path as it should be, but at least it exists; hopefully this will get better with time and effort.

      --
      "The weirdest thing about a mind, is that every answer that you find, is the basis of a brand new cliche" -
    292. Re:Honest Question by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Isn't the American dream that anyone can become one of the super wealthy

      Yes it is, and that is why in the richest country in the world there is so much poverty and a lower standard of living than, say, western Europe or Japan. Each individual will be better off by supporting policies that make things better for everyone, but because they think they might get rich some day they instead keep taxes for the rich low. Somehow socialism has come be mean hand-outs, but actually we are all better off paying a little more tax to fund public services than trying to each have our own private arrangements.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    293. Re:Honest Question by rufty_tufty · · Score: 1

      I like that idea, but I really don't think it's true. Maybe it's a sad world view that I hold, maybe it's experience of living in the UK where the tax collected from transport and cars in particular are at least an order of magnitude above the costs, but I really think taxes applied are as large as the government thinks the economy can sustain in that area; and expenditure is matched to what will get them elected at the next election.
      Somewhere income meets outgoings, but they're nothing like as simple as you make out.

      --
      "The weirdest thing about a mind, is that every answer that you find, is the basis of a brand new cliche" -
    294. Re:Honest Question by rufty_tufty · · Score: 1

      Okay another example.
      Let's say I just bought a 200k sports car.
      I think you agree it is more likely to get stolen than my current 2k skip on wheels.
      That car will probably require more police effort and arguably do more damage to the roads than my old one.
      So me having fancy property is a cost to the state.
      Why should someone else bear that cost?
      Maybe you're willing to take on the cost of the defence of that property personally through insurance, guns and security devices, maybe there really is zero crime where you are. Go back to first principles, what are the functions of the state and most of those statements of intent talk about providing a level playing field for all (justice, law, etc), providing some form of social responsibility (looking after neighbours, the weak, universal education etc) and securing property rights. Property rights go way beyond simple theift, what about trespass, what about if my neighbour pollutes the stream that runs through my property, what if he simply uses more that his fair share of the water in that stream? You need the state then to stand up for your rights, look after your property's rights and therefore it is fair to tax the property that the state is providing a service to. (even if you never need to call on that service).

      Alternatively I leave the money in the bank and (micro and macro economic effects aside although that is another fascinating conversation) there is no cost to anyone else other than the contract between me and my bank.

      --
      "The weirdest thing about a mind, is that every answer that you find, is the basis of a brand new cliche" -
    295. Re:Honest Question by michaelwigle · · Score: 1

      Except that property rights are guaranteed by the Constitution. There is no requirement of a property tax for this. That argument aside, I'm not a theoretical hermit on a self-sustaining farm. I'm a city dweller who pays city income taxes for city services such as a police, etc. So let's keep the discussion to realities and not extreme case nut-job hypothetical situations.

      OK, so by your argument then, renters do not deserve protection of law for theft from their homes. And the other commenter believes renters don't deserve building codes to protect their safety because they just rent. Or, is it the belief of both of you that I, as a home owner, should have to pay more towards those services than a renter because I own a home instead of renting? You see, all of these services can be covered by an income tax and/or a sales tax. That way, those who are making (or spending) money, and thus, can afford to contribute, do. Those who aren't making (or spending) money, and therefore may not have as much to contribute at the moment, don't. This is a built-in "safety net" against extended loss of employment. I believe this should be one of the benefits of investing in a property, maintaining it, and paying it off quickly. It's my own self-insurance against loss of income because I can use less food, water, electricity, and gas if I need to due to income loss. But I can't reduce my mortgage or my property taxes no matter what my financial situation.

      So, although I understand your line of reasoning. I disagree with the logic of it.

    296. Re:Honest Question by rufty_tufty · · Score: 1

      "because they are no longer on their way to becoming rich that they should be taxed more?"
      no because as they have hoarded wealth they will have had this extra tax applied steadily as it has increased.
      "Property? Cash in the bank?"
      Yes, assets.
      Now I know that it is possible to hide wealth (paintings in the attic) but i don't believe that is how the majority of the nations wealth is stored and it's the big hitters who have control of multinationals I'm concerned with, not grandma and her diamond ring under the floorboards.
      "The whole purpose of income tax is to have a sliding scale which accounts for income levels (which those living off of investments have a great deal of as well). "
      True, but you have the crazy situation of someone who is sitting on assets of hundreds of millions who has a very low income why? They never bought that house it is one of the family properties so they don't pay a mortgage. The company pays for most of their dinners. Travel, again all company. New suit? Business expense, New car, buy it offshore and import it as a $1 sale (it has been done)You have have the crazy situation where a multi-millionare living a playboy lifestyle has a lower income that a white collar worker because everything is either inherited or done in the name of their company or done offshore and comes direct out of the company/trust fund's coffers. That is just crazy!

      --
      "The weirdest thing about a mind, is that every answer that you find, is the basis of a brand new cliche" -
    297. Re:Honest Question by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      If you curtail the possible reward, they will *absolutely* do less of this - there's more guaranteed benefit from hoarding their money than there is from reinvesting it at that point.

      The reason we have banks that give loans to business is so that ordinary people can invest at basically zero risk. You put your money in a high interest savings account and the bank adds it to the money others put in and doles it out again as loans. Even if the bank goes under insurance and government support will keep your money safe.

      That is a much better way of getting investment in new companies because it doesn't require lots of rich people, the result would be no matter the distribution of wealth.

      A family of 4 earning $1M EARNED A FUCKING MILLION DOLLARS THAT YEAR and there's no reason they should have $750k of it taken from them just because they did well. You're encouraging people to not try to do that well. Don't you understand that? If the nation continues down this path then earners WILL take their businesses elsewhere, and you'll be left with a bunch of people dependent on government, and no one to tax.

      The reason they should pay $750k in tax is that it is the price of being part of the society that allows them to be that rich. The difference between developed countries and third world shit-holes is that there is a strongly regulated society and government that looks after everyone in it, and in order to do that it needs money. There are not many rich people in the third world because there is no way for them to become rich, and the only way to raise enough tax to pay for a society that allows wealth is for people with more money to pay substantially more than the less well off.

      The threat of leaving the country is never followed through. At one point we had a 90% top rate of tax and there was no mass exodus. People don't just abandon their homes, their friends, their businesses and move to another country, especially when all of the desirable countries are doing the same thing anyway. Plus it wouldn't save them that much money either because the business probably can't just up sticks and move all of its people and assets so their income from it will be taxed the same anyway. Really the only people who can even contemplate leaving are financial speculators, and frankly we won't miss them much. They don't create wealth or add anything to our society, they just make money from abstract financial transactions between others like them.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    298. Re:Honest Question by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2

      Are you seriously saying that someone born to poor parents in a shitty neighbourhood with crap schools and no money for extra tuition or study aids is not disadvantaged? Except for a lucky few most poor people get trapped in poverty because they don't have access to the things which could get them out of it.

      To make something of your life you need a genuine opportunity to do so.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    299. Re:Honest Question by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      Unions make up 40% of those companies exempted from Obama Care (and rising).

      http://washingtonexaminer.com/blogs/beltway-confidential/2011/01/unions-make-40-percent-employees-exempted-obamacare

      Selective reasoning can easily make it seem one way or another.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    300. Re:Honest Question by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      Liberals love to claim to have thought it through, but are entirely surprised when unintended consequences happen, "We never thought of that". The solution is not to ever unwind an unwise policy, it is to tweak it until it looks like the US Tax Code, an unweildly maze of often contradictory codes.

      The cry of "we must do it for the children" (environment, economy, poor, minority) is always a good "cause" but as we find out at the end of the book, the road to hell is paved with good intentions.

      No, my solution is SIMPLE. Let people live without interference and protect LIBERTY at all costs. But then again, you don't want LIBERTY, you want your version of slavery to the state masters, thinking you can control your masters. HA!

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    301. Re:Honest Question by IrquiM · · Score: 1

      Why not do both? And it's $1 million - you're already beyond the "way to becoming" rich. Filthy rich - that's another thing.

      --
      This is blinging
    302. Re:Honest Question by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

      Well one nutball deserves another I guess. It's not so bad when you look at the vast amount of GDP we have. But yeah, it would really help to reduce the debt.

      I really don't see how the most powerful nation on the planet is going away. Possibly if china stops buying our debt. But they'd want to unpin their currency from ours before they do that, which would cause massive turbulence and ultimately a raise in their currency, which would also massively disrupt their economy. They're not about to slit their own throat.
      So walk me through this, how's it going to happen?

      Also, raising up the other nations of the world is a good thing. When you have an imbalance like we did, it means that jobs go over there, but we get cheap goods. That's good and bad. When they get rich off of this deal, jobs will return, but prices will go up. Good and bad. If you want to be a pessimist and ignore all the good, have fun with that.

    303. Re:Honest Question by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      We are generating wealth, but we're not retaining much of it. Hence hemorrhaging of wealth. Those without jobs want to get back on their feet. Those that are employed are facing burnout (working overtime to keep said job). At least in the professional sector. While the most powerful nation won't be going away, there's a very slim possibility of the union fracturing. At the very least, more so today than in any other period of our nation's history post civil war era. It it does happen, I reckon it would be a non-violent revolution. But for sure it would be political as hell. Sort of like a "cold-civil war" mentality that we have now, but worse. Going back to regional forms of currency would suck, but would be the only way to decouple from the federal debt we have now. FYI, sovereign nations such as ours can't -by law- default.

      As for China, they think with in terms of engineering and logic at the political level. They will do what makes since. Even today they're weaning off the dollar and going after precious metals such as Gold. But you're correct, they're no way they want to disrupt the apple cart they too are sitting on. But they want off and working toward that goal as we speak. Can't really blame them too.

      Also, raising up the other nations of the world is a good thing. When you have an imbalance like we did, it means that jobs go over there, but we get cheap goods. That's good and bad. When they get rich off of this deal, jobs will return, but prices will go up. Good and bad. If you want to be a pessimist and ignore all the good, have fun with that.

      Like I said. Global economic equilibrium. That's a good thing for humanity as a whole. Unfortunately for the west, the transfer of wealth happened at the worst possible time, and the short amount of time it took to transfer it. We can't change our economy over night without major pain, and doing so while under mass amount of debt makes it that much more troublesome. We barely made it out of that previous rut because of WW2. But this time it's much worse, and we're not unified on a single goal with mass production and employment in mind.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    304. Re:Honest Question by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      For example, the issue of SSI solvency could be solved by eliminating the SSI tax limit at $106,800 - meaning, that at present only the first $106,800 of *earned* income is subject to SSI withholding.

      Or how about they just eliminate this entire concept of a "separate tax" in the first place. Eliminate SSI withholding entirely and lump SS into the normal budget. Raise income taxes (or cut SS spending) to balance the budget as they do with any other program. Same goes for Medicare/Medicaid.

      Eliminating the Bush tax cuts would also go a long way to reducing the debt over time

      You never raise taxes during a recession. But more important, eliminating those taxes does nothing to address the root problem: loopholes, capital gains income tax dodging, etc etc. If you really want to make sure rich people "pay their fair share", eliminate the loopholes instead of trying to raise taxes on small business owners and non-millionaires by jacking taxes at the 250k line.

      he upper tax rates have been lowered for *years*, yet where are the new jobs?

      By the same argument, Obama/Bush have spent trillions and trillions on "stimulus" -- where are the jobs? Perhaps there's something to whole belief that the free market CAN'T be artificially controlled by government.

      letting the Bush tax cuts expire would restore the highest tax bracket from 35% back to 39%

      As already mentioned, I oppose tax hikes during a recession by principle. But I really can't stand misguided and misplaced targeting. The highest bracket is WAY too low, not to mention utterly irrelevant, if your intention is to address CEOs and tax dodgers. They get all their gains through capital gains (with $1 salaries). All the focus on the Bush tax cuts is stupid.

    305. Re:Honest Question by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 1

      All the focus on the Bush tax cuts is stupid.

      Agreed, the Republicans should stop focusing on keeping them, let them expire (which would also raise the tax rate Capital Gains to be taxed as regular income) and let us all move onto other things... As for raising taxes during a recession... on the poor and middle-class, I agree, on the rich, not so much - they're not hurting (and haven't used their saved taxes to help the economy either).

      I don't know the reason SSI and Medicare are a separate payroll tax line item, but am guessing it's because they affect pre-income tax calculations, and lower the taxable portion of income. Many economists have said that eliminating the cutoff would restore long-term SSI solvency - Medicare is another story...

      The stimulus bills (of which your phrase "trillions and trillions spent" is a bit hyperbolic, unless you're actually referring to the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq), in all likelihood, prevented the recession from being much, much worse (granted that's difficult to prove), but I agree that this kind of thing doesn't encourage companies to hire when there's no demand for product/services - however, this can also be said for most/all of the Republican "solutions" as well, which all seem to disproportionately benefit the rich, who aren't helping anyone but themselves.

      Your last analysis that the highest tax bracket is too low and that effort should be spent closing loopholes and targeting people paid mostly by capital-gains is spot-on. Talk to your Republican buddies about that as they are hell bent on keeping things the way they are...

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    306. Re:Honest Question by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      I have had real jobs, now I have a career and once you get to that point, yes your employer does care about your moral and ability to perform and continue performing, but when the strings get drawn in tight they will also draw them in tight.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    307. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd rather they taxed those who were already rich and living off their savings/company. I'd rather tax those who are sitting on trust funds

      The government have already collected tax for those incomes and the investor has taken/payed his risks and payed all the taxes for his profits. Would it be preferable that the government collected taxes multiple times on the same income over generations? The "fat cats" consume like everybody else. If you had a universal sales tax or a VAT the government would get its own through the consumption and the rest would go to stimulating the economy.

    308. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1 - I have a BS degree, the wife has a BS degree and CPA license Unemployed for 2 years and can not get a job at McDonalds because she is overqualified.
      2 - only one kid asshole. Fuck off.
      3 - It's not my problem it's the rich assholes problem. They were the ones tht collapsed the economy and caused the problems that plague my home. Madoff, a rich guy, is at fault. Neihmann Brothers, A bunch of rich guys, are at fault. AIG, a huge pile of rich guys... are at fault.

      Rich assholes caused my problems with their greed. and instead of a bullet in the head or pound in the ass prison they get more money to bail them out. I'm all for a bullet in their heads for treason. Starting with every banker.

      I am tired of the complete uneducated idiots saying the poor are mismanaging money. They are not. It's just a large number of horribly uneducated rich people spouting off about things they have ZERO education in and acting like they actually know something.

      Go back to watching Fox news and the Special Ed team.

    309. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everything is someone else's fault. Never yours eh? Sounds like an Obama supporter.

      Here, try this, RELOCATE. Texas, South Dakota, North Carolina...Oh, wait, Obama's trying to kill a few thousand jobs there with he minions on the NRLB.

      Hundreds of thousands are sitting on their ass waiting for work to come to them. Go to where the work is.

      Quite bitching and pissing and moaning about others.

    310. Re:Honest Question by Reservoir+Penguin · · Score: 1

      No, it's only hard to tell if you are a socialist and promote class warfare. if one's income is taxed twice as much in absolute numbers he better be really using twice as much in services or he is being ripped off by a populist government sucking up to the idle poor.

      --
      US-UK-Israel: The real Axis of Evil
    311. Re:Honest Question by Reservoir+Penguin · · Score: 1

      That's OK, rich Europeans and Russians also like foreign cars, often American luxury sedans and SUVs. So it all evens out in the end.

      --
      US-UK-Israel: The real Axis of Evil
    312. Re:Honest Question by Nursie · · Score: 1

      You, like many others, have no idea what a socialist is, have you?

      Government is not paid for like a loaf of bread. Certain services are needed to keep society ticking over. People are taken from by their ability to pay. If you tax everyone the same amount then you wouldn't be able to take much because some would starve if you took anything at all. And so you end up with no government.

      Me, I prefer to have regulations on business, a fire department, roads and all that sort of stuff. You can only have these things by higher taxes on those that earn well, both higher in raw amount and higher in percentage. As someone that would fall in the fifth percentile of earners in the US, I'm ok with this.

    313. Re:Honest Question by Reservoir+Penguin · · Score: 1

      Ok, fire departments. roads. Sounds so benign, who in the right mind would not want fire departments, police stations and roads? But I know what you socialists (or should I say social democrats, greens and other assorted left wing sympathizers?) really desire at heart. If you just wanted these basic services then yes, taxing everyone equally would be more than enough. But as soon as you get one foot in you immediately start implementing a full scale welfare state, universal health care, social security and a plethora of other social entitlements. Pretty soon all these little "free" things start to add up and suddenly your all out of money. So what do you do? You must engage in class warfare, you must convince people that stealing money from their better off neighbor is OK cause there is no way he can make a cool million without cheating. You must dehumanize, make them look like cheating lying thieves and then it makes it OK to engage in this modern form of highway robbery. But you can not fool me, I have studied history, the socialist cancer always begins with this sweet talk about creating a better, a more fair society and ends in gulags.

      --
      US-UK-Israel: The real Axis of Evil
    314. Re:Honest Question by rufty_tufty · · Score: 1

      "Except that property rights are guaranteed by the Constitution. There is no requirement of a property tax for this."
      Except that it is up to the state to enforce these rights.

      "OK, so by your argument then, renters do not deserve protection of law for theft from their homes"
      No, I was using a house as an example of one type of property, like I used a car as another, the argument applies to all types of property. If the house rights were infringed then the owner of the house would be the one to contest the issue. not the renter It is always the owner of the property that has their rights infringed. In the case of someone who is renting a property and has their goods stolen then it is the goods that they own that are stolen regardless of where they are located at that time. What I was talking about is the principle of taxing wealth i.e. all goods owned. If you don't own the house you live in, fine, but the goods you own are all that can be stolen from you and there is a tax on those goods. (Now for most people the value of those would be so small as to be either not worth taxing or it would be insignificant.) Any formulat I would support would be a none linear formula (yes I know this too has issues, but let's keep it simple for the sake of discussion of the principle)

      Look you seem to think that tax on income is fair. Why? I have worked for that, I have sweat toiled and studied to get that income why is someone else entitled to a cut? Well there's any number of reasons why in order for society to function someone has to take a cut, but it is still unfair. Tell me, why is it more fair to tax income that I have worked for and is adding something to society by that toil than for something that is sat there doing nothing.
      Why is it more fair that someone can sit on a pile of unused goods and hoard them from society. Most economic theories go on about the most useful thing to do with money in a society, what brings a high quality of life is to keep money moving around as much as possible, so why tax and therefore discourage people from earning and loaning and sharing and instead encourage people to sit on their goods not doing anything with them. If you tax income, and rent and interest etc then you encourage people to do what's worst for society.

      --
      "The weirdest thing about a mind, is that every answer that you find, is the basis of a brand new cliche" -
    315. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They pay $750 because they can afford it

      Oh, aren't you delightful! Presumptuous jackass. Someone who's starving in India would think that YOU could afford to donate about 90% of what you make to charity. So - you go first. And after you've do that, then you might have a right to tell rich people what THEY can afford to do with THEIR money.

      It's easy to have an opinion of what someone else can afford. It's even easier to say "people with more money than me should have to give more of it away". You want equality? There are plenty of people "less equal" than you. You're no Mother Theresa. You're a hypocrite. How about starting with YOURSELF, not a conveniently-defined class of "people with more money than me".

    316. Re:Honest Question by GlobalEcho · · Score: 1

      The stock issuance does not occur in a vacuum.

    317. Re:Honest Question by tbannist · · Score: 1

      Really? You think in the near future Education, Medicare and Social Security will eat 500% of annual tax revenues?

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    318. Re:Honest Question by Asmodae · · Score: 1

      Never said it did. But it does occur very very very infrequently in the context of the stock market. For arguments sake: Person A) has stock he wants to buy and person B) has stock. They will trade at whatever price they agree on. If person B and A agree on the price of $1 or $10 million for that stock the company is completely unaffected. They don't get any of it. It might increase the relative value of the stock briefly that allows them to sell more (if they have more left to sell). But the transaction is completely independent of the company's day to day business. So when person A buys a bunch of stock from other stockholders the company cannot grow, or use that money in any way, which I believe was the GGPs point.

    319. Re:Honest Question by michaelwigle · · Score: 1

      I agree with you that we want to discourage stockpiling of goods. I will even concede the fact that property tax is a good way to deter that. However, I would argue that the cost of maintenance and upkeep of a house is a deterrent in itself. If a house isn't being used as a personal abode or a rental property then it is vacant. Vacant houses are a significant cost to property owners who find their property deteriorate or get vandalized. Most folks I know who own significant amounts of property as investments actually contribute quite a bit to the economy in maintaining those properties, paying staff to manage the properties, and using the income from those properties as a resource for further investment in other businesses. So I disagree with you to a point in that I don't believe property tax as a way of discouraging sitting on property and not doing anything with it is needed at all.

      I think property tax is also an inhibitor for folks with smaller incomes to be able to plan for and purchase a home. People who own homes tend to take better care of their properties and tend to be more engaged in their communities. In my neighborhood we saw most of the home owners flee as more low income rental properties appeared. This caused a breakdown in the sense of community. We are starting to pull back together as a community as we help many folks with financial planning and reasonable home buying. So I would say all of these things are also good for the economy. I see a personal home as a form of insurance against sudden and extended income loss. I see property investment (commercial and residential) as a source of income tax for the government and income for property owners that can be reinvested.

      Having said that, I am not necessarily opposed to a reasonable property tax. However, I think it has more negatives than positives and tends to be more of a burden on the lower middle class and lower income home owners than any kind of deterrent for property investors. Keeping in mind also that the cost of property taxes simply gets passed on to the renter of the property, who then pays it in the end anyway.

    320. Re:Honest Question by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      The stimulus bills (of which your phrase "trillions and trillions spent" is a bit hyperbolic

      It ain't that hyperbolic. Trilions were spent.

      Bush's stimulus (https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/Economic_Stimulus_Act_of_2008) cost 152 billion.

      Obama's Recovery Act (https://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:itUEv7mOS_oJ:en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Recovery_and_Reinvestment_Act_of_2009+&cd=9&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us&client=firefox-a) cost 787 billion.

      Then there's Obama's more recent stimulus (https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/Tax_Relief,_Unemployment_Insurance_Reauthorization,_and_Job_Creation_Act_of_2010), costing 858 billion.

      And just recently Obama has unveiled a new batch of spending (http://money.cnn.com/2011/09/20/smallbusiness/stimulus_plan_hiring/) with a 447 billion price tag.

      So that's at like 1.8 trillion (1.6 of it Obama's) with another half trillion or so being proposed. And that's assuming you don't count any of the bailout bills as "stimulus", which are definitely suspect. And that's 2-3 years of spending. The wars you bring up, though equally costly, were expenditures over a decade (afghanistan was 2001, iraq was 2003). Now I'm no huge fan of the wars either, but in a straight "cost per year" comparison, they aren't comparable, especially given the fact the war expenses are winding down while even more stimulus is being proposed, however ineffective. It boggles my mind that people can attribute SOLE blame for the deficit to the Republicans for spending 2-3 trillion on a decade of war and give Obama a free pass on spending 2+ trillion (projected) in 2-3 years.

      Talk to your Republican buddies about that as they are hell bent on keeping things the way they are...

      I hate those fuckers as much as you do. I'm a Ron Paul advocate and would like a viable third party to rise to power.

    321. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is part of the system that allowed the stock to be sold in the first place. If you take it away, nobody would buy stock. They'd just buy bonds, which are safer investments overall.

      In other words: "the stock issuance does not occur in a vacuum" means that simply being able to sell stock is dependent on stockholders' ability to trade that stock when they want to. You want to issue stock? The only reason you're able to is because investors can trade that stock later. Otherwise, you'd have to sell bonds, and pay interest on them. You don't pay interest on stock. It's a trade-off: liquidity of stock vs. guaranteed return of bonds.

      Investors aren't completely stupid.

    322. Re:Honest Question by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 1

      It boggles my mind that people can attribute SOLE blame for the deficit to the Republicans for spending 2-3 trillion on a decade of war and give Obama a free pass on spending 2+ trillion (projected) in 2-3 years.

      No, I agree with you, though the Republicans are quick to complain about the stimulus spending, but not the war spending, and the stimulus monies presumably stayed (more) here in the US. Personally, I think the monies spent on the wars were simply wasted. Sure, retaliate against those in Afghanistan for 9/11, but beyond that - and especially Iraq - complete cluster fuck waste of our tax dollars.

      Ron Paul has a bit of the crazy in him, but that might not be all bad... :-) Certainly better than anything the GOP had, has, will ever have. Obama had potential, but unless he seriously nuts up, will have blown it all trying to cooperate with a GOP who only really cares about defeating him in 2012 - and, I believe, so much so they're willing to tank the economy to help engineer an Obama / Democratic defeat. After all, as widely reported:

      Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) said the Republicans number one priority would be defeating President Obama in 2012.

      Sometimes, one can only fight diskishness with dickishness.

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    323. Re:Honest Question by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Hi Mr Coward. Come say that to my face (not in the "I'll beat you up" sense, but the "you are a completely wrong fucktard who wouldn't even suggest such things if you knew me" sense). I have voted for tax increases on myself. I feel that the rules tax me too little. I'm in the top 10% of wage earners in the US and pay less than 10% of my income in federal income tax. That's insane. It should be 20% or more, but the tax breaks for the top earners result in too low taxes.

      But you are a lying little prick lying about what you think I would do, then attacking some fictional character you made up. Fuck off. Some of us understand the tragedy of the commons and work for the better good, even if that means one less iToy for themselves.

    324. Re:Honest Question by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      That requires land to grow enough food, and that 10% has the vast majority of the land and controls the police to protect themselves and their land, so where do you grow your food if you have no money?

    325. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have voted for tax increases on myself. I feel that the rules tax me too little.

      "I'm not a racist! I have 2 black friends!"

      Well, isn't that noble. Color me impressed.

      Now, if you send ~90% of your money to Africa... then at least I'll give you credit for being consistent in your idiocy.

      Better yet... start a company and employ some Americans if you have so much money that you don't know what to do with.

    326. Re:Honest Question by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Ah yes, I should have expected a "no true scottsman" response. Anything other than addressing the facts.

    327. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're a moron. I didn't say you were no "true" ... whatever the hell you're talking about (you apparently can't spell Scotsman). I said you're a hypocrite, because you claim that rich people can "afford" to have their money taken away based on YOUR opinion of what your standard of living should be, but some starving guy in India doesn't get to have an opinion on what your standard of living should be. Because he'd say you could "afford" to have a lot more money confiscated - you'd still be orders of magnitude better off than him. But his opinion is invalid; yours is the only one that counts. YOU are the supreme ruler of deciding how much I can "afford" to lose.

    328. Re:Honest Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You'd be right, fellow AC, if this article is about India and the standards of living in India.

      But this article, and this topic, is about the US.

      By your logic, US should revoke some of the liberties people have, as people in other countries don't have them (and would kill for them)

      Oh, and his call of no true Scotsman fits

      You first called him to start paying money himself ("You're a hypocrite. How about starting with YOURSELF, not a conveniently-defined class of "people with more money than me".")

      Your demand at first was simply for him to offer up his own money for the poor.

      He responds that he does offer his own money: he voted to be taxed more. This satisfies your original demand (he's offering his own money)

      But then you move the goal post, and made new demands [90% of your money to Africa] [start business and employ Americans]. You're making a higher demand just so you can continue to call him a hypocrite. That is the very definition of no true Scotsman.

    329. Re:Honest Question by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      The no true Scotsman was with regards to me claiming I'm for higher taxes and you stating that I'm like the racist who claims he isn't because he has two black friends. From your response, there's nothing I could say that would convince you that I was indeed speaking the truth because the bar to reach is variable (hence "no true Scotsman").

      And we are in a society. I have a say in how much I "give" to the government/charity, but also in how much my neighbor "gives" as well. That's how societies work. Apparently you prefer living outside society and hate democracy.

    330. Re:Honest Question by Walter+Carver · · Score: 1

      2. DON'T have kids if you can't afford them. The cause of pregnancy is well known.

      Low birthrate for us, then.

    331. Re:Honest Question by badkarmadayaccount · · Score: 1

      Is it? Frankly I'm OK with this vampire going after Buffy. Let the gov and the fat cats fight it out. Here's for hoping they kill each other.

      --
      I know tobacco is bad for you, so I smoke weed with crack.
  3. That's nice, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...how about we further reduce the fucking out of control spending, too?

    1. Re:That's nice, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you miss the part about the more than half trillion cut in benefits spending? Lets ignore that and instead bemoan the fact that some millionaires may have to pay a few thousands more in taxes. They are practically going to be destitute after that!

    2. Re:That's nice, but... by rossdee · · Score: 1

      We could stop having wars*, but the Republicans wouldn't like that idea either.

      *and drastically reduce military spending

    3. Re:That's nice, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you miss the part that these "cuts" are over 10 years?

      There's nothing binding here if the next President -- or even the next seated Congress -- decides it is going to change things.

      More bread and circuses, with a nice class warfare frosting.

    4. Re:That's nice, but... by luis_a_espinal · · Score: 1

      Did you miss the part that these "cuts" are over 10 years?

      There's nothing binding here if the next President -- or even the next seated Congress -- decides it is going to change things.

      More bread and circuses, with a nice class warfare frosting.

      Because cutting half a trillion as a whole this immediate fiscal year (or even in the next 2-3) starting tomorrow is absolutely possible and practical. You can't have it now so having in 10 years is just impractical. Totally zero-sum. </sarcasm>

      I love how people call this idea "class warfare" when it's been heralded not just by one billionaire (Buffett) but several. Ideology trumps logic.

    5. Re:That's nice, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Well you see, Buffett still has warm blood flowing through his veins and a couple well-oiled cogs spinning away in his noggin, so he's clearly an Evil Socialist.

    6. Re:That's nice, but... by smash · · Score: 1

      Drop the unprovoked wars against third world countries all over the place, and you'll save well over half a trillion this financial year alone.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    7. Re:That's nice, but... by AngryDeuce · · Score: 1

      Sure, there's a lot of money that could be made once we crippled the Military Industrial Complex and gut useless agencies like the TSA.

      Oh, wait, rich people invest in all those companies so that spending is ok. I forget sometimes.

    8. Re:That's nice, but... by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      Did you miss the part that these "cuts" are over 10 years?

      There's nothing binding here if the next President -- or even the next seated Congress -- decides it is going to change things.

      More bread and circuses, with a nice class warfare frosting.

      Because cutting half a trillion as a whole this immediate fiscal year (or even in the next 2-3) starting tomorrow is absolutely possible and practical. You can't have it now so having in 10 years is just impractical. Totally zero-sum. </sarcasm>

      I love how people call this idea "class warfare" when it's been heralded not just by one billionaire (Buffett) but several. Ideology trumps logic.

      I guess it's easy for Buffet to call for higher taxes since his company doesn't pay them.

      From HERE

      Berkshire Hathaway, the eighth-largest public company in the world according to Forbes, openly admits to still owing taxes for years 2002 through 2004 and 2005 through 2009, according to the New York Post. The company says it expects to "resolve all adjustments proposed by the US Internal Revenue Service" within the next year.

      Sure, if I didn't pay taxes, I wouldn't mind if they were raised.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    9. Re:That's nice, but... by Lawrence_Bird · · Score: 1

      You are joking right? $3T in proposed "deficit reduction" of which $1.5 comes from increased taxes. The other $1.5T comes not from cuts but from reductions in an increasing baseline budget. Of the $1.5T, $1T is said to come from 'winding down Afghanistan and Iraq' but of course ignores the enormous future costs of verterans care, repair/replacement/restocking of military equipment. Leaving $500B for reductions in entitlement outlays over 10 years - $50B a year, if it is indeed all from entitlements. So please, get your facts in line. There is not a single cut to anything in this proposal. Spending will be higher each and every year going forward. And none of this is binding on anyone in the future.

      As to the tax aspect. Brilliant idea to raise the capital gains rate on those with the most capital to invest. Do you think they will keep that money here? Or will they invest abroad where it will, net of taxes, have a higher return?
       
       

      Socialist governments traditionally do make a financial mess. They always run out of other people's money. It's quite a characteristic of them. They then start to nationalise everything, and people just do not like more and more nationalisation, and they're now trying to control everything by other means. They're progressively reducing the choice available to ordinary people. M. Thatcher

    10. Re:That's nice, but... by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      We could stop having wars*, but the Republicans wouldn't like that idea either.

      *and drastically reduce military spending

      Considering our Democrat President has continued both wars, and that his budget request for the DOD was HIGHER than that passed by the GOP controlled House, I'd say both parties are fine with the defense spending we have...

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    11. Re:That's nice, but... by sycodon · · Score: 1

      Spending cuts NEVER happen. History shows us that.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    12. Re:That's nice, but... by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      The problem is that half a trillion dollars over ten years is barely significant compared to the amount of money the federal government spends over 10 years. So, what we are talking about is a tax increase right now in exchange for an insignificant cut in spending over ten years that might not even happen.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  4. Nice gesture by DogDude · · Score: 1

    It's a nice gesture, but it really won't do anything to address the root of the wealth disparity in this country: the military industrial complex that runs our government.

    --
    I don't respond to AC's.
    1. Re:Nice gesture by luis_a_espinal · · Score: 1

      It's a nice gesture, but it really won't do anything to address the root of the wealth disparity in this country: the military industrial complex that runs our government.

      I always though that the military industrial complex was *one* of the factors in this seemingly complex problem we are facing. But why bother with the details when we can simply single out one of its many factors and make it up as it is the only thing that counts in the whole picture. No one solves complex problems by dealing with its important details, no one I tell ya! </shakes facist fist in the air>

    2. Re:Nice gesture by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      Don't forget Lobbyists, Media (Hollywood and Beltway Press), Unions, and Lawyers too.

      The problem isn't one side or the other, it is BOTH sides that play against the middle, who just want to work, earn a living, and have people leave them alone.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    3. Re:Nice gesture by AngryDeuce · · Score: 1

      And that will never change...the last president that tried to take on the military industrial complex got his brains blown out in Dallas by a "communist" named Lee Harvey Oswald.

  5. Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by The+O+Rly+Factor · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    This whole "fuck rich people" movement is really starting to get on my nerves. Rich people are not the problem, it's all of the tax loopholes companies take advantage of that is the problem, why not do something about them?

    Oh wait, that's right. Tax loopholes and corporate tax law are far too complicated for the average American to understand, so they need a common enemy to crowd against...cue the rich person destroyin our 'conomy...somehow.

    1. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by adamchou · · Score: 1

      you're totally misconstruing the "movement". its not at all fuck rich people. its rich people should be equal to us. in previous statements, obama said he's only trying to raise taxes on rich people so that they pay the same amount as the working class people because rich people are able to generate income through avenues that have a lower tax rate.

    2. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by saleenS281 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Wealth accumulating at the top does ruin the economy. The only thing that makes this economy thrive is spending. One person having a billion dollars in the bank isn't going to make Target's quarterly numbers, no matter how much real-estate or stock said rich person invests in. Unless that money finds its way to the lower and middle class to be spent again, our economy will continue to stagnate. So yes, rich people continuing to accumulate a larger share of the wealth in this country every year are the problem. Fixing corporate tax loopholes will not increase demand for goods from the middle and lower classes.

    3. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

      Yup. The interesting thing is that even some of the rich people in question are effectively saying "please fuck us" - tax-wise at least.

      http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/15/opinion/stop-coddling-the-super-rich.html

      --
      retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
    4. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who do you think lobbied and bribed politicians to create all those loopholes and tax shelters? Who do you think perverts the system with massive corruption?

      I say the "fuck rich people" movement is spot on. Politicians don't do these things just for the sake of doing it. They do it because they get bribed to do so.

    5. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This

    6. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by superwiz · · Score: 1

      no, they are not. warren buffet has dodged billions in taxes. he is not saying "tax me". he is saying tax everyone else who might be catching up to me.

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    7. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      At long last, someone on Slashdot that understands how an economy works.

      Consumer demand drives growth, not rich people investing in gold and government bonds. Companies with money to spend don't expand production (and jobs) if they don't see demand increasing.

      And right now they don't see demand increasing so they don't need to expand or hire more people. So they just sit on the money, or they invest in productivity improvements which leads to job losses.

      Raising taxes on the rich is the ONLY thing that will save this economy.

    8. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      we need more rich people to blow money on crazy stuff. isnt some prince somewhere far from the usa blowing his entire country's savings on a star trek theme park? that's the kind of attitude we need here in the states.

    9. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by Darth+Snowshoe · · Score: 1

      This.

    10. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by btalbot+ · · Score: 2

      Spending doesn't make an economy thrive. Savings, investment, and production do. More spending and consumption don't fix the effects of over-consumption.

    11. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by roman_mir · · Score: 2

      The only thing that makes this economy thrive is spending.

      - the US economy is not thriving, it's nowhere near thriving. The only thing that makes any economy thrive is production capacity, and USA has an unsurmountable debt and a 53Billion USD/month trade deficit. That's not thriving, when you are vendor financing all of your purchases.

      Who is getting richer when you spend counterfeit currency to buy Chinese made products? It's not the Chinese, so they will come to their senses one of these days and then what?

      One person having a billion dollars in the bank isn't going to make Target's quarterly numbers,

      - USA doesn't need more consumption, it needs real recession to kick in and it needs underconsumption and savings so that real capital can be once again accumulated to restart production.

      A rich person is NOT benefiting from his wealth when he is NOT spending it, the rest of economy IS benefiting from his wealth, because he is not just holding cash in a bank, he is investing that money.

      How and where the money is invested is a function of political and economic freedom, but the fact remains: nobody who has billions is actually benefiting from that money until they really spend it, when they are not spending that money, that's the total investment capital available to the market.

    12. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by smash · · Score: 2

      Give rich people in your country incentives to actually grow their business via local employment instead of offshoring to more attractive labour markets.

      Companies with money to spend don't expand their number of jobs if it is far cheaper and less liable to be sued when you spend the money to develop a robot, or pay shipping from the other side of the world from production based in china where the labor rate is less artificially inflated.

      If your job market is so fucked that it is cheaper to pay people on the other side of the world to turn your raw materials into products and then ship them back to you, rather than produce locally then something is SERIOUSLY wrong.

      That doesn't just go for the US - most of the western world is in a similar position, and this is why they're all fucked. The east asian nations, russia, germany and other economies that have been actually producing goods and putting money into production rather than providing artificially cheap money to fund speculative bubbles are laughing all the way to the bank.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    13. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by Jhon · · Score: 1

      "One person having a billion dollars in the bank isn't going to make Target's quarterly numbers, no matter how much real-estate or stock said rich person invests in."

      How many "billionaires" have even one "billion" in liquid cash sitting in the bank?

      Your statement is just loaded with contradictions. If it's "in the bank" how can it be investing (real-estate or stock)? And if it's investing, how is it not helping the economy? Only the "stupid" with money have it sitting in a bank. Or the "scared" (and there's a whole other discussion about what prevents someone from investing in non-safe investments).

      Moderators, Really? "insightful"? Feh.

    14. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by Beelzebud · · Score: 1

      Tax cuts during a time of war. First time in history. Shares sacrifice, my ass. O Rly thanks you for arguing in favor of his wealth.

    15. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by kevinNCSU · · Score: 1

      One person having a billion dollars in the bank isn't going to make Target's quarterly numbers

      Keep in mind that everything with economics is more complicated then the first level. One billion dollars does not simply sit in a bank. It is loaned out to businesses, large and small that wish to start up or expand, and private individuals who wish to buy homes or cars. If you're an hourly worker for a dry-walling company shopping at target your probably paying for your goods with money that some rich person had "in the bank".

    16. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed, the US economy is not thriving, we agree on that. It's due to a lack of spending. Which means there is no need for production, let alone production capacity, because nobody is buying.

      Sorry, but starvation does not cause prosperity.

    17. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by Miamicanes · · Score: 1

      >USA doesn't need more consumption, it needs real recession to kick in
      >and it needs underconsumption and savings so that real capital can be
      >once again accumulated to restart production

      Unfortunately, the recession you're welcoming with open arms would end up being deflationary. During periods of deflation, the best thing a wealthy person can do is put his cash in a safe and forget about it, because just about anything he might try to invest in is likely to end up causing him to lose money.

      Inflation isn't good, but deflation is deadly... especially to any industry with long supply chains and timeframes (ex: automakers and building construction), because just about anything you try to build is going to end up being worth less when you're finished than you spent to build it in the first place (with the possible execption of merchandise with extremely high markup, like a Rolls Royce, and construction work that's mandatory, like roof repair after a hurricane; neither case will generate enough economic activity to keep their respective industries alive, let alone prosperous).

      Inflation is Adam Smith's way of forcing the wealthy to invest their money and put it to work, by slowing depleting its value if they try to just sit on their capital for too long without putting it to productive use. High inflation (and wildly unpredictable inflation) is bad because it induces unproductive behavior (people end up spending lots of time managing their money instead of earning more), but a small, stable amount of annual inflation (let's say ~3%) is a good thing.

    18. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      'Cause taxes are bad, so don't do taxes. 'Cause they're bad, m'kay?

    19. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by Gilmoure · · Score: 1

      Hey, applying payroll taxes on anything earned past first $108,000 is pure communism. Who cares if 70% of people make less than $108 and therefore have their full earnings taxed, you gotta' think of how hard the rich have it. They can't afford to be taxes on all 100% of their earnings.

      --
      I drank what? -- Socrates
    20. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by Gilmoure · · Score: 1

      All the poor ($250k/year income) people of course. They can't stand seeing the screws being put to rich people. Poor people love their betters!

      --
      I drank what? -- Socrates
    21. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      It's due to a lack of spending. Which means there is no need for production, let alone production capacity, because nobody is buying.

      - orly? And that's what you derive from the 53Billion USD/month trade deficit?

      That's 53Billion USD/month that USA consumes more than it produces, and you are telling me that nobody is buying and it does not need production?

      Well, your logic is weirding me out, but it's not unusual for a Keynesian to mis-understand the simplest of things.

    22. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by roman_mir · · Score: 2

      Unfortunately, the recession you're welcoming with open arms would end up being deflationary.

      - no, that's FORTUNATELY, not unfortunately. Recession must be deflationary, as bad investments must be restructured, debt must be paid out partially and the investors must eat part of the loss as well.

      Deflation is much better than inflation in case of recession, because it allows the poorest people to survive, as they can buy more with whatever meager savings they have.

      The important point to understand that deflation in this case is the cure. The disease is the counterfeit currency printing and vendor financed consumption and debt and trade deficit and lack of production.

      Inflation isn't good, but deflation is deadly..

      - that's nonsense, both of those statements. Inflation is actually eating your economy alive right now, while deflation would have allowed the bad debts to be liquidated and people would save and restart production.

      Inflation is Adam Smith's way of forcing the wealthy to invest their money

      - pure nonsense on its face, as what you have in USA (and in the West) is inflation - counterfeiting of the fiat currencies, which is then being distributed to the largest government propped monopolies and the poorest and middle class end up shafted with higher prices.

      but a small, stable amount of annual inflation (let's say ~3%) is a good thing.

      - more Keynesian nonsense, but also funny, because the real inflation in USA is over 11% and I count it as 13.

    23. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by vegetasaiyajin · · Score: 1

      You are confusing correlation with causation. What you say is true if rich people kept their money as cash under their beds or in a safe.
      The reality is that money is put in banks, which lend the money to businesses which produce stuff and hence create economic growth. This results in an increase in consumption (because there is more to consume). You believe that it is consumption that causes economic growth, when in fact it is the opposite.

      --

      My heart is pure, but make no mistake, it's pure evil
    24. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

      You clearly didn't read the link at all. (Looks like NYT is semi-paywalling - I was able to use that link before but now it's paywalling me...)

      In the article, Warren is indicating that his taxes (in terms of percentage) are lower than anyone else in his office and that this should not be the case. He specifically says that if you make money with money (e.g. investments and such), your taxes are ridiculously low. If you make money by doing real work - your tax percentages are FAR higher.

      --
      retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
    25. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by Desler · · Score: 1

      Yeah it's such a "fuck rich people" move that it's supported by a number of billionaires.

    26. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by werepants · · Score: 1

      Have you actually read anything about him? He made a fucking massive donation to the federal reserve. He explicitly says "tax me more".

    27. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by Spoke · · Score: 1

      Do you realize that you're talking about the man who plans on giving away most of his wealth to charity when he dies and is only leaving his children enough to build their own empire?

    28. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by ThorGod · · Score: 1

      Your statement is just loaded with contradictions. If it's "in the bank" how can it be investing (real-estate or stock)? And if it's investing, how is it not helping the economy? Only the "stupid" with money have it sitting in a bank. Or the "scared"

      Investment money doesn't function the same way as consumer income. A fraction of consumer income becomes investment, yes, but the larger fraction increases to GDP by a 'multiplier'. A fraction of investment becomes (eventually - and that's part of the problem) consumer income. But, at some point an individual firm has hired all that it's going to and residual capital becomes profit (sometimes paid out to shareholders, sometimes those shareholders are the public). I don't have studies on the relevant multipliers at hand, but my gut says the consumer multiplier is much greater than the investment multiplier.

      Ultimately, I believe a country's economy is best when the largest possible number of citizens experience high income very near some average rate. Every dollar out there represents one dollar of economic decision power. It's best for the largest possible share of people to have a 'large', low-skew, and average per capita 'economic decision power'.* Otherwise I agree with you - most earners over 250k/yr probably don't have everything sitting as cash on hand. All of those 250k/yr + earners are a small minority relative to the majority who make less than even 50k/yr. That's the problem.

      *What do I mean by this? For a market to be efficient all of the input factors must be paid their efficient wage. Labor should be paid its fraction of the output and capital should cost its fraction of the output, etc. It's not efficient to have so many jobs earning poverty wages (though it's also not efficient to improperly prop up wages above poverty). It's also not efficient to have baseball players making the millions they do while our nation's educators make lower middle class wages.

      --
      PS: I don't reply to ACs.
    29. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by hey! · · Score: 1

      It's not rich people destroying our economy. It's undermining the economic security and progress of the vast majority of the people in that economy for the marginal benefit of rich people that's doing it.

      There's nothing wrong with rich people accumulating wealth. It's when some of them start buying politicians that the problem starts. It's like my old lefty Uncle Ivan used to say: Kid, there ain't no socialists and there ain't no capitalists. It's socialism for me and capitalism for you.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    30. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by superwiz · · Score: 1

      yes, his taxes are lower because he is a known tax dodger. you know, before contradicting me, you might bother to read the actual comment i made. perhaps THEN you can accuse me of not reading the article (my comment was MUCH shorter). Warren Buffet hides his money in a "charity". Charities don't pay taxes. He's avoided LITERALLY billions in taxes by doing this.

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    31. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by superwiz · · Score: 1

      all the money you give to charity is not taxable. at all. and it's not a random blindly selected charity. it's the charity which spends money essentially as he directs it. money is not about being there in the bank. it's about who gets to spend it. if he is the one spending it, then it doesn't quite matter that how he spends it. if doesn't pay taxes on it, then he should shut up about taxing everyone else.

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    32. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Eat a big dirty pus leaking dick, mongoloid.

    33. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by gtbritishskull · · Score: 1

      Correct. But, right now companies are sitting on record amounts of cash. They have decided that it is not worth investing it. Mainly because there is no reason to increase production. Because there is low demand. Because the middle class does not have money. That is the bottleneck. Once our economy is back on track, the bottleneck may change (to capital most likely). And then the companies will be happy to spend their loads of cash. And then maybe we can change our tax policy again to help companies keep more of their cash. But until that point, it does not help our economy at all to give them more cash to sit on.

    34. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by rabtech · · Score: 1

      You are confusing correlation with causation. What you say is true if rich people kept their money as cash under their beds or in a safe.
      The reality is that money is put in banks, which lend the money to businesses which produce stuff and hence create economic growth. This results in an increase in consumption (because there is more to consume). You believe that it is consumption that causes economic growth, when in fact it is the opposite.

      Not strictly true... there are cycles both of business and income distribution.

      When businesses are seeking investment but there is little capital to go around, cutting taxes on the wealthy will stimulate the economy because that frees up money to be lent, which in turn builds factories, which employ people, etc. In those situations it is not a lack of customers with money in their pockets that is the problem. As more production comes on-line and prices fall, consumers will spend their money buying more goods for lower prices per good.

      When there is global glut of capital chasing any kind of return whatsoever (as we had in the run up to the crisis and still have today), additional investment either ends up earning paltry sums financing government debt or other extremely safe investments OR it ends up chasing risky investments without an appropriate rate of return. In this scenario, businesses refuse to invest even at 0% interest rates because they see weak demand. This becomes a self-reinforcing cycle where everyone attempts to pay off their debts at the same time and refuses to spend. We have a huge capacity overhang in most sectors today... we are capable of producing far more than we are consuming so there is little need for capital anyway.

      Given our high unemployment and low core inflation rates, workers won't be making much additional money anytime soon. They'll continue to struggle to repay debt. This means depressed consumer spending (which drives 70% of our economy) for the foreseeable future. Workers have little-to-no money to save or invest and zero bargaining power to increase wages. Productivity increases result in layoffs as businesses can't increase profits via sales so they seek to cut costs. The end result is that wealth continues to slowly accumulate to the top.

      One possible response is to shift the tax burden off the low and middle income earners and onto the wealthy. That gives the low and middle class instant increases in buying power, which will immediately be used to pay off debt or purchase goods. The other option is massive government deficit spending to goose the economy.

      --
      Natural != (nontoxic || beneficial)
    35. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by Lost+Engineer · · Score: 1

      Um, the chinese are getting richer.

    36. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by Miamicanes · · Score: 1

      > Deflation is much better than inflation in case of recession, because it allows the poorest people to survive,
      > as they can buy more with whatever meager savings they have.

      You're overlooking the fact that statistically, the poor (and for the most part, the middle class, and a fairly large chunk of the upper class as well) have no real savings to speak of once you factor in the negative value of their pre-existing debt (student loans, upside-down mortgages, and credit cards with 14% interest rates despite a nominal prime rate approaching 0%) that must now be repaid in deflated currency. In the entire United States, you'd be lucky to find 10,000 people who'd be genuinely better off under sustained real deflation. The remainder would be crucified by an impossibly crushing debt load hemmed in by falling wages for those who can even manage to get a job. On the other hand, you wouldn't have to look very hard at all to find 299 million Americans who'd benefit from sustained moderate inflation (and about 50-100 million towards the upper middle class end of the spectrum, whose debt is primarily fixed-interest long-term debt like student loans and mortgages, who'd effectively see their debt washed away within a couple of years).

      > deflation would have allowed the bad debts to be liquidated and people would save and restart production.

      Newsflash: nobody sane is going to invest a million dollars producing goods likely to have an ultimate resale value of $950,000 (ie, goods whose ultimate value is less than the cost of their production) when they can just put the money in a vault and wait for its absolute value to appreciate on its own. Especially when those same businesses can't get loans to finance the production of goods. Even under moderate deflation, it becomes almost impossible to raise investment funds because investors won't settle for anything less than zero risk with an impossibly high return.

      Try this: name ONE ERA in modern history marked by deflation that's looked back upon fondly by the people who experienced it firsthand. I don't think there's anybody who has ever genuinely said, "You know, the Great Depression was a wonderful long-term boost for our nation's economy, and I'm glad it happened!"

    37. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      The Chinese are not getting richer from any of the dollars that they are accumulating, they are in fact getting poorer because they are buying those dollars up on national level with the newly printed yuan, but then what can they do with those dollars?

      They can't spend them obviously, because they can't buy anything from USA, the US doesn't produce much for Chinese to buy, the 53Billion USD/month trade deficit shows it.

      If China comes to USA and asks to buy a port, say in New Orleans, would US sell them the port for all those trillions? Unlikely.

      Chinese keep buying up US debt, but they can never sell it. It's only "liquid" as long as you don't try to sell the stuff, and if you sell it, you'll crash the price (which would be good for USA, don't take me wrong.)

      But the Chinese are getting poorer as they are immediately hit with the inflation that they are importing from USA by buying up those dollars. China sees huge price increases immediately, 15-25% price hikes a year just for food.

      As a country, the Chinese would be BETTER served dumping all of the goods they ship to USA into the ocean, you see. But of-course the best thing they could do is let their currency go where it must go - up due to market appreciation, and then they'll have enough purchasing power in China to be able to buy their own stuff they make and not sell kidneys for iPads.

      No, they are not getting wealthier by selling to US.

    38. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by m50d · · Score: 1

      the US economy is not thriving, it's nowhere near thriving. The only thing that makes any economy thrive is production capacity

      No, the US has plenty of production capacity - look at any corporate quarterlies, they're running well below capacity because there's no demand. What makes an economy thrive, and what's missing, is consumer spending - and the way to get that back is to put money into the hands of people who will actually spend it.

      A rich person is NOT benefiting from his wealth when he is NOT spending it, the rest of economy IS benefiting from his wealth, because he is not just holding cash in a bank, he is investing that money.

      If investment were what was needed we'd be hearing very different things from businesses. Some small businesses are having trouble attracting investment, but the overwhelming message is that companies have plenty of capital to invest and grow - but they're sitting on it because the demand isn't there.

      Give 100 people $10k each and they'll buy and sell to each other, growing the economy. Give 99 of them nothing and 1 of them $1m and it doesn't matter how much he "invests" by buying businesses, they won't have anyone to sell to. We don't have an investment problem, we have a demand problem, and redistribution is an appropriate solution.

      --
      I am trolling
    39. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      In deflationary environment and in a real recession, the businesses that must go under would go under, while government would be forced to stop spending completely and would have to sell assets to start paying out not only the interest, but the principal.

      If your advice is to keep inflating until the debt magically "disappears", you will find that the Dollar itself will magically disappear with it and your entire economy will be hit with incredible interest rates and you will be FORCED into deflation.

      You think my solution is bad when the dollar is still worth something, try it when the dollar is worth precisely nothing.

      The people, who you believe are benefiting from inflation, will have nothing once the dollar is gone and interest rates are in TRIPLE digits, forget double. Because that's what you are going to have and without any savings and production capacity, you'll have to sell your shirt, all of your natural resources with it before you could start accumulating enough savings to restart the production and the economy.

      Your problem is that you are looking at this too near a term, like for the next election. I am looking at this from POV of 5 year deal, and at the rate of inflation that US is going at, with 3 month t-bills giving no yield, with 10 year bills giving no yield, with 53Billion USD/month trade deficit (for now) and with hundreds of trillions of dollars in debt, USA will find itself in an impossible situation, rebuilding not only the economy, but the money.

      Does US have the gold reserves it's constantly boasting about? Because if that's not the case, it's ground 0 for the Americans.

      As to the Great Depression - that was completely government manufactured, I wrote many comments on that.

      By the way, the government then was trying to prop up Agriculture prices by destroying the stock (actually destroying grain, poultry, milk, etc.) and they were pumping hundreds of millions into the financial markets, same thing they did in 2008 (and same result they get with lowering interest rates to 1% back with Greenspan and now to 0% with Bernanke).

      What do you think that does to the long term inflation outlook of US currency? OTOH 19 century USA had actual deflation and production was booming.

    40. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      look at any corporate quarterlies, they're running well below capacity because there's no demand.

      - that's not production capacity they have, that's them using the free money to buy back something that at least is better than the currency, that is being inflated away - their own shares.

      The US banks that were bailed out, they are all insolvent. They have long term low yielding loans on their books, should the interest rates go above 4%, they are all immediately bankrupt and then US will do what? Bail them out again?

      what's missing, is consumer spending - and the way to get that back is to put money into the hands of people who will actually spend it.

      - you can't spend if you don't produce.

      "Putting money into hands" is a worthless exercise, if those hands don't produce anything. I just left a comment, explaining why the Chinese are not getting richer by selling to USA, this is the same thing.

      Why DO people trade? It's called COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE.

      You see, you trade with people to get STUFF from them. Not paper currency that comes off Feds printing presses (figuratively speaking, they don't even print anymore, just add 0s to the accounts).

      You trade with anybody so that you can buy THINGS that others make. So if YOU build a car engine, you want to sell it so that you can buy FOOD and shelter, etc.

      If you are stuck in a weird one sided trade, where you build car engines all day long, but when you sell it, you get back pieces of paper but you can buy NOTHING with them, then why the hell did you even bother?

      Do you see my point? USA has 53Billion USD/month trade deficit, that's all the food or whatever other products that USA is not producing, but it's consuming 53Billion USD/month stuff.

      Do you know that USA imports 90% of its sea food? USA is SURROUNDED with oceans, why is it importing 90% of sea food?

      It's because there is enough demand, but there is no production. The demand is fueled by the counterfeit currency, that's the problem, so when you say: "put money into hands of people", what do you mean exactly?

      Do you think the people should be able NOT to reduce the trade deficit, but still have the money to buy goods from producing nations? If you think so, what will you do once they stop subsidizing your consumption habits?

    41. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by monkyyy · · Score: 1

      a "thiving" economy is not a measure of how healthy it is, its how big it is

      if u want things to go back the way they were, u want money to go to the poor and work their way back up to the rich

      --
      warning pointless sig
    42. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right, if the governments (federal, state, and local) would make the U.S. more business friendly (by making it not worth it to offshore) then business would have factories here. Business hate uncertainty and taxes.

      And to the person that said "Rising the tax on the rich is the only way to save the economy" exactly how? The rich tax base is small, and you can only get a certain amount of money from them. You tax them to much, they, and their money, will leave the U.S. The way to save the economy is to increase your tax base by encouraging job growth through incentives.

    43. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by monkyyy · · Score: 1

      when a rich person invests its to the tried and true, not the risky

      we need the economy to not slow to a standstill, where the same players stay on top and no one new is entering

      i.e. investing isnt all ways good, it can keep some companies live way past their prime

      --
      warning pointless sig
    44. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by limbodog · · Score: 1

      The tax code is about 10,000 pages long. I think it's perfectly reasonable to fail to fully understand it. I'd estimate that there isn't a human on the planet who fully understands it. Even supernumerate savants would probably struggle with it as it isn't pure numbers. I'm totally with you on simplifying the tax code. I'd like to see it automatically get recycled and start from scratch every 15 years (when the fiscal landscape has probably changed considerably by that amount of time). Lets do that! Except that nobody has really volunteered to do that. Businesses and the rich (the only ones with real voices in government) have carefully crafted all those loopholes and don't want to see them removed. Personally, I'd like to see a law that says that the tax code cannot exceed 10 pages of single-spaced 11-point font 8.5x11" paper. If they can't get it all in that space, it doesn't need to be there. Tax law *should* be simple.

    45. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      Both do.

      People with money wanting to spend it are what give opportunities to investors. If nobody wanted to spend money once the investor paid the money to make the opportunity to spend exist, it would be a terrible investment.

      There is no always right answer about trickling down money or bubbling it up through the economy, both are good, it's only when the system is too far one way for too long that things start to become problematic (either too much money at the top not making it's way down, or not enough concentrated money to allow for big investments).

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    46. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, I'm pissed at the 'Fuck the poor people and steal all their shit' movement for the last 20+ years.
      Rich people are EXACTLY the problem. We have had decades of GROWTH in the economy yet the bottom 60 % have seen their share actually fall.
      By contrast the top 5% have gotten 85% of this increase in wealth.
      This is EXACTLY the problem.
      Money is not just a thing unto itself.
      It is the basic unit of both consumption and production.
      If you decrease the amount of money available for for the bottom 60% and horde the majority of it within the top 5% you end up with a economic system that cannot function due to a basic artificial scarcity of this man made game called Money.

      Just look at the charts all over the web that have wealth by percentage over time. The best economic times always happen when there is less concentration of money (Not WEALTH per sea, but MONEY), and the worst economic times happen when the money is taken out of the system and hoarded by the upper ~5% of people.

      Also, high taxes on the top earners, and higher interest rates in general means that the incentives are to actually INVEST money in things that actually create something. Creation, of media, bricks, phones, cars, bridges.. These are the ONLY things that create wealth.

      Arbitrage, money trading, credit default swaps, automated high frequency trading... These things do not create anything. They simply suck money out of the system itself and removes it from the economy at large and hordes it for the couple of percent that personally profit off of it.

      The current system requires 1's and 0's that we pretend are money to function.
      We have just about the same amount of shit in the ground to mine, food on land to farm, and people who want to work and buy things as before the current problems. We have just as many places to live, hell, we still have the shut down factories and empty office buildings.
      The only thing keeping people from working, hiring, buying, etc is that some assholes decided to steal vast amounts of 1's and 0's from the very system and not get that money back into circulation.

      Really, it makes as much sense as saying that people cannot have a job anymore because they did not collect enough stars in Mario Galaxy.
      The system is just a man made game and crooks are breaking the rules.
      So fuck it.
      Change the rules.
      Problem solved.

    47. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Tax evasion is a crime. If you know he did it, contact the IRS with details and they may give you a finders fee. Tax avoidance is acceptable and encouraged. I engage in avoidance, hence why I'm in the top 10% of wage earners and pay less than 10% of my income in federal income tax. If you don't avoid taxes, you are a moron. If you evade taxes, you are a moron.

    48. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      More spending leads to more production. Hoarding kills the economy (deflationary spiral until economic collapse). Over-consumption is not a "problem" for the economy.

    49. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      you're totally misconstruing the "movement". its not at all fuck rich people. its rich people should be equal to us.

      False. There's a wide swath of people in the joint 250k+ income bracket that DON'T engage in tax shelters/loopholes to dodge taxes. These people ARE working class, albeit "wealthy working class". And Obama and the "fuck rich people movement" are all about sticking it to these people just as much as they are about sticking it to the true rich people (e.g. millionaires/billionaires). Believe it or not, the majority of people who don't have that much money have absolutely no qualms taking from anyone making any amount more than them with the justification of "meh, they can afford it".

    50. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Who is getting richer when you spend counterfeit currency to buy Chinese made products?

      Counterfeit currency? I think you drank the koolaid to the point where you don't even use words remotely similar to their accepted definitions. At least you weren't mentally ill enough to say "fiat currency" when every currency on the planet that isn't counterfeit is fiat, though there are some non-fiat "currencies" out there which are counterfeit (home printed coins by nutjobs that use "fiat" on a regular basis and such).

    51. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by vegetasaiyajin · · Score: 1

      My comment was an oversimplification, but consumer spending is not what drives growth. They are correlated, but consuming just for the sake of consuming is not what generates growth. Actually, underconsumption can generate growth as it results in more savings available in banks for productive capital investment, which does generate growth.
      I am not against higher taxes for the rich, as they benefit more from the services the state offers (e.g., more protection of their private property, possibly higher use of infrastructure, and so on), but the concept of economic growth being a consequence of spending is wrong. It is the other way around. This belief is a big part of what is causing the crises these days.

      --

      My heart is pure, but make no mistake, it's pure evil
    52. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by Lost+Engineer · · Score: 1

      Agree about the Yuan, but then what can we do?

      But I don't see how this is specific to the US. Commodities like food and oil have been increasing in price relative to other currencies, too. Chinese, particularly in the east, have a considerably better standard of living than their ancestors, so they're getting richer.

      Are you saying they would be better off without foreign trade at all or just the US?

    53. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      I am saying they would be better off without holding worthless US debt. The companies can do whatever, but the national bank is buying up US debt by buying those US dollars from Chinese banks with newly printed yuan.

      China has a trade surplus with USA but it has a trade deficit with Germany, so it clearly can benefit from trade with some countries.

    54. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by Miamicanes · · Score: 1

      Ah... but you're forgetting one very, very big difference between personal debt and sovereign debt: US federal debt is dollar-denominated. It would be kind of a nuclear option, but if push came to shove, the US could truly print its way out of debt. Furthermore, unlike countries like Iceland and Greece, the US has some of the most abundant natural resources on planet earth. The US does, in fact, have options available that private citizens who owe money don't. The worst thing the US could possibly do is sell off its natural assets to foreign owners to pay down debt. It would be the financial equivalent of taking out a $200,000 home equity loan on a house that's mostly paid for to pay credit card debt that could be washed away by bankruptcy. Morally admirable, perhaps, but financially stupid.

      The US also has an advantage few other countries enjoy besides China -- in addition to having sinfully abundant natural resources, the US has a gigantic domestic market with the electoral muscle to prevent those resources from being exported wholesale for a pittance instead of sold domestically. If Congress, the Senate, and the President decide that Exxon isn't going to be allowed to sell its Alaskan & CONUS oil to anybody besides Americans... it's not going to be sold to anyone besides Americans. If they try to take their ball & go home (as if "they" could go anywhere besides maybe Switzerland or Dubai) by shutting them down, they'd be nationalized in 3 hours, and their employees would be back at work the next morning as government employees. You can argue about whether it would be morally right, or a good idea... but the fact is, it would happen.

      It's also important to remember that the US can get away with way more inflation than other countries, because the true value of the US dollar lies with its nearly infinite liquidity and network effects. Simply put, the dollar has value as currency because everyone else has vaults full of dollars to use as currency. Even in cases where you have a very strong currency, like Norway or Australia, by the time you factor in the bank fees to convert to any other currency, you're better off just leaving your (US) dollars as (US) dollars and spending them to buy online pr0n instead of handing 5% of your wealth to a bank somewhere just to exchange your dollars for some other currency.

      Don't get me wrong. I'm not advocating the expenditure of money just for the sake of spending money. This is precisely the time when the government should be buying up all the freeway right of way (at fire sale prices) that it's ever wanted to own for future expansion projects, 16-laning every major freeway in America, running fiber to every halfway-urban neighborhood (not necessarily to every house, but at least getting it close enough to run cat6 cable for gigabit ethernet the last thousand feet from pod to home router), burying power lines in hurricane-prone areas, and generally investing in the kind of high-quality infrastructure that will still be useful 50-100 years from now, instead of doing stupid things like subsidizing half the purchase price of electric cars so environmentalists can feel smug and superior to their neighbors.

    55. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by smash · · Score: 1

      The rich are investing in gold at the moment because of the massive devaluation of the US dollar by this rampant spending going on. And because the US is such a hostile environment to try and operate a business. They invest in productivity improvements simply because employing americans is too expensive for what you get especially when combined with the business hostile legislation.

      So rather than employ people (who present litigation risk), they employ robots and chinese. Raising taxes won't help that, it will just result in operations moving further offshore. And the execs don't have to live in places like China either. There are plenty of nice places to live with favourable tax legislation if this crap gets passed.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    56. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      US could truly print its way out of debt

      - it's what the Fed is doing now, that's how you'll have dollar hyper inflation eventually.

      the most abundant natural resources on planet

      - without actual money (and destroyed dollar is not money), USA has no capital to organize tools/labor (which are necessary to extract the resources to sell).

      This is by the way what will end up happening - USA will open its borders to foreign companies, who will come in and start extracting natural resources in exchange for real money, which USA will have to save and spend on products/tools/machines/food that it will have to buy from producing nations.

      US has a gigantic domestic market

      - no it does not.

      In order for 2 people to trade, they have to exchange products. Not just fiat paper, they must be able to satisfy each other's demand for products.

      Countries trade for comparative advantage, so do people, that's what money is - a value store, a way to exchange products by proxy and a way to keep score (unit of account).

      US consumer is now vendor financed and is also debt financed with all the counterfeit dollars, but US consumer is not producing anything worth exchanging for, thus US consumer is not a legitimate consumer, because US consumer is not also a producer.

      If I make tools and the other guy makes food, we can exchange food for tools and do the exchange in money. But if money is counterfeit paper, and I am not going to get anything for them, once I sell the tools, because the other stopped making food, then I don't want to give him the tools. It would be better for me to find somebody else who makes food to exchange with.

      So there is no real market inside US. There is a huge demand, as all the vendor financed consumption and 53Billion USD/month trade deficits shows, but no real economy worth exchanging with.

      If Congress, the Senate, and the President decide that Exxon isn't going to be allowed to sell its Alaskan & CONUS oil to anybody besides Americans.

      - so by forcing Exxon to exchange actual product - oil for nothing (counterfeit currency), do you expect Exxon to continue oil production?

      Why?

      Of-course this will not happen, because the dollars are going to be completely worthless and the government would want PRODUCTS coming their way, so they WILL NOT do this, they will likely TAX Exxon more (IF they can, I am not sure they will be able to tax them more than they are taxing them now), but it's basically fascist economy at that point.

      Fascism is about allowing private interests to produce but heavily taxing their work to subsidize government spending.

      it's not going to be sold to anyone besides Americans.

      - why would anybody WORK for worthless money? You won't get anything from Exxon at all in this sort of a deal, Exxon would just shift operations and would not sell you anything, because it won't produce anything under that kind of a regime, because the money that you offer doesn't buy anything.

      they'd be nationalized in 3 hours

      - confiscation of tools? Confiscation of their tools of labor? Well, of-course, then it's not just fascism, then it's basically Marxism/Communism. You will confiscate the tools of labor from a company and you think you'd have real production.

      Of-course this has been done before, it failed miserably - USSR.

      because the true value of the US dollar lies with its nearly infinite liquidity and network effects. Simply put, the dollar has value as currency because everyone else has vaults full of dollars to use as currency.

      - oh god. Zimbabwe dollars. Somebody had houses full of this stuff. Surely, it must be very valuable? Soviet rubbles? Couldn't buy anything for them even if you had barges full of them.

      somewhere just to exchange your dollars

    57. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by m50d · · Score: 1

      that's not production capacity they have, that's them using the free money to buy back something that at least is better than the currency

      No, it's production capacity they have. I'm talking things like factories running below capacity because it would be a waste of money to hire the workers to run them at full capacity, because the product wouldn't sell. A company in that position doesn't benefit from the money of rich people (who invest), because investment isn't what they need. They, and the economy as a whole, benefit from more money being in the hands of poor people (who spend).

      "Putting money into hands" is a worthless exercise, if those hands don't produce anything.

      So you'd never feed a baby? Call it a Keynesian stimulus if you like; it's worth providing goods those who are currently unproductive, if by doing so we can boost the economy in a way that ultimately makes everyone more productive.

      Say we have three people, each of whom is producing something the other two wants. In a healthy economy all of them would be producing at full capacity and trading with each other. But if all of them have no money, each of them buys less, and as a result none of them can sell their full production capability. So they work at below capacity, and everyone ends up with less stuff. That's the situation we're in right now.

      If you are stuck in a weird one sided trade, where you build car engines all day long, but when you sell it, you get back pieces of paper but you can buy NOTHING with them, then why the hell did you even bother?

      That's a fair question to ask the Chinese. But we're the guys who are getting the car engines and giving them pieces of paper, so why wouldn't we keep doing that as long as we can?

      Do you know that USA imports 90% of its sea food? USA is SURROUNDED with oceans, why is it importing 90% of sea food? It's because there is enough demand, but there is no production.

      Nope, it's because domestic companies either can't supply what people want, or are uncompetitive. If there was a production problem, i.e. a shortage of investment, US companies would be running their factories flat out and complaining that they couldn't hire enough staff or get the investment to build bigger factories.

      when you say: "put money into hands of people", what do you mean exactly?

      I mean progressive taxation, i.e. wealth redistribution, i.e. using governmental authority to take money away from the rich (in whose hands it is not benefiting the economy, because all it provides there is investment capital, and we have much more of that than we need right now), and give it to the poor, who will use it to buy more stuff, which leads to increased economic growth - more trade, higher employment, all the things we want from the economy.

      Do you think the people should be able NOT to reduce the trade deficit, but still have the money to buy goods from producing nations?

      I thought we were talking about rich vs poor here, so I don't really see the relevance of the trade deficit. My point is simply that it is in the interests of the economic wellbeing of the country for wealth to be spread around equitably, rather than concentrated in the hands of the few - and I approve of the use of governmental authority towards this end.

      --
      I am trolling
    58. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      I'm talking things like factories running below capacity because it would be a waste of money to hire the workers

      - you won't find much of that in USA today, the tools do not stay idle. They are either sold or they are moved to other places (like Mexico, where a number of car makers moved their factories to).

      Factory floors require rental payments/tax payments, if you are in a business of making money, then you won't be paying without producing something. What you do is, you quickly shift production somewhere else, move the tools, move your investment.

      So you'd never feed a baby?

      - I don't see babies, I see people who want to continue getting their SS or EI or whatever other gov't checks and they won't go and get a job that pays the same as EI pays, because why do that? It makes no sense.

      These are the same people, who will vote to continue this nonsense in the future, by likely voting Democrat or Republican, but not for real liberties. Most of them won't vote for a libertarian like Ron Paul. I don't support these people. They are getting what they are voting for.

      But you know who HAS been supporting these people, you call "babies"? Those who still pay taxes AND the foreigners who are accumulating worthless US debt. They need to understand that it's not "babies" they are subsidizing. These are grown individuals, who are happy as a voting block to live on hand outs and not have to produce anything.

      But if all of them have no money, each of them buys less, and as a result none of them can sell their full production capability

      - money is not the question. It's not about liquidity, or Zimbabwe would have been the wealthiest, healthiest economy in the world.

      It's about production. The people who do not produce cannot consume, that's all there is to it.

      That's a fair question to ask the Chinese. But we're the guys who are getting the car engines and giving them pieces of paper, so why wouldn't we keep doing that as long as we can?

      - sure, you can go ahead and do that. Of-course this means you are forgoing a healthy economy and you are just voting for more subsidies and debt spending.

      Eventually the reality will catch up, but by the time it catches up, you will have nothing to work with at all and will have to have a giant repossession, a giant garage sale, selling your things back to other nations to get some food and tools to start some production.

      You'll have to open your borders to foreign national companies to mine your natural resources, because you won't have the capital/tools to do so yourself. You'll be paying with terrible standard of living in the future by spending now and not producing. BUT you are right - you are selling your future to the Chinese, they are buying it for worthless money. Enjoy it.

      Nope, it's because domestic companies either can't supply what people want, or are uncompetitive.

      - that's what I said:

      there is enough demand, but there is no production.

      - it's exactly what I said.

      I mean progressive taxation,

      - you already have it. People with high pay, pay most of the taxes. Warren Buffet is an old liar when he says he pays less than his secretary.

      His company pays 35% federal corporate income tax, that's HIS money, he is the largest shareholder. He pays (X-0.35*X) - 0.15(X-0.35*X), so about 44.5%.

      Half of the population in USA aren't paying any federal income taxes.

      wealth redistribution

      - you CANNOT redistribute wealth. By "redistributing" money via taxes, you are only redistributing MONEY, but wealth is PRODUCTION CAPACITY. It's funny how simple misunderstanding of nomenclature makes such a huge difference. You CAN destroy wealth by taking away all of the investment capital and obviously you will cause more capital flight

    59. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by m50d · · Score: 1

      Factory floors require rental payments/tax payments, if you are in a business of making money, then you won't be paying without producing something. What you do is, you quickly shift production somewhere else, move the tools, move your investment.

      Long-term, sure. But there are costs associated with moving, particularly in an economy where no-one else needs any new production capacity right now either. If you're running your factory at 75% capacity and expecting the economy to pick up eventually it's probably cheaper to keep doing so than to tear it down and build a smaller one.

      But you know who HAS been supporting these people, you call "babies"? Those who still pay taxes AND the foreigners who are accumulating worthless US debt. They need to understand that it's not "babies" they are subsidizing. These are grown individuals, who are happy as a voting block to live on hand outs and not have to produce anything.

      The babies line was about the absurdity of your position, not what I think of such people. A minimum-wage job is not a worthwhile use of anyone's time, it's in society's best interests that people spend their time looking for something more productive. And if they really are just lazy and workshy (which is pretty rare), they'd only damage any company they did work for, so again it's better for society that they simply remain unemployed. The tax burden that they place on the rest of us by so doing is by no means unbearable.

      You'll have to open your borders to foreign national companies to mine your natural resources, because you won't have the capital/tools to do so yourself. You'll be paying with terrible standard of living in the future by spending now and not producing. BUT you are right - you are selling your future to the Chinese, they are buying it for worthless money. Enjoy it.

      So wait, is the money worthless or isn't it?

      People with high pay, pay most of the taxes. Warren Buffet is an old liar when he says he pays less than his secretary. His company pays 35% federal corporate income tax, that's HIS money, he is the largest shareholder.

      If he's not cycling his profits through Ireland and paying less than 10% at the company level then he's a rarity. But in any case, those taxes apply to any investor, rich and poor alike.

      you CANNOT redistribute wealth. By "redistributing" money via taxes, you are only redistributing MONEY, but wealth is PRODUCTION CAPACITY. It's funny how simple misunderstanding of nomenclature makes such a huge difference. You CAN destroy wealth by taking away all of the investment capital and obviously you will cause more capital flight out of the country, but you can't redistribute wealth.

      Again, which is it? If the money is worthless then surely it makes no difference how it is distributed. The rich care about their money precisely because it is wealth, or equivalent to it.

      So what did the country end up with? Nothing. Couldn't even FEED itself, had to sell oil and gas for freaking WHEAT. Russia? Ukraine? Couldn't grow enough wheat? Well obviously not, it's because government cannot do actual wealth production. You can confiscate the money and even the TOOLS of production, and with government in charge you will only end up with theft of resources, by those close to it, but there will be no wealth production at all.

      Sure, if you confiscate everything then the incentives go wrong, you end up with massive corruption and inefficiency and all the rest of it. But just because 100% taxation is absurd doesn't mean 0% isn't.

      Which is exactly what an economy needs - investment capital. Investment capital in the hands of people who will actually use it to increase production capacity, which is what economy needs. Investment capital - the money that does NOT benefit the 'rich', it makes them work.

      Of course it benefits the ri

      --
      I am trolling
    60. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by roman_mir · · Score: 2

      I understand you are trolling, so your sig says, but for how long can you keep it up?

      --

      Long-term, sure. But there are costs associated with moving,

      Looking at the list of current plants and plants closed in USA, the numbers of workers for just the Ford company is revealing that the long-term is here now.

      The babies line was about the absurdity of your position

      - why is my position absurd? I never talked about babies, I am talking about unemployment in USA, which is nominally over 9%, but in reality is over 20%.

      A minimum-wage job is not a worthwhile use of anyone's time

      ? No? Really?

      What if you are unemployed?
      What if you have over 20% unemployment?
      What if you have underproduction?
      What if you have huge debts and are printing fiat to support the debt based consumption?
      What if your kids are in colleges, getting worthless degrees, while without minimum wage laws at all, they could be hired for nominal fees and actually become apprentices, and learn at work to do something useful and then in 4 years, while other kids get their BSc in Sociology, these kids would have 4 years of work experience and NO mortgage without a house?

      What if you don't produce anything and have 90% of your sea food imported from elsewhere?
      What if your money is quickly becoming worse than toilet paper, because you can't really use it for that, it's too dirty?

      What if China will STOP subsidizing you (and it eventually will)?

      So wait, is the money worthless or isn't it?

      - USD is worthless for the Chinese, they can't buy anything for it, so they buy your debt, which means they are buying your FUTURE with worthless paper you give them.

      Debt is deferred taxation, do you understand the concept? It means taxes that must be paid later. But who is going to pay that? I don't even think Chinese will get anything back (anything useful), even from your future generations, because your future generations will wake up and LEAVE. And WHO is going to give you anything when you are old? You think you'll have your SS check? Sure, the gov't will print it, but it won't be coming out of production and it won't buy anything.

      If he's not cycling his profits through Ireland and paying less than 10% at the c

      - maybe he isn't paying the taxes by using all the tricks available in accounting, then he shouldn't be in a position to preach about taxes, should he?

      In any case, giving any money to government is destructive to the US economy in the long run. There is no difference if the money is coming from China or taxes, at this point it worsens the situation by causing greater debt, and this explodes the Keynesian heads in government, now they believe they have no choice but to keep interest at 0%, which PREVENTS the economy from restructuring, they print more money, and this worsens the situation.

      This is a vicious cycle, that can only be interrupted by categorically denying any new money to the government.

      Again, which is it? If the money is worthless then surely it makes no difference how it is distributed.

      - printed currency is worthless. Printing currency makes it worthless. EARNED money is CAPITAL savings. Capital savings can be invested, organized with other resources - land and labor, to produce new value. Government confiscating earned money is surely destroying the wealth, because that's the money that is actually was produced for, earned, and it could be invested with by the people who earned it.

      Of-course in today's USA there are too many people who got their millions from government itself,

    61. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > employing americans is too expensive for what you get

      Actually, Americans are still quite cost-effective to employ compared to other native English-speakers. Unlike Europeans, we don't disappear for a month at a time on extended vacations, and few Americans can go away for more than 3 consecutive days without remotely doing work at least once or twice. 18 year old American high school graduates might be behind high school graduates from other countries, but the extra years middle-class Americans spend in college go a long way towards making up for it. By the time you factor in the total cost of hiring one American compared to one European, and compare total annual work output, the supposedly expensive American ends up looking almost third-world cheap by comparison.

    62. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by smash · · Score: 1

      The difference is, americans are far more likely to sue, and win in court on trivial BS matters. Cost of employment pales in comparison to cost/risk of lawsuit...

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    63. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by m50d · · Score: 1

      without minimum wage laws at all, they could be hired for nominal fees and actually become apprentices, and learn at work to do something useful

      Staggering naivete. The overwhelming majority of minimum-wage jobs are dead-end jobs, and that would only be more true for jobs that paid less.

      maybe he isn't paying the taxes by using all the tricks available in accounting, then he shouldn't be in a position to preach about taxes, should he?

      Sure he should, because he's doing what all the other rich people do; if we're not taxing him we're not taxing them either.

      In any case, giving any money to government is destructive to the US economy in the long run. There is no difference if the money is coming from China or taxes, at this point it worsens the situation by causing greater debt

      What are you saying, that taxation increases personal debt? Because what I'm arguing for is the opposite of that - take tax money and either give it directly to, or use it to supply services to, the poor, thus helping get them out of debt.

      Government confiscating earned money is surely destroying the wealth, because that's the money that is actually was produced for, earned, and it could be invested with by the people who earned it.

      So money is wealth as long as it belongs to the person who earned it, but as soon as you take it from them and give it to someone else it magically stops being?

      I think you believe it's good to take 45% of income away from people based on the fact that they are in your eyes 'rich'. However you are again, not paying attention AT ALL to my point - USSR has done this. The money was taken away from the richest, but the gov't can't create wealth, they spent it.

      USSR has taxed at 100%, which breaks things. Britain has taxed the rich 95%, and not only did the country not collapse, it was one of the most glorious periods in its history. Even in the US, right now tax rates on the rich are at historic lows.

      The rich person working is really a charity basically at that point, because the rich person does not HAVE to work. He can just spend, be a consumer, have a good time.

      Oh please. The rich are all doing this out of the goodness of their hearts, because they're rich so they must be good. Poor people couldn't possibly do any good, because they're poor, so must be evil.

      If that was the case, then Zimbabwe would have the best economy in the world.

      So there's more than one way to ruin an economy, that proves nothing. I can dig up an example of a country with zero income tax going to hell in a handbasket if that's what you want.

      The only people who can legitimately consume, are those who legitimately produce. Until you get this little detail, the further discussion will simply be regurgitation of what was said previously multiple times.

      You have indeed identified the core of our disagreement. What does "legitimacy" matter for anything? If you claim that investment is better for the economy than consumption and money is best off in the hands of the rich, surely you should support taxing the poor and distributing the money so collected to the rich, who'd make better use of it (that would just as much be taking away what someone had produced). A dollar is a dollar is a dollar, whether earned or given; if I buy a soda the impact on the economy is the same whether it's my dollar or someone else's.

      Take care and good luck in your new Marxist utopia, you didn't address my question of-course, do you think a person who lived in one utopia of that type is an idiot for never ever wanting to experience it again?

      I think you're an idiot for deciding that since 100% taxation is bad, lowest taxation is the best. That's like living in the Sahara for a while, finding it uncomfortable and deciding that

      --
      I am trolling
    64. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Staggering naivete. The overwhelming majority of minimum-wage jobs are dead-end jobs, and that would only be more true for jobs that paid less.

      - staggering ignorance. Before minimum wage laws (and before minimum wage was above $1), there were plenty of apprentices. Kids were working at mechanic shops, wood shops, actually learning the trade while helping and being paid almost nothing, but they didn't have to accrue any debt and they didn't waste their time.

      Sure he should, because he's doing what all the other rich people do; if we're not taxing him we're not taxing them either.

      - I just read he is fighting the IRS about his taxes as well. What's good for the goose, good for the gander, or is it?

      What are you saying, that taxation increases personal debt?

      - Ha, you again missed the point. Taxation increases national debt. Any money given to the government is fungible, so they will use it to the maximum, always spending and always growing the debt.

      They are only limited in their spending by the amount currently available, of-course they borrow, but at some point that window will close, so they will only print/collect/confiscate.

      Any money given to the gov't makes the economy worse, that's what I am saying, because it causes larger spending, which in return causes more gov't debt, which forces them to keep interest at 0, which prevents any investment savings and investments and this prevents economy from recovery.

      Any amount of money at this point, that is given to gov't prevents recovery.

      So money is wealth as long as it belongs to the person who earned it, but as soon as you take it from them and give it to someone else it magically stops being?

      - of-course.

      Money that is earned and SAVED is capital - it was earned by creating wealth (products), and it is used to reinvest.

      Any of this money taken away by gov't will prevent recovery, but also when "redistributed" to others to spend on consumer goods, this money becomes more public DEBT, because this money will go to OTHER COUNTRIES, and they will keep it, print their own currency, buy out this, will use it to buy more US debt.

      Any money taken away to SPEND ON CONSUMER GOODS that are NOT produced in USA prevents recovery in more ways than one.

      USSR has taxed at 100%, which breaks things. Britain has taxed the rich 95%, and not only did the country not collapse, it was one of the most glorious periods in its history. Even in the US, right now tax rates on the rich are at historic lows.

      - USSR didn't tax much at all.

      You didn't live there, so how would you know. It just paid in PRINTED RUBBLES. They printed trillions of pieces of paper a year, it was completely worthless.

      I am sure that nobody in Britain actually ever paid 95%, such a thing is ridiculous on its face, and forcing a king to sign Magna Carta was a good primer on how people deal with tyrants.

      USA was formed by tax evaders by the way, who felt that King George was unfairly taxing them.

      Oh please. The rich are all doing this out of the goodness of their hearts, because they're rich so they must be good. Poor people couldn't possibly do any good, because they're poor, so must be evil.

      - you missed my point again, but what else is new?

      When I say CHARITY by the RICH is them working, what I mean is they do NOT have to work. They are NOT doing this out of any goodness, they are doing this because they like doing it. But you can't tax mental satisfaction.

      Are poor evil? If your logic deducts that from my comments, then I wonder who taught you logic in you socialist paradise?

      So there's more than one way to ruin an economy, that proves nothing. I can dig up an example of a country with zero income tax going to hell in a handbasket if that's what you want.

      - there were over

    65. Re:Anti-Rich People Rhetoric by m50d · · Score: 1

      Any money given to the gov't makes the economy worse, that's what I am saying, because it causes larger spending, which in return causes more gov't debt

      Let me get this straight: giving the government money increases government debt, and taking money away from the government decreases government debt?

      this money will go to OTHER COUNTRIES,

      What, and investment money always stays in the US?

      When I say CHARITY by the RICH is them working, what I mean is they do NOT have to work. They are NOT doing this out of any goodness, they are doing this because they like doing it.

      Which makes it not work. Anyone can do things that are enjoyable, but only the poor do things that are unpleasant but desirable for the economy.

      Because you are proposing forceful coercion, by which those who produce must subsidize those who do not produce but are more than willing to consume the produced goods.

      Yeah, I know. That doesn't mean it isn't in the interests of the economy, or society.

      Also if the dollar is taken away by force from a producer and given to somebody who does not produce, this is the dollar that is NOT used to grow the economy, this is the dollar that is NOT used as investment capital, this is a destructive dollar, where a transaction is performed, but one side produced something (like your can of cola case) and the other side produced nothing.

      "destructive dollar", I like it. Seriously though, no, every dollar is the same as every other dollar, that is the dollar's whole raison d'entre. Someone still worked to produce it (whether it was me or someone else it was taxed from), so there's no more or less production. Whether it's used for spending or investment is indeed a difference, but my whole point is that in present economic circumstances spending is more useful to the economy. You can see this on the basis of available production capacity, or you can measure it more directly by looking at prices: interest rates for investors are low, because there's little demand for investment and plenty of supply; purchasable goods are cheap, i.e. spendable money is expensive, because there's plenty of "demand for spending" and little supply.

      --
      I am trolling
  6. Never Happen by DaMattster · · Score: 1

    This is exactly what it is, a proposal. It will never happen! If it does and I am wrong, it will be with significant concessions as to render the thing useless and the middle class will bear the brunt again.

    1. Re:Never Happen by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      True, Obama will make concessions and make bipartisan decisions until everything the Republicans don't like is gone, just as he has done with everything else. Heck by the time they're done with it there will be cuts to social services and an extension on the Bush tax cuts in place of this tax.

      Instead of making bipartisanship one of the cornerstones of his administration he should have said "FUCK bipartisanSHIT, it's our turn now and we'll do what we want, bitches! Go home and cry to your mamas if you don't like it!"

      Making compromises hasn't won him any fans. The republicans still hate him despite the fact that he's further right than Clinton and looks a lot like GWB on paper, and he's left everyone who voted for him feeling abandoned.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  7. More expenses? by knuthin · · Score: 1, Funny

    Now being rich is a crime?

    How do I pay for my Xbox Live subscription, my BBM unlimted data plans, the new iPhone that might launch anytime, the new anytime or my trips around the world every six months, if I am paying taxes for these stupid homeless/poor people who live in the middle of nowhere?

    Looting others' money is just not as fun as it used to be.

    --
    Some apps are WYSIWYG. Some others are WYSIWTF.
    1. Re:More expenses? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Don't kid yourself. You're not rich. This isn't about you, even if Fox tries to convince you otherwise.

      At best you're some middle-class chump who generates money for those who are actually rich.

    2. Re:More expenses? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now being rich is a crime?

      I wasn't aware that only criminals paid taxes.

  8. Class warfare? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, tell the poor people they're dumb for wanting the small proportion of the country that owns most of the wealth to pony up!

    Fuck off Republicans.

    1. Re:Class warfare? by ErikZ · · Score: 1, Interesting

      First off, yes you can live on Min wage. I've done it.

      Second, no one is forcing students to take out huge loans for college. I made it through college without borrowing anything. (Stupidly running up credit card bills is another matter however.)

      Third you need to define the "American Dream" before you can claim how it isn't available for millions of Americans.

      Fourth, if you're going to claim that trickle down economics is class warfare, you should back it up with something. Anything.

      And that's just my response to your first sad, sad paragraph.

      --
      Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
    2. Re:Class warfare? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I still think the ol' U S of A is the greatest country in the world"

      How can you still think that? Have you lived elsewhere? I have. Or is this just your way of saying you still love your country? You can still love your country even if it's not the best country in the world to live in.

    3. Re:Class warfare? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By convincing them to invest in our future, do you really mean take their money by force and then have a politician give it to a politically connected corporation which then goes bankrupt and screws the common investors in the bankruptcy, while making sure the politically connected investors are covered? Because I saw this happen with GM and Solyndra. A pattern is emerging.

    4. Re:Class warfare? by Lost+Engineer · · Score: 1

      One wonders why, if raising taxes on .2% of citizens is so good for the remainder, hasn't it been done already. Certainly there should be enough votes among the non-millionaires.

    5. Re:Class warfare? by QKRTHNU · · Score: 0
      I guess you haven't figured out the correlation between:

      the unlucky 40 million who can't get jobs or are under-employed

      and:

      A federal minimum wage of $7.25, which allows employers to pay wages that employess can not live on

      HINT: Raising the latter will also increase the former. Frak Taxes...SMASH THE STATE!

    6. Re:Class warfare? by bussdriver · · Score: 1

      Class warfare has been made a taboo topic and spun by clever P.R. people so that the masses can't openly and intelligently discuss the class warfare being waged against them for decades. It has gotten so bad that a lot of people are just now becoming aware of it... Anybody who talked about it was attacked, called names and marginalized. It is difficult to do today because it draws attention to the idea which at this phase is bad strategy; the next phase is to blame scapegoats which has been underway for a while. I don't think there is a single plan for the next phase other than to create confusion.

      The chart everybody must see before talking about this mess AT ALL: (a few screens down)
      http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2011/07/the-chart-that-should-accompany-all-discussions-of-the-debt-ceiling/242484

      Millionaires don't make their money on their own; they require more public resources than somebody on food stamps. People like Trump take big risks for huge gains and go bankrupt OFTEN (as Trump has) and the losses are burdened by the public they claim to have not needed and shouldn't pay for. Corporate welfare costs us more than anything else. No, welfare does not include social security, medicare, or unemployment insurance - they are separate programs that WE PAY for in every paycheck; sure they don't pay out exactly what you pay in, but neither does private insurance does it?? Hell, social security is as close as we've ever come to a FLAT TAX (if you just made it fully "FLAT" it would have too much money; you see, it is basically flat but has a low ceiling so well off people don't put in anything, you don't have to be "rich" to avoid it.) The social security trust fund isn't as individual as an actual trust fund...even then, if the selfish are upset by this, the solution would be a 1:1 ratio and that might make them happy; however, the republicans would still want to kill it because their REAL opposition to social security is that their banker masters want all that investment money to gamble with (along with protections so you suffer for their losses and not them... as usual.)

      Trickle down is a bad label today; instead they say "rich provide jobs" which suckers the simpletons who can't see how this is another label for THE SAME THING. Again, DEMAND creates jobs, not supply the rich boss is not going to higher more people because he gets more money, he is going to hire more people to meet increased DEMAND... his GOAL is to cut as much overhead as possible so he can get richer and more powerful. YOU ARE OVERHEAD!!! "Human resource" dehumanizes you to just another material resource-- and the less resources, the lower the cost and the higher the profits. Over produce -- over supply and you drive down prices, profit etc. Yeah, give the rich money so they can hire people to produce more that doesn't sell at an ideal profit ratio... with no public backing of that risk why should they?? They may as well keep the handout themselves and put in no effort or risk.

    7. Re:Class warfare? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Aside from the rich not giving the slightest of two shits about future generations because they'll be dead by then, maybe if we stopped paying sports players and actors more money than god, there'd be plenty of money kicking around for other things.

      Hell, we're literally FORCING money onto actors and sports figures. And people wonder why joe tradesman is so looked down upon. Why do shit work when you can make millions of dollars playing games and talking?

    8. Re:Class warfare? by Red_Chaos1 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Eating Ramen 3 times a day in a bad part of the neighborhood with no car, etc. etc. is not really "living."
      If you ran up CC debt, you *didn't* make it through college without borrowing.
      Everyone knows what the American Dream is and that it's unobtainable by the majority (at all, or without major financial consequences), stop being a moron.

    9. Re:Class warfare? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interestingly enough, I live in a decent part of town in a major US city, and support myself and another person on about $1200 a month. We have access to typical living conveniences, and in general want for nothing. Yes, it takes work to do. No, it's not impossible. It's not even really impractical.

      It's also not a Ramen diet. It's called buying ingredients and actually making food. It's cheaper; try it sometime.

      I guess we're doing something wrong to be able to live on FAR less than minimum wage.

    10. Re:Class warfare? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok dejavu, Your post seems to be missing a few things...

      You call the people on unemployment unlucky, not sure if your serious or sarcastic... most(over 90%) of the people I know drawing funemployment are working under the table and having a blast with their handout from uncle 0bammy.

      You list federal minimum wage and state that people cannot live on that??? personally I have lived on less, of course I didn't have play money when living that frugally but here again I know some people that live on similar amounts and while they may not be living the royal lifestyle but they still get by and could be doing better but they don't necessarily have the work ethic that I have developed and besides that there are states that have laws that exceed the feds rate by over 20%.

      So you think the USA is the greatest country in the world eh? Strange I usually hear the same sentence coming from liberals who want to destroy this great country of ours (citizens of the USA) followed by how we should tax the rich more, here again I see a trait of work ethic in the so called rich that has allowed them to earn more monies than their counterparts with less than desirable work ethic... So we should punish them(the rich) for working harder so their families can enjoy life???

      I see another phrase that I hear coming from liberals that would like to see the USA be transformed into a third world country... 'status quo' obviously if the rich get richer then there is not status quo hence the meaning 'existing state' = 'not changing' I think you should be working on changing the status quo of the poor's work ethic then maybe true 'change' can take place... in the mean time just keep making it easier to get handouts(rights) from the all providing big government.

      So you think that 'rich people' have a chance to fix things... If this statement wasn't so laughable I'm not sure I could type a cognitive response but I will give it a try between rolling on the floor, I am sure you have seen the stats and know that even if you taxed the rich(>1,000,000/Yr) at 95% and gave all that(full cut) to the poor(20,000/Yr) each of them would only get around 8,000 dollars more that year and of course this would last exactly one year because the rich would have absolutely no incentive to work so all the fruits of their labor could be given away and of course the above scenario assumes that the poor would actually get the monies taken from the rich but we all know how the tax collector works about .08 cents of every dollar collected would ever get to the poor... sad but true.

      I also couldn't help but to notice in your well worded and well thought out post that you mentioned you were born here but you neglected to add that you were a proud citizen of the USA...or whichever country you may be a proud citizen of???

      Personally I am a proud citizen of this great country and will do everything in my power to defend it and it's freedoms from all threats foreign and domestic !!!

    11. Re:Class warfare? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have two questions:
      1.) Why do you think that U S of A is the greatest country in the world? Answer honestly please. More general question, why does Americans needs to add this so often?

      2.) If the French would go around screaming "France is the greatest country in the world", Americans would be first to scream "arrogance, nationalism". How is it different?

    12. Re:Class warfare? by ErikZ · · Score: 1

      I ate normally, it's not hard to budget for food. Ramen was on the menu, but mostly because it was easy and fast to make. Not because of cost.

      I ran up the CC on things I didn't need, mostly trying to impress girls, eating out, etc. If I didn't have the CC I wouldn't have spent the money.

      I'm not everyone. Please explain what the "American Dream" is. I'd appreciate it if you used small words.

      You're not defining it because once you do, we can take the next step and prove/disprove it. I suppose if you'd rather cling to your misery, I won't stop you.

      I'm astonished your comment has been voted up to 5. I went to college from 97-2000.

      --
      Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
  9. Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by JoshuaZ · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It is class warfare to increase tax rates in the highest income brackets to a level that is about half that of the 1950s http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Income_tax_in_the_United_States#1913_-_2010. The current tax rate for the highest income brackets is 33%. In the 1950s and 1950s the highest tax rate was 91%. One can also argue that the proposed increased tax rate won't even restore the high tax rate to the same extent, since the historical tax rates were for income of at least $250,000, whereas this will apply to income of at least a million dollars but this would be slightly misleading since adjusting for inflation $250,000 in 1960 dollars is around a 2 million now. But even given that, the general point should be clear: This is far less than the historic tax rate during a time period that is often considered to be one of the most stable and prosperous.

    The other problem with labels like class warfare is how much they miss the point of what actual class warfare is. If one wants to see actual class warfare look at the French Revolution where aristocrats and clergy got executed and this eventually spread to wealthy merchants. Or look at the Russian Revolution and the following years where people were punished and exiled for simply being farmers who owned their own land and equipment. That's class warfare. Voting to increase tax rates to levels well below historical levels is just regular economic policy. One can discuss whether such taxes are a good or bad thing, but it is pretty clear that such discussion isn't going to go very far when people like Ryan are using this sort of ridiculously inflammatory rhetoric.

    1. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by JoshuaZ · · Score: 1

      Ok. I understand that sarcasm in titles can be difficult to detect. But did you even read my comment before writing your reply?

    2. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The tax rate is 33% on "income." But rich people don't work for a living and make an income. That would be vulgar.

      Instead rich people invest their money and get a return on investment. That tax rate is only about 7% once all the deductions are taken into account.

      Warren buffet claims that he pays less in taxes than his executive secretary does.

    3. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you read his post before replying? He was saying it wasn't class warfare......

    4. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you read the OP at all before you commented? If you did, you may need to get your reading comprehension checked...

    5. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by adamchou · · Score: 1

      Sorry, read the first two sentences and though this guy doesn't know what he's talking about and I ha denough. Didn't get it till the end of your first paragraph.

    6. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by twoallbeefpatties · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The other problem with labels like class warfare is how much they miss the point of what actual class warfare is.

      You're giving the phrase too much credit. The term "class warfare" is just an advertising slogan. It's what conservatives say in response to any program which might raise revenues on the upper class. It's not something that can be torn apart and dissected - it's just a phrase meant to evoke a gut response and get people to vote the other way. History means nothing to a slogan.

      --
      Libertarians somehow believe that private businesses should be stronger than governments but weaker than individuals.
    7. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by coinreturn · · Score: 1

      It is class warfare, and it's about damn time the lower and middle classes got a weapon. The upper class has been waging class warfare for decades (er, actually since time immemorial, but I digress).

    8. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by rickb928 · · Score: 1

      In the 50s, the 'rich' were plowing their capital into expansion. Postwar, we were virtually the only working economy in the world. Today, we may be in precisely the opposite situation.

      So taking capital for government operation is a good idea now? Even Kennedy spoke of reducing taxes to encourage investment and economic activity, spyurring growth and in the end more tax revenue overall.

      But that's one of the economic arguments. The other side has their points. Eisenhower was so right about economists.

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    9. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by QuantumRiff · · Score: 1

      When your taxing the rich, its "Class Warfare".. When your taxing the middle class and poor, its "Balancing the Budget"

      Keep in mind, Paul Ryan has had his own constituents removed by police for trying to meet with him, and has had NO open public forums this year. Some people did pay $15 to go to a rotary club fundraising luncheon, but when asked hard questions, the police removed them.. (why are they having cops sitting in the room of this private event anyways?)

      Paul Ryan is trying to make a name for himself to run for president someday.. he likes the national attention. He could care less about Janesville, WI.

      --

      What are we going to do tonight Brain?
    10. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      whooooooosh!

    11. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by SrJsignal · · Score: 1

      "They" you realize capital gains tax rates can be taken advantage of by everyone. Oh and by the way the two lowest "normal" tax brackets get to pay 0% for capital gains. So let's not get silly and talk about capital gains in a "they" manner, EVERYONE may take advantage of that.

    12. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Here is a good question asked at just about 16:30 in that video.

      The answer right now is that people in higher income brackets are paying most of their taxes at their marginal rate.

      Nobody ever paid 91% taxes, people modify behavior not to be abused that way, and at the time when taxes were that high in USA nominally, people were able to write off all of their expenses from their corporations, and the IRS couldn't really check anything, since there were no integrated computer records.

      The truth is that USA is on top of the world in terms of taxation levels, but it is also at the very top in terms of spending.

      Class warfare never works for the benefit of the lower classes, because the truly wealthy will always make sure their wealth is untouched, any new taxes that are enacted, will only be a concern to the dwindling middle class.

    13. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nice try dip shit.

      I guess this means you also want everyone making $10K to pay 42% correct?

    14. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Kjella · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The other problem with labels like class warfare is how much they miss the point of what actual class warfare is.

      There's plenty class warfare going on, not just your extremes. Most people vote in interest of themselves and thus by extension their class, it's the wolf class and sheep class deciding what's for dinner. That the rich "shop around" for the biggest incentives and highest tax breaks is class warfare. Raising taxes on the rich saying "you can help pay too" is class warfare. Every time you talk about the burdens and benefits of living in society will run into this. And it's usually not a matter of what's right or wrong it's about power. The masses have strength in numbers, but the rich have strength in lobbyists and moving jobs. It's never going to be an evenly pitched battle because the tools are different, but it absolutely happens. All the time.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    15. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by anti-pop-frustration · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Remember kids, raising taxes on the rich is class warfare! But lowering their taxes is "incentivizing job creation" and "stimulating the economy".

      Funny how class warfare is such a one way street to the right. For some reason it's never class warfare when "job creators" lobby federal and state officials to end all the ground gained by organized labor since the industrial revolution.

    16. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look at the deductions etc during that era - NOBODY paid 91%. The tax reforms of the early 80s slashed the rates, but also the deductions. Unfortunately, it is time to go after the deductions again. Why do you think GE hasn't paid any taxes of late - there are various deductions added to the tax code for their benefit.

    17. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by NetNed · · Score: 1

      Warren Buffet is very successful but that statement it stupid. If he feels so bad, then why does he have his income structured in such a way that his statement is mildly true? Truth is when you add all the taxes he really pays through corporate taxes on his investment firm that he is the majority holder in, he pays a massive amount more then his secretary could even think of paying, percentage wise and of course money wise. His statement is only true because he is paid a income on unrealized capital gains, which he ends up paying a capital gains tax on, which also is MUCH lower then if it were a straight up federal income tax.

    18. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by adamchou · · Score: 1

      Everyone is allowed to but not everyone has the ability to. You think that single mother with 2 kids making $40k a year can afford to put in as much as that millionaire tycoon? Hell, those millionaires don't even need to work. They can just make all their money off the investments.

    19. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by SiChemist · · Score: 1

      The truth is that USA is on top of the world in terms of taxation levels, but it is also at the very top in terms of spending.

      I'd really like to know where you got this bit of falsehood. According to this little graph:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Income_Taxes_By_Country.svg

      the US is among the lowest in personal income taxation.

    20. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The other problem with labels like class warfare is how much they miss the point of what actual class warfare is.

      None of the the talking points about this -- class warfare, job creators, economic uncertainty -- survive any type of thoughtful analysis.

      Advertising and marketing consultants used focus groups to discover that the words "class warfare" were effective in convincing people to vote Republican. The same type of advertising and marking consultants wrote the ads for Axe Body Spray that convince 12 and 13 year old boys to make themselves small really bad.

      Of course, back in the reality based world, Obama's proposals aren't class warfare, and Axe Body Spray doesn't make girls sleep with you. But advertising isn't a dialogue designed to speak to your head. Advertising is a discussion for your gut.

    21. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by pnuema · · Score: 1

      I call bullshit. Corporate taxes are corporate taxes, and personal taxes are personal taxes. You cannot conflate the two. If you don't like that corporations have to pay taxes, feel free to take your corporation somewhere else. There will certainly be another that will step in to compete for your US customers.

    22. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by pnuema · · Score: 2

      We do tax everyone. We all pay payroll taxes, even the poor. This is a right wing meme that is really kind of disgusting in its dishonesty. Tell you what. Let's stop taxing people. Let's start taxing transactions. Every time money moves from one place to another, let's let the government take a micro-portion as tax. That way, we wall get taxed exactly the same - corporations, rich people, poor people, banks, even the government. That would be fair now, wouldn't it?

    23. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by coaxial · · Score: 1

      Truth is when you add all the taxes he really pays through corporate taxes on his investment firm that he is the majority holder in...

      Nice try. Both he and I own stock. We don't pay corporate taxes. The company does. It's not our accounts, nor are they our not assets.

    24. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He does it that way because he can. He is saying that he shouldn't be able to.

    25. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      OECD provided graph? ! for 2005 as well. Graph that doesn't include State taxes.

      Here is a better source.

      This again, does not include State income taxes.

      Here they are

      If you are making over say $10,000,000/year, you'll pay marginal tax rate on 99% of your income, so that's 35% + SS + payroll + Medicare + State. State taxes vary and in some cases they are 0, which is why people move to Texas or Florida out of places like Connecticut or Illinois for example.

      Of-course the other taxes will also add up, like property, sales, gas, etc.

    26. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pay attention and you'll see he says a lower RATE than his secretary. H U G E difference. I'm sure he pays more most on /. combined. Though it is possible, it isn't probable. Warren != company. Companies are the ones that aren't paying their share.

    27. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by martas · · Score: 1

      My kingdom for a mod point. The sad part? Most of US politics is played and won and lost on slogans. The country is being governed the same way Levi jeans are sold. Yeah.

    28. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by characterZer0 · · Score: 1

      Warren buffet claims that he pays less in taxes than his executive secretary does.

      No. Warren Buffet claims that he pays a lower percentage of his income than his executive secretary does.

      --
      Go green: turn off your refrigerator.
    29. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

      His statement is only true because he is paid a income on unrealized capital gains, which he ends up paying a capital gains tax on, which also is MUCH lower then if it were a straight up federal income tax.

      Why yes. Yes that DOES make his statement true.
      Since when did "true" equate to "stupid"?

    30. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree. Class warfare would be if the rich hired security officers to keep the poor from coming into their territory, and barricaded themselves inside gated communities, then tried to make peace and enrich themsleves by putting "Idiocracy"-like television on to opiate the rabble. Or, if the rich just gassed all the poor, that would be class warfare.

      This is not class warfare. It is politics.

    31. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a *great* and *accurate* slogan ... once you realize that the middle and lower classes have been in full tactical retreat from the economic battlefield for the last couple of decades, and the rich are balking at any thought of changing the situation because they like it that way.

      So, yes, it's "class warfare", and excuse the vast majority of us for daring to request that the 1% minority that has most of the wealth to contribute as much as they used to contribute a decade ago.

    32. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Amouth · · Score: 2

      Truth is when you add all the taxes he really pays through corporate taxes on his investment firm that he is the majority holder in, he pays a massive amount more then his secretary could even think of paying

      http://money.cnn.com/2010/04/16/news/companies/ge_7000_tax_returns/

      if GE can make it's US payment 0 while earning 10b - i'm sure Buffet's tax people can too.

      Warren Buffet isn't stupid - If he doesn't has to pay the taxes then he won't. He's just one of the very few super rich that are pointing out how dumb it is that he can get away with it.

      --
      '...if only "Jumping to a Conclusion" was an event in the Olympics.'
    33. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by larkost · · Score: 1

      No, that would indicate that the dollar amount that Warren Buffet pays is less than his secretary, which I have never seem him as quoted as saying. What he has said is that his tax rate (so a percentage) is much smaller than that of his secretary. And since his income undoubtedly comes overwhelmingly from investments, that would almost be hard for him to do otherwise. But I am sure that the total dollar amount that he pays is much larger. But he has repeatedly gone on the record to say that he feels that this is a miscarriage of (social) justice, that those making the most income can (by definition) afford to pay a higher percentage, and that it is only fair that they do. It is hard to make a straight-faced argument that he is wrong.

      Oh... and the top federal income tax rate is only 35% on your income over $379,150 (single payer). You pay a smaller percentage on all of the money you earn before that. This is what is called a "marginal" system, and guarantees that you are never penalized for making more money (in federal income taxes at least, despite what some people in politics argue).

    34. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Xphile101361 · · Score: 1

      Welcome to slashdot, where we don't read the articles, much less the comments about them The interesting thing to me is that over the years it seems as if more and more of the wealth of this nation is being collected at the top, but less and less of the taxes are coming from the top. Maybe I'm wrong, but it would be nice to see some stats on that.

    35. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by WesternActor · · Score: 1

      Two things. First: It's taxes. Call them taxes. Not revenues. TAXES.

      Second: "Pay their fair share" isn't "a phrase meant to evoke a gut response"? Come on. As if anyone's share is somehow more fair if it's drastically out of proportion with what the majority of people pay. Soaking the rich isn't fair. Fair is, Everyone pays the same rate. That's not what the Democrats typically want, and anyone being intellectually honest knows that.

      --

      --Matthew
      "If the lights of Broadway blind me, I won't mind..."
    36. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is not "ridiculously inflammatory" to call an attempt to bribe the poor with the money of the rich "class warfare." You can make a reasonable argument for bribing the poor with the money of the rich, but don't attempt to call it other than it is. Isn't it a sad state when pitting groups of the populace against each other is "normal economic policy?" (It really is normal economic policy.)

    37. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      So easy to fix that. Just cut donations to the bone, and let each candidate's arguments speak for themselves. Of course anyone running for public office would also need to be fully audited once a quarter.

    38. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by crunchygranola · · Score: 1

      In the 50s, the 'rich' were plowing their capital into expansion. Postwar, we were virtually the only working economy in the world. Today, we may be in precisely the opposite situation.

      So taking capital for government operation is a good idea now?..

      You have economics and history exactly backwards. If the rich plow capital back into the business it is not income and does not get taxed. This is what happened when rates were high in the 50s and 60s. When rates are low the capital is often pulled out for other things, that turn out to be unproductive for the nation. Higher taxes is actually encouraging productive investment of capital.

      --
      Second class citizen of the New Gilded Age
    39. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by crunchygranola · · Score: 1

      ...

      The truth is that USA is on top of the world in terms of taxation levels

      By being 27th or so in the OECD in terms of actual tax burden (percentage of the GDP paid in taxes)?

      but it is also at the very top in terms of spending.

      Again no, we are well below the median -- except for the Defense spending thing. We are far out in front there.

      Class warfare never works for the benefit of the lower classes,

      Certainly not the successful one waged by the upper classes against the middle class for 40 years.

      because the truly wealthy will always make sure their wealth is untouched, any new taxes that are enacted, will only be a concern to the dwindling middle class.

      Ohh.... you are calling any push-back against tax law changes made to favor the rich over the last 40 years "class warfare". Sort of like that "freedom is slavery" stuff from Orwell. Go back to the Ministry of Truth.

      Notice all - it does not matter how much taxes are cut, the right-wing will always claim that is at record levels in blatant defiance of the facts. This is "faith based economics".

      --
      Second class citizen of the New Gilded Age
    40. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 1

      Warren buffet claims that he pays less in taxes than his executive secretary does.

      Close. He said he pays a lower tax rate than his secretary:

      Warren Buffett, the third-richest man in the world, has criticized the US tax system for allowing him to pay a lower rate than his secretary and his cleaner.

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    41. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by rickb928 · · Score: 1

      That was. My. Point.

      We could use some expansion. So is taxing 'excess' income going to work?

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    42. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Mod parent Insightful!

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    43. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by RobinEggs · · Score: 1

      If he feels so bad, then why does he have his income structured in such a way that his statement is mildly true?

      Because unlike the vast majority of other ultra-rich people, he does something as good or better than paying taxes with any money he saves in loopholes. He gives the Gates foundation ~1.5 billion a year, and save inheritances of roughly 0.03% for each of his children every penny of his fortune will end up in charities. I've heard many times of the rich and those who hope to be complaining that the government is inefficient and private ingenuity is better and they're giving away damn near all their fortune anyway so the government should just butt out and let them be the magnanimous gods that they are. Buffet and Gates seem to be the only ones putting the majority of their money where their mouth is.

    44. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I do hope this doesn't get buried because Im anon.
      Let me tell you a story about how increasing tax brackets can suddenly become more close to home for a 'middle class' person.
      I was a military joe making about 25-30k a year and appropriately so, paying peanuts in taxes... Somewhere under 15% iirc. I worked really hard and always did my best to punch above my weight, and all of my performance reviews indicated that. Well, working in Iraq I made a few friends who sat next to me in my shop doing the same work as contractors, and making about 5-10x more than me. I never imagined that fate awaited me, until I was ready to get out.

      In the course of 2 months I went from my military pay, to a contractor position in Afghanistan. Say what you will about us being overpaid, but I worked my ****ing ass off for a year. I was suddenly now above the 250k mark. This wasn't because I'm a money-grubbing warmonger, it's because my hourly payrate was a quasi-competitive $60/hr, and most contracts require you to work 12-14 hour days, 7 days a week, no vacations and no weekends. When the taxes hit my income was smashed from nearly 20k a month to around 13. That's a pretty nice hit. I put every penny in the market in various ETFs. I did the right thing and saved. I came from a poor family and suddenly I had money, and I wanted to make sure I could always support myself.

      About a year in I am flying on one of a few hundred helicopter missions to one of my typical work locations and we begin to take small arms fire. Hanging out the window I am hit when a bullet spalls a piece of the fuselage into the side of my face. I'm fine, but my contracting days are over, I lose my job, and am sent back home. Suddenly I am making $0, just had a tax bill of about $40,000 hit my mailbox, and on top of that we are knee deep in a recession. My assets have devalued sharply and I am forced to sell many securities at a loss to cover medical expenses. I don't mind because it was a risk I took. But it was unpleasant.

      When I GET home, for all my tax money I get:
      -No medical assistance from the VA, the federal government, or my state
      -No prospect for educational assistance (Besides the GI bill I paid into; I'm white and of marginal scholastic performance)
      -Record jobless rates
      -The military does not want a one-eyed geospatial analyst back for some reason

      My case is a bit extreme. But I found it extraordinarily frustrating that just because I had a windfall year where I worked myself to the bone and made really only a fair wage for it, I was bumped into nearly the maximum tax bracket. The sliding scale is absurd, and all said and done I have netted a king's ransom of $40,000 for my efforts after taxes and other expenditures. Your one-year performance is a terrible indicator for how much you should be taxed, especially when 'real' rich people (ie not me) can afford to have exotic accounting tricks up their sleeves. I didn't get well paid because I am a fatcat or because my father went to harvard. I got well paid because I worked 90 hours a week, and many people get fucked over just like I did in similar scenarios because they had a lucky year or two.

      The net result is now that I spend absolutely nothing, receive absolutely nothing, and watch every day as down the street I see the same people collecting unemployment and welfare for months, if not years. There is an entire community down the road from me where the residents are insular Hungarian orthodox Jews and literally don't speak English, yet the women strategically stop working after 2 children because that's the threshold government benefits begin to bring in more than their jobs. I can't perform the only skilled trade I know as it often requires depth perception, which requires stereoscopic vision. Do I get a nice tax refund now because I'm poor? Even worse, my combat injury isnt from time-in-service, but contracting, so I get to deal with being ostracized when I mention how it happened by judgmental hipsters who suck tax-free off a protected trust fund in brooklyn

    45. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It might raise the tax rates on the wealthy, but that should not be confused with raising revenues. Look at the history of tax revenues compared with the top marginal rate. The rate has been highly variable, whereas revenue has stayed constant at about 18% of GDP. That says to me that we need to bring spending more closely in line with historical revenue levels, not 7% higher.

    46. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1
      Reducing taxes only works when the taxes are high to begin with. The continued mantra of "Cut Taxes" being good for the economy stops working when the rates aren't that high. otherwise, might as well reduce all taxes to 0%. Then the economy will stay permanently stimulated and always do well.

      You know when you've hit that sweet spot when further reductions don't do anything. Witness the last Bush II era cuts. They didn't help.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    47. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by robotkid · · Score: 1

      You're giving the phrase too much credit. The term "class warfare" is just an advertising slogan. It's what conservatives say in response to any program which might raise revenues on the upper class. It's not something that can be torn apart and dissected - it's just a phrase meant to evoke a gut response and get people to vote the other way. History means nothing to a slogan.

      Right on!

      My grandparents had everything their family owned in China robbed by bandits, then the Marxists came and forcibly confiscated everything else and said "this belongs to the people now, you'll leave and never come back if you know what's good for you". They fled with nothing more than the shirts on their back. THAT is "redistribution of wealth". Decades later, my remaining foreign-educated relatives were stripped of their professorships and forced to work in rice paddies during the Cultural Revolution. THAT is "class warfare". I demand the next politician who uses either of these phrases either retroactively get flunked in history 101, or be willing to explain to my grandparents how adjusting the marginal tax rate by from 15 to 25% for the top 10% of earners is in any way similar to either of these.

    48. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the original income tax of 1913 had a top bracket of 7% and the budget was basically balanced and Government spending was under 10% of GDP.

    49. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      We tax EMPLOYERS, who pay the bulk of payroll taxes. I would suggest that any HIDDEN tax is evil. I would love it if instead of hiding payroll taxes, employees would have to write out a check every month and send that off as their "pay roll tax".

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    50. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's remember one thing when we reference the past high tax rates of the 50s...The rest of the world was a smoking cinder! We had no choice but to succeed having been victorious in the biggest war the planet has ever seen. The world has since rebuilt, and we need to compete. It's a different landscape, and you can not compare now and then...Well, maybe you can but it doesn't actually mean anything in regards to the current debate. We aren't sitting on top of the world any more, and we can't afford to act like we do, throwing entitlements around and acting like the money will always be rolling in. Conservatives are sitting in dark rooms wondering how to screw poor people - they want business to succeed, and they want to stop raising government spending. Sure, Warren Buffett can afford to pay more - but when you take that approach you are essentially seeing just how badly you can squeeze the top - forgetting that government spending is FAR more difficult to reduce than it is to increase, not to mention putting your eggs in one basket. What happens when that top bottoms out? Yeah, you're all screwed. Then you'll cry about why rich people aren't ponying up enough, but the fact will be that they simply aren't going to be there, and won't have the money for you to take. The richest people also happen to be the most volatile. In this latest crash the number of people making $1 mil or more TANKED. They simply disappeared taking their tax revenue with them. A broad tax base is a stable tax base, and a stable economy generally turns out to be a wealthy one - for everybody.

      I don't know about you all, but I for one do NOT want to rely on .5 percent of the population for my own comfort. If I want to screw the rich, I'll find some other way of doing it - cutting them off on the highway, and make their monacles pop out from hearing my blue language...But when it comes to a stable government, fuck 'em. We're better off stable and caring for ourselves than going with our hands out demanding more from people who aren't inclined to give it to us.

    51. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      GDP in USA is cooked at the same rate that CPI is cooked, and CPI, the way it was calculated during Nixon's administration is at 11%, though I count 13.

      GDP in USA has been on a steady decline for over 2 decades, and since 2000, the decline has been over 10% a year. Those are not the numbers you will find in government sources, you have to look at people who calculate the numbers as they were before the government came up with a clever way to reverse-engineer the numbers by applying statistics tricks, hedonic adjustments.

      Again no, we are well below the median -- except for the Defense spending thing. We are far out in front there.

      - USA outspends all other nations in health insurance and care, in education for example per capita, of-course wars are not helping at all.

      The GDP is a joke for yet another reason - the "domestic" part, but 70% of it is spending on consumption, and USA has 53Billion USD trade deficit, which tells you something about that "domestic" part being a very loaded term.

      AFAIC there shouldn't be any income or payroll taxes, but that's a different story.

    52. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by dogmatixpsych · · Score: 1

      I don't want to try and point fingers and say "Liberals started it" but the modern idea of "class warfare" comes from Marxism. He proposed that the struggle between classes in capitalistic societies would resolve through a "war" with the middle class (working class) victorious. Yes, it is overused but it is generally used correctly and in a manner that Marx would probably approve.

    53. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Neither do dictionary definitions.

      Apparently, many Republicans do not feel the need to make "factual statements" when they are spewing what sounds like factual statements.

    54. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by deets52 · · Score: 1

      Warren buffet claims that he pays less in taxes than his executive secretary does.

      Sure he does - he has many more tax lawyers and accountants then she does - DUH!

      If Warren Buffet really wanted the rich to pay more then maybe he should pay all his back tax bills instead of fighting them in court. I mean, I am I the only person who thinks he's being a little bit more than hypocritical when he talks about *the rich* need to pay more taxes when he and his company have teams of accountants and lawyers fighting his tax bills on a regular basis?

    55. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by garyebickford · · Score: 1

      You're ignoring the fact that as a result of those high rates there was huge pressure for creating a jungle of loopholes and exceptions that reduced the effective rates quite a bit, and folks in the higher brackets moved their money elsewhere where it couldn't be taxed, thereby taking it out of the system and reducing economic growth. Interesting that it was Kennedy who ran on lowering both taxes and expenditures, and balancing the budget. Reducing rates from 91% resulted in a huge increase in government revenues, as folks didn't work so hard to hide their income.

      The original platform of the proponents of the 16th amendment was that only the top 2% would be taxed, and the maximum rate would never exceed (IIRC) 5%. The opponents argued that the income tax would allow the federal government to grow out of bounds, and centralize all political power to the federal government away from the states. We can see how that turned out.

      --
      It's easier to be a result of the past, but more fun to be a cause of the future! http://www.spacefinancegroup.com/
    56. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nobody ever paid an effective rate that high, and I'm tired of you people bringing up the 91% thing.

    57. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, a class voting to claim the property of another class could not be described aptly as class warfare? Your kin are on their way out for a reason, and that's that people understand if you keep stealing from Peter to pay for Paul you end up with 1) Running out of Paul's money or 2) Paul leaves the country and stops giving a shit about you babies.

    58. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      An advertising slogan? You mean like "pay their fair share", when in fact the top 1% of tax payers are paying what, 30% to 40% percent of the federal tax revenues collected?

    59. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by pnuema · · Score: 1

      We tax EMPLOYERS, who pay the bulk of payroll taxes.
      Or, to put it another way, we all pay payroll taxes. When I call you out on your lies, don't change the subject.

    60. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The truth is that USA is on top of the world in terms of taxation levels

      Bullshit. Utter bullshit.

    61. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      I saw we own the phrase. Just like a black man or homosexual takes control of the words used to oppress him. Embrace class warfare. Rise up and stand against them. Use your voice, your vote and your guns if needed to take a stand and show them that the tide of this battle is now turning. And in the long run that tide will wash over them.

    62. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by zildgulf · · Score: 1

      If that is "class warfare" then the extreme wealthy and powerful have been winning this battle for the last few decades. It is the middle class that is losing big time. Do they really think that they can have the massive market in the US without a stable or growing middle class? Sure we can have a functional market where 95% of the people are in poverty but the US market would be decimated if this happens.

      Another economic point, the internet is full of Chicken Littles saying this is like 1929. I beg to differ. Historically this economy echoes that of 1937 with a Congress determined to balance a budget during a depression, with an increase in unemployment in 1938. If that is true we will likely have 5+ years of hard times. I say prepare for the long haul an if you have to retire within the next 5 years, I am truly sorry, for you are completely screwed over.

    63. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're giving the phrase too much credit. The term "class warfare" is just an advertising slogan. It's what conservatives say in response to any program which might raise revenues on the upper class. It's not something that can be torn apart and dissected - it's just a phrase meant to evoke a gut response and get people to vote the other way. History means nothing to a slogan.

      That may be how Republicans are using it, but there is another thing that "class warfare" can mean. It describes the French Revolution. You could argue that it describes the American revolution. Like "Socialism", conservatives can use a word or phrase to describe something in an exaggerated way that historians scoff at, but the real thing does not cease to exist.

    64. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It can be torn apart and disected rather easily. Class warfare is when a political group pits one class of individuals against another for political gain. For example, one can engage in class warfare by demonizing a specific group of people by repeating that they do not pay their fair share. Another issue that should be corrected with your post is that raising revenue and raising taxes are two different things. Conservatives will argue that sometimes best way to raise revenues is to lower taxes. Raising taxes frequently leads to lower revenue. A good recent example is what just happened here in California with the Affiliate-Nexus Tax bill. Once enacted, thousands of Amazon affiliates were simply shutdown. Companies like Savings.com just decided to move their business elsewhere. This is not just a phrase to evoke a gut response - it is real people losing real jobs.

    65. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by cc_pirate · · Score: 1

      The max tax rate under Kennedy was 90%!!!!!! It is one thing to talk about reducing a 90% rate and another thing to talk about reducing a 33% rate that often times winds up being 7%!

      --

      "There are laws that enslave men, and laws that set them free. " - Sean Connery as King Arthur

    66. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by NetNed · · Score: 1

      Or at least the ones that have the PR for doing so.

    67. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by cc_pirate · · Score: 1

      You couldn't be more wrong if you tried.

      The US is one of the least taxed developed countries in the world and the federal government in the US spends much less as a % of GDP than any comparable developed country.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tax_rates_around_the_world

      You are right that the rich tend to hide their wealth, but technology is making that more and more risky. Go ask the former customers of UBS how they feel about that. :)

      --

      "There are laws that enslave men, and laws that set them free. " - Sean Connery as King Arthur

    68. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by St.Creed · · Score: 1

      Class warfare never works for the benefit of the lower classes, because the truly wealthy will always make sure their wealth is untouched, any new taxes that are enacted, will only be a concern to the dwindling middle class.

      And the first step in the war is propaganda, to try and prevent any new tax from even put in place. Tax evasion works so much better when you can prevent the tax from being there in the first place.

      --
      Therefore, by the (faulty) logic you're using, you're just a cow with a keyboard - osu-neko (2604)
    69. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by NetNed · · Score: 1

      Corporate taxes are just that but it's not like just the corporation is a entity taking the burden of such taxes. There are people that are responsible for the tax and if they can't pay the tax then they and the corporation is not going to fend well.

      I read a story about 2 month ago about Buffett and his statement and it was broken down like this: "Mr. Buffett owns about one-quarter of his investment company Berkshire Hathaway, and his shares are worth about $38 billion. This wealth is mostly stored in what are technically called "unrealized capital gains." Eventually when those gains are converted into income, he will pay a capital gains tax. Even so, in 2008 Berkshire paid $3 billion in corporate taxes. And since Mr. Buffett is the principal owner, he shoulders a big share of that tax."

      Here is a link to the Wall Street Journal story about Buffett's comment. Call it bullshit if you want.

    70. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by NetNed · · Score: 1

      Yeah but I am thinking he shoulders quite a bit more burden of the $3 billion Berkshire paid in 2008 corporate taxes then you do. He is the majority owner thus corporate taxes affect his bottom line a little more then it does you and your "stock".

    71. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by NetNed · · Score: 1

      Well then why doesn't he point out how he has benefited from insider trading over the years? Pretty dumb that he got away with that. Or maybe he should point out how he was pushing for a provision that would exempt previously written derivatives contracts from proposed rules on collateral that were in a senate bill? Berkshire owns derivatives tied to about $63 billion in assets. Think that has anything to do with it? If he is so holy in his quests then why is he saying one thing and doing another. I personally think it is because he stands to gain something from being a "champion" of the "cause".

    72. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Amouth · · Score: 1

      don't know why or how you got the idea he is "holy in his quests" - i make no such judgement of people either way..

      --
      '...if only "Jumping to a Conclusion" was an event in the Olympics.'
    73. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The rich already pay higher income taxes, notwithstanding what Warren Buffett says. He lives off capital gains, not income. Anyone who earns a high income already pays higher taxes--our graduated income tax system already ensures that. And anyone who has investments--your pension, your 401k, your personal investments--benefits from a lower capital gains rate, not just the rich.

      Class warfare refers to this divisive White House logic of soaking the so called "rich", creating the impression that increasing their taxes would go far toward closing our deficit, when it would not. It just villifies the successful, entrepreuneurial culture that built American wealth to begin with. The idea that it is somehow good and right for government to suddenly start raiding people's bank accounts when the national mood shifts against them is the new tyranny. They are a minority, and the rights of this particular minority are somehow not important so long as there is extra income we can get our hands on.

      The real issue here is job creation: stimulate small and medium size business with lower corporate taxes, allowing them to divert that into new hiring and business development. End crony corporate welfare for mega-companies like GE.

    74. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by NetNed · · Score: 1

      I don't have that idea about him, but it is certain that others do. The media sure likes to paint him that way also. So it's not really odd for people to feel he has some sort of standard. Heck one person reply that seem to infer that anything he does is ok because he donates so much to charity.

    75. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Savantissimo · · Score: 1

      The effective federal income tax rate for those making over $1M is 25%. (2007 IRS figures: tax paid/gross income). The $10M+ group pays less than 20%.

      US taxes are low by developed world standards, particularly when VAT is taken into account. Places with lower total taxes as a percentage of GDP are mostly 3rd world. The wealthy in the US are finding it hard to hide their wealth overseas anymore, enforcement is very serious now, reporting requirements are practically airtight. Anyway, even if the rich do try to evade taxes, that is no argument not to tax them, but rather to tax them even more, to close loopholes and increase enforcement so that the taxes they can't evade still meet revenue needs.

      --
      "Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?" - Patrick Henry
    76. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I couldn't disagree with you more.

      A wealthy person looking to save themselves more money is smart NOT class warfare. So long as they are within the bound of the existing laws they are not breaking any rules or abusing power which is traditionally the beginnings of class warfare. I have to agree with JoshuaZ above his definition of class warfare is quite accurate. Perhaps we will never see class warfare again in our lifetimes in this country but what we are going through now is simply not it. It is something else entirely.

      The masses have the power if they chose to use it. What is interesting is that the masses do not seem to use it any longer in North America in general. If you disagree with what an organization has done, as you've mentioned above moved jobs away or out of the country, then it is up to the masses to react in a negative economic fashion to protest that decision. There are only two logical options to protest against a decision of that nature. The first is to band together and create a competitor which has local labor. The second is to simply boycott the products of that organization and support only those who have local labor to keep it that way. What we are seeing is in North America it appears very few if any of the two alternatives are being done. Leaves me with only one conclusion, no one cares enough. People do have the power but those people need to rally themselves to execute that power if they don't then they will forever remain powerless.

    77. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If one wants to see actual class warfare look at the French Revolution where aristocrats and clergy got executed and this eventually spread to wealthy merchants.

      Not a bad idea!

    78. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by jwilso91 · · Score: 1

      Funny how class warfare is such a one way street to the right.

      Confiscatory taxes on the middle class that are used to shift wealth to the segments of the economy that can't be bothered to work (or to prepare themselves for work) are not class warfare, eh?

    79. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It would be typical for liberals to dismiss whats true as they do when ever they are challenged. For the Liberals out there that believe in there miserable ideology please show me throughout history where any of your gov' programs by design and stated goal have been successful or brought prosperity to a group of people ? I have yet to receive an actual response with facts that can be backed up by a neutral source. I am very much interested in seeing a response based on facts and not fictitious information.

    80. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it would be fair if they WERE paying 33%, but they are not. It's more like 14%

    81. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. by Reservoir+Penguin · · Score: 1

      I'm not surprised you chose the 50s as the base for you comparison. The truth is that it simply would not work in today's global economy. The money would flee US in a second. In the 50s there was not really much alternative to doing business and keeping money in the US, half the world was in the grip of centrally planned socialist economy, Europe was still recovering from a devastating war, territories in Asia, Africa and Latin America were going through national liberation.

      --
      US-UK-Israel: The real Axis of Evil
  10. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  11. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by Duradin · · Score: 1

    Would you be so kind as to enlighten the rest of us how you've managed to do your work in a vacuum so that you've made no use of anything paid for by taxes?

  12. Sarah Palin? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..have the fruits of your labor taken away from you.

    OK then.

    Any question as to why the US is going down the toilet?

    Palin? On Slashdot?

  13. Don't be an idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Wealth" is not a fixed number. Bill Gates making a dollar does not prevent you from making a dollar, even that same dollar. The money of the wealthy isn't locked up in a vault or giant mattress, it's out there in investments. The economically innumerate progressive types of this world need to get that through their thick, pig shit filled skulls. and abandon their cartoonish, buffoonish view of reality.

    Or just die. That would work, too.

    1. Re:Don't be an idiot by AngryDeuce · · Score: 1

      The money of the wealthy isn't locked up in a vault or giant mattress, it's out there in investments.

      You're right, it is...unfortunately, the investments are all on the other side of the world. Companies in the US get tax breaks which affords them more money to lobby government and make it easier for them to move more money overseas.

      If they were actually investing in this country we wouldn't have the massive unemployment we do. It's fairly obvious that the money is only moving one way right now, out of this country. If you want to blame Americans for wanting a first world salary for their labor, that's fine, but I doubt you're going to find much popular support for that Randian bullshit.

    2. Re:Don't be an idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ROFLMAO. Yes, and that capital sure is working hard right now, what with no, you know, actual loans being made right now. And if they spend it? You think the wealthy spend a lot of money on consumable items? REALLY? How many latte's can one drink? And if they buy property, how is that capital 'working'? Luxury items? OK, 1 time expenditure. Money is sure working anemically there.

      Boy you are an idiot.

      You think that there is no benefit that accrues soley to the wealthy by accruing capital; that said benefits is not removed from the 'lower' classes? Well I guess that all that hard work is as stupid as your "thick, pig shit filled skull", and your "cartoonish, buffoonish view of reality" (where your view of economics seems to have come from 60s Bugs Bunny cartoons) because they aren't working for anything then?

      Get this, you idiot: trickle down economics DOES NOT WORK. It is propaganda to fool morons like yourself into giving more advantages to the wealthy at your own cost.

      Fucking idiot. What next, you believe in some magic invisible hand that takes care of the market and has nothing to do with regulation?

    3. Re:Don't be an idiot by element-o.p. · · Score: 1

      ...unfortunately, the investments are all on the other side of the world.

      Bingo! That's the problem right there.

      If they were actually investing in this country we wouldn't have the massive unemployment we do.

      And that's the solution. Unfortunately, Obama proposing a "Wealthy Tax" (in other words, punishing the successful for, well, being successful) isn't going to make that happen. If you want investors to invest in this country, you've got to provide businesses with incentives to stay here. Raising the taxes on business, investors, and others who succeed isn't going to do that, no matter how well it sits with the ignorant masses who complain that "it isn't fair!" that someone has more money than they do.

      --
      MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
  14. Ryan is ignorant of economic history by dr2chase · · Score: 5, Informative

    Remember how awful the economy was when Clinton was president? Eight horrible years of peace and prosperity, thank God that's long gone.
    Going back as far as 1950, higher top marginal rates are (weakly) correlated with improved economic growth, not reduced economic growth ( http://golem.ph.utexas.edu/~distler/blog/archives/002279.html ).

    1. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since out of the billions of social, economic, political, etc. factors that make an economy of "peace and prosperity", only the personal income tax rate has changed in the last decade, so changing it back will, of course, instantly make us peaceful and prosperous again.

    2. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by dr2chase · · Score: 1

      Didn't say that would happen, did I? What is clear is that a higher top marginal tax rate is compatible with robust economic growth.

    3. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by rickb928 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      That is the other side of the argument - if you raise taxes on high incomes sufficiently, you encourage re-investement and deferral of the income.

      Whatchathink, /.ers?

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    4. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Peace????? We were at war except Clinton was too stupid to know it.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1993_World_Trade_Center_bombing
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khobar_Towers_bombing
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bombing_of_Iraq_(December_1998)
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1998_United_States_embassy_bombings
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bombing_of_Iraq_(December_1998)
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Cole_bombing

    5. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remember how awful the economy was when Clinton was president? Eight horrible years of peace and prosperity, thank God that's long gone.
      Going back as far as 1950, higher top marginal rates are (weakly) correlated with improved economic growth, not reduced economic growth ( http://golem.ph.utexas.edu/~distler/blog/archives/002279.html ).

    6. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by 0123456 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Remember how awful the economy was when Clinton was president? Eight horrible years of peace and prosperity, thank God that's long gone.

      You mean how awful the economy was when the Republicans ran Congress?

      America always seems to do best when there's gridlock due to different parties controlling Congress and the White House, because the perpetual conflict ensures they can't screw things up too badly.

    7. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remember how awful the economy was when Clinton was president? Eight horrible years of peace and prosperity, thank God that's long gone.

      Yeah, if we could only have another dot com bubble and a republican congress. That would make it happy days are here again!

    8. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Eight horrible years where the 2008 depression was created (in 1997 and 1998 and 1999). By stripping away the last of the laws to protect us from the shenanigans of the 1930s. Gee guess what happened again... Combined with the double whammy of lowering taxes during the Bush years has lead to record deficits. Plus the provocation of former allies (they dont like having missiles dropped on them).

      MOST of what happened economic wise was a market manipulation of grand scale. Do not confuse tax's with what was going at around 2000. Go take a couple of macro econ classes to have explained to you what was going on. It was huge sums of loan money being recreated with more loan money. Didnt you ever ask yourself why the fed cared so much about the interest rate? Also 1992-1997 was a recession.

      Lay blame where it is due. All of them. Stop picking sides in this and you will be better off. Both republicans and democrats have failed us.

      1950s growth was more correlated to a huge manufacturing base (built during ww2), low unemployment, low inflation, and good product demand. Look to the 1970s where it was about the same manufacturing base, but low demand, high unemployment, and high inflation.

      Its very simple. If people do not have jobs. People dont buy things...

      Raising taxes does not directly create jobs. Lowering taxes does not either. Both *might* create jobs.

    9. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by smash · · Score: 2

      To be fair, the US's current problems don't stem from Bush or Obama, they go back far further than that. Ever since the end of world war two, the US has been spending vast amounts of money on military R&D, the space race, korea, vietnam, star wars, etc.

      This has been a long time coming, and Nixon getting rid of the gold standard was the first sign that things were going south. Since then, you've been on an exponential debt accumulation, and Bush/Obama have been the ones to be stuck holding the tab near the end of it.

      How much further than the debt growth continue? Well, china is looking to cash out of their US dollars in a massive way - by buying several thousand tonnes of gold. However they need to be careful not to exit the USD all at once or they'll really crash the market and end up getting less for their dollars.

      This whole "global financial crisis" (or rather "US market = fucked, and most people are sheep" crisis) didn't just happen overnight or even in the past few terms. The downward spiral started a LONG time ago.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    10. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Beelzebud · · Score: 1

      Was Clinton too stupid to know it, or was the country too distracted by blow job stories to realize it themselves? Did Bush II realize we were at war, when he came into office, and ignored the warnings about Bin Laden?

    11. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Doesn't that prove your point that lower rates make for more improvement? Unless you can show that the top rate under Clinton was anywhere near that of the 50's.

    12. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Stonent1 · · Score: 1

      Well, remember Bush Sr. scaled down the military significantly after the end of the cold war, and that created a great surplus in money which Clinton used to balance the deficit.

    13. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by hedwards · · Score: 1

      Technically speaking Clinton was a conservative when it came to economic policy. He just wasn't the sort of bat wing insane nutter that typifies fiscal conservatives these days. And ultimately, that policy did in large part lead to the dot com bust.

      That being said, at some point, we need to just leave well enough alone and allow the markets to correct themselves. Restore sane regulation and tax policy and things should mostly right themselves. It's this tendency to bail out banks and other institutions without demanding permanent changes be made to keep it from happening again, combined with insane mergers that's keeping it from happening.

    14. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by dr2chase · · Score: 1

      Bush Sr. also raised taxes. Remember all the heat he took for that?

      I remain baffled that so many people (not you in particular, but all the sibling-reply ACs) are unable to apply the Goldilocks rule. Too hot (too high), not good. To cold (too low), not good. There's a good spot somewhere in the middle. The tricky bit is finding it.

    15. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you are ignorant of economic history as well.

      One of the big reasons for prosperity under Clinton was a gridlocked house and senate. When Washington can't get anything done the nation prospers.

    16. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The economy was good during the Clinton years because it is universally accepted by the non-political that it was Bush Senior's tax increases that set the stage.

      Amazing that the supposedly intelligent community of /. mods and readers continually miss this point, which to me points to the partisan nature of most geeks.

    17. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by dr2chase · · Score: 1

      Whoosh! You make my point for me -- higher taxes during the Clinton years, compatible with a growing happy economy. Doesn't matter who passed the taxes, does it?

    18. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Jhon · · Score: 1

      Yeah... I remember how Congress finally got Clinton (after several vetos) to sign huge reforms. Do you remember who that Congress was? It's amazing how that works,huh?

    19. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by maxume · · Score: 1

      Present day deficits are ridiculous and I think the debt is too high, but the U.S. GPD over the post WW2 period has exceeded 300 trillion dollars, all the while the government has racked up a 20 trillion dollar (or so) debt (both of those numbers are calculated in a way that is hostile to my point, I don't want to argue the details of exactly what they should be).

      So the debt is better described as "excessive and foolish" than it is described as "vast and disastrous".

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    20. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Clinton didn't cause those conditions, or even act wisely to preserve them. He benefitted from those conditions, and those conditions were rapidly running out of steam (in part due to his policies) by the time he left office. You're confusing good luck with some sort of shrewdness or wisdom on his part. Not the case.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    21. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fair enough, you didn't say that. Higher income tax rates alone do not make or break a society. Going back further than Clinton, you had tax rates well over 50% and a fairly robust economy. My point is that looking at tax rates in a vacuum is disingenuous.

    22. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean when the budget was balanced? When they spent what they had, not what they want? Yea, I remember that era too.

      http://www.factcheck.org/2008/02/the-budget-and-deficit-under-clinton/

    23. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Merk42 · · Score: 1

      It seems nowadays nothing gets done because one side is arguing against the other sides proposal simply because the other side created it.

    24. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Courageous · · Score: 1

      The world is a different place, now. Capital flight is so much easier, now.

    25. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by frosty_tsm · · Score: 2

      Remember how awful the economy was when Clinton was president? Eight horrible years of peace and prosperity, thank God that's long gone.

      You mean how awful the economy was when the Republicans ran Congress?

      America always seems to do best when there's gridlock due to different parties controlling Congress and the White House, because the perpetual conflict ensures they can't screw things up too badly.

      non-obstructionist Republicans in Congress (a la '90s, ignoring the impeachment) + Dem in the White House = peace and prosperity.

      Today's Republicans think they are on the debate team and will take the opposite side of any Democrat position. I bet if the Democrats said "we are against the raping of babies", the Republicans would instinctively pick the opposite side (regardless of their personal opinion; no I am not saying or implying the Republicans are for that).

    26. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by dr2chase · · Score: 1

      Wow. I didn't know he had balanced it even with the SS surplus excluded (shows what I get for EVER listening to conservatives; never more than half-true, at least in my experience).

    27. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The entire country isn't the Commander In Chief and the the extent the Commander In Chief takes part in activity that is clearly going to be a huge political distraction is his own fault. That being said we know that Clinton did not taking terrorism seriously it was always a matter of FBI arrest warrants even after overt declaration of war by OBL/Al Qaeda. This can be proven from his own speeches and administration interviews and pre-dates Monica Lewinsky. According to Michael Scheuer and others we missed 10 or so chances to liquidate OBL and others because of a lack of policy to actually kill the enemy. This clearly could have saved us trillions of dollars and thousands of lives over the past 10 years. So in essence the Clinton peace and prosperity was basically, in large part, a deferred debt with balloon payments as these things tend to get more expensive as the problem gets worse.

    28. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Remember how awful the economy was when Clinton was president? Eight horrible years of peace and prosperity, thank God that's long gone.

      The Onion had a good article looking back on those dark times:

      http://www.theonion.com/articles/bush-our-long-national-nightmare-of-peace-and-pros,464/

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    29. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by RobinEggs · · Score: 1

      America always seems to do best when there's gridlock due to different parties controlling Congress and the White House

      It's not just appearances. Economic studies do indeed show that the economy has been best when Republicans control congress and Democrats control the White House, followed closely by the other way around.

      Though with a third party, consisting entirely of people who can't do 4th grade math, dominating Republic votes that doesn't seem to be the case this time.

    30. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by WelshRarebit · · Score: 1

      The social safety net is socialism! Taxing the rich fairly is class warfare! It is patriotic to advocate for the destruction of the US government! Oh yeah, and war is peace!

    31. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Baagh. You are an idiot.

      You could tax everyone 100% and it won't pay for this dictatorial (since the public doesn't have any say on the matter) mess.

      Stop spending what you don't have on war and put some banksters in prison and mark to market their (our) shit, and senators in ft leavenworth for breaking their oath of office to protect the constitution and regulate the monetary system, use the logan act to stop the foreign and corporate agenda, deactivate the DHS, restore the constitution and bill of rights.

      Stability, accountability, trust must be restored, raising taxes will only make things worse. Tax isn't paid to build roads, it's paid to pay off treasury notes!

    32. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Peace and prosperity? WTF?!?! How old are you? Twelve?

      Peace? Oh, you must mean how we didn't have any terrorist attacks......like at the World Trade Center (done by whom? oh yeah, that guy that he let get away so he could attack it again with airplanes) and the bombing of embassies in Nairobi, Tanzania, and Kenya. Or maybe you mean how there was no intervention in other nations.....like Somalia (continued after Bush I got us there)....or Rwanda (where Clinton pulled out and left thousands to face Genocide and instead provided "humanitarian aid" to known genocidaires).....or missile attacks in Afghanistan and Sudan......or firing off rockets on Iraq any time Clinton had a bad press day. Or maybe you've forgotten Operation Deliberate Force with airstrikes against Bosnian Serbs and the subsequent bombardment of Yugoslavia which included civilian factories and television stations (all without the approval of the UN)? Or how about the military force sent to Haiti? I'm sure that was peaceful.

      As for prosperity, let's take a look at that one too. Where did the prosperity come from? It wasn't taxes. It was the dot-com bubble which the White House had nothing to do with and which set the country up for a massive crash when people started to realize that scooters and pinball machines wouldn't turn a profit. Following the start of the dot-com crash everyone started moving their money into real-estate (like mortgage derivatives) and we all know how well THAT turned out. As for his "surplus" it was borrowed money from Social Security that had to be paid back (like taking out a second mortgage on your house and declaring you have more money now because your checking account has a "surplus"). The White House didn't do a damn thing to improve the economy. They just sat back and rode a period of good fortune and took credit for it (which is exactly what Republicans do when things go well).

      You're either uneducated or willingly ignorant. Quit drinking the Kool-aid and realize that all of the politicians are tools.

    33. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The entire country isn't the commander in chief and if the president engages in behavior that is obviously going to be a huge political distraction that is his own fault. That being said Clinton's laxed attitude toward terrorism, believed it was a criminal issue for the FBI, is well known (speeches and interviews will back this up) and pre-dates Monica Lewinsky. This same position was maintained even after OBL/Al Qaeda overtly declared war on us. According to Michael Scheuer and others we had around ten opportunities to liquidate OBL and company but we didn't have the policy in place. When someone declares war on a country and attacks that country's military and embassies it would seem obvious they need to be killed and have the authorization to do so. Clearly action during the Clinton administration could have saved trillions of dollars and thousands of lives. So basically piece and prosperity at the expense of deferred debt with balloon payments. The Bush administration was a bit slow on the uptake but this was partially hindered by the messy and late transition (remember Bush v Gore). By 2000 OBL's location was a lot more sketchy and to me hard to compare the first year of an administration coming on-board and figuring out what to do with 8 years of standing bad policy.

    34. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It critically depends on how you tax different sources of wealth, i.e. those from labor and capital. Not all income is equal. The real growth in economies is achieved when small business become big, and that happens when the founder reinvests his labor income, creating capital (and capital income). This should be promoted. Established capital is far less likely to create growth, wealth and jobs.

      Just to throw in a few random ideas: When an inheritance contains a controlling stake in a company, defer the estate tax until the first round of layoffs. That ensures that the government gets extra income just when it needs to pay benefits.

    35. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by isaac · · Score: 1

      Today's Republicans think they are on the debate team and will take the opposite side of any Democrat position. I bet if the Democrats said "we are against the raping of babies", the Republicans would instinctively pick the opposite side (regardless of their personal opinion; no I am not saying or implying the Republicans are for that).

      No, naive.

      The R's would run campaign ads with a scary white-on-black text: "Democrat John Jackson: 'we are... raping babies" and a voiceover reminding the viewer that only Jack Johnson can be trusted to stand up to the baby-raping Democrats led by Nancy Pelosi from San Francisco (and we all know what that means, wink wink.) Elect Jack Johnson!

      --
      I am not a lawyer, and this is not legal advice. For Entertainment Purposes Only.
    36. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      The Republicans would say that they are terrorist babies and therefore deserve to be raped.

      Alternatively, they would argue that government has no business wasting taxpayer money on preventing baby rapes, since private industry can provide a cheaper and more efficient solution to that problem, backed by rape insurance industry. If a baby didn't have insurance, then it's obviously a lazy bum and deserves to be raped.

    37. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by rickb928 · · Score: 1

      I'm with ya. Really. Really. But we don't yet have the power.

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    38. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Fishbulb · · Score: 1

      Considering the fact that you can donate 50% of your income to charity pre-tax* and given that ultimately that's what the system is designed for you to do (give freely of your own choosing, rather than let the government just spend as they see fit), then you see that tax is the whip and charity is the carrot. But if you're a greedy, self-absorbed sod of a grinchy Scrooge, then giving to charity won't make you feel any better, like it does for normal humans.

      The carrot's not as sweet without knowing the sting of the whip.

      * - From http://www.charitynavigator.org/index.cfm?bay=content.view&cpid=31 :
      "For most people, the limits on charitable contributions don't apply. Only if you contribute more than 20% of your adjusted gross income to charity is it necessary to be concerned about donation limits. If the contribution is made to a public charity, the deduction is limited to 50% of your contribution base. For example, if you have an adjusted gross income of $100,000, your deduction limit for that year is $50,000."

    39. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We have not, nor have we EVER spent vast amounts of money on the space race.
      Just want to put out there that the TOTAL NASA spend since the start of the space race is equal to 1 current YEAR military spending in the middle east.
      That's right.. for about 50 years we have spent as much on NASA total as one year of middle east adventures.

      Think on that.

    40. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by element-o.p. · · Score: 1

      Remember how awful the economy was when Clinton was president? Eight horrible years of peace and prosperity...

      Under Clinton? You remember those years differently than I do. I seem to recall concerns about recession during his tenure, although admittedly, it wasn't as bad as what's happening now, although twelve years of fiscal irresponsibility will do that. As far as "peace" goes, do you remember Bosnia/Serbia, Somalia, launching the cruise missile at Libya, etc., etc.?

      --
      MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
    41. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The economy was at its best when OL C was in charge! There was a surplus, not a deficit. Spread the wealth around instead of the same old rich people getting rich off the masses (middle class). I say scrap all of Congress, all the house, even the President and start fresh with people who are not politicians, but people of common sense! Take away Congress' ability to vote on their OWN SALARIES!!! Make it change based on their ability to produce!

      Put online voting to work and let the people truly decide what laws should and shouldn't be passed. The technology exists, they just don't want to use it because it would be too easy for EVERYONE to vote. They want to focus on the older crowds that would spend the time to go vote. The 18-30 age bracket could finally be heard consistently, and loudly! The Obama election showed that on a small scale. Let's open it up to the rest of Americans.

      Get rid of all the restrictions about a person having to go to a particular place to vote. Get rid of the lawyer jargon when drawing up these laws so the common folk can make sense of them. Put them online and spell out so working Americans know what each one means and what they are voting on. Quit hiding the devil in the details!

    42. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by element-o.p. · · Score: 1

      America always seems to do best when there's gridlock due to different parties controlling Congress and the White House, because the perpetual conflict ensures they can't screw things up too badly.

      Exactly. That is a economic stimulus plan I could get behind :D

      --
      MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
    43. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait, so he instantly caused prosperity when he stepped in?
      It had nothing to do with the setup from the previous years?

      Go be stupid by yourself somewhere.

    44. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by dr2chase · · Score: 1

      When Clinton was president, income taxes were higher than now (raised by both Bush Sr and by Clinton). The economy recovered from a recession and hummed along nicely. The issue is, if higher taxes (especially on the wealthy) are such economy-killers, how could this ever have happened? It's about the tax rates, not the president.

    45. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Ozlanthos · · Score: 1

      Yes and No. If you still allow a business to deduct operational and upgrade costs, you'll stimulate investment, and spending in general. However, we also have a regulatory system that seeks to extort every last red cent from businesses before they can even open their doors. There are many other countries run by people who don't really care about the environment, or the health and well-being of their citizens, so we hike taxes here, companies move ops there....plain and simple.

      -Oz

    46. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by zildgulf · · Score: 1

      I agree. The truly wealthy are job destroyers when capital gains are barely taxed. The wealthy then have no incentive to become "angel investors" or aggressively invest tooffset the higher taxes.

      I'm afraid that Congress will group together the merely "rich" (those earning between 250K and 1M) and the truly wealthy (multi-millionaires and billionaires) Those that earn less than a million a year tend to be small/medium business owners or managers of larger companies. It is the small/medium business owners that tend to be job creators since they do not benefit a much from "economy of scale".

      That means if there is additional work to be done the owner has to do it or hire a contractor/employee for the job. There are no other options for the small/medium business owner since productivity gains often does not free up another worker to do the additional work that easily. In larger companies productivity gains means doing more work with fewer employees. Employees/contractors can be shuffled to do additional work almost as will as productivity increases.

    47. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Sean0michael · · Score: 1

      An article I keep bookmarked for these occasions:
      Divided Government Is Best For the Market by Donald Luskin. He basically does the analysis and comes to the same conclusion you drew anecdotally. When government is divided and gridlocked, the economy does best.

      --
      Funtime Candy Wow! - my plan for eventually conquering Japan.
    48. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by smash · · Score: 1

      GDP figures are bunk. When your economy produces nothing and measures "spending" funded by debt as growth (which is what your GDP has largely become) its not a measure of growth. or else you'd be doing fine, when you're CLEARLY not.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    49. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remember how awful the economy was when Clinton was president? Eight horrible years of peace and prosperity, thank God that's long gone.

      I know! Since we must always credit the previous president for the current administration's failure or fortune, thank God for George H.W. Bush! Am I right?! Am I right?!

      To be fair, it was actually Reagan that gave us that nice little 12 years of peace and prosperity, but I digress...

    50. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by maxume · · Score: 1

      There's plenty of food and other goods in the stores there poindexter.

      You can't actually create production with debt, you can only encourage it (that is, consumption has to be backed by actual goods or it doesn't happen; that is tautological, not controversial). The encouraging comes in when you promise to pay more than $1 tomorrow for $1 today.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    51. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remember how Clinton presided over the Nasdaq bubble which gave the illusion of wealth? Remember how the economy was sliding into a recession at the end of Clinton's 2nd term because the bubble was simply unsustainable.

      BTW, no one paid anywhere close to the top marginal rate in the 1950s, there were so many deductions that the AMT was introduced. Kennedy couldn't lower the tax rate without eliminating a lot of the deductions.

    52. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Correlation Causation
      Q.E.D.

      Your argument is bogus.

    53. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Slashdot eats punctuation - bastids!

      Correlation is not Causation
      Q.E.D.

    54. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was fine once he had a Republican Congress.

    55. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by RL78 · · Score: 1

      dot com boom?

    56. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by dr2chase · · Score: 1

      Logic fail. Counterexample, not correlation/causation. If higher taxes = bad economics, how do we manage to have a good economy (again, and again, and again) when top-end marginal rates are high?

      Do you wonder why educated people think tea party conservatives are idiots?

    57. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by dr2chase · · Score: 1

      And kept the higher taxes. This is about tax policy, not the flavor of politician making it. Bush Sr raised taxes, so did Clinton, conservative Republicans hated it and predicted disaster, but instead it turned out exactly opposite. Conservatives have a pretty crappy record of economic prediction when it comes to the results of raising taxes.

    58. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by dr2chase · · Score: 1

      Isn't that exactly the sort of thing that higher taxes are supposed to keep from happening (in Ryan's economics) because who would invest in a world where so much of their gains are confiscated? Recall all the startup investment; people don't sink money into startups hoping to land in anything other than the highest tax brackets.

    59. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by RL78 · · Score: 1

      My point is that the higher tax rates were not responsible for the prosperity we enjoyed in the 90's. In an economy with little or no growth like it is now, it would be even more stifling to raise taxes on anyone. Flat tax. You earn a dollar you pay a %, you earn a billion, you pay the same %. That is the essence of fair.

    60. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess you don't recall the recession that hit in Spring 2000, while Clinton was still in office, and we never really recovered from (the Housing Bubble gave the false appearance of a recovery).

    61. Re:Ryan is ignorant of economic history by dr2chase · · Score: 1

      Citation? Wikipedia says March 2001, still certainly attributable to Clinton, though he was not in office. It's not hard to check facts on the internet, you should try it sometime.

      Higher marginal rates do not guarantee a good economy, but they do not guarantee a bad one, either, contrary to Ryan's assertion, and contrary to conservative predictions when Bush Sr. and Clinton passed their respective tax increases.

      You point out that "we never really recovered", despite all of Bush's tax cuts. How does this make a case for keeping high-end marginal rates low, if they did not revive the economy?

  15. We are doomed by cmdr_klarg · · Score: 1

    We insist upon spending gobs and gobs of cash on stupid shit, and when we find we don't have enough to pay for it we lean on the people who don't have much to begin with, while simultaneously spending more of that non-existent cash by giving it to people who already have a lot of it. Makes perfect sense to me.

    --
    THE SOFTWARE, IT NO WORKY!!!
  16. DOA. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Jesus-Boys won't let it happen.

  17. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by gatkinso · · Score: 0

    I've paid taxes. Whereas most of the poor have not.

    Next.

    --
    I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
  18. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    He lives in Somalia, you insensitive clod!!!!

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  19. Funny thing is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    BO is also proposing to not extend any of the Bush era tax cuts, which means all our taxes are going up. The "Taxes on millionaires" part is just a distraction.

    1. Re:Funny thing is by SiChemist · · Score: 1

      No, President Obama is proposing letting the Bush tax cuts for those people making more than $250,000 expire.

  20. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by Duradin · · Score: 1

    So be poor and pay no taxes.

    Next.

  21. Actually sounds good to me by durdur · · Score: 1

    The top tax rate on personal income has never been lower, anytime in the past 50 years. Furthermore it was deliberately set lower than necessary to fund current spending levels, back in 2001. So raising it is only a sensible move. You would think from the outcry against it that it was some radical move to kill off rich people, but it is neither radical nor would it cause a catastrophe. It will not by itself greatly alter the distribution of wealth. But it will start getting us closer to having tax revenue actually fund what the government spends. (I do not think just cutting government spending is a reasonable alternative - although that can be done too - it was a combination of spending and poor tax policy that got us into this, and fixing both those things is a reasonable way to get us out of deficit).

  22. i will gladly by superwiz · · Score: 2

    tax you today for and promise to cut spending tomorrow.

    --
    Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    1. Re:i will gladly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds good compared to the the "spend today and tax future generations" that is practiced today.

      Also: Spending is not necessarily a bad thing. When you get improved services for extra spending, it might be worthwhile. I know that I am not always purchasing the cheapest offer for good reasons, so why should the government?

    2. Re:i will gladly by anyGould · · Score: 1

      tax you today for and promise to cut spending tomorrow.

      That's only fair as a balance to the debt ceiling deal of "we'll cut spending now and think about adding taxes someday".

    3. Re:i will gladly by hedwards · · Score: 1

      That's how it works in a down economy. We've got a 9% unemployment rate that ignores the people that have given up looking for work or are chronically underemployed. The government making the spending cuts necessary to balance the budget is just going to make that worse.

      On top of that, they're talking about taxing the folks whose tax breaks were a significant part of the circumstance which led us to be in so much debt. People making more than $250k a year account for about 1.5% of the country, and those making more than $1m per year are a fraction of that.

    4. Re:i will gladly by gatkinso · · Score: 1

      Stop it with this thing known as logic.

      --
      I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
    5. Re:i will gladly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We're talking about the top top top. They have more money than they know what to do with on an individual level.

    6. Re:i will gladly by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      We've had cuts already with no tax raises and in fact we had Bush's shitty temporary tax cut extended. So you're comment is pretty retarded when you look at the reality of things.

    7. Re:i will gladly by superwiz · · Score: 1

      That's how it works in a down economy.

      can you name the years in which federal spending was reduced relative to the previous year? If you can't then it's not how it works in a down economy (as you claim). It's how it works in every economy. Spending go up. Occasionally taxes go up. The increase in quality of service is NOT correlated with increase in spending.

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    8. Re:i will gladly by superwiz · · Score: 1

      What if you don't get better services? Do you get to pick?

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
  23. Class warfare...makes for rotten economics by TheWoozle · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Yes, that's true. However, I wonder why this comment is usually directed at the working classes, when they are the ones upon whom the warfare is being waged. The rich have been conducting class warfare in the US since the Reagan administration, and they are now beginning to reap what they have sown.

    I now make more than twice what my father earned at the height of his career in the early 80's, but I have less actual purchasing power. Rotten economics indeed.

    --
    Insisting on "correct" English is like saying that there is only one, definitive recipe for chili.
    1. Re:Class warfare...makes for rotten economics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Reagan's tax changes are very misunderstood. They reduced rates across the board for all Americans, including the richest Americans. However, those changes resulted in a more of the tax burden being put on the richer Americans. Don't believe it, do research on 1981 IRS statistics vs 1988 IRS statistics.

      The key isn't just tax rates. What Reagan or his advisers realized that when you lower tax rates combined with closing tax loopholes, you reduce the reward/incentive for dodging taxes. For example if you can spent 10 dollars to save 20 dollars in taxes you will. However, if you have to spend 10 dollars to save 10 dollars in taxes, you might not.

    2. Re:Class warfare...makes for rotten economics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I now make more than twice what my father earned at the height of his career in the early 80's, but I have less actual purchasing power."

      Uh, you'll have to take that complaint to the Federal Reserve, ATTN: Monetary Policy. Inflation is hardly the fault of private wealth.

    3. Re:Class warfare...makes for rotten economics by hedwards · · Score: 1

      Because the poor are stupid enough to believe that they might some day be rich with enough hard work, and the rich are neither plentiful nor stupid enough to buy into it as a vote getter.

    4. Re:Class warfare...makes for rotten economics by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      Reagan realised you could just borrow to cover your tax shortfall and let the next guy figure out how to repay it. That was all.

    5. Re:Class warfare...makes for rotten economics by RobinEggs · · Score: 1

      I agree with your basic sentiment, but the economic statistics simply don't support your claim that purchasing power is so bad that yours has *dropped* while earning more than double your fathers wage. Relative purchasing power is shit for the middle class and has dropped since the mid-seventies, yes, but saying that even doubling your income doesn't let you stand still is ludicrous, especially when you're completely ignoring inflation as you are.

    6. Re:Class warfare...makes for rotten economics by byteherder · · Score: 1

      Are you kidding me? The rich have been conducting class warfare since the pharohs. What makes you think they are going to change now.

  24. Military spending? by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Might it not be better just to cut say military spending in half? Nobody is going to invade the US, without coming home to a glass parking lot anyway, and all that money is just thrown down a hole. Yes military spending is to an extent recycled back into the economy, but surely we can come up with something more constructive to spend it on if one must spend that money?

    1. Re:Military spending? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This proposal has merit, however it's necessary to distinguish between Defense as a commodity and Defense as a constituency Much of the so called waste goes for bribes to politicians and other favored classes in exchange for political support. Eliminate pork, minority owned business and other set asides, pointless environmental studies and all the other administrative BS needed to procure ANYTHING for government use, and that's your 50% cut right there.

    2. Re:Military spending? by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      Might it not be better just to cut say military spending in half?

      That would be great! Now what do we do for the remaining $1.3 trillion in deficit spending?

      This whole tax issue is simply papering over the fact that our Government spends way too much money. In constant dollars, the Federal Government is receiving about as much as it did in 1998 - the height of the Clinton boom, and when we started a meager budget surplus. The problem is, spending - in constant dollars - has increased by 50%. We don't need more tax revenues to the Federal Government; we need spending restraint by the Federal Government.

      You can whack the entire DOD budget AND the VA budget - take both to zero - and still have a $400 billion deficit. It's all the other spending that's killing us - not just the military. Every single Federal tax dollar from all sources - personal income tax, social security/FICA, corporate income tax, capital gains, excise, tariffs, etc - just barely cover our spending on Social Security, Medicare/Medicaid, and Income Security (unemployment, welfare, food stamps, section 8 housing). EVERYTHING ELSE the Federal Government does - EPA, OSHA, IRS, DOT, DOEs, DOC, DOD, all the rest - is funded with borrowed dollars.

      We have a spending problem - not a revenue problem. And it's a LOT bigger than just military spending. MUCH bigger.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    3. Re:Military spending? by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      Defence spending might be bigger than you think: http://www.warresisters.org/pages/piechart.htm Still I agree, what's needed are spending cuts.

    4. Re:Military spending? by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      Our budget is $3.7 trillion; even assuming that chart's source numbers for military spending are correct, it would come to 26% - not the 36% as claimed. In essence, their numbers are provably wrong - they don't even add up internally. It's not the military spending that is breaking our bank - it is all the other spending that is doing it.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    5. Re:Military spending? by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 2

      Sure, but I'd say it would be an important part of financial discipline to reduce military spending.

    6. Re:Military spending? by jmottram08 · · Score: 1

      If you think that cutting the military in half will solve the long term economic problems you have a big surprise coming.

    7. Re:Military spending? by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 2

      No, but there's no question it will help significantly.

    8. Re:Military spending? by frosty_tsm · · Score: 1

      Might it not be better just to cut say military spending in half? Nobody is going to invade the US, without coming home to a glass parking lot anyway, and all that money is just thrown down a hole. Yes military spending is to an extent recycled back into the economy, but surely we can come up with something more constructive to spend it on if one must spend that money?

      Or we spend more wisely. Spend on the troops and give them good gear; stop spending on exotic weaponry that we couldn't use effectively in any post-Vietnam conflict.

    9. Re:Military spending? by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      It doesn't matter if the money is spent on actually killing people or not though, all that matters is that its only purpose is killing people. Infrastructure spending, now that's cherry. Coast to coast HVDC, effective high speed maglev rails, renewable investment and free municipal wi-fi in every urban area, hell coat the entire country in the stuff, blue sky science investment, all that and more, that's constructive. That has a permanent value, it pays off forever.

    10. Re:Military spending? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, not really. Military spending indirectly boosts the economy by ordering American-manufactured weapons, vehicles and equipment. Even if you COMPLETELY ZEROED OUT the military budget, the U.S. deficit would actually INCREASE in the long run because tax revenue would decrease when all those factory workers get laid off.

      Cutting military spending to insta-solve the deficit is a myth. Its been done by every country in the world after every war. It doesn't work.

    11. Re:Military spending? by tyrione · · Score: 1

      Might it not be better just to cut say military spending in half? Nobody is going to invade the US, without coming home to a glass parking lot anyway, and all that money is just thrown down a hole. Yes military spending is to an extent recycled back into the economy, but surely we can come up with something more constructive to spend it on if one must spend that money?

      Part of the proposal is to cut over $1 Trillion from the 2 Wars.

    12. Re:Military spending? by LtGordon · · Score: 1

      Might it not be better just to cut say military spending in half? Nobody is going to invade the US, without coming home to a glass parking lot anyway, and all that money is just thrown down a hole.

      So you're suggesting that the military is redundant because we still have the military to protect us?

    13. Re:Military spending? by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      Not redundant - excessive.

    14. Re:Military spending? by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      From the op: "Yes military spending is to an extent recycled back into the economy, but surely we can come up with something more constructive to spend it on if one must spend that money?"

    15. Re:Military spending? by rizole · · Score: 1

      Yes I like this idea. And let's tax the rich while we're at it.

    16. Re:Military spending? by Pstrobus · · Score: 1

      We could eliminate the entire federal govt. except Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and payment on the national debt and we would STILL be paying out more than we bring in. Think of that, no DOD, TSA, DHS, VA, NPS, NFS, BLM etc. nothing. Not even the senators and congresscritters getting paid.

      And we'd still have to borrow money to make the nation go.

      --
      "The conduct of neither [party], if strictly examined, will be irreproachable." -Elizabeth Bennet
    17. Re:Military spending? by jmottram08 · · Score: 1

      Some would argue that the last terrorist attack cost the US several trillion, so paying the military to prevent them is a net savings. Are there better things to spend money on? Sure. Is military spending "not constructive"? No, not really. Can the military do its job with less money? Sure. Will cutting the military in half, an spending that money on infrastructure really do anything to solve the financial problems in the US? no.

    18. Re:Military spending? by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      Some would argue that the last terrorist attack was a direct result of military interventionism though. Some might also argue that its the job of intelligence services and law enforcement to prevent terrorist attacks, and that the subsequent military costs could have been avoided by say not introducing security theatre and invading Iraq.

  25. I was going to journal about this by mcgrew · · Score: 0

    I decided not to. Anyway, the rich righties are pissing me off with "this is class warfare!!!!" Wake up, people, class war is already being waged and we of median income are getting our asses kicked.

    Can someone explain to me why Buffett's secretary pays a higher rate than him? What other country has a more regressive tax system?

    Federal taxes are lower than any time in sixty years, and the deficit is bigger than any time in history. But the Koch brothers (who started the "Taxed enough" party) think their taxes are too high!

    Some of today's rich people disgust me. Kudos to Buffett, one rich guy who isn't disgusting.

    1. Re:I was going to journal about this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Can someone explain to me why Buffett's secretary pays a higher rate than him?

      Yes. The issue is Capital Gains tax vs. Income Tax. Each has its own formula for valid reasons.
      Warren Buffet does not pay income tax, he pays capital gains tax on his investments. If you have any investments you pay the same tax rate as he. Its simple really, if your investments perform well enough that you dont need to work - you and Buffet will enjoy the same tax rate.
      If this push goes through, you will be taxed at a higher rate on your investments. So you get fucked both ways. But keep believing in the rhetoric the dems are pimping. There goal is to get their hands on more of your money. This is just another way. Fool.

    2. Re:I was going to journal about this by Grizzley9 · · Score: 1

      While not a TEA party member, I would think most of them would not be either if they actually felt their taxes were being used wisely. When you see your tax dollars going to so much government waste and needless spending and bureaucracy it's easy to fall into the TEA party mindset. When you fix Washington's wasteful spending, then I and many others will be up to considering more taxes.

    3. Re:I was going to journal about this by Beelzebud · · Score: 1

      It's easy to fall into that line of thinking, if you're lazy. We're involved in two wars. You can cut every social program you want, but we're still flushing money down the war shithole. Not only that but we've given the richest citizens a giant tax cut during the wars. Shared sacrifice? Why aren't teabaggers anti-war? Rhetorical question, of course....

    4. Re:I was going to journal about this by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 2

      Some of today's rich people disgust me. Kudos to Buffett, one rich guy who isn't disgusting.

      You FELL FOR IT! Did you know Warren Buffet can go pay for the Federal Debt--there's a link on their page--but he hasn't? He's called for the government to come get it from him. It's great marketing because it won't really happen. It'll be debated, but won't happen. He went out there to make himself look good, because what he said has no real meaning.

    5. Re:I was going to journal about this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Umm, Ron Paul is very anti-war and loved by the tea party.
      Tax cut during war? Bullshit
      You try to claim some moral / intellectual superiority??? That is the problem with the left / democrat party today. They have become so hardened in their hate for anyone they think disagrees with them. If you bothered to connect with a "tea party" supporter, you might find that you are closer on issues than you think.
      But you wont. Obama says hate them. MSNBC says hate them so like a good little ghetto rat, you do.

    6. Re:I was going to journal about this by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      Can someone explain to me why Buffett's secretary pays a higher rate than him? What other country has a more regressive tax system?

      Simple - his earned income (salary) - on which he pays income taxes and Social Security/FICA taxes - is less than his secretary. His unearned income - capital gains on passive investments, bank account interest, etc - is huge. But that's at a lower 15% tax rate - so that's what most of his total income is taxed at.

      If you want to hit the rich like Buffett in the pocketbook, don't play around with the income tax at all. Raise the capital gains income tax rate to 50%. That'll nail Buffett, Gates, and the other super-rich. Whether or not hammering your investment source is a good idea is another question, but if you want Buffett to pay a higher tax rate than his secretary, you're only recourse is to raise the capital gains tax - because his earned income is less than his secretary in the first place. He will always pay a lower tax rate.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    7. Re:I was going to journal about this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      She pays a higher rate because all her taxes are in the form of income taxes. Averaging the large amount of money he makes in dividends and investments taxed at capitol gains rate of 7% with his annual income of $100,000 at %33 comes out to a lower overall rate. Due to his earned income of 100K he doesn't even fall into the brackets that are impacted by the proposal.

      I earn 50% more than her and I also pay a lower overall rate.

    8. Re:I was going to journal about this by anyGould · · Score: 1

      >

      Can someone explain to me why Buffett's secretary pays a higher rate than him?

      Easy - she has far less disposable income than he does. That means that he has the ability to put his extra money in places that don't trigger taxes. Thus, his effective tax rate is far lower, since he's paying taxes on only the portion of the money he's using.

    9. Re:I was going to journal about this by Grizzley9 · · Score: 1

      I shouldn't have to add the detail of "war" to waste and needless spending should I? I thought that was a given. Overall though, they are not producing much but are keeping numerous people and related industries employed around the world.

    10. Re:I was going to journal about this by Homr+Zodyssey · · Score: 1

      And its funny how they didn't think it was wasteful until a democrat was at the helm.

    11. Re:I was going to journal about this by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      That begs the question of why unearned income should be taxed at a lower rate than earned income. And don't talk about risk -- working people risk their very lives.

      It's not about "hitting Buffett in the pocket"; my pocket is hit twice as hard. Raise the capital gains tax or lower my income tax.

  26. Ignorance is a viewpoint and all that by MikeRT · · Score: 1, Troll

    It sometimes still amazes me when I meet liberals who don't understand that many people who "make $1M" actually don't keep most of it even before taxes because they run sole proprietorships or partnerships. It's a testament to the fact that we need a "you must know this much to have a right to be heard" sign next to the soap box.

    I'm all for giving men like Buffet and Gates precisely what they want. They want more taxes, have at it. Instead of starting the curve ramping up in the low millions, let's have it really start hitting home in the tens of millions and then go nuts when someone takes home over $100M. That way we know we aren't hitting small businesses.

    Since most of the truly wealthy seem to have a left-wing streak, I as a conservative, see no reason to not give them what they want good and hard so long as we can spare small businesses.

    1. Re:Ignorance is a viewpoint and all that by necro81 · · Score: 1

      It sometimes still amazes me when I meet liberals who don't understand that many people who "make $1M" actually don't keep most of it even before taxes because they run sole proprietorships or partnerships

      If they don't keep it (i.e., plow it back into their business - and more power to them!), then they shouldn't be taking it out as income, but should instead structure their business accounting differently.

    2. Re:Ignorance is a viewpoint and all that by coinreturn · · Score: 0

      It sometimes still amazes me when I meet liberals who don't understand that many people who "make $1M" actually don't keep most of it even before taxes because they run sole proprietorships or partnerships. It's a testament to the fact that we need a "you must know this much to have a right to be heard" sign next to the soap box.

      I'm all for giving men like Buffet and Gates precisely what they want. They want more taxes, have at it. Instead of starting the curve ramping up in the low millions, let's have it really start hitting home in the tens of millions and then go nuts when someone takes home over $100M. That way we know we aren't hitting small businesses.

      Since most of the truly wealthy seem to have a left-wing streak, I as a conservative, see no reason to not give them what they want good and hard so long as we can spare small businesses.

      Bull-fucking-shit. The only truly wealthy that have a left-wing streak are the few vocal ones with actual hearts in their chests and not robotic machinery. Generally, the CEOs of all the major corporations are conservative greedy fucks, spending billions in lobbying money to reduce their taxes. Also, if any sole proprietorship or partnership is NETTING over $1M (you are taxed on NET, not GROSS), then they should be taxed as wealthy, because they fucking ARE wealthy. Your claim of "you must know this much to have a right to heard" is actually "you must agree with me this much to have a right to be heard." And that me friend, is fascism.

    3. Re:Ignorance is a viewpoint and all that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "many people who "make $1M" actually don't keep most of it even before taxes because they run sole proprietorships or partnerships"

      And your expenditures are deducted from your tax liability. You get taxed on what you make.

    4. Re:Ignorance is a viewpoint and all that by NiteShaed · · Score: 2

      It sometimes still amazes me when I meet liberals who don't understand that many people who "make $1M" actually don't keep most of it even before taxes because they run sole proprietorships or partnerships.

      Maybe that's because those liberals only consider people with an actual personal income of a million or more to "make $1M". Nobody actually says "Dan the contractor", who grossed $1M last year before taking into account his business expenses and labor costs is a millionaire, unless they're trying to score some points dishonestly about how taxing the rich really hurts the little guy instead.

      --
      Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
    5. Re:Ignorance is a viewpoint and all that by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      Those SPs should switch to LLCs. A SP is too much risk, and when it fails you will have your ass taken out of you and your house and car sold. Filing fee for an LLC is like $384 in my state, versus about $50 for a SP.

    6. Re:Ignorance is a viewpoint and all that by maxume · · Score: 1

      It isn't going to be an income tax increase on every person that has an AGI of $1 million, it is going to be an income tax increase on people that earn more than $1 million and have such large capital gains that their effective tax rate is lower than people earning a typical salary.

      If you figure that the increase in taxes will probably be something like 10% on earnings that are likely around 5% of invested capital, it isn't even particularly worth squealing about preferring private sector investment to government spending, the impact will be in the range of 0.5% of the capital invested by these people (arguments that a 1% disincentive would somehow stop someone from trying to earn millions of dollars aren't even worth addressing seriously).

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    7. Re:Ignorance is a viewpoint and all that by zotz · · Score: 1

      It sometimes still amazes me when I meet liberals who don't understand that many people who "make $1M" actually don't keep most of it even before taxes because they run sole proprietorships or partnerships.

      I see this explanation made often.

      Why do they structure their business like this instead of incorporating? Why is this point made without laying out the facts/evidence to back up the point. I have paying some attention for a good while now and have not seen this.

      all the best,

      drew

      --
      FreeMusicPush If you want to see more Free Music made, listen to Free
    8. Re:Ignorance is a viewpoint and all that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I seriously doubt aggressive (50%+) taxes on the super-rich (start at 10m say) would fly (but I support them wholeheartedly - if our economy and stability and safety makes you rich and safe and secure, I don't see why you would not want to give back). In our economy, THAT is where all the money is.

      The point you seem to be missing as a conservative is that Republicans have been arguing that NO TAX INCREASES should be allowed on anyone who makes more than around $100k, because they are "job creators". I guess most of them at 100k are hiring the teenager down the street to mow the lawn and watch their kids...

      They are, however, totally fine with cutting any program or tax break that provides any benefit to people at the poverty line.

      Your proprosal makes sense, and I would back it. I do not see the Republican party seriously backing this. To me, it falls into the category of "stuff most of us agrees on", that gets vetoed by idealogical positions they take. If the Republicans don't get everything they ask for exactly the way they want it, they will take their ball and go home (see debt cieling crisis that they manufactured). Thus, not even the sensible stuff gets done.

    9. Re:Ignorance is a viewpoint and all that by zotz · · Score: 1

      It sometimes still amazes me when I meet liberals who don't understand that many people who "make $1M" actually don't keep most of it even before taxes because they run sole proprietorships or partnerships

      If they don't keep it (i.e., plow it back into their business - and more power to them!), then they shouldn't be taking it out as income, but should instead structure their business accounting differently.

      I think his point is that the "gross revenue" of their business is treated as their personal income. Is this really the case and if it is, why do they not incorporate to avoid this "trap"?

      all the best,

      drew

      --
      FreeMusicPush If you want to see more Free Music made, listen to Free
    10. Re:Ignorance is a viewpoint and all that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is what I'm hearing, and it makes no sense to me:
      "They should pay more in taxes, and they should also restructure their business so they pay less in taxes"

    11. Re:Ignorance is a viewpoint and all that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Name me one person who doesn't separate their business from the personal wealth at that level of revenue, and I'll show you someone who has set themselves up for a massive fall when one lawsuit over the business happens. Nobody gets a business to $1M in revenue without looking at the tax and liability issues (either by being smart, or via "the hard way").

      And about those "small businesses" you throw around - you realize that some of the largest companies in the world (by revenue) are defined as "small business"? The legal definition is "owned by under 100 stakeholders". There is no revenue, profit, or employee size taken into account. So by saying "small business" in the US, you mean "oligarchs". Do you wish to correct your earlier statement?

    12. Re:Ignorance is a viewpoint and all that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ""you must know this much to have a right to be heard" sign next to the soap box"

      Or you can just step onto the soap box and be heard as well. "when I meet liberals" Fuck off, we're not all retarded.

    13. Re:Ignorance is a viewpoint and all that by Logarhythmic · · Score: 1

      Do you run a sole proprietorship? I do. My business expenses are legally deducted from my taxable income by filing a Schedule C. If I were ever to claim (from the perspective of the IRS) that I "made $1M", it would mean that my actual revenue was significantly greater than that. I don't pay income taxes on the money spent to run the business, because once it goes back into the business, it's not "income" anymore. Obviously there are rules and regulations for what's legitimately deductible, but the point stands.

      --
      "Before criticizing someone, first walk a mile in his shoes. Then, you'll be a mile away... and you'll have his shoes."
    14. Re:Ignorance is a viewpoint and all that by St.Creed · · Score: 1

      Actually, I meet quite a lot of otherwise intelligent and sane persons who really don't understand that difference emotionally. Yes, they can understand it intellectually but 5 minutes later it's still "but man, you sure earned a lot of money!" - no I didn't, I just collected a lot of government tax for them that I need to transfer at the end of the quarter. So I understand the GP frustration on that point. And I'm not sure about the proposed tax either: will it be on gross take or net income?

      --
      Therefore, by the (faulty) logic you're using, you're just a cow with a keyboard - osu-neko (2604)
    15. Re:Ignorance is a viewpoint and all that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think his point is that the "gross revenue" of their business is treated as their personal income. Is this really the case and if it is, why do they not incorporate to avoid this "trap"?

      all the best,

      drew

      Simple, two reasons. 1) the lose of control of the business and 2) the tax rate is typically higher, both at the state and federal levels than an individuals..

      The only way to pay less in corporate taxes is to be able to spend millions on tax accountants/lawyers... kind of defeats the purpose.

    16. Re:Ignorance is a viewpoint and all that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey moderators. Disagreeing with someone does not make them a troll.

  27. Re:Woah, TIMEOUT! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Agreed. I should never see something on the salshdot front page that's *also* on the cnn and foxnews front pages. This made me sad.

  28. Re:Welcome to drudgedot, again... by tacroy · · Score: 2

    Please understand this is a COMPLETELY honest comment. Please take it as face value. I am ignorant of this new tax and as I am working I don't currently have time to research. Based on the summery, President Obama is proposing to increase taxes on those that make over 1mil a year and the republicans are calling it class warfare. Which part of that is wrong / pandering to the conservative base? If it is fact then it can't be construed as bias, however, if it is FALSE then it should be discredited. In all honesty, I ask, please fill me in. Thank you.

  29. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by superwiz · · Score: 1

    don't think he said anything about "anything". providing $1 of services for $100 of taxes is still flushing money down the toilet.

    --
    Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
  30. Class warfare by cmdr_klarg · · Score: 1

    I love how the conservatives trot out "class warfare". The non-wealthy must suck at it, because they aren't winning (and haven't been for centuries).

    --
    THE SOFTWARE, IT NO WORKY!!!
    1. Re:Class warfare by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When I see video and photographs of prog protests, I see a lot of progs carrying signs with the words "class warfare" on them. So how is it that this is a canard of the right?

    2. Re:Class warfare by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You could tax the upper 1% at 100% and still not balance the budget at current spend rates. You could seize their entire wealth and still not pay off the debt so this effort will be short lived.
      Also keep in mind that in comparison to the rest of the world, middle class Americans are very wealthy.
      So after we get the rich peoples money, im coming after yours. After we take out the rich, there will be no one left to push back against the gov. You will be my bitch. I will tax you to the point that I control all the money and resources. Earning income will be a futile effort because I will take it all. No incentive, no reward. Yes indeed, you will be my bitch.

    3. Re:class warfare by Bengie · · Score: 1

      +9001

    4. Re:class warfare by Tom · · Score: 1

      I found the infographics that illustrates the split nicely:

      https://www.nytimes.com/imagepages/2011/09/04/opinion/04reich-graphic.html

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  31. The Fruit of Thirty Years by Pstrobus · · Score: 4, Interesting

    For the past thirty years we have held up the image of the put upon rich person who would love to invest in the US but can't because of our terrible tax burden. So the tax code has been modified to take the burden off the most wealthy [our top tax rate used to be 50% now it is 35%]. We did this in hopes that the wealthy would let the rest of the economy have more. This has not happened. In fact, the money has become more concentrated at the top while wages have stagnated at the bottom and in the middle. Instead of investing in industry, the Giant Pool of Money at the Top has bought US debt [we don't owe our soul to the Chinese, we owe it to the wealthy] and, because T-bills have had lousy returns for a decade, the money also went to fuel speculative bubbles [including the global housing bubble].

    In this situation, where the top earners [about 5% of the population] have over 85% of the wealth, to whine about horrible confiscatory tax and wave the class warfare banner is beyond absurd. In order to have class war you need to have class, is the GOP saying that we still have class in the democratic United States?

    --
    "The conduct of neither [party], if strictly examined, will be irreproachable." -Elizabeth Bennet
    1. Re:The Fruit of Thirty Years by coinreturn · · Score: 1

      For the past thirty years we have held up the image of the put upon rich person who would love to invest in the US but can't because of our terrible tax burden. So the tax code has been modified to take the burden off the most wealthy [our top tax rate used to be 50% now it is 35%]. We did this because we were lied to that the wealthy would let the rest of the economy have more. This has not happened.

      There, fixed that for you.

    2. Re:The Fruit of Thirty Years by Pstrobus · · Score: 1

      I still like my version better. We decided to fawn all over the rich and hope that they would share their largesse, forgetting entirely that like other bullies, they had no incentive to share. We let them keep it in hopes that they would be moved to give back some of it to us.

      Sure there were lies, but a lot of them were ones we told ourselves "if I give up prosperity now, I'll get a double helping in the future" and "if I we tax the rich, when I become rich I'll have to pay higher tax."

      --
      "The conduct of neither [party], if strictly examined, will be irreproachable." -Elizabeth Bennet
  32. We've needed another tax bracket or two... by TWX · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ...for a long time now. IIRC, the 250K top tax bracket dates back to almost the beginning of the income tax system, when 250K was legitimately rich, and the earner of 250K would likely be a millionaire due to cash reserves from earning that kind of money for years.

    Nowadays, 250K is still a very, very good income, but inflation has curtailed its spending power significantly. New brackets every so often that account for inflation, or else a periodic adjustment of all brackets for inflation would probably be good for the country.

    As far as those who want to argue that "job creators" in the form the of the wealthy wouldn't create jobs if their personal income were taxed higher, the simple solution would be to offer tax breaks for the demonstrable creation of jobs. This mainly would affect small companies where only a handful of people actually own the companies in question, as they could say, "I didn't take $XX salary because instead I reinvested $XX in the company for salaries for workers" with the ability to produce those figures from the payroll books...

    --
    Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    1. Re:We've needed another tax bracket or two... by durdur · · Score: 1

      > New brackets every so often that account for inflation, or else a periodic adjustment of all brackets for inflation

      FYI the tax bracket thresholds currently are not fixed but change yearly based on inflation. I assume this would be the case with any new bracket placed on very high incomes.

    2. Re:We've needed another tax bracket or two... by TWX · · Score: 1

      That's the thing, we could keep the number of brackets constant, and adjust the range each bracket covers. Probably wouldn't do well to do that year to year, as it would make retirement planning much more difficult, but I could see adjusting them every five years or so, with the option to adjust sooner if there's an economic necessity.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    3. Re:We've needed another tax bracket or two... by hedwards · · Score: 1

      $250k is still rich, it's just not as rich as in previous years. People making more than $250k only represent about 1.5% of the US population meaning that 98.5% of Americans make less than that amount. No matter how you slice it, $250k is rich, unless of course they're incompetent and spending all of it each year.

    4. Re:We've needed another tax bracket or two... by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 1

      As far as those who want to argue that "job creators" in the form the of the wealthy wouldn't create jobs if their personal income were taxed higher, the simple solution would be to offer tax breaks for the demonstrable creation of jobs. This mainly would affect small companies where only a handful of people actually own the companies in question, as they could say, "I didn't take $XX salary because instead I reinvested $XX in the company for salaries for workers" with the ability to produce those figures from the payroll books...

      Yes, and that's precisely the reason that a lot of small businesses incorporate, so it's made patently clear for tax purposes where the money is going. And since reinvesting in the company reduces the profit for a company, it has lower taxes so long as it keeps reinvesting in itself. Having said that, salaries for workers are taxed at another level (payroll taxes). But, then, it all really comes down to whether the small company is interested in avoiding taxes for the sake of avoiding taxes, best utilizing their money for the growth of the business, or simply dolling out money to the company's owner(s). At the point at which a person is making a gross $1 million/year and there's actual discussion about how "unfair" it is to be taxed "so much", it makes me thing the person is either upset with the dollar figure on their pay stub or they have the mindset that their workers are unproductive and should be taxed to the point of slaver, as they don't deserve whatever they're paid. In short, it's a lack of consideration of their position relative to others or even simply relative to what their salary affords them.

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    5. Re:We've needed another tax bracket or two... by maxume · · Score: 1

      If you do it right and the economy grows just a little bit, it should simplify retirement planning (because the adjustments would generally be in favor of the taxpayer, at least if the taxpayer was someone that required a real plan in order to retire).

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    6. Re:We've needed another tax bracket or two... by TheTyrannyOfForcedRe · · Score: 1

      $250k is still rich, even today. A person with that yearly income is one of the richest people on the planet, and one of the richest people to ever live on planet Earth. The fact that people making that amount do not recognize and appreciate exactly how fucking lucky they are makes me sick. "It doesn't go as far as it used to." Seriously? $250k and you are not happy with what you have? You need it to "go further?" I imagine these same people, if they made $1mil a year, would be complaining that they couldn't afford the stuff that the $50mil a year guys can afford. What a bunch of bastards.

      BTW, this rant was not directed at the parent poster.

      --
      "Liechtenstein is the world's largest producer of sausage casings, potassium storage units, and false teeth."
    7. Re:We've needed another tax bracket or two... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you'll find that taxing the rich helps create jobs. Just look at the jobs created under Bush 2 vs Clinton. Bush lowered the taxes for the wealthy, and job creation hardly budged compared to Clinton who had higher taxes. Look at the unfairness of the CEO salaries vs what the average worker makes. Its now about 300 times the average worker compared to about 30 times the average worker a few years ago. Look at the outrageous bankers salaries and bonuses. What other class gets this. And for what, gambling and expecting us to bail them out?

    8. Re:We've needed another tax bracket or two... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remember that when the income tax was enacted 85%+ of the population payed NOTHING.
      It was, from the very beginning, a tax only on the wealthy.
      They were the ones who had government goons break strikes, who had actual banana republics propped up by the us military, had shipping lanes protected by our navy, and the people who directly benefited by treaty's and diplomacy.

      The Fed tax system was ALWAYS meant to be mostly funded by the new class of non-royal wealthy.
      The US was one of the first places in the world that allowed common people accumulate wealth and have a right to property.

      You succeed in this country you have to pay for the PRIVILEGE of living someplace that not only allows, but will protect you if you are lucky, and I do mean LUCKY enough to accumulate or inherit a vast fortune.

      Also, just to put it out there.... unless you cure cancer, or invent working cold fusion... No, you did not EARN 10's of millions of dollars.
      It is impossible that you can EARN more than a million $$ a year.
      I don't care how smart you are. I don't care how hard you worked. No person on this planet EARNS more than a million a year.
      Never can you EARN that much money. You got lucky, and you might DESERVE to keep much of your good fortune. But that is what it was.... Nothing but Good Luck.

    9. Re:We've needed another tax bracket or two... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My household income is around that mark, and I must say I don't feel rich at all. Around NYC, that income makes you comfortable, but certainly not rich. I am relatively young, so maybe its just that I haven't had the years of wealth accumulation that might make me feel more secure. I have a hefty mortgage on a nice but modestly sized 2BR condo outside of Manhattan, and still commute over a half hour on the subway.

      I am certainly not living paycheck to paycheck, and I am certainly better off than many families. But the high cost of living paired with the extreme volatility these days in my industry ( I am a programmer at a bank), make me really uneasy. Uneasy to the point where I am just banking money as I feel it is just a matter of time before I get laid off and may not be able to find another high paying job. Its kind of strange to me that by the numbers I am a target of a lot of anger. Not that I discount the anger that those that are truly struggling, but just the oddness of being a "high earner" and still stressing like most of the middle class about the future.

    10. Re:We've needed another tax bracket or two... by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      $250k is still rich, even today. A person with that yearly income is one of the richest people on the planet, and one of the richest people to ever live on planet Earth. The fact that people making that amount do not recognize and appreciate exactly how fucking lucky they are makes me sick. "It doesn't go as far as it used to." Seriously? $250k and you are not happy with what you have?

      I think you're missing the point. Every argument I've seen about raising taxes on rich people boils down to two main arguments: 1) it won't impact their lifestyle, and/or 2) they're paying less taxes than middle class using tax loopholes and capital gains. NEITHER of these categories apply to the "lesser rich" segment you have no problem casually throwing under the bus simply because they earn more than you do. These people continue to work for their money, have families, jobs, expenses, etc etc -- basically they have far more in common with the middle class worker trying to make a living than they do the rich billionaire flying around in private jets. Yet people treat them like they're all flying around in private jets with a desire to take every scrap of income from them that they can get their hands onto. By the same logic, should someone making 70k a year be forced to live the lifestyle of someone making 30-40k a year just because they have more? Should we treat them like assholes for wanting to keep their hard earned money, for wanting to have something more than an average/below-average lifestyle? Should we tax them like crazy because they're making double what the others are? Because to someone making 30k, 70k is an extravagant fortune. Surely they can part with that wealth, right?

  33. Re:Woah, TIMEOUT! by ojintoad · · Score: 1

    Is it a slow news day? There's nothing at all happening in the world of science or technology that would be more important to the average nerd than this? What about every other bill the President has proposed? I haven't seen those on slash dot

    Mod parent up. This is just tax policy news. There's no gadget, there's no advanced math - it's pure politics. This isn't news for nerds, this is news that applies to the general public and in no way applies specifically to nerds.

  34. Total Lack of Cognitive Dissonance by feidaykin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What's going to be entertaining (in the sense that the sad circus of American politics is entertaining) about this whole thing is to watch the about-face the conservatives will make about how much money it takes to be rich. Recently, various state governments have been going after unions, and you see conservative commentators on the various shows talking about how teachers make enough money, how $30-40k a year is plenty when you consider union benefits, blah blah. Now these same exact people are going to go on the same exact shows and, with a straight face, say how those poor folks making a million a year are just struggling to get by and really need a break in this kind of economy while completely ignoring the fact they've spent a better part of a year telling us a teacher's salary is downright lavish. How does a conservative's head not explode from the cognitive dissonance? Do they actually simultaneously believe these polar opposite stances they take, or are they (like all politicians) simply bought and paid for by their masters and puppet whatever talking points they are fed?

    For those of you who are going to dispute my point, here are some preemptive replies. First, I know that folks on the left do this shit all the time too. I remember Kerry's "flip flopping" helping cost him the 2004 election. But pointing to the other side and saying "See, they do the same reprehensible thing we do" does not actually make it okay. It's still downright disingenuous. My point is simple: How much money does it take to be rich? Because the conservatives in America have two different definitions that depend not on the amount income, but essentially on class. The fact that these same conservatives are the first to scream "Class Warfare!" at this kind of proposal is deliciously ironic and the whole thing would be fucking hilarious if the stakes weren't so high.

    Reality check: to solve the long-term debt crisis, two things need to happen. Taxes need to go up, and spending needs to go down. Either side that says you can do one but not the other is living in some magical fairy-tale land where facts are superseded by what they wish were true.

    --

    "To confine our attention to terrestrial matters would be to limit the human spirit." -Stephen Hawking

    1. Re:Total Lack of Cognitive Dissonance by ftobin · · Score: 1

      I think one easy way to address these problems is to stop talking about absolute levels of income, but rather percentiles of income. Everyone could get a mailing from the IRS describing where they are on the income scale, and knowledge of this may help create more productive conversations.

    2. Re:Total Lack of Cognitive Dissonance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      And the issue is that the spending cuts are always 'down the road' and their is no effective mechanism for the current Congress to force a future Congress to make the promised cuts. Tax hikes on the other hand, are not used for deficit or debt reduction, but on immediate new spending. Thus, any new taxes should be opposed on the basis that they don't represent real fiscal discipline - the only way to control spending is the starve the beast.

    3. Re:Total Lack of Cognitive Dissonance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Reality check: to solve the long-term debt crisis, two things need to happen. Taxes need to go up, and spending needs to go down. Either side that says you can do one but not the other is living in some magical fairy-tale land where facts are superseded by what they wish were true.

      Actually, you need tax *revenue* to go up, or spending to go down, or both. But on the other hand, these policies affect the economy: Taxes are a disincentive to earn, produce, and grow the economy. Spending can boost the economy by putting more money in the system. Too much debt can cause fear, which is an incentive to save rather than spend, which is bad for the economy. And in the end there are a lot of other factors besides the federal government affecting how well our economy does. There's no easy, obvious fix.

    4. Re:Total Lack of Cognitive Dissonance by TigerTime · · Score: 0

      I understand your point, but I hate when people use teacher's salaries as a measuring stick. Teacher's salaries are 30-40k a year for 8 months of work and they get to chill off and on for a quarter of the year. They can get summer jobs just like students can and raise that salary from 30-40 to something around 40-50k depending on the job they're doing. Vacation has worth. 4 months is ALOT of value.

    5. Re:Total Lack of Cognitive Dissonance by TobesWSU · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Teachers do NOT get 4 months to "chill off". They're often at school for a week or so after the students leave in June and are working to set up for the next year a few weeks before school begins in mid august. They get 2 months tops and a good portion of that is spent doing prep work. You sir are a douchebag of the highest order.

    6. Re:Total Lack of Cognitive Dissonance by jmottram08 · · Score: 1

      Reality check: to cut spending by any significant amount, that is ta say, by the amount required to actually balance the budget, will not happen. period. Reality check #2: You cant increase taxes enough to cover a debt that surpasses the GDP. Ask Greece.

    7. Re:Total Lack of Cognitive Dissonance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong. Teachers work after hours and have meetings and workshops to go to during the summer.

      When you speak of things you don't understand, you are retarded.

    8. Re:Total Lack of Cognitive Dissonance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You misunderstand their stance. You are arguing against a straw-man, so of course "the opposing position" doesn't make sense - you framed it that way.

    9. Re:Total Lack of Cognitive Dissonance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because the conservatives in America have two different definitions that depend not on the amount income, but essentially on class.

      Naah, they're more personal than that.
      Definition one: me.
      Definition two: things I'll spend money on.

      Anything that threatens the benifitors of definition one is evil. Anything that advances def two will probably be at the cost of those benefiting from def one, and is therefore evil.

    10. Re:Total Lack of Cognitive Dissonance by DigiTechGuy · · Score: 2

      Not sure where you guys are from that teachers make $30k-$40k but here in NJ the range is more like $50k-$70k. Older teachers who'd been doing it forever, tenure, etc... There are many parts of the state where teachers are making over $100k, or at least putting the "underpaid" teachers in the rest of the state to shame. Oh, and I wish I got a 2-3 month vacation like teachers do, especially in prime summer weather. Bottom line is teachers here in NJ make a ludicrous amount of money for what they do and the amount of vacation they get, not to mention the great benefits. All of this is paid for by you and me. I can't wait to get out of this miserable state.

    11. Re:Total Lack of Cognitive Dissonance by joocemann · · Score: 1

      I should remind you that the media over-exaggerated a couple changes in opinion that Kerry had, one being excusabole in that he became more informed about the war and decided not to continue (for, then against).

      If you go on youtube you can find video evidence of McCain directly contradicting himself on numerous topics and occasions preceding the 2008 election. No point was made at all, despite him flipflopping on at least 4x more things.

      Major media is blatantly in bed with politics. It is a discredit to truth to reference their manipulative b.s. in any sense that it is real.

      On another note: trickle down has NEVER worked and history shows that the economy thrives when benefit/money/wealth is in the hands of many. FDR and JFK would be labeled communists in todays political bullshittery, but their social programs spurred boons and beneficence felt by so many that they are heralded today as our greatest presidents. Republicans often give them credit, but fail to recognize why they were great.

    12. Re:Total Lack of Cognitive Dissonance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you really thought they had it that good, you'd be a teacher. Check the starting salary, deduct the cost of the lost income and graduate study, certification and continuing education they pay for out of their own pocket. I looked into public school teaching, it's not that great a career.

    13. Re:Total Lack of Cognitive Dissonance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This "cognitive dissonance" is called "double-think". it works really well when considering it benefits big brother.

    14. Re:Total Lack of Cognitive Dissonance by Overunderrated · · Score: 1

      Recently, various state governments have been going after unions, and you see conservative commentators on the various shows talking about how teachers make enough money, how $30-40k a year is plenty when you consider union benefits, blah blah. Now these same exact people are going to go on the same exact shows and, with a straight face, say how those poor folks making a million a year are just struggling to get by and really need a break in this kind of economy while completely ignoring the fact they've spent a better part of a year telling us a teacher's salary is downright lavish. How does a conservative's head not explode from the cognitive dissonance?

      Because no conservative actually says something so stupid. That's a stereotype you've made up in your head that doesn't exist in reality. No one opposes higher taxes on the wealthy because they're "struggling" or "need a break." It's for macroeconomic reasons. I have no problems with someone disagreeing with this particular theory of economics, but I do have major problems with people willfully ignoring the reasoning of the opposition and preferring to posit strawmen.

    15. Re:Total Lack of Cognitive Dissonance by Lost+Engineer · · Score: 1

      Who's saying millionaire's are struggling? All I heard was that higher taxes is bad for the economy.

    16. Re:Total Lack of Cognitive Dissonance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My favorite about-face will be from this already being called the "Buffet tax" - named after Warren Buffet's call to add $1m and $10m tax brackets because he's paying a lower percentage tax than his own secretaries.

      See, a lot of the pro-wealth arguments have included the sentiment that the rich are rich because they deserve it, because they're smarter and/or harder workers and earned it all themselves, and that therefore their opinions are more insightful. (At the extreme of this, any who disagree are dismissed as "jealous").

      Now they have to try to say that somehow Warren Buffet is horribly, horribly wrong as he points out the tax imbalance, as he says that yes we're engaged in class warfare (the rich vs the rest, with the rich very clearly winning), as he points out that the 'job creators' haven't behaved any differently in their investments over his career whether the top bracket is 70% or 35%.

      And while they're trying to bash Buffet without destroying the foundation of their older arguments, the rest of us are sitting here remembering, very vividly, that ten years of tax cuts for the rich hasn't done jack shit for 'job creation'.

    17. Re:Total Lack of Cognitive Dissonance by omb · · Score: 0

      Once again absolute nonsense from a stupid leftie, it is not your money,
      and because you keep redistributing it, ie stealing it, your economy is in in the tank and
      people spend more of their time keeping their own money than finding you a well paid
      job. Looser

    18. Re:Total Lack of Cognitive Dissonance by pnuema · · Score: 1

      My brother has two masters degrees, teaches in the one of the best public schools in the country, and has for 15 years. I have a Bachelors in General Studies, and 8 years experience. I make more than he does. He also pays $800 a month to insure his family. I pay $150. I suspect you are cherry picking your statistics.

    19. Re:Total Lack of Cognitive Dissonance by DigiTechGuy · · Score: 1

      In my experience college education isn't worth much. What state does your brother teach in? I have a feeling it's not NJ. Also note NJ has some of the highest property taxes in the country, if not the highest. Median property taxes are about $6600/yr. Well over half that goes to the schools.

    20. Re:Total Lack of Cognitive Dissonance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are also REQUIRED to take classes. At my work required classes are considered part of the job and I get paid to go to class.
      Also, 30-40.. hell 50k a year, for someone with usually a MASTERS???
      Bargain.
      Our Fuck-twit electrician makes twice that.

    21. Re:Total Lack of Cognitive Dissonance by pnuema · · Score: 1

      Your experience is anecdotal, and shouldn't be taken seriously. Statistically, the more educated you are, the more money you make - unless you are a teacher. These are demonstrable facts. And what is the relative cost of living in NJ? I suspect that all salaries are inflated over the national average, not just teachers.

    22. Re:Total Lack of Cognitive Dissonance by Ameryll · · Score: 1

      It's not that the conservatives believe that $30K-40K makes you rich. It's that they think that $30K is enough to live on, and that's all you deserve if you're income comes from the government. They believe that if you made your own company from the ground up that you don't owe any of your money to the government because they built it with their money. (Insert crotchety get off my lawn line here) They don't really care about what benefits they got from the government to get there and are often deluded into believing that they're doing something for the people (like making jobs) so they shouldn't have to give back via taxes too.

    23. Re:Total Lack of Cognitive Dissonance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is the people and companies lumped in with "rich"
      The 4 employee painting company I worked for was considered "rich" at 300k gross a year.
      But half was payroll, a quarter was operating costs, the owner got about 40k in the end.

      It's been mismanaged, but 2.5% could have kept us healthcare.

      If you want to rape the people you claim to want to help, go ahead and raise taxes on the small businesses like that.

    24. Re:Total Lack of Cognitive Dissonance by DigiTechGuy · · Score: 1

      All experiences should be taken seriously, as you can determine trends. What I have experienced, and what I gather from your experience vs your brother's experience, is that a formal "education" doesn't get you nearly as far as experience, knowledge, and skill does.

      You can compare to your area here: Salary.com cost of living calculator or using any of the many other COL calculators and statistics available, which will give similar numbers.

      Pay in NJ is generally higher than other places, but not nearly as inflated as teachers pay is vs. other places. Teachers pay here is public record data and easily accessible. I have a large family that are mostly teachers, and many friends who are teachers. They have mostly chose that route because it's an easy route to guaranteed high pay and great benefits while having a long vacation in the summer. Yeah it sucks before tenure, but it's gravy once they get that. You still haven't mentioned what state your brother teaches in.

    25. Re:Total Lack of Cognitive Dissonance by Smurf · · Score: 2

      Not sure where you guys are from that teachers make $30k-$40k but here in NJ the range is more like $50k-$70k.

      Nope. For New Jersey: Starting salary for teachers, $38,408. Average salary, $58,156. And do note that NJ has the third highest starting salary and the fourth highest average salary among all states. Though the $30k-$40k range does seem to be somewhat low, it is far closer to reality than your $50k-$70k range.

    26. Re:Total Lack of Cognitive Dissonance by DCFusor · · Score: 1
      You bring up a great question and idea -- let me take a little farther. What constitutes "rich" in material things is variable. It's certainly true that a job with great bennies you can't easily be fired from is worth more than the same pay as a contractor - no question. Ask the bank for a loan with one vs the other sometime if you don't think so. On the other hand, as you point out - double or triple the money certainly papers over a lot of other things (which is why I'm a contractor when I bother to work, myself).

      .
      Of course, you can have high income, but (by choice) high debt and be "poor" again, but again, I feel like that's choice.

      .
      Further, some people choose, and make no mistake, it's a choice, to live in places that really cost a lot more. I live in the deep boonies, where 30k/yr pretax is way plenty and I live high on that here - new cars, home paid off, lots of acres. Move me to silicon valley, or NYC - I can't afford rent, maybe food-only. Suddenly I'm poor, though my income is the same.

      .
      Someone above suggested adding tax brackets. I'd surely agree -- due to failed Fed policies, a 1913 nickel buys more than a dollar does today, and clearly inflation is part of the current system setup (a requirement, actually) and bracket creep is an old government trick to raise taxes without seeming to. And that's the problem - to admit to the level of actual inflation, which is far higher than CPI - they'd have to admit to a management failure, and increase SS and other COLA payouts, no? So that's not gonna fly politically, even though it's a good idea.

      .
      Other than the rich being able to game the complex tax codes -- which we could do something about, there are other issues. Almost half of workers pay zero tax. No way that's good or fair, they should at least pay a little something, and since there are so many more of them than rich (which is another social problem) there's actually much more money there -- and it'd be easier to get better off people to pay more if they couldn't point to all those paying nothing, but still able to vote for goodies, entitlements, and pork. I think you really do want to avoid punishing people (too much) for being successful here, or lose some real important motivations, and all we have is humans to work with, not angels. Truly, there are plenty we should simply take it all from and put into jail, but we don't seem to be able to do that to anyone able to afford campaign contributions at this point -- the record is clear on that one.

      --
      Why guess when you can know? Measure!
    27. Re:Total Lack of Cognitive Dissonance by pjp6259 · · Score: 1

      Except spending cuts aren't down the road. From the summary, there are "$580 billion in cuts to mandatory benefit programs." included in this package.

      --
      Computers don't make mistakes. What they do, they do on purpose.
  35. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by justleavealonemmmkay · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If by "work hard" you mean go to a business school where they will give you a adress book of other self content bastards who will exclusively hire you instead of someone competent and teach you how to maximize short term profit until you can use your golden parachute (only to be hired the next month by another rogue corporation's board), then that's what you deserve. This is about 50% of the rich, "hard working people". Add to that the 45% of lucky sperms, and you have 95% of the rich out there.

    Working hard is by far no guarantee to get wealthy.
    Being rich is by far no proof to have worked hard.

  36. Small business by Dachannien · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The important thing is to spare small businesses from the tax increase. A lot of small businesses are either simple proprietorships/partnerships or LLCs, for which the profits are taxed as an addition to personal income. Proprietors and partners will pay these taxes from the cash on hand of the business, meaning that the business has fewer resources to expand and hire more employees.

    So go ahead and tax the $20M CEOs and such, but try to avoid placing the additional burden on small businesses.

    1. Re:Small business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please define "Small Business" in concrete terms. When Republicans say "small business" they mean something very different than the "mom-n-pop corner business". We have to stop letting politicians use terms without defining them.

    2. Re:Small business by goingToSay · · Score: 2

      Doesn't matter if they are a small business. If they are making one million dollars in profit (after expenses) per year then this will not hurt the business.

    3. Re:Small business by siride · · Score: 2

      This.

      I get the value of economies of scale with large corporations, but with technology in play, it isn't as big of an advantage as it used to be. We really should be investing in small to medium-sized businesses and have very few large corporations. The latter rarely do a good job of creating new technologies or really, new wealth. Up-and-coming businesses come up with the new ideas and generally are more efficient (because they have to be to survive). Of course, large companies have the ability to, say, throw a billion dollars at a risky idea and even have it fail and still have the company survive (albeit not without pissing off the shareholders). On the balance, however, it seems best to focus our efforts on the middle class, small and medium-sized businesses and let the rich fend for themselves. After all, they hold all the power and wealth, so they don't need to be coddled (don't need to be gutted either, of course).

    4. Re:Small business by AlKaMo · · Score: 1

      The small business owners are not the ones reaping the benefit of lower tax rates on long-term capital gains. Most of them are already paying taxes at the marginal tax rate, unlike the people this proposal is targeting.

    5. Re:Small business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      According to most financial analysts, the $20M CEO is a small business.

    6. Re:Small business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You may need to re-think the word small.

      A small business with a $1M profit is not so small. For a retailer this would be the profit on about $25M in sales. If a business with $25M in sales keeps the $1m profit, it can aford to pay the taxes on it.

    7. Re:Small business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so leave the money in the company. don't draw it as income.

    8. Re:Small business by olau · · Score: 1

      Eh, I co-own a small business in Denmark. Maybe the rules are different in the US, but over here, if you actually spend the money say on an employee the same year you earn them, you don't have to pay tax on the them. Even if you spend them the year after, you can deduct the loss (if you have one, which is not likely if you earned 1 million dollars last year :) in future tax payments.

    9. Re:Small business by mgoheen · · Score: 1

      As a small business owner I can say that this is a commonly sited but incorrect assumption. For S Corp. or LLCs, hiring a new person would reduce the net income for the company owner, thus reducing the taxable income. Taxing the profit on an individual (business owner) should have no bearing on hiring -- in fact, it acts as an incentive to invest your profits in expansion of the company through hiring or other deductible expenditures.

    10. Re:Small business by sunking2 · · Score: 1

      Give me a break. Small businesses are some of the biggest tax frauds out there. I don't know a single person who owns a small business who is honest with their taxes. I guarantee that me and my w2 - mortgage interest pay a higher rate than 95% of small businesses as they drive around in their $45k company trucks with the mag wheels and deduct their trips to the grocery store for milk as company miles.

      Not meaning to totally bash on them, just get tired of them being considered the holy grail of the economy and a bunch of do no evils.

    11. Re:Small business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yea. Not gonna happen. America loves monopolies now. Again! Haven't you been paying attention?

    12. Re:Small business by coaxial · · Score: 1

      Well then, they should simply incorporate.

    13. Re:Small business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Small businesses can expense a lot of things, so their taxable income on $1 million revenue is almost always $0.

      In fact, most small businesses have a taxable income of $0 unless they want to accumulate money in the company for a rainy day.

    14. Re:Small business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      A small business with a PROFIT of over $250K is pretty rare, and if it is so lucky, is doing pretty well thank-you-very-much. We're not talking revenue, but the money left over after all expenses, costs of goods sold, employee wages, etc are paid. So no, taxing small business PROFIT of over $250K is unlikely to wreak havoc.

      The other side of the coin, which I never hear anybody say, is that higher tax should actually be an *incentive* to invest in the business. At 25% tax, every dollar I keep costs me 33%. At 33%, every dollar I keep costs me 50%. So at some point, profit becomes expensive.

      The other way around, at 25%, every dollar I invest costs me $0.75. At 33%, every dollar I invest only costs me $0.66. The end result is these employees that I'm allegedly not going to hire because the profit tax went up, are effectively cheaper to hire than at a lower tax rate.

    15. Re:Small business by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      but try to avoid placing the additional burden on small businesses

      Too late. The ObamaCare bill that we had to pass in order to know what was in it has passed, and businesses are starting to understand what was in it (a crushing new payload that will stifle more jobs, etc). And the continuing avalanche of regulations that make starting and running even a small business nearly impossible - that's not going away, but is rather being made far, far worse by the current administration. The effective tax rate on the owner of a proprietorship is certainly meaningful, but actually it's the least of their worries. That's just mosquito bites, compared to the regulatory shark that's chewing their legs off.

      You want to protect and encourage more small and mid-sized businesses? Don't punish them for taking chances. And don't punish "the rich" for investing money in those companies. That's the other part people can't seem to grapple with. Small companies that grow quickly, hire people, and buy things from other companies generally do so because some Eeeeevil Rich Person (or a group of them) has risked a pile of money to get them from "small" to "mid-sized." Punish those people for risking that money, and they won't take as many risks. And Mr. Small Business Guy will be stuck in Small-ville, and that's the end of his hiring, his buying, and the TAX REVENUE that comes from all of that activity.

      Everyone wants to confiscate the rich guy's earnings for having taken that risk, but forget that he won't see a dime of income from that risk (or pay taxes on it) unless a LOT of other new and very taxed activity successfully takes place. You want to avoid a burden on small businesses? Don't punish the people that help them survive and grow when they have no chance of otherwise going public or attracting institutional financing (and these days, that's pretty much every small business).

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    16. Re:Small business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A "small business" by definition makes about $2.5 - $20 million per year in revenue. Small businesses operate in a huge range of industries, so it's nearly impossible to say what their average profit margin is, but if you assume a very healthy 10%, only the largest half would be affected much by the new rate, and if small business is anything like business in general, company size is not normally distributed and is clustered heavily at the bottom, so very few of them will actually be affected.

    17. Re:Small business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would guess small businesses are far more likely to evade taxes than large ones, at least in terms of legality. A lot of small business owners pay substantial personal expenses with business assets, and don't declare it.

    18. Re:Small business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The important thing is to spare small businesses from the tax increase. A lot of small businesses are either simple proprietorships/partnerships or LLCs, for which the profits are taxed as an addition to personal income. Proprietors and partners will pay these taxes from the cash on hand of the business, meaning that the business has fewer resources to expand and hire more employees.

      So go ahead and tax the $20M CEOs and such, but try to avoid placing the additional burden on small businesses.

      I'm SO tired of hearing this argument! Such "small business owners" should.... dum-de-da-DUM!.... FORM A LEGAL BUSINESSS (ie actually incorporate themselves). One of the main benefits of doing such is that you separate your income from the company's profits... money you reinvest in your company does NOT get taxed as part of your profits!

      The owner pays themselves a salary, which falls under their income tax, everything else that doesn't get reinvested (corporate profits) gets charged the corporate rate.

    19. Re:Small business by TigerTime · · Score: 1

      You're joking right? It's not as if every company takes their profits and just puts it in the bank for no reason, or goes into personal coffers somewhere. Most of the profits are turned around to try and grow their companies. Tax that money more, and the growth slows an equal amount.

    20. Re:Small business by goingToSay · · Score: 2

      Money that is put back into the business is tax deductable.

    21. Re:Small business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If a small business that makes more than $50k a year, never mind $1m, chooses not to incorporate, then it is 100% proprietors fault. Simply from legal point of view they are stupid, never mind taxation.

    22. Re:Small business by ProfessorPillage · · Score: 1

      If a sole proprietor is making over $1M in profit per year, and not re-investing it into growing the business, then that business can afford to pay a higher tax rate on the amount of profits over $1M.

      If a partnership or multi-member LLC is making more than $1M per year in profit, then those profits are divided between the partners/members before the tax rate is applied, so we're talking about profits over $N million where N is the number of partners/members (assuming equal ownership).

      If they used some of that profit to hire employees, then that would be a business expense and they wouldn't pay the taxes on it. So this really isn't a burden on small businesses.

    23. Re:Small business by Quirkz · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's not just Denmark. Business taxes are only on profits, not total income. So if you pull in $2 million in sales but it costs you $1.5 million in expenses, you're only taxed on the remaining $500k. This tax would only affect a small business that was putting $1 million directly into the pocket of its owner. And if you're pocketing $1mil annually, you are by definition NOT suffering from a lack of resources to expand and hire more employees. I don't know how people consistently fail to understand this, or why the grandparent is 5 Informative.

    24. Re:Small business by greatcelerystalk · · Score: 1

      The number of small businesses making over 250,000 per year is around 3%. The number of small businesses making $1M per year or more in profits is even smaller than that. This proposal won't adversely effect small businesses.

    25. Re:Small business by Shadow99_1 · · Score: 1

      I know a couple that runs their own business and doesn't even make enough to hire employees, yet incorporated solely to take advantages of tax laws. If your a sole proprietor or an LLC and think this is going to hurt you, do what all the big boys do an incorporate. It can be done for a few hundred to a couple thousand. It's a very small price to pay.

      --
      we are all invisible unless we choose otherwise
    26. Re:Small business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your argument sounds like a good one for claiming that there should be a reduced tax for *businesses* making under $1M annually. If an *individual* takes home more than $1M, I don't see why the fact that he also happens to be a small business owner seems to matter.

    27. Re:Small business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The important thing is to spare small businesses from the tax increase. A lot of small businesses are either simple proprietorships/partnerships or LLCs, for which the profits are taxed as an addition to personal income. Proprietors and partners will pay these taxes from the cash on hand of the business, meaning that the business has fewer resources to expand and hire more employees.

      So go ahead and tax the $20M CEOs and such, but try to avoid placing the additional burden on small businesses.

      BS. Anything you spend on expanding your business or hiring new employees is deductible. So if anything, Raising the top bracket makes small businesses want to reinvest and hire MORE.

    28. Re:Small business by mory · · Score: 1

      That is why I'd like to see a slight tax increase on the wealthy while simultainiously a drop on the payroll taxes employers must pay. I'd also like to see corporate taxes cut but only if it includes closing of lots of loopholes. If this was done, pass through organizations and large corporations would see less taxes per dollar spent on labor and this would hopefully spur some hiring. To your point about small businesses(at least pass through ones), the drop in the payroll tax would see the owner's costs decrease, most likely setting off any increase in the total taxes at the end of the day. If that small business was made up of a few partners that had no interest in highering, think small law firms, they would end up paying more but they were job creators anyway. The long of short of it is, if we start now we can make well thought out increases to taxes and decreases to spending. If we wait, we will need to make drastic ones. Unfortunatly, there is no political or public will to make small sacrafices when pie-in-the-sky ideology makes people think it will all fix itself and there will be no hardship.

    29. Re:Small business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So if a small business (I own one) wants to avoid higher taxes, they can simply take on new expenses by hiring new employees. Or investing in new equipment/facilities. If the owners are taking home $1M+, are they going to shut down their business because they aren't making enough money? They are already NOT hiring more employees since they are taking home all the profits.

    30. Re:Small business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a business owner.

      There's one thing wrong with the "small business" argument being advanced as a reason to reject tax increases on high income: it's the profits that are taxed, not revenue. The income tax rate I pay as an LLC has no impact whatsoever on my ability to hire. Payroll is one of the expenses of running a business, so when I hire a staff member, the salary and benefits I pay are an expense that reduces the net profit on which I'm taxed.

      There are other things (payroll taxes, unemployment insurance) that do go up with the number of employees. Fiddling with these could have a modest impact on my ability and willingness to hire. But changes in the income tax structure are (within reasonable limits) aren't going to change business behavior much: my strategy to maximize profit isn't really changed by the tax rate I eventually pay on the profits I realize.

      This explanation doesn't consider the effects of post-tax investment on job creation. Some of that $20M CEO salary does turn into investment dollars that fuel business expansion and create jobs, but there's some anecdotal evidence at this point that suggests this is probably not the most efficient way for a society to go about pursuing those goals.

    31. Re:Small business by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      Not that I don't agree whatever tax reform happens shouldn't be more onerous on small businesses... but I'm not sure I agree entirely with your statement.

      I'm pretty sure if an LLC/S-Corp, etc spends money on employees, that extra payroll would count against net profit, and so would not be taxed. It seems in that case the tax would actually encourage expansion and capital expenditures over taking extra profit.

      A sole proprietorship can be at a disadvantage this way when trying to grow, etc, but that's why they incorporate when it becomes worthwhile. And besides, due to the preferential tax treatment for corporations and the horrible health insurance situation for sole proprietors, the US has one of the lowest rates of self-employed people of all Western countries. Republicans who claim more taxes will hurt that small segment of the US population need to get a clue, they have already managed to hurt it much worse in recent times with previous tax and benefit policies.

    32. Re:Small business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well change the tax system so that businesses are taxed as businesses and people are taxed as people. Why would a business ever be taxed as a person? Who set that one up? It's not like a law of nature or anything. Some douchebag found some slick way around a rule and it stuck.

      I think we should get rid of business taxes and property taxes and have "services taxes". There'd be a military tax, an administrative tax, a medicare tax, a social security tax, etc...

      You could even do it locally and have a police tax, a fire tax, a school tax...and each tax would go specifically to pay for what it says. I know you can't anticipate everything, so you could have a "general tax" on the end...Either way, get rid of taxes on property and business taxes and tax only things that can actually breathe. And you could see pretty easily who was "overspending" and who wasn't.

      Oh and make "income" mean everything you make. If you make money by investing, that counts the same as money you make by working in an office.

    33. Re:Small business by seantide · · Score: 1

      That's just ignorant. Of course it will hurt the business. It is unfair and immoral to steal money from someone just because they make more money.

      You seem to think that profit is something a small business owner can go play with and spend on toys. Most likely it is used for re-investment, expansion, R&D, and so on. Things which a small business cannot do if you take it from them.

    34. Re:Small business by goingToSay · · Score: 1

      Please correct me if I'm wrong but isn't any money that is put into the business tax deductible? Meaning if a company makes 400k and puts 200k back into the business they pay taxes on only 200k (The profits). As I see it, higher taxes are an incentive to spend more money on the business because you don't pay taxes on that money.

  37. Oh, this is really about news for nerds! by MrJones · · Score: 0

    What does this news have to do with "News for nerds" ???

    --
    Get my e-mail after a captcha test in: http://tinymailt
    1. Re:Oh, this is really about news for nerds! by smitty97 · · Score: 0

      nothing, it just generates the most comments. same formula as other "news" companies.

      --
      mod me funny
  38. tax incidence Re:Tax planning and rich people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    This is a subtle point that is covered in first semester microeconomics. The "incidence" of a tax (who actually pays it, seller or buyer of a commodity) depends on the relative slopes of the supply and demand curves. If the commodity is inelastic (i.e. demand doesn't depend much on price: gasoline in the short run), then if you put a tax on the seller, they can just bump the price, and their revenue remains the same, while the buyer pays the full tax. On the other hand, if you have a very elastic commodity (where people are happy to not buy it if the price goes up a little bit), then a tax applied on the mfr falls mostly on the mfr, because if they raise prices, people stop buying. (Example would be a tax on domestically produced toys vs imported ones. There's a lot of toy mfrs out there, and people buy just on price)

    So, corporations send tax money to the govt, and some of it is manifested in higher selling prices, but some is manifested in lower revenue. If you have a tax policy that is uneven across lines of business/commodities, you can use this to encourage/discourage certain lines of business (e.g. tobacco taxes). The problem is that different commodities all have different elasticities, and that elasticity changes with time scale (gasoline is inelastic in short run, you still have to drive to work today, but quite elastic in the long run, jack the price of gas up to $6/gallon, and people stop buying Escalades and start buying Honda FITs) If you put a huge tax on gasoline (to encourage reduction in consumption) it would hit the consumer first, but the manufacturers in the long run. So you could give individuals a rebate on the tax when they file everyyear.. OK that helps the overall consumption reduction goal, but now the tax code is more complicated. And so it goes

    1. Re:tax incidence Re:Tax planning and rich people by I'm+just+joshin · · Score: 1

      It's a shame you posted this as an AC where it won't get the visibility it deserves. It's a very good explanation.

  39. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You make it sound as if 90% of your income was being taken away. I look at it as equalizing the system. Some countries do this to a crazy amount (though I can't think of any right this moment).

    If you're making $1,000,000 and have $900,000 taken away by taxes, you're still coming home with $100,000 which is about 3-4x what I'm making now. If you're making $1,000,000 and have $350,000 taken away by taxes, you get $650,000 left. That doesn't sound that bad to me. Yes, it's 35%, but the country needs support now and some of the lowest tax rates are here.

  40. A Warren Buffet said himself by justleavealonemmmkay · · Score: 2

    There’s class warfare, all right, but it’s my class, the rich class, that’s making war, and we’re winning

    1. Re:A Warren Buffet said himself by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      There’s class warfare, all right, but it’s my class, the rich class, that’s making war, and we’re winning

      Warren Buffett is free to make out a cheque to the US government and send it in at any time if he feels he isn't paying enough tax.

      In reality the 'rich class' love income tax because most of their income is not classed as income, so income tax prevents others from accumulating enough capital to enter the 'rich class' and compete with them.

    2. Re:A Warren Buffet said himself by Amigan · · Score: 1
      I find it interesting that Warren Buffet is more than willing to pay more - nothing has stopped him as there is a section on the tax form to voluntarily contribute more.

      Maybe if he paid himself a salary commensurate with his income as opposed to the $100K annually he gets - he'd actually be impacted by what the president proposes. Instead, he collects his income from capital gains (taxed at 15%). Of course, if he paid himself a comparable salary, then he'd also have to pay SS+Medicare.

      On the other hand, his company (Berkshire Hathaway), has been locked in a 10yr fight with the IRS as to how much money they should pay. http://www.theblaze.com/stories/obama-suporter-warren-buffetts-co-hasnt-paid-some-taxes-since-2002/

      --
      "Software is the difference between hardware and reality"
    3. Re:A Warren Buffet said himself by PCM2 · · Score: 1

      Warren Buffett is free to make out a cheque to the US government and send it in at any time if he feels he isn't paying enough tax.

      Of course he can. And what does this completely fatuous statement have to do with fixing the tax structure in the U.S.? Or do you think Warren Buffett has been personally sitting on all the money?

      --
      Breakfast served all day!
    4. Re:A Warren Buffet said himself by Lost+Engineer · · Score: 1

      I always find these rich "tax me more" guys disingenuous. Maybe that's the wrong word. I mean I believe Buffett is willing to pay more taxes, but who elected him king of the millionaires?

    5. Re:A Warren Buffet said himself by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      My understanding has been that they actually want to raise the tax for capital gains, hence the name "Buffett Tax".

  41. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by Microlith · · Score: 1

    You sound ignorantly Teabagger.

  42. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's somewhat misleading: the ultra-poor may not pay income taxes, but they definitely pay just about every other tax (sales tax, excise tax, property tax, etc). I think the issue here is that the other end of the spectrum, the ultra-rich tend to pay less taxes proportionally than the average middle class person due to loopholes.

  43. Grasping at straws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The administration is going to get hammered for raising taxes during what appears to be another recession. Bad move, it won't raise much revenue, and Obama will lose the 2012 election.

  44. Re:Welcome to drudgedot, again... by rickb928 · · Score: 1

    Oh, that's funny. And pathetic. Really, you can't tell a front-page troll from pandering to the liberal /. masses, fairly slobbering at the prospect of demonizing the Right in favor of such rational concepts as taxing more in a recession, expanding government to reduce government debt, cutting entitlement programs in the same recession, spreading debt reduction over 4-5 election cycles, and preaching civility to the opposition while practising the most vile forms of libel and slander against that same opposition, with a straight face?

    Not that the other side has a clue, nor any compulsion to do the very same thing, beginning with taxation, through cutting entitlements in the worst economy in decades, and finally just wanting it to be THEIR key that locks the door on recovery.

    Really, too funny. ./ caters to all the loonies, if you squint a little.

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
  45. Oye by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The unfortunate truth is that right now the rich pay a lower tax rate than most other people. Fine so be it, but we are in a big hole that we need to fill and the middle and especially working class cannot handle any more hits right now. We look to those who have done well to kick in a little more to help get us out of this mess rather than having to fire teachers, or not get roads plowed in the winter.

    Also, his proposal as a TON of spending cuts in it too. It's balanced unlike anything else our government has done lately.

    1. Re:Oye by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      The unfortunate truth is that right now the rich pay a lower tax rate than most other people.

      The facts say otherwise. A little research would show "the rich" actually pay a higher rate - and pay a higher rate given their share of adjusted gross income, too.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
  46. One Problem - What is 35% of Zero? by dila813 · · Score: 1

    Most Millionaires and Billionaires have Zero Yes Zero Income. When we say Millionaires and Billionaires, we are talking about their net worth (already previously taxed) and not their incomes. So who will this tax catch? Up and coming working Millionaires and Billionaires that haven't transitioned to living off their assets.

    1. Re:One Problem - What is 35% of Zero? by smash · · Score: 1

      It will catch all the sheeple who think "woot, yeah down with the man!" and vote for whoever had the hair brained scheme in the first place.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    2. Re:One Problem - What is 35% of Zero? by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      Hey, stop using that logic and reason! There's a lynch-mob to form here!

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
  47. Taxes are built into everything by Marrow · · Score: 2

    Federal taxes are built into gas, phone bills, any product you purchase. Taxes are built into everything. They do this in such a way that the true cost of government is hidden from populace. After all, if you got a bill at the end of the year that said "You owe us 60% of everything you made this year", people might get testy.
    So please dont think that the poor are not paying taxes. They are, and they are probably paying a fairly large portion of their meager incomes to boot.

    1. Re:Taxes are built into everything by RingDev · · Score: 1

      It's also used to tax non-residents. If all government revenue came from a bill presented to every legal resident, then all tourists, visitors, and illegal resident would be enjoying their time in the US completely tax free.

      -Rick

      --
      "Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
    2. Re:Taxes are built into everything by Marrow · · Score: 1

      Good point, I did not think of that. I mostly think of tourists getting gouged by the hotel "fees".

  48. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by rickb928 · · Score: 0

    My president is making every effort to bring that to fruition. Good progress so far.

    Against my wishes, by the way.

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
  49. Cap Gains vs. Income by necro81 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The main reason that Warren Buffer, hedge fund managers, and many of the rest of the ultra-wealthy pay so little in income taxes is that most of their "income" is in the form of long-term capital gains: the appreciation of and sale of investments. On that money, they don't pay the maximum income tax rate of 35%, but rather the maximum long-term capital gains tax rate of 15%. (The situation is different for short-term cap gains, which are generally taxed at the ordinary income tax rate.) This is also the case for many CEOs who have compensation packages in the tens of millions of dollars: much of that value is in the form of stock and stock options, not outright salary.

    In that light, creating a new, higher income tax bracket is unlikely to have quite the intended impact that many would like to see: having the ultra-wealthy pay at least as great a percentage of their annual income as taxes as their secretaries, minions, and housekeepers. Much as I prefer a simplified tax code, it seems to me that we may want to instead add this provision: If more than 50% of your adjusted gross income comes from long-term capital gains, then count it as ordinary income, because that's what it is to them.

    Yes, some will find ways around that (and goodness knows the ultra-wealthy have tax planners aplenty), but it seems more equitable than what we have currently. Please don't trouble us with the strawman argument of "If the ultra-wealthy have their investments taxed so heavily, then they won't invest." What else are they going to do with all their extra money? Save it at ~0% interest?

    1. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      And, like the 1098357928375098270198249082709824376 other times some moron politician has gone vote hunting with a "tax the rich" scam, the rich will just pay lawyers. Oh but this is Obama, The One? He's Different?

      I can never figure out if Obama supporters should be patted on the head, or punched in the face.
      Nick

      Capatcha: Enrich

    2. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree. I keep trying to explain to people that income from capital gains is taxed different and they give me a blank stare. Its long term/short term capital gains that need to be taxed at a different rate. Buffet is even a huge proponent of taxing them at a higher rate

    3. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Much as I prefer a simplified tax code, it seems to me that we may want to instead add this provision: If more than 50% of your adjusted gross income comes from long-term capital gains, then count it as ordinary income, because that's what it is to them.

      This is the most reasonable solution I've seen so far. It should actually be something more like this, though:

      The first $250k of capital gains is taxed at 15%; any capital gains over and above $250k is taxed at ordinary income rates.

      "Please don't trouble us with the strawman argument of "If the ultra-wealthy have their investments taxed so heavily, then they won't invest." "

      No, in that case what happens is the wealthy move their citizenship to a country that has lower marginal tax rates - so instead of the US government getting income from taxes, that other country does. So yes, they still invest, but the net result is that the US government doesn't ANYTHING. Remember, there are no barriers to the ultra-wealthy moving around.

    4. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by jgtg32a · · Score: 2

      Actually I'd like to add 0% cap gain for the first $10k, that would provide a nice incentive for more people to invest.

    5. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Thelasko · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The reason they pay only 15% on capital gains, is because the corporation already paid taxes on profits. Combining the two taxes creates a total tax between 30% and 50% depending on income.

      --
      One of our competitors trademarked the term "hypothesis". From now on, we will call them "boneheaded ideas".
    6. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by maxume · · Score: 1

      The essence of the proposal is exactly a minimum tax rate on all income over $1 million. People earning most of that $1 million as ordinary income will generally already be paying more than that new minimum rate, it will mostly impact people that would currently pay long term cap gains rates.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    7. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      In that light, creating a new, higher income tax bracket is unlikely to have quite the intended impact that many would like to see: having the ultra-wealthy pay at least as great a percentage of their annual income as taxes as their secretaries, minions, and housekeepers.

      Or they will follow the model of our current Treasury Secretary and just not pay it.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    8. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fine. Just flat tax the whole damn thing and be done with it. Across the board, same tax amount regardless of where the income comes from. One, and only one exception. Those who live below the poverty level of wages do not pay income tax. Period. Federal nor State. This will give the governments incentive to help the lower income bracket increase their pay. ( Or it will cause the government to adjust the poverty level line up )

      Everyone else pays into the system. EVERYONE. You make money in the US of A, you pay taxes on it. Period. Throw that Bible Business into the works too. It ceased being a place of worship and became a tax free haven a long time ago. No deductions, no exemptions. TEN FUCKING PERCENT. Plan your damn spending around the fact your pay will take a 10% hit every payday. End of story. It will greatly simplify the Tax Code, it will make sure everyone pays into the plan ( instead of just 1/2 the damn tax base as it is today ) and the rate is still low enough to attract businesses that ran away due to lower corp tax rates overseas.

      Couple this with some intelligence in Congress ( yeah we can dream ) that we can't spend more than we take in, and we have a winning hand.

    9. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by llZENll · · Score: 1

      MOD UP, It amazes me how many times this fact is ignored. Buffett "only" pays 15% on dividends because the corp has already paid around 35% (specifically 38% last year for berkshire if I recall correctly) meaning that Buffetts real tax rate on his dividends is 50%!

      The tax rate in the USA is what holds our economy back and is very excessive, add up your taxes, they are ludicrous. For me: income 33% (self employed, my effective rate last year), state 7%, property 3%, sales tax 7% for a TOTAL OF 50% !!!!

      If you are not self employed be sure to include your employers contributions to Medicare and SS (usually 6%) as if they weren't paid by them that would be 100% extra salary for you.

    10. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Warren Buffer"???????

      LOLOLOLOLOL. Typing on your iPad are you there, Richie Rich?

    11. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're thinking of Private Equity managing partners, not hedge funds. Hedge funds tend to trade too often to fall into the long-term bracket.

    12. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right, and income tax should be abolished "because the corporation already paid taxes on profits."

    13. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Please don't trouble us with the strawman argument of "If the ultra-wealthy have their investments taxed so heavily, then they won't invest." What else are they going to do with all their extra money?

      You're missing the point. If they are punished for making investments, they won't BE ultra-wealthy, and a lot of smart risk-takers who might become wealthy will likewise not become so. The only way those people who make those capital gains see a dime of that money back (let alone MORE it back than they risked) is if the people in whom they invested grow, hire, and spend in ways that are HEAVILY TAXED. The wealthy investor types are getting back their cash after it has been taxed in several other ways. Penalize them for risking the money and other assets they put into play as other companies are trying to grow, and you absolutely will reduce tax revenue in countless other areas.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    14. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a consultant/contractor, I can average anywhere between 80K in a year and 275K in a year depending upon my willingness to work and drum up contracts. ALL of my AGI comes from hourly rate SALARY. Bleeding me and anything above 250K is only going to tell me to stop working so hard.

      Sure - if my money was some 50% from nothing but investments where I do _nothing_ to earn but let it just accrue electronically in my bank accounts - sure - tax that.
      It's not like I am going to just save it at 0%.

    15. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lucily, this 15% tax benefit is due to end in either 2012 or 2013. At that time, it will go to 20%. IMHO: Should just be treated as regular income.

    16. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by shadow_slicer · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's only true for capital gains from dividends. Capital gains from changes in the share price are only taxed at 15%.

      For this reason many companies do not make a profit. Instead they spend the money on either capital items or investments and pay $0 tax. These uses of the money increase the assets of the company, which is then reflected by a corresponding (sometimes even amplified) increase in the share price. If a stockholder then sells enough stock to make up the difference in price, they effectively pay themselves dividends at a total tax rate of 15%.

      Personally, I think the best way to solve this is to make dividends a before-profit outlay for corporations, and then make all capital gains count as income. Of course, good luck getting something like that implemented...

    17. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The tax rate in the USA is what holds our economy back and is very excessive, add up your taxes, they are ludicrous. For me: income 33% (self employed, my effective rate last year), state 7%, property 3%, sales tax 7% for a TOTAL OF 50% !!!!

      Add up the benefits you get from the government spending that 50% (infrastructure, police & fire departments, national defense, etc.) and compare it to the benefits you get from spending the other 50% (a new pair of shoes and a subscription to Netflix) and then tell me what's ludicrous.

    18. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by buzzn · · Score: 1

      Bollocks. You are implying that the same dollar that the corporation made in profit is taxed twice. It is not. The corporation's dollar in profit stays in the corporation. The individual's capital gains dollar comes from whoever paid a dollar more for the stock once it is sold.

      There is only an indirect relationship between corporate profits and individual capital gains. I can for example own stock in a corporation that made billions in profit yet paid $0 in corporate taxes, that stock may have gone up several hundred percent.

      Some companies pay dividends, which are taxed as capital gains. But that is only a portion of the market. And there is actually no requirement that a dividend be paid on profits; a company could lose money and yet choose to pay a dividend in order to prop up its stock price.

      --
      Join the window installer's union, where prosperity is a brick throw away!
    19. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...corporation already paid taxes on profits.

      Bullsh!t! Berkshire Hathaway, Warren Buffet's company, owes unpaid taxes back to 2003.

    20. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Courageous · · Score: 2

      If you read the details of what Buffet said, and the analysis, this situation is worse than it would first appear. There are plenty of short term trades that by fiat of law are permitted the "long term" investment rate. This includes hedge funds, for example.

      C//

    21. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by chihowa · · Score: 1

      Do you feel like you're being punished for working by being taxed? Then why is being taxed on capital gains punishment? You're saying that at 15%, they're able to become ultra-wealthy, but at 35% they'd be broke and working in fast food or just give up as it isn't worth it. Do you really believe this?

      --
      If you want a vision of the future, imagine a youtube comments section scrolling - forever.
    22. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Owning and selling stocks or stock options has absolutely nothing to do with corporate taxes or taxes on profits, except perhaps to raise or lower the market stock price.

      The only time capital gains may end up taxing something based on corporate profit is with qualifying stock dividends, where the corporation profit is taxed (though many corporations effectively pay no tax) and the individual is taxed on the dividend amount.

      The vast majority of capital gains are stock sales.

    23. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by hedwards · · Score: 1

      No, the reason why they pay 15% of capital gains is because the government needed a bubble to get them out of a recession. It's time we fixed the problem and looked for a more stable solution rather than one that's just kicking the problem down the line.

      It also assumes that they're paying that tax rate, rarely if ever do corporations end up paying that much, and when they do it's usually because they only do business in the US. The largest corporations invest in infrastructure for their businesses outside of the US and book those losses against profits in the US, allowing them to avoid paying any taxes to the US government. What little tax they pay is usually for things like property and B&O where applicable.

    24. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by larkost · · Score: 1

      That only makes sense on dividends or sales of companies... and even then from a twisted perspective. For the vast majority of capital gains (e.g.: stock market gains) that argument is pure hogwash.

    25. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, (ideally) the corporation paid taxes on the profits before disbursing them to investors. But whenever money changes hands, we tax the receiver of the funds. If I pay a housekeeper, for example, I do it with money that I have already paid income tax on, and then she pays income tax on the money she receives. There's no reason to allow those who live on passive income to pay lower tax rates than those who work for their money.

      Also, the capital gains tax does not apply only to shareholders in corporations. For example, if I buy gold and it appreciates in value, the gain in value is the capital gain, on which I will pay capital gains tax. The government did not tax the gold on its profits before charging me the tax. (Which makes sense, as taxes only apply whenever money changes hands.) If I'm able to make my living trading precious metals, I should pay income tax on my income, not a discounted non-progressive rate.

    26. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by crumbz · · Score: 1

      1. According to IRS data, the Fortune 500 paid an average tax rate of 17%.
      2. However, since taxes are merely an input cost, one can argue that corporations do not pay taxes on income. As we saw during the recent government shutdown of the FAA, when the airlines were not required to collect ticket taxes during that period, the airlines raised their prices to the level pre-shutdown and pocketed the difference. Taxes may impact profitability but the taxation is paid by the customer.

    27. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, and when I take the money I already paid taxes on and buy an apple with it, the grocer pays taxes on that money again. That's not double taxation either, since the money is doing different work in both cases.

    28. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by ScentCone · · Score: 0

      Do you feel like you're being punished for working by being taxed?

      Yes. Why? Because I use to work 50 hours a week, and made a given amount of money. I now work about 90-100 hours a week, and make more. But my taxes have gone up per dollar I make. I still have the day job, and its salary. I also make money running my own business on the side. My day job's salary is now taxed at a higher rate than it was before I took on even more work and generate more economic activity than before. I am being punished for doing and producing more.

      You're saying that at 15%, they're able to become ultra-wealthy, but at 35% they'd be broke and working in fast food or just give up as it isn't worth it.

      No, you said that. Some will find it to be worth it, but many will find that having twice as much money taken away after they risk their money to invest in a business is dis-incentive enough, by simple math, to make that sort of risk indeed not worth it. It's a market. People with something to invest split hairs, looking for the smartest place to put that money to work. If you more than double what you take from them when they are smart and make a sound investment, you will be chasing their money and their energy somewhere else. You lose that tax revenue, and you lose the much, much larger tax revenue that is generated by the companies, employess, and customers of those companies that are able to grow through that investment.

      You could tax the annual earnings of everyone who makes $1m a year at a rate of 100% and it would barely put a scratch in the defecit. But slowing down what happens when they invest money (in the way of all of the resulting taxable economic activity) or speeding up all of that activity by working the opposite direction will have a huge impact on the deficit. Regardless, no changes in that area will come close to impacting the debt, compared to reigning in overblown entitlement spending.

      why is being taxed on capital gains punishment?

      Because such taxes only hit people who are smart and do the exact things that make other businesses and employees (who are also taxed) successful. It is a direct dis-incentive to do the exact thing that enables the economy to grow to and put capital where it's most effectively used. If they want to enable companies to grow, they should reduce capital gains taxes, not raise them. Nothing keeps investment money locked up in one place more than taxing the act of moving it from one place to another.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    29. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by ProfessorPillage · · Score: 2

      That makes sense for dividends, which are the shareholders' portion of the corporation's profits, but not for capital gains. The corporation did not pay a tax on the increase of its share price, and property owners did not already pay a tax on the increase in their property value prior to selling that property and paying capital gains tax.

    30. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Great argument for lightly taxing dividends, idiotic argument for taxing capital gains. Profits are, at best, loosely correlated to asset values.

    31. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean the corporation's customers already paid taxes.
      Any tax burden placed on corporations will merely be passed along to consumers.
      So you're advocating quite a regressive tax, in that the lower- and middle-classes will be paying their income taxes along with the corporations' corporate taxes, as they already do, while the wealthy will pay their comparatively small capital gains taxes and also a disproportionally small share of the corporations' corporate taxes.

    32. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the corporation already paid taxes on profits.

      And they also donation the change to the tooth fairy to be handed out to children...

    33. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And? And what? How does this get modded "Insightful"?

      The corp gets paid by its customers (and SHOULD then pay taxes), corp pays the exec for their work (and he SHOULD pay taxes again). And when I pay the guy to fiddle with my car's engine (he pays taxes), I had no choice but to pay him out of MY earnings (which I have to pay taxes on!).

      Cry me a god damned river. Corporations and people living under the same laws is SOOOOooo unfaaaaair waaaaah. Jesus.

    34. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm assuming you are talking about the corporation they have invested in. If so, you are assuming the corporation actually pays 30-50% on their income. As recent news shows with Google, GE, Goldman, that is far from the truth. With all of the deductions and loopholes available to corps their income subject to tax is substantially less then that. Moreover, gains on a corporation's stock, could be related to numerous other factors unrelated to a corporations income which is subject to tax. For example, it might be related to intangible assets like brand name, or IP (which are not taxed at a corporate level).

      As it relates to a company like Berkshire Hathaway, I guess I can understand that you are saying that Berkshire pays taxes on the gains/dividends it recieves first before it distributes any dividends to its shareholders (who also pay taxes on it). But like I said, there are a lot of loopholes and deductions a C-Corp can take to deflate its income below what you would expect.

    35. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by orgenegro · · Score: 1

      I thought all those taxes were passed on to the consumer. Which is it?

    36. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Personally, I think the best way to solve this is to make dividends a before-profit outlay for corporations, and then make all capital gains count as income. Of course, good luck getting something like that implemented...

      Most of those companies are granted limited-liability by the government, so that if the company flares out and dies leaving behind acres of toxic waste seeping towards the river, the dividend-earning shareholders just whistle and walk away. What money-stream pays for the cleanup, now that almost every company is making much much less profit under that system?

      From a before-vs-after perspective, it'll be from taxes on those dividend-receivers, but their memory is going to be short, and within a few years people are going to be complaining that they are being taxed heavily for an "unrelated" purpose.

    37. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seems fair to me. Contribute 30%~50% of ill gotten gains to the good of the country, and you'd still have 50%~70% left.

    38. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The whole point of capital gains tax being lower was to encourage people to do additional investing to help boost businesses and encourage entrepreneurs. Make more money from investments, and you're more likely to put more money back into more investments. It's not like that money just goes nowhere. That money gets pushed to companies that use it to grow and improve. It really does make sense. But people don't want to think of it that way. Yes, those people earn more and more money, but they also put a lot more back into additional investments to continue the trend. You don't get rich just from sitting on your money. The old adage of "spend money to make money" really is true. And spending money on start-ups and small businesses is great for the economy.

    39. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Pop69 · · Score: 0

      Capital gains on traded shares comes from all the gambling on share prices at the stock market.

      It has NOTHING to do with tax on company profits.

      You sir, are fucking idiot or a troll, I can't decide which.

    40. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Okay... Corporation makes profits via their business endeavors, and pays taxes on those profits. Investors make profit via the company's stock, and they pay a reduced tax because the money "has already been taxed".

      The company I work for makes profits via their business endeavors, and pays taxes on those profits. Workers receive a salary from the company, and the workers pay full taxes, even though the money "has already been taxed".

      How is that fair?

    41. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by SoftwareArtist · · Score: 1

      No, the reason has nothing to do with that. The actual reason they only pay 15% is that they successfully lobbied congress (and spread around lots of campaign donations) to get the government to lower their tax rates. Of course, people retroactively came up with justifications for why forms of income that mainly benefit the wealthy should be taxed at lower rates than forms of income that mainly benefit the poor and middle class. But don't mistake that for the real reason. It's nothing but a rationalization. If some other kind of income had been more important to the wealthy, they would have invented a reason to cut taxes on that instead.

      --
      "I'm too busy to research this and form an educated opinion, but I do have time to tell everyone my uninformed opinion."
    42. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This would true if capital gains only occurred after companies paid taxes, but the connection between market value and income tax paid is very weak. Since the crash, lots of companies (GE, your favorite bank) have increased in market value dramatically (thanks to the various bailouts) while paying almost no taxes (thanks to dramatic losses).

    43. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Luminary+Crush · · Score: 2

      So you are saying then that any product who's raw materials have already been taxed and the labor to create the finished product has been taxed shouldn't be taxed? And, the profit made from sale of such widget shouldn't be taxed because it's been taxed earlier in the production chain?

    44. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are basically saying that if some money has ever had any taxes paid... then that money can never be taxed again.

      So if I make some money and I pay taxes on it... and I later hire a maid to clean my house... then she shouldn't have to pay taxes on that money I give her. (I mean legally and not by using "under the table" methods.) If I hire a carpenter to build something onto my house... he won't need to pay taxes on money I give him either. And if we extend that... if I go and buy a new yacht... I don't need to pay taxes on it since I already paid taxes.

      The "corporation already paid taxes" is not an acceptable excuse in the real world. The truth is that all capital gains income needs to be taxed at the same tax rate and level as any other income.

    45. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, thank you for pointing out "double taxation". I forgot, in no other transaction in America is something taxed more then once. Oh, wait, what is that, every transfer of money is taxed and that is how the US raises taxes. Who knew?

    46. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Hatta · · Score: 1

      For me: income 33% (self employed, my effective rate last year), state 7%, property 3%, sales tax 7% for a TOTAL OF 50% !!!!

      You fail math. You can't just add percentages if they are percentages of different things. Income tax is 33% of your income. Sales tax is 7% of what you spend. If you want to add the two, you have to use a factor to correct for what proportion of your income you spend.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    47. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Chowderbags · · Score: 1

      I pay taxes on my income, then pay taxes again as sales taxes. It's not some novel concept that's unique to dividends that money gets taxed as it moves.

    48. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your logic holds for dividends but not for capital gains. Companies don't pay tax on share price increase.

    49. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Lost+Engineer · · Score: 1

      I think the point was that raising income taxes doesn't hit the wealthy as hard as an increase in capital gains. GP is right about that.

    50. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless the corporation has deferred or otherwise nullified their taxes by shifting their income to other countries.

    51. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by beaker8000 · · Score: 2

      The reason why both the corporation and the stock owners are taxed is because they are separate entities. This structure affords stockholders limited liability - stockholders aren't liable for company debts. If you give up limited liability (partnership or sole proprietorship) then you are no different than the firm and you only get taxed once.

      So complaining about double-taxation is disingenuous, considering you choose the corporate form for limited liability.

      Lastly, quoting a corporate tax rate is misleading when many large firms (through tax credits and grants) actually receive money from the federal government, see corporate welfare and the quote from wikipedia below. Of course this doesn't even count the billions to financial companies through bailouts and the fed's zero interest rate policy.

      "In March 2011, The New York Times reported that despite earning $14.2 billion in worldwide profits, including more than $5 billion from U.S. operations, General Electric did not owe taxes in 2010. General Electric had a tax benefit of $3.2 billion."

    52. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by TheEyes · · Score: 1

      Actually this isn't true either. Studies show that the rich don't move to avoid taxes, any more than the middle class or poor do. Maybe you find it surprising, but rich people tend to like a lot of the things middle class people do: clean streets, low crime, working gas/water/electricity, decent weather, a stable government that doesn't erupt in bloody revolt every few years, etc. These things don't exist in ultra-low tax countries.

    53. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah! That's right!
      http://www.forbes.com/2010/04/01/ge-exxon-walmart-business-washington-corporate-taxes.html

    54. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The above comment is correct, a capital gains tax is a double tax. And taxing capital gains would be horrible. I think an increase in the capital gains taxes would likely cost jobs because most investors use their capital gains to reinvest into the market. If they have less to reinvest, then the companies they are investing in have less capital. Less capital means they will not be expanding or hiring new employees. And the rich are the ones that reinvest the most.

    55. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      having the ultra-wealthy pay at least as great a percentage of their annual income as taxes as their secretaries, minions, and housekeepers

      My impression has been that this is precisely what Obama proposes.

    56. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are wrong. The wealthy don't stuff their "extra" money under their mattresses. That extra money is either spent or invested - and that "spent or invested" money is, itself, spent or invested, and so on. That movement of money creates wealth and jobs. If a wealthy person buys a large house, they have bought that house from another person (or the builder of that house who employs people to build that house). The seller of the house then either spends or invests that money, and so on. If a wealthy person buys a $20 million yacht, who do you think builds the yacht? A business that employees people built the yacht. Each successive owner of that yacht receives the money and then invests or spends the money, and so on.

      Think things through completely, and you will see you are completely ignorant of how things really work.

    57. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by microbox · · Score: 2

      Capital gains is different to dividends. Taxing corporations, and then taxing stock dividends is a double tax. Capital gains is about the company value increasing, which is not taxed at all.

      --

      Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
    58. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by cartman · · Score: 1, Informative

      Capital gains on traded shares comes from all the gambling on share prices at the stock market.

      A stock market isn't gambling and has nothing to do with gambling. Just because you say "oh, look, there's chance involved" doesn't mean it's identical to a casino. There's chance involved in surgery, or meteorology, or construction.

      Gambling is creating a risk (rather than distributing it), it's totally random (rather than people using information to try to make prediction), it does not generate any net earnings for the gamblers (unlike investment), it doesn't convey information or allocate resources (unlike investment), it does not involve gamblers even selling things to each other, and on and on. In fact gambling and investment have nothing in common other than chance and money, which gambling also shares with (say) surgery and meteorology and bridge construction. Anyone who says that the stock market is a casino understands nothing about either.

      It has NOTHING to do with tax on company profits.

      It has everything to do with a tax on company profits, since profits ultimately drive all capital gains. There could never be sustained share appreciation without profits and growth of profits. There couldn't even by a bubble.

      You sir, are fucking idiot or a troll, I can't decide which.

      You have absolutely no idea what you're talking about, and you're a child as well.

    59. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just because its stock has gone up does not mean that a corporation has made a profit. The two are only weakly related in cases where corporations pay dividends to their stockholders.

    60. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by TheSync · · Score: 1

      The main reason that Warren Buffer, hedge fund managers, and many of the rest of the ultra-wealthy pay so little in income taxes is that most of their "income" is in the form of long-term capital gains: the appreciation of and sale of investments.

      At the same time, there are plenty of lawyers, doctors, entertainers, and athletes that make over $1 million per year whose income is taxed at normal rates.

      One could also argue that income from long-term capital gains of corporate securities (stocks and bonds) have already had their income reduced by a corporate income tax and sales taxes before they received their cut (taxed individually at capital gains rate). Income from property capital gains has been reduced by property taxes, etc.

    61. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong.

      The proceeds taxed as capital gains don't come from the revenue of the company (those are dividends and they're taxed as ordinary income).
      The proceeds taxed as capital gains come from the sale of the company (literally from the buyer of the stock).

      As such, those proceeds are no more "already taxed" than the pocket money I just used at the hot dog cart (which, of course, was taxed as income to me, and will be taxed as income to the hot dog vendor as well).

    62. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      For this reason many companies do not make a profit. Instead they spend the money on either capital items or investments and pay $0 tax. These uses of the money increase the assets of the company, which is then reflected by a corresponding (sometimes even amplified) increase in the share price.

      I don't think that works, at least not without some kind of loophole that you haven't mentioned. Acquiring an asset is a capital expenditure, not an expense. Capital expenditures are not deducted from income, so you cannot use this as a tool to reduce your net profits. Buying a $10 widget does not reduce the company's profits by $10.

      Now, the depreciation of an asset is an expense, so if your $10 widget wears out in 10 years, then you get to enter a $1 expense for each of 10 years to reflect your reduced valuation of the widget. This will reduce your profits, but it still doesn't do what you suggest. If you turn around and sell your widget to a widget-fancier for $8 after 5 years, when the books record a $5 valuation of the item, then you must also record that you have realized a $3 income on the sale, which will therefore increase your profits by $3. You will have managed a net reduction in your profits of $2, which is exactly equal to the cash you lost by buying and selling the widget. But there is no point in this -- you might as well make a charitable donation of $2 which would accomplish the same thing.

      So buying a lot of nonproductive useless stuff simply to warehouse it and boost your assets is not a good strategy. If the stuff does not depreciate, then your taxes remain the same and you have only succeeded in converting cash to useless stuff. But if the stuff does depreciate, then you will only reduce your profits by an amount equal to the loss you realize upon sale of the stuff. In neither case will prospective shareholders value your company more highly than if you'd just kept the cash, and you'll only reduce your taxes if you lose money on the sale, which is worse than being taxed on that price difference anyway.

    63. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NO!

      Stock holder gets paid by either divident or stock value appreciation. Divident is affected by the corporate tax. The stock appreciation has NOTHING to do with corporation tax rate. Stock appreciates when business improves and makes more profits and expand, regardless of the tax rate. There is NO doube taxation.

    64. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by plurgid · · Score: 1

      > What else are they going to do with all their extra money? Save it at ~0% interest?

      create jobs overseas.
      and that's the other half of the problem.
      Ross Perot was right about the "Sucking sound" ... it was from China, not Canada

    65. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yea' the company I work for already payed taxes, so I should not have to pay income tax right?
      I mean it was already taxed?

      WTF? you do not understand, or willfully lie about the way the system works.

    66. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Corporations like GE, Right?

    67. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by martin-boundary · · Score: 1
      If a corporation is to be an independent legal person/entity, then it should pay its taxes independently of the effect on shareholders. Otherwise let's radically cut corp rights down.

      What you're suggesting is that it's all right for two neighbours to pay only half of their tax bill each, because together the sum amounts to about one full tax contribution.

      The double taxation argument is bogus. Let's properly separate the treatment of shareholders and their companies.

    68. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Capital gains, not dividends.

    69. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      What does corporate tax have to do with capital gains? Oh yeah thats right, nothing. The more taxes a corporation pays means the company makes more more, and the generally means the stock goes up, which means the owner has a higher capital gain. But these two things aren't related. IT doesn't equate to "50% tax"

    70. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      That might be relevant if all capital gain was from dividends, but that's not always the case (it's not even the most common case!)

    71. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Thelasko · · Score: 1

      The company I work for makes profits via their business endeavors, and pays taxes on those profits. Workers receive a salary from the company, and the workers pay full taxes, even though the money "has already been taxed".

      Your salary comes out before taxes. It's considered an expense, since it's the cost of doing business, and isn't taxed.

      --
      One of our competitors trademarked the term "hypothesis". From now on, we will call them "boneheaded ideas".
    72. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Guaranteed they won't be investing the extra percentage that they will be taxed on their capital gains. The government will pull that money out if the investment pool, effectively shrinking the economic growth opportunities.

    73. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason for a 15% had nothing to do with "combined tax" as reported above, which is just a "game" people play to say their taxes are too high. It was "Stimulus" for rich people to put more money into businesses. And keep the stock market hight

      http://www.ncpa.org/pub/st307

      "In May 2003, President George W. Bush signed into law his investment tax cut. This package included accelerated reductions in income tax rates, a cut in the dividend tax from 39.6 percent to 15 percent and a reduction in the capital gains tax from 20 percent to 15 percent. The purpose of the Bush tax cut was to provide an incentive for more domestic capital investment, more business spending and a turnaround in the stock market, which lost $6 trillion in value after the technology bubble burst in 1999-2000."

    74. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by chihowa · · Score: 1

      But my taxes have gone up per dollar I make.

      Your entire argument seems to be centered around this concept. Either you're implying an interpretation of tax brackets that is simply false or you're implying an interpretation of human behavior that is at odds with all of human history.

      I'm sure you know this, but while your taxes go up per dollar you make, they only do so in discrete sets. Making more money will lead to paying more tax and paying a higher average per dollar rate, but you will still net more income than if you made less money.

      Which leads to the second implication: if given the chance, people will choose to earn more money. I am unfamiliar with this hypothetical person you speak of who refuses to invest his money or take a promotion because, while his net income will increase, it won't increase as much as it could have (if the rules of the game were inexplicably different).

      While I'm firmly on your side in the opposition to overtaxation (and much of taxation in general), I don't follow your arguments that increasing tax rates would disincentivize investing or working for money. As long as the net income is positive (and we're talking ~35% taxes here, not 90%+) there is still significant return and incentive to invest (or work). If the choices are invest and make your money grow or not invest on principle to oppose taxation, the former is always going to be the overwhelmingly popular choice.

      --
      If you want a vision of the future, imagine a youtube comments section scrolling - forever.
    75. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting, I see what you mean.

      Thanks for answering!

  50. I'd love to be able to pull sh*t like this by RogueWarrior65 · · Score: 1

    I remember going to the bankruptcy auctions of several dot-com companies and thinking: Damn, there are a sh*load of Aeron chairs here...and a powered paraglider no doubt the CEO was using. I'd love to be able to say to my investors and customers "Gee, we bought all this cool stuff but we don't have the money to pay for it so we're going to have to double our prices and force our customers to pay for it and we're going to issue more stock and force investors to buy it. Yeah, that's it. That's the ticket."

    Old & busted: Spending bill aka tax hike.
    New hotness: Deficit reduction bill aka tax hike.

    And then there's this so-called jobs bill which btw, hasn't even been introduced on the House floor. This is the mother of all adjustable-rate mortgages (ARM). Offer a teaser rate for 16 months and then skyrocket the rate. Yeah, that's it. That's the ticket.

  51. the harder i work, the more i get taxed by lecheiron · · Score: 1

    so much for the incentive to excel

    1. Re:the harder i work, the more i get taxed by maxume · · Score: 1

      The key provision being announced is a tax on investment income for people that have income of more than $1 million a year.

      People that work hard for their millions should not see rate increase from the increase in the investment income tax rate.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    2. Re:the harder i work, the more i get taxed by m50d · · Score: 1

      So if you want that extra $10k you have to work $14k's worth harder rather than $13k's worth. Sounds like you've got that incentive right there.

      --
      I am trolling
    3. Re:the harder i work, the more i get taxed by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      And geez look the more you get taxed, the more money you take home!

  52. GOOD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since this site hates anyone making money I'm sure you all will be worshiping this stuff. This is the end of the US economy, call me an idiot all you want but this is class warfare you fools, get an education if you don't understand. Socialist fools, America was the alternative to this uneducated stuff, if we wanted this we could have stayed in Europe.

    1. Re:GOOD by Beelzebud · · Score: 1

      Look up the tax rate of the 50's, and then tell me how the nation didn't implode back then. You are an uninformed jackass.

    2. Re:GOOD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since this site hates anyone making money I'm sure you all will be worshiping this stuff. This is the end of the US economy, call me an idiot all you want but this is class warfare you fools, get an education if you don't understand. Socialist fools, America was the alternative to this uneducated stuff, if we wanted this we could have stayed in Europe.

      Oh the tragedy.
      Lets see, europeans have a public heath system that works, they have a public school and university system that gives you a high level education without sending you into debt for the rest of your life.
      We don't imprision 1% of our society for stupid mistakes. We don't privatise the shit out of everything so that some corportation can grow its profits on the citizens back. We recognize that the concept of common good (public good) is real. Yes we pay higher taxes, but you know what, in the end its worth it. The end game is to construct a a society where everybody lives normally. We have rich, middle class and poor. But not to the incredibile extent you have in the US.
      We don't spend hundreds of billions of $ to fight useless wars against a non existant enemy, money which could be put to more productive use.
      Socialism is not comunism you stupid fool. Stop being brainwashed.

  53. Oh, good by roman_mir · · Score: 1, Redundant

    I am not going to say much on this topic, just note another step in the wrong direction by Marxist government.

  54. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by siride · · Score: 2

    Poor often don't pay federal income taxes, but they do pay other taxes, and considerably more, relative to what they make and the wealth they have, than the middle and upper classes.

  55. GM by Sasayaki · · Score: 1

    How come GM can make $50 billion of dollars in profit and pay zero tax? AND receive bailout money? (source = http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/11/03/gm-tax-break-could-be-wor_n_778300.html)

    Extra taxes on the very wealthy is all very well, but it's kinda like fixing the dripping tap in the bathroom while your swimming pool disgorges hundreds of liters an hour out into the backyard, flooding everything, killing all the plants, ruining the carpet in the rear of the house and drawing the ire of your neighbors who suffer for it too.

    And then claiming on top of it all fixing the tap is class warfare.

    --
    Check out my sci-fi book "Lacuna" at http://goo.gl/MVxX8
    1. Re:GM by llZENll · · Score: 1

      Well there are a few ways, if that 50B was foreign income they do not have to pay taxes on it. Also the amount of tax revenue collected from corporations is tiny, only 12% of all taxes http://www.taxpolicycenter.org/briefing-book/background/numbers/revenue.cfm, even if you doubled the taxes of corporations you would not do anything for revenues or the deficit and it would bankrupt most companies. As for taxing the rich it is worthless, even if you tax the rich 100% you are not going to hardly put a dent in the deficit, the only way to do it meaningfully is to raise taxes on the middle class, which are by far and away the largest tax source. Again all of these solutions are going about it wrong, we do not need higher taxes for anyone, we need to cut spending across the board 50-75%, and lower taxes for everyone.

    2. Re:GM by euroq · · Score: 1

      As for taxing the rich it is worthless, even if you tax the rich 100% you are not going to hardly put a dent in the deficit, the only way to do it meaningfully is to raise taxes on the middle class, which are by far and away the largest tax source.

      Uh, no. You are either misinformed or exaggerating. If you tax the rich 100% you will get trillions. The upper class of the US own most of the wealth of this country. In 2007, the top 20% of the country owned 85% of the wealth. I'm not saying you should tax anyone 100%, but you are way off about the middle class vs. upper class. How can the largest tax source be the middle class when they own less than 15% of the wealth of this country?

      --
      Just because the U.S. is a republic does not mean it is not a democracy. Democracy/republic are not mutually exclusive.
  56. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You sound ignorantly Teabagger.

    And you just sound ignorant.

  57. No. No. Nooo. Nooooooooo! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are no wealthy people, only job creators, damnit!

  58. still an income, not a wealth tax by PoochieReds · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Note that this is still an income tax -- not a wealth tax. Those who are already wealthy can and will always game this such that they report little income, thereby preserving their wealth. If necessary, they'll just keep their money offshore.

    If he had any sense, he'd offer an amnesty to the wealthy. Allow them to repatriate their funds from overseas at a reduced tax rate so that money comes back to the US. The money the treasury makes on that smaller percentage would still be more than the zero they get from it today.

    1. Re:still an income, not a wealth tax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with that is that it encourages people to dodge taxes. If there's a recurring amnesty event that people can opt into, then the amnesty rate IS the effective rate. So when people say that the wealthy don't really pay taxes, they mean that the wealthy only pay "reduced tax rates". Because of schemes like this. Well, this would be for wealthy people that are blatantly breaking the law, there are still plenty of legal loopholes too.

      It's incredibly short-sighted in a time when we need some long term planning.

    2. Re:still an income, not a wealth tax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a small business co-owner, wealth taxes actually may be more detrimental to certain small businesses than an increase in personal income tax. Our business resides in a county that charges taxes on property owned by the business (they also tax the residents for their property, including vehicles), which includes all of its inventory. We pay a much larger tax (due to the business being a retail store) than a small consulting firm that brings in the same amount of money each year. So, if you have no inventory and are only a service type business, you'd make out like a bandit on a wealth/property tax system. However, for people selling real goods, you're royally screwed.

    3. Re:still an income, not a wealth tax by anyGould · · Score: 1

      If he had any sense, he'd offer an amnesty to the wealthy. Allow them to repatriate their funds from overseas at a reduced tax rate so that money comes back to the US. The money the treasury makes on that smaller percentage would still be more than the zero they get from it today.

      They tried that, remember? They grabbed some cheap tax rate, and then promptly started hoarding even more money overseas, knowing that they can now just wait for the next "tax free day" to come around.

    4. Re:still an income, not a wealth tax by jmottram08 · · Score: 1
      Why would people do this at all? Offshore = no taxes, diversified wealth.

      What is one reason to bring the money back to USD? The amazing interest earned? Inflation?

    5. Re:still an income, not a wealth tax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They tried that, it didn't do squat. Not one job. In fact, it encouraged them to move more work offshore.

      Big corps move profits offshore and losses to the US. Then they expect to get amnesty for those profits every few years.

      Corporations are by definition un-American. They owe no allegiance to the US or it's citizens.

      Funny, the word of the day to submit this post was "imported".

    6. Re:still an income, not a wealth tax by sjames · · Score: 1

      While we're at it, we can offer amnesty to people who knocked over the liquor store so they can pay their fair income taxes on the proceeds.

      Or we could put both groups in prison (they can share a cell) and take the money owed.

    7. Re:still an income, not a wealth tax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even more, its an income, not a capital gains tax I believe. It likely would not manage to even touch WArren Buffet's earnings on Cap/Gains.

    8. Re:still an income, not a wealth tax by Lost+Engineer · · Score: 2

      There's no need to tax wealth. We already tax the profits from wealth as either income or capital gains.

      As far as stashing money overseas, I would argue the whole tax code needs a reboot. Too many incentives, disincentives, and loopholes have been created by special interests over the years.

    9. Re:still an income, not a wealth tax by kevinNCSU · · Score: 2

      If you are already wealthy and retired, and aren't earning more money, why do you believe the federal government has a right to continue to tax money they already taxed once when you first earned it?

  59. Class warfare by rasmusbr · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "Class warfare may make for really good politics but it makes for rotten economics."

    Hey, that's actually true! Why didn't you shout out during the Bush administration?

    Tax cuts for the rich, huge public deficit, enormous public debt, continued private indebting of the middle class, withering away of the public school system and other government systems that the American middle class and lower classes depend on...

    Terrible acts of class war that lead to terrible economics, especially in the long term when the debt is going to be paid off, or alternatively when the US decides to default.

    So you're right. Of course, if you don't want a class war the first thing to do is to remember to not start one.

  60. Finally, they should have proposed this long ago by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since Obama took office, he's been wanting to raise taxes on "millionaires and billionaires", but Republicans have been able to shut him down by arguing that his tax changes would affect people making significantly less. The Dems try to rally the votes to affect one end of the spectrum, while the Repubs argue for the support of the other. By adding a new bracket, they're splitting the category. Democrats get their revenue increase and Republicans get to show they fought for the small-business owner. If Obama had tried to create the new bracket instead of using the old "it only affects millionaires and billionaires" argument, he could have had his increase back in '09.
    I remember hearing about a poll that asked whether the tax rates on the extreme top end, >1 mil/yr, should be raised, and over 90% of people supported it. Even the people who would be directly affected by such a tax increase overwhelmingly supported it.

  61. Reflections of Paul Ryan's Notion of Class Warfare by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Number of households in the United States filing tax returns: 140,494,127

    Number of households in the United States filing tax returns with incomes of $1,000,000 or more: 236,883

    Percentage of households in the United States filing tax returns with incomes of $1,000,000 or more: 0.19959471529%

    Percentage of households in the United States filling tax returns with incomes of less than $1,000,000: 99.80040528471%

    Number of people in the US living at or below the poverty line in 2001: 34,570,000

    Number of people in the US living at or below the poverty line in 2010: 46,200,000

    Percentage of US population living at or below the poverty line in 2001: 12.1%

    Percentage of US population living at or below the poverty line in 2010: 15.1%

    Of those living at or below the poverty line in 2010, the percentage that are 18 years old or younger: 35.5%

    Of those living at or below the poverty line in 2010, the number that are 18 years old or younger: 16,401,000

    Total number of people living in the United States, as of September 19, 2011: 312,204,000

    Maximum number of people living in the United States who would be affected by President Obama’s proposal to impose a minimum tax rate on those earning more than $1 million a year : 450,000

    Highest possible percentage of people living in the United States who would be affected by President Obama's proposal to impose a minimum tax rate on those earning more than $1 million a year: 0.144136526118%

    Number of people in the United States who would not be affected by this tax increase: 311,754,000

    Lowest possible percentage of people living in the United States who would not be affected by President Obama's proposal to impose a minimum tax rate on those earning more than $1 million a year: 99.855863473882%

    All stats derived by me from Census.gov using 2010 and 2011 census data, and from IRS.gov data using 2009 data, the most recent year for which reporting, especially Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) information, was available.

    The first person to invoke Census.gov or IRS.gov conspiracy theories will receive my 1st Annual Stannous Fedora Trophy. Please reply with your mailing address, so I'll know where to send this very special award.

  62. I'd start giving it away by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If I was rich, and suddenly I "owed" half (or more) of my yearly earnings to the elite who run the business of government (notice I didn't say "the people"), I'd start giving it away to charity immediately. And I'd make damn sure to give away enough to keep myself under that arbitrary bracket.

    We are living under the most expensive, most powerful government AND world empire (with military bases in some 150 countries) in the history of organized coercion. There is no way in hell they don't have enough money passing through their greasy hands. The problem is precisely the opposite: they have too much. It's almost laughably obvious, yet somehow they have diverted the attention away from the problem (runaway spending) and put the blame on the rich? Yeah, I'll believe that as soon as you can force me to swallow the pill (never).

  63. Only Thing Being Taxed Here by Greyfox · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Is my patience.

    Goddamn Republicans beating the same fucking drum they've been beating for 10 years "Lower taxes and remove regulations so corporations can compete!" Ignoring the fact that that's what got us into this mess to begin with.

    And Goddamn Democrats incapable of showing anything resembling leadership. Hook up that vagisil IV drip because they're just a bunch of vaginas.

    Vote them out. Vote them all out. And keep doing it until we find some representatives who are more interested in solving the nation's problems than playing political games with American lives as the pieces.

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    1. Re:Only Thing Being Taxed Here by Lost+Engineer · · Score: 1

      Um we did vote them out. We voted out some Demopubs and got some Republocrats How's that two party system workin for ya?

    2. Re:Only Thing Being Taxed Here by Thaelon · · Score: 1

      I totally agree with your sentiments. The percentage of American citizens that are millionaires is something like 0.3%, yet the percentage of elected representatives that are millionaires is about 40%. I think there should be a law that - given how important wealth is in our society - mandates that the income percentages of representatives match those of its populace. Then we might actually have enough people in there who care about the middle class and the poor to do something for them.

      And Goddamn Democrats incapable of showing anything resembling leadership. Hook up that vagisil IV drip because they're just a bunch of vaginas.

      I do not think that is the issue. Rather, that republican and democrat is to the wealthy what good cop and bad cop are to the police. That is, they're both working for the same side; the republicans as advocates, the democrats as purposely ineffectual opposition. That way the masses are kept placid by the illusion that we have a representative democracy and that it's not all controlled by one faction. When, if you ignore what they all say, and pay attention only to what is done or not done, we have a plutarchy. In theory we could just vote them all out. In theory, the next generation of pics could just develop wings and fly.

      --

      Question everything

    3. Re:Only Thing Being Taxed Here by Greyfox · · Score: 1

      In my state there are usually 4 or 5 different parties running for seats, up to and including Congress. I usually vote for one of them. I guess I'll have to vote harder.

      --

      I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    4. Re:Only Thing Being Taxed Here by IMightB · · Score: 1

      I 100% agree with you. I also like to add that allowing Corps to spend unlimited amounts of money in politics is really going to F up elections. Worse the shell (Shill) groups that spring up are pretty much completely unregulated. It started with Swiftboat Veterans and got worse from there. It'll get much much worse from here on out. With Corporations controlling/buying both parties, I simply don't see how we (as a country) can get off this treadmill to hell. I think that the first step would be to get laws to not recognize Corps as "a legal person" because they simply aren't. Next, severely curtail the amounts that they are allowed to spend on politics and make political contributions 100% disclosed and transparent.

      If you're a Republican that isn't super wealthy, you're getting screwed by your own party Overlords. If you're a Democrat, well you're a Democrat, they simply can't get their act together to save anyone. I'm a registered Independent and I think/thought that Obama has/had potential to be pretty decent Pres. He started out by trying to be moderate and giving the parties a chance to cooperate, they couldn't. The D's are failing him and the R's are basically dick-slapping him in the face every chance they get. The two party system is simply killing America. In closing I'd like to add that Republicans are the only Party that I can think of that makes Democrats look good.

    5. Re:Only Thing Being Taxed Here by IMightB · · Score: 1

      Yup and the next election cycle we'll vote out the Repulocrats and vote in some Demopub's. The circle continues....

    6. Re:Only Thing Being Taxed Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, but ever increasing government expenditures are the source of the problem. The problem is that the government is spending $1.5T more than its revenue. It needs to stop spending - if you feed it more money then it will spend more and want even more later. Smaller, limited government is what is needed. The large government with the giant budget didn't do its regulatory job and that it what got us in to this mess. Yet everyone involved in government gets their full salary, including benefits, and a defined benefit pension. The big spending government even gave the CDO/mortgage looters fat bonuses from your tax dollars. They even indebted future generations to pay for it. Wanting even more government is just stupid. Believing that more government means more people watching out for you interests is just stupid. I'd rather keep more of my money and just have a smaller, more basic government.

    7. Re:Only Thing Being Taxed Here by Beeftopia · · Score: 1

      We have government of the highest bidder, by the highest bidder, for the highest bidder.

    8. Re:Only Thing Being Taxed Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree 100%. I usually vote for the Democrat in most elections, but it doesn't really matter since they'll just succumb to any demands the Republicans make. The Democrats need to grow a pair and stand up for what they (supposedly) believe in.

  64. IIt all depends on whose ox is being gored! by wfstanle · · Score: 1

    I only have one question for all who cry "class warfare". Where are all those cries when programs that benefit only the wealthy at the expense of the poor are proposed. Class warfare isn't just a one way street, it goes both ways. You may say that benefits that favor the rich will "trickle down" and create jobs but we all know that most of the jobs created are in China and India. If job creation is the goal, why not tie any benefits to actual DOMESTIC job creation. If DOMESTIC jobs are not created, no tax cuts for you. If you cut DOMESTIC jobs, your taxes should go up.

    1. Re:IIt all depends on whose ox is being gored! by haruchai · · Score: 1

      Ah, "trickle-down economics", the golden shower of wealth redistribution ( or not, as is typically the case). How about not pissing in my face and telling me it's raining jobs and money?

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
  65. .... right... by smash · · Score: 1

    OK... much as people hate the tall poppies, guess what happens when you give them massive disincentives to operate in your jurisdiction? They leave and go make their money elsewhere. They take their jobs with them.

    This is not the solution - much as the average joe doesn't like it, rich people operating their business in your country provide jobs.

    Tax less, stop removing the disincentives to employ people over there, and the economy will actually start producing things and making money. Rather than relying on borrowed money from China to provide bunk GDP "growth" that measures debt-funded spending on goods imported from overseas.

    However, it is no doubt popular with the voters.

    Good luck america, with leadership like this, you'll need it.

    --
    I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    1. Re:.... right... by pnuema · · Score: 1

      BULLSHIT. If they want to leave, let them leave. Other people will compete for the business they left behind. The fact of the matter is that the vast majority of US executives DON'T WANT TO LIVE IN CHINA, AND WILL NOT LEAVE. You must think we are all stupid.

    2. Re:.... right... by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1
      Of course, the end result of that game is that we transform into a third world country.

      If we don't pay workers here third world wages, then the companies will then move to the third world. If we have anything else but the lowest possible cost, which in some instances is brought about by the third world country subsidizing the cost to make it artificially low, then they will leave.

      It's a race to the bottom, and doom.

      But wait a second. If Americans are to be reduced to third world wages, then who is going to buy the goods produced?

      And there lies the problem. There is no sense of morality in the present situation. And certainly no sense of future - but that's another subject. And without a sense of morality, the companies doing this will simply extract the nation's wealth, and leave us a pretty empty shell. It's like a return to the late 1800's. Although in this case, perhaps like some South American countries.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    3. Re:.... right... by JustSomeProgrammer · · Score: 1

      Because cutting taxes for the rich over the past few years has created a hell of alot of jobs right?

    4. Re:.... right... by St.Creed · · Score: 1

      Rich people do not provide jobs because they feel like it. They provide them when they earn money on them. Taxes are raised on money earned, usually, so shouldn't be a huge disincentive to investment. You will always have more money after earning it and deducting expenses, and paying tax, than before.

      As a freelancer, I grumble when paying taxes of course, but still: paying more tax is good because it means I have a higher profit. Even if I hate it :)

      --
      Therefore, by the (faulty) logic you're using, you're just a cow with a keyboard - osu-neko (2604)
    5. Re:.... right... by smash · · Score: 1

      Anyone who wants to make money will leave as soon as they get big enough. Where the execs live has absolutely ZERO to do with where they have their factories and labour force.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
  66. Re:Welcome to drudgedot, again... by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

    Eh, there's no conservatives. Everyone is nuts.

    "Taxing the Rich" is really code, anyway. Here we are actually taxing "the rich," but often the argument hides the separation between "the rich" and "businesses." The past decade or two have centered around "Business as The Rich" politics: insurance companies, oil companies, Wal-Mart, etc, have the money we need to support everyone else. That sort of tax structure is really taxing "The Poor," because we just basically reduce the production capability of the economy--destroying wealth, thus reducing the availability of jobs. It seems that just in the past year or so we've moved to "People with Money as The Rich," possibly because the other model is better for setting up a political climate where, say, socialized healthcare seems viable (The Government will make those evil, rich insurance companies and health care providers pay for it, so it's okay), but I only see a huge blunder for that specific argument--I don't see how the politicians leveraged that political portrayal, so much as just stumbled along and cried until they got their way.

    I'm more concerned with controlling businesses than taxing the shit out of them. The government needs to put dynamic but sensible market-driven controls on things like living expenses and tuition. The problem is this is extremely hard to work out. Full communism fails because we can't just dictate that a widget or an apartment or a year of tuition will cost so many dollars and expect shit to work; but full capitalism fails for the same reasons: college degrees are such an important commodity and instant money is so easy to get that tuition is "whatever the fuck we feel like charging" (and create a financial nightmare for students), while landlords raise prices when they think people with more money are willing to live there (regardless of actual operating expense--a $600 apt is a $1200 apt if someone will pay $1200 for it).

    These kinds of activities are bad for the economy. Restricting landlords for example--say by strong tax incentives and strong tax penalties to create a big profit gap to jump--would put more money in the economy and lower the poverty line. Let's say a landlord company can operate reasonably at 15% rental income above operating expense--if it takes $100 to run, you can make $115. Isolate this to areas (say zip code) with limited grouping (maybe 3 plus remainder, i.e. you can have groups of 3 3 3 5 but not 3 3 3 6 or 3 3 4 4). The landlord will do class separation: he'll decide that these apartments are more expensive (profit) while these other apartments are less expensive, to keep the poor away from the middle class--trust me, they hate each other anyway.

    Seems legit, right?

    Except, at 15%, maybe the landlord has enough money to stave off odd fluctuations--and hell we have insurance for that, which is an operating expense--and to save up some coffers. Great, but what about buying that other building? Do we just give them back their interest in taxes? Then they won't care for a low-interest loan, and the banks will give high-interest loans to ream the government in the ass! Do we let them keep the interest as an expense? Then they can buy (and sell) a bunch of properties and run rent high, reaming their tenants! What about when they sell a building? Invest their money? Surely we can't cut that off their "expenses"--I'm not ready to commit to a "Your tenants share in your good investment strategy!" bill, if you can make 7.5% off your coffers then you can keep it on top of the 15% profits from rent.

    It's complex. You don't want to dictate onerous shit onto businesses--or tax them to hell--but you can't let them run free. There are definite advantages to something like the above, or similar for college tuition (for books it's easy: mandate that all college courses must supply any graded material and allow the use of any text, thus previous editions or BETTER texts may be used). You have to not collapse or stall the busine

  67. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's very likely that percentage-wise, you pay much more in taxes than millionaires and billionaires. That's what Warren Buffet is on about. Not whether you pay taxes or not.

  68. We're in TWO WARS. by Beelzebud · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's about time the rich "share the sacrifice". First nation in history to give tax cuts to the rich, during a time of war. And some of you want to whine about class warfare? You're damn right it is, and the rich have been waging it on the rest of us for 30 years.

    1. Re:We're in TWO WARS. by Reservoir+Penguin · · Score: 1

      Well, according to some statistics in a post above, "the rich", those making a million or more are only 0.14% of the population. So they ain't the ones who voted Bush into the White House. It's poor and middle class who started the war, so let them pay for it.

      --
      US-UK-Israel: The real Axis of Evil
  69. Difficulty of Comparing 'Numbers' by BoRegardless · · Score: 1

    Many comments have noted comparisons with the past as if a simple comparison establishes a rule, but very few are true. Any time a programmer or engineer wants to make an honest calculation he wants it to be on solid fact.

    No politician or journalist has put forth a key HARD FACT to put INCOME & TAX issues in perspective. Why? What is the total tax, license & fee take out of the economy by all forms of government over time? Last time I heard it is over 50%.

    Want it to be even WORSE? Add to that the cost of all forms of regulation compliance.

    Are we serfs working for a dictatorial government that is now the ruling class with salaries 2-3 times that of their privates sector counterparts?

  70. Honest Answer by ukemike · · Score: 1

    Once the wealth accumulates to the top only, how will the economy survive without spending by the middle and lower classes? Won't a lot of business just shutdown because people don't have money to spend?

    You ask the question like this is something that might happen in the future. But really you have described exactly what has been going on for 30 years and exactly the results that we are suffering from today.

    --
    -- QED
    1. Re:Honest Answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The economy is a feedback loop with money cycling back and forth between different groups. In general, the Gross Domestic Product GDP are maximized when everyone is optimally employed. However, company profits are maximized when the difference between the selling price and the cost to buy/make something multiplied by the volume of items produced and sold is maximized. I believe the "Free Trade" agreements which did not take into account "the cost of living differentials", "environmental protection differentials", and "the fiduciary responsibility of the corporate leaders to maximize profits for the shareholders regardless of any other concern" are responsible for much of the transference of the wealth from the middle class to the rich over the last 20- 30 years. This has caused a downward pressure on salary and wages of middle class jobs in the USA. The government wants to keep spending at the same or higher rate, but that the middle class no longer gets enough money to pay the same taxes. The government's job is to make sure everyone stays optimally employed which maximizes the total wealth. If the government fails to keep everyone optimally employed, the unemployed person's job is to figure out how to modify the government to become fully employed. The government could provide a disincentive for this to occur by requiring the rich to pay for the government to hire the unemployed person and for any reduction in tax revenue associated with the lessening of employment.

  71. But what nobody seems to notice or discuss is.... by Mike · · Score: 1

    inflation.

    The unstated policy of the Federal Reserve and the past umpteen administrations is to debase our currency in order to pay off debts more cheaply. Heck, the value of the dollar has lost about 95% of its value since 1913, and about 25% in the last decade alone. So as this continues, we'll all ultimately become millionnaires, but that money won't buy very much. And this "new tax rate for millionnaires" that all you are supporting will apply to YOU.

  72. Re:Welcome to drudgedot, again... by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

    But it isn't "class warfare" because it is Obama sticking it to the rich!

    --
    Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
  73. Re:But what nobody seems to notice or discuss is.. by Beelzebud · · Score: 1

    Let us know when it flops to less than 99% of the population making less than 1 million a year.

  74. The root of our revenue problem... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Everyone should pay income taxes, but 40+% pay nothing and many of those actually make money off the tax system. This is the result of how politicized our tax system has become. It is used to redistribute wealth by shifting most of the tax burden to the top few percent, and it is used for social engineering by rewarding specific behaviors (and now by penalizing others!) . Squeezing more from those who are successful won't fix our revenue problem- there just aren't enough of them and the economy will suffer from even less liquidity. The solution is a pro-business agenda (more taxpayers) and a minimum positive tax rate. If you only make 16K, then maybe it's only a couple percent but everyone who earns needs to be paying into the system. Most credits need to be eliminated and income taxes just need to be as simple as sales taxes. Being pro-business is no longer an option- we are seriously out of money.

    Lastly, all this extra-Constitutional shit the Federal government is into needs to be scaled back or eliminated without a Constitutional Amendment. Let states provide services to the same people who are taxed to provide it. As it is, we've got money flowing all over the place which destroys the accountability of these programs.

  75. Artificial modality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lot of stupid discussion here.

    Tax rates are based on the multi-modality of income n the United States. Think of a series of normal curves, defined by income in the X and number of tax payers in the Y, each one shorter and wider than the preceding curve and you will have an idea of how the various tax brackets are conceived of. Now Obama wants to toss out the modality identification and use political identification of tax brackets. If you want to see how these are defined check out the tax tables for 2010. At the end of the book you will find definitions of the 6 tax bracket groups. The group with the highest income level has the least number of people in it and pays the largest percentage of taxes.

    It really wouldn't be that difficult to identify the other modalities, incomes and income ranges and then create different tax rates for the other modalities. It would be expensive to define and pass the law defining them and probably worth it.

    If you check out pages 36 & 37 of the 1040 instruction form (2010) you can read about capital gains tax. Right now the tax on capital gains is 15% because Congress believed people living off their investments were retired and wanted to encourage people to invest for retirement. What Congress needs to do is identify the income modalities for capital gains and create a scaled tax rate similar to that for income. They could also create a "loophole" where people over 55 could pay 15% on the first 100K of their capital gains income, which would address the original intention of Congress.

    Yes, it would chase the rich out of the United States. That wouldn't bother me, the States have always been a nation of the middle class and the current culture favors the increasing gap between the rich and the middle class. Check out the statistics on income and income modalities if you want to, they are on line at bea.gov, gpoaccess.gov and irs.gov.

  76. But middle class is already in "strategic retreat" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, if it's "class warfare", then the middle and lower class has been in full-out strategic retreat for about the last 2 decades, as the rich have been getting just about everything they want (i.e. tax cuts, without regard to what the impact will be on deficits and debt). I mean, sheesh, Bush and the congress/senate in power at the time basically cut taxes (good) without any real effort to cut spending to match (bad). They literally said "deficits don't matter" (Cheney specifically said this). Then it piled up for about a decade into a critical problem.

    What's the alternative? Slash and burn government services even more? At the time when cutting government spending risks economic impact too? We of the middle and lower class are deeply sorry for even suggesting that maybe we might negotiate a better arrangement, or for asking the rich to give the same historical share of their income as they used to provide before someone gave out a premature tax cut without corresponding spending cuts. There's been a "tax holiday" for 10 years, and government didn't magically get smaller. It's time to cut spending AND pay more.

  77. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Yeah, as someone who grew up in a work-class family that managed to climb to the upper middle class/lower upper class (or whatever you want to call it) I'm going to quote my dad (who started his own company which ended up becoming fairly successful): "Sure we worked hard but we were lucky too". That pretty much sums up his views on his own success, he worked hard but he was lucky to be in the right place at the right time with the right idea...

    On a personal level I've actually had some issues this experience of upward mobility, I grew up in a working class neighborhood, just about all my old friends are the children of people who worked blue collar jobs, I knew I had to work hard to make anything of myself and despised the idle rich (and according to my dad I did so with good reason) yet these days my dad frequently has to deal with these people and yes, a lot of them truly see themselves as "self-made" even though they really had it easier than my dad (and required less luck since they were born into wealth).

  78. Problem solved..? by daffy951 · · Score: 1

    1. Save $1.5 trillion in 10 years with the help from a new tax. 2. Save another $1.5 trillion in 10 years from other cuts. 3. Problem solved..? ...But there are $1.3 trillions missing -every- year, what's going to cover the rest?

  79. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by RingDev · · Score: 1

    In Wisconsin we have a 5.5% sales tax.

    If you live paycheck to paycheck, effectively you pay 5.5% in taxes assuming you do nothing but spend your money on taxable goods.

    If you do not live paycheck to paycheck, you only pay that 5.5% tax on the money you spent on taxable goods.

    For low-income individuals, a significantly larger portion of their expenditures are applicable for sales tax, meaning that 5.5% tax may wind up being 4%+ of their annual income. Where as an individual who is exceptionally wealthy will not be spending a significant amount of their income on taxable goods. So that 5.5% will only be about 1% of their income.

    By their very nature, consumption taxes are regressive, not progressive. Poor people almost universally pay a higher rate on consumption taxes than rich people.

    The same can be said for income taxes. Individuals like Buffet, Jobs, Syrge, etc... who take $1 salaries are effectively scamming the tax system. They pay into unemployment insurance, social security, payroll taxes, etc... at a $1 income level. Meaning THEY AREN'T PAYING INCOME TAXES EITHER! They get the vast majorty of their anual pay from unerned income. Dividens, stock bonuses, trades, etc...

    And THAT is the huge tax cut that was supose to expire. The piddly 3% change to the top marginal INCOME TAX is nothing, the 15% cut to the top marginal unearned income tax is where the resistance is coming from.

    -Rick

    --
    "Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
  80. Small business red herring by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The important thing is to spare small businesses from the tax increase. A lot of small businesses are either simple proprietorships/partnerships or LLCs, for which the profits are taxed as an addition to personal income. Proprietors and partners will pay these taxes from the cash on hand of the business, meaning that the business has fewer resources to expand and hire more employees.

    So go ahead and tax the $20M CEOs and such, but try to avoid placing the additional burden on small businesses.

    Businesses that are operating as sole proprietorships are not the kind of small businesses that expand and hire workers. (There's a reason they call them sole proprietorships, see?)

    If they are interested in hiring people, they're almost certainly going to have to incorporate anyway.

  81. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by AngryDeuce · · Score: 1

    That sweet tax-free lifestyle is available to you anytime you want. Simply give away all your possessions, get yourself a job cashiering at Walmart, and enjoy that awesome tax-free lifestyle LIKE A BOSS!

    Oh, wait...then you'd have to live like a poor person. I can see now why you choose be rich. Guess those taxes aren't so bad after all, huh?

  82. Deficit reduction is not debt reduction. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't have a problem with Obama taxing the rich higher. I have a problem with him calling it an economic plan.

    Reducing the deficit (not the debt) by 2 trillion over 10 years? After he increased the deficit by that much in 1 year as soon as he took office? That's like going on a shopping spree to run up your credit card bill, then coming up with a financial plan that involves buying one less pack of gum on each of your next 10 shopping sprees.

    Not that I'm singling out Obama. He's just a typical politician, using the usual "reduce the deficit" term to trick people into thinking he's at least minimally financially responsible. Politicians have been doing it for decades, and it's time we started calling them on it. Reducing the deficit is the equivalent of running up your credit card bill at a slower rate. You still go bankrupt eventually; it just takes longer. Let me know when someone actually starts talking about reducing the DEBT.

  83. Grover Norquist by tekrat · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This bill is dead on arrival that the House, which is Republican controlled. Too many there have signed Grover Norquist's pledge to NEVER raise any taxes of any kind.

    I'm sorry to say this, but the radicals are now in control. Just like the Taliban, they have an extreme ideology and will not compromise or make "common sense" decisions because they carry a radical philosophy.

    As such, there is no longer any 'bargaining" going on. The bill will be flat out struck down or filibustered into oblivion. I'm not sure if you've noticed, but our Congress has passed almost no legislation of any kind since taking office 18 months ago. All they've done is argue.

    This is the Congress that campaigned on a platform of "jobs", came in and immediately wasted two days reading the Constitution, then tried to repeal Obamacare and abortion rights, and since then, hasn't done anything except destroy the nation's credit rating.

    Good luck getting this through.

    --
    If telephones are outlawed, then only outlaws will have telephones.
    1. Re:Grover Norquist by Anonymous+Meoward · · Score: 1

      Who the hell is Norquist, anyway? If the constituents who elected me say "do this", and Mr. Norquist says "don't", I honestly wouldn't care what this pathetic little man would have to say. For every buck he can raise to oppose my re-election, I can turn out one more voter ("Meoward: Standing Firm For You!")

      --
      --- The American Way of Life is not a birthright. Hell, it's not even sustainable.
    2. Re:Grover Norquist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The radicals WERE in control. House, Senate and White House. The game is changing and the radicals don't like it.

      The radicals put in motion the events that destroyed the nations credit rating. The radicals refused to take the actions that would have preserved the nations credit rating.

    3. Re:Grover Norquist by jandrese · · Score: 1

      It's not impossible, but it may have to wait until after the 2012 election, depending on how that goes.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    4. Re:Grover Norquist by QuietLagoon · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry to say this, but the radicals are now in control

      Yup. America's Political Spectrum

    5. Re:Grover Norquist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The 'do nothing' Congress you speak about predates your 18 month window. The Democrat controlled Congress has still failed to pass a budget (going on 800+ days now), didn't even bother to legally pass Obamacare (it was 'deemed' passed), and both Democrat and Republican we warned that it would take at least $4B in saving to avoid a downgrade. I agree, this is DOA, but because it's bad legislation that won't fix the issue

    6. Re:Grover Norquist by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Of course it won't pass. He knows it won't pass. He doesn't want it to pass. This is strictly theater, and part of his campaign activity.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    7. Re:Grover Norquist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, the point is not to get this actually passed. The point is to place the Republicans in a difficult place because they have signed these pledges that have drawn a line in the sand. Obama's best tactic is to keep coming up with reasonable solutions that the other side will reject on principle and because he proposed them. Either they continue to reject them, illustrating to the moderates of the country that they are all extremist idiots, or they let them through and he gets credit for the new policy and they are seen as weak by the extremist base which will turn on them, thus marginalizing themselves. It is all about being seen to try, actually getting this stuff passed would just be gravy.

    8. Re:Grover Norquist by arnott · · Score: 1

      Even Dems will fight to show Republicans in bad light and do not want this to pass. Check this cartoon.

    9. Re:Grover Norquist by StormReaver · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure if you've noticed, but our Congress has passed almost no legislation of any kind since taking office 18 months ago.

      You say that like it's a bad thing. The last thing we need is for this bunch of incompetents to pass actual legislation.

    10. Re:Grover Norquist by King_TJ · · Score: 1

      To be honest? I'm relatively okay with all of this. Just to throw in another viewpoint here .... sometimes I think government becomes so big and so controlling and overbearing, the populace is better off if a "monkey wrench" in thrown into the gears, jamming things up and keeping it relatively dysfunctional.

      I basically have a libertarian mindset (though not necessarily a big supporter of the official Libertarian political party). What I see with our current president is a guy who stepped into office with a lot of big plans to revise everything into his vision of what would make the nation better. That would include such general concepts as forcing a switch to alternate forms of energy, increased taxes for the wealthy to improve things for the poor, and of course, the whole idea of revamping the nation's health-care system using his set of solutions. Unfortunately, he tried to accomplish all of this at arguably the WORST possible time in many decades -- right after the housing bubble burst and our nation was sinking into ever-deeper debt fighting the war inherited from the Bush presidency.

      Regardless of one's opinion of Obama's planned solutions, he simply picked the wrong battles to fight at the wrong time, and wound up frustrating more people than he could ever please.

      Right now, it's all a huge mess, and yes - we've got radical, polarized opinions a-plenty out there. That's why really, it's probably best we let those polar opposites keep butting heads and cancelling each other out right now, to ensure none of those extremely radical ideas become "law of the land". I think a lot of our economic problems will simply take TIME to work themselves back out -- and government intervention and manipulation is kind of like giving pain-killers to an athlete with sprained muscles, instead of taking him off the field and giving him time to heal and recover. Obama is scrambling to apply as many "quick fixes" as he can to make people happy again, long enough so he can implement some of the other things he's had his heart set on changing. Right now, we don't really need any of that.

    11. Re:Grover Norquist by hedwards · · Score: 1

      Just out of curiosity, when do the treason trials begin? Any politician of either party that signed that pledge ought to be put on trial for treason. Norquist isn't a representative of the US, nor does he have any power under the constitution to accept such pledges of fealty.

    12. Re:Grover Norquist by glodime · · Score: 1

      This bill is dead on arrival

      What bill?

      The Al Jezeera "news" article is about what Obama is expected to announce today:

      Barack Obama, the US president, is expected to seek a new minimum tax rate for the wealthy to ensure they pay at least the same percentage as middle-income taxpayers. ... A White House official, who declined to be named because the plan has not been officially announced, said the new rate is part of Obama's proposal for long-term deficit reduction that he will announce on Monday.

      The AP article is about the American Jobs Act proposal that President Obama sent to Congress on September 12, 2011:

      It would let Bush-era tax cuts for upper income earners expire, limit deductions for wealthier filers and close loopholes and end some corporate tax breaks.

      I recognized one of the loopholes (the classification of investment management compensation as capital gains) as an issue complained about here on Slashdot.

      The Whitehouse.gov site has no new announcements, statements, or releases about changes or addenda to the American Jobs Act posted today. However, it does have a statement and report from the Office of Management and Budget about the American Jobs Act. But no proposals of new tax brackets.

      There have been a number of proposals regarding the taxing of incomes over $1 million as Ezra Klein has noted. But none from President Obama. (Regarding new marginal tax rates, I find House Representative Jan Schakowsky's proposal the most straight forward and reasonable, assuming that the government favors increasing taxes on incomes over $1 million.)

      So what are we discussing? I suspect the conversation has merged the separate issues and stories into an incomprehensible clusterfuck to the disservice of everyone engaged.

    13. Re:Grover Norquist by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      This bill is dead on arrival that the House, which is Republican controlled.

      Yeah. Too bad they couldn't have passed the bill in 2009 when there was a Democratic house, senate, and president. If Obama were serious about this, he would have proposed the legislation when it stood a good chance of going through. Instead, he waited until it could be used for political points to complain about anti-budget Republicans in the 2012 presidential race.

      Face it: Bush the Third had no intention of ever passing this proposal. This is nothing more than political grandstanding.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    14. Re:Grover Norquist by Lost+Engineer · · Score: 1

      We need a Godwin's Law for Taliban references.

    15. Re:Grover Norquist by kevinNCSU · · Score: 1

      When did not wanting to raise taxes become radical extremism on par with being a member of the Taliban? If you're upset about the divisive political atmosphere in Washington DC you should check your own rhetoric and ask if it's helping. Pro Tip: Calling people terrorists generally doesn't pave the path toward amiable compromise.

    16. Re:Grover Norquist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget that some Democrats have come out publicly against this (opposition to it is bi-partisan) and Sen. Majority Leader Harry Reid (D) hasn't put this on the Senate calendar until after their recess.

      Yes, this is the Congress that campaigned on a platform of "jobs", and they have opposed many job killing bills.

    17. Re:Grover Norquist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wouldn't say that reading the Constitution for two days is a waste of time for politicians, much better than them dreaming up more laws to pass. The more time that they waste doing absolutely nothing the better. With each law passed it seemed we loose a little bit more freedom...

  84. Tax brackets need to be adjusted for inflation. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How the government gets away with static tax bracket values while being able to devalue the dollar through inflation is mind boggling. We have been fighting over this $250k bracket for decades ... corrected for inflation $250k from the 70's is equivalent to almost $1.5 million dollars today. The $250k bracket today would have been only $43k in the 1970's. Were people going after people making $43k in the 1970s? Hell no.

    People are getting stuck on the numbers themselves without any care for the actual value and that is dangerous.

    Its like are these people that get bent out of shape about Oil companies making "Record Profits" ... I ask "How can't they?" when you are making the dollars they collect less valuable they need MORE of them to get the same amount of oil. For instance: $4 a gallon of gas today, corrected for inflation for back in 1980 would have been $1.45 a gallon. In the 1980 a gallon of gas was ~ $1.30 ... and most of the difference there is the increase in gas tax since 1980.

  85. Re:Woah, TIMEOUT! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's about economics, doofus. You're OT.

    Imagine you're a spirit about to be born, but you don't know whether you'll be rich, or poor. Now design tax system that's fair. Discuss.

  86. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

    I live and work overseas the entire year. I get the distinct pleasure of also paying US taxes, as well as taxes of the country I live in. I've not used anything in the US in terms of infrastructure, but I sure get to pay for it!

    --
    Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
  87. WTF by kurt555gs · · Score: 3, Funny

    Why do people that aren't rich defend people that are? The problem is very simple, just about everyone reading this is not rich. If we would like to live better lives, and build small and medium businesses we need capitol to do this. If the rich have it all, we can't. The only way for our lives to get better is if the rich have less of the money and we have more. It really is just that simple. We can't have more unless the rich have less!

    Now, for those that are not rich defending policies that benefit the rich at your expense? WTF? Do you think the rich will read your post and like you? This is like President Obama pandering to the Republicans. It's just dumb. You aren't one of the club.

    George Carlin said it best: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dpcd0woY2KY

    --
    * Carthago Delenda Est *
    1. Re:WTF by Arancaytar · · Score: 2

      It's denial. The poor people who defend such policies are desperately trying to convince themselves they are wealthy, because there is no worse sin in the United States of America than being poor.

    2. Re:WTF by RobinEggs · · Score: 2

      Why do people that aren't rich defend people that are?

      Because they've been fed so much plutocratic propaganda about class mobility and how highly likely they are to become rich themselves someday, that they don't want to rock the boat they're about to board. I'm dead serious.

    3. Re:WTF by jader3rd · · Score: 1

      I think the reason is they're being objective. They are able to take themselves out of the picture and look at it in a way that might not benefit them the most personally. Or they're being hopefull that it will apply to them someday.

    4. Re:WTF by Overunderrated · · Score: 0

      Why do people that aren't black defend people who are?
      Why do people that aren't gay defend people who are?
      Why do people that aren't elderly defend people who are?
      Why do people that aren't impoverished defend people who are?
      Why do people that aren't _____ defend people who are?

      "They have something I want, so I should get it" is not a valid basis for taxation. You're doing nothing but scapegoating the wealthy. The "tyranny of the majority" doesn't just apply to the classic civil rights issues, you know. You have no right to take someone else's money just because you have a larger voting bloc.

    5. Re:WTF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the normal income of most people increases significantly, I don't see it as a bad thing if the income of the rich increases more. Economies aren't zero-sum.

      It's only a problem when we are effectively robbing the poor to pay the rich.

    6. Re:WTF by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2

      Why do people that aren't rich defend people that are?

      Because every one of them hopes that he will be, some day. Even if the odds of them actually making $1M/year, after all deductible expenses, are only slightly higher than 1 in 1000.

    7. Re:WTF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are incorrect. Economics is not a zero sum solution. You (and George Carlin, who I adore) are missing one very important thing: machines. Machines allow one man to do the work of 10 or 100 or even more men. That frees up those 10 or 100 men to build other things. That is called the division of labor, and that is what provides us with all of the wonderful things we have - washing machines, refrigerators, cars, highways, airplanes, homes, etc (it takes millions of people with different skills to build all of the stuff we take for granted). When you add machines into the equation, everyone becomes wealthier. Even the poorest in our country today would be considered Kings if they lived 150 years ago because they have indoor plumbing, access to drugs that prevent simple infections that killed people by the tens of thousands, a huge selection of food that even a King of 150 years ago didn't have, a used car that can get them 30 miles to their job in 30 minutes (a journey that would take a couple of days back a few hundred years ago). That wealth was created by investment (a.k.a savings) in machines. Nothing less, nothing more.

    8. Re:WTF by Red_Chaos1 · · Score: 1

      You completely miss the point. Completely and utterly. Everyone has a responsibility to pay taxes. taxes help keep things running. The rich use their wealth to buy tax breaks and other perks, as well as ferreting out any and all loopholes to continue not paying any taxes at all. This is what is not okay. It's not a "tyranny of the majority" (boo fucking hoo, you rich fucks being held responsible, such a crying shame -_- ), it's holding the guilty parties feet to the fire.

    9. Re:WTF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right. But why stop at just taking money? I will probably never have a Ferrari. Rich people Ferraris. We, the majority, should make the government take every Ferrari away from the rich and give them to people who don't have them. Then I can live a much better life. Let's take all the possessions of the rich and equally divide them for everyone else. Now that would be fair!

      To answer your question, I defend the rich keeping the stuff they earned because I believe in a FREE economic system when the majority shouldn't be allowed to take whatever they want from the minority. That's what America is supposed to be about.

    10. Re:WTF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      your life will get better when *you* start being responsible for it. Rather than wanting to take it away from a group of people you feel don't deserve it.

      if your dream experiment was played out - in a few years the money would be back in the pockets of the responsible and smart.

    11. Re:WTF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do people that aren't rich defend people that are?

      Your confusion reveals so much. The best policies aren't always the ones that benefit you personally the most.

      I'm not rich. However, philosophically, I want the government taking as little money from the people as possible. Yes, that includes both taking as little from me and as little from the rich as possible.

      So many arguments today focus on finding a justification for whatever policy personally helps you the most. I'm tired of the selfishness.

  88. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by Cajun+Hell · · Score: 1

    It sounds like you're suggesting there's something unfair or unjust about taking the fruits of people's labor away from them.

    If so, then I agree.

    I wonder, though, when that unfairness happened. We have, for many generations in a row now, commanded our government to overspend. We punished, at the polls, any political candidate who said they would not overspend. If someone ran on the platform of not taking short-terms gains at the expense of people in the future, we voted against them by a wide margin.

    Welcome to the future. We always voted for either you, or your descendants, to be the final sucker who pays the price. Either be the leaf node on the Ponzi tree, or find a way to be an interior node, so you can laugh and point at the leaf below, hopefully dying before any retribution. But please, don't ever say you didn't want anything unfair to happen, or for there to not be any final victim who has the fruits of their labors taken away. We all did want something unfair to happen.

    I think it's fine to complain about the relative efficacy of various strategies for facing the debt and unsustainability, but let's not ever cast the debate in terms of someone being a victim or unfair things happening, because those things are certainties beyond debate. The debt undenably exists and somebody is going to pay for it. Will dead people pay for it? I think not. Therefore, injustice must happen.

    --
    "Believe me!" -- Donald Trump
  89. nice gesture by Charliemopps · · Score: 1

    It's all well and good that he wants to bring down the deficit. I hate taxes, but if it would lower the deficit, then I'd support it. But our federal government has a track record doesn't it? They will raise taxes... and at the same time, raise the deficit. Then we'll invade another middle eastern country, or maybe even Africa this time... install a new base, bomb more cities. Maybe we'll use a bit of it to hire a Chinese company to build some bridges for us.

    The problem isn't the government, the problem is us. If you're voting democrat or republican, YOU are the problem. Vote for ANYONE other than the 2 established parties and you'll be doing something to make a difference. You can even vote communist, I don't care. Just get the parties that are currently working together to destroy this country out of office... we can clean up the mess afterwards.

  90. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

    How many of those taxes you listed are Federal taxes, not local taxes?

    --
    Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
  91. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by AngryDeuce · · Score: 1

    Being rich is by far no proof to have worked hard.

    I know a fair number of wealthy people and I can absolutely agree with this. Almost all of the money they have was earned by grandparents and great-grandparents who were the true entrepreneurs. The subsequent generations just give the money to investment bankers and live on the returns. These people haven't worked a hard day in their life. They didn't even have to work to get into school because their families all donated large sums of money to them so they get in by default, as well as pass (because the last thing you want is a family pulling their annual endowment, better give the junior fuck up a good grade).

    There are a few that took the money and worked to start their own businesses and make their own names for themselves, but they are the minority. Mostly it's just coasting on money earned the last time there was no middle class in this country, i.e., pre-WWII...

  92. Republican Mouthpiece by utkonos · · Score: 1

    Since when did slashdot become a Republican mouthpiece? Plus, the quotes in the summary above ARE NOT FROM THE @#$%@# ARTICLES!!!!! Both of those quotes that samzenpus says are "From the article" are exactly nowhere in either article.

    The quality of the editing here on slashdot has gone down the drain recently. If this sort of fabrication occurred on a real news site, then samzenpus would be out of a job.

  93. Re:But what nobody seems to notice or discuss is.. by tekrat · · Score: 1

    No, because even with a dollar buying less than 95% of what it used to, most people are still earning $40,000 per year or less.

    You're forgetting that despite inflation and the devaluing of the dollar, middle class wages have been flat for more than 30 years.

    So, even though the dollar buys less, we earn the same amount. Our wages aren't adjusted for inflation or what a dollar is "worth". That *why* everyone is in credit card debt, because it's impossible to make ends meet without going into debt because every year, we actually earn LESS.

    I'm unlikely to earn $1 million per year, even if the dollar was worth a penny. So, please, go back to basic economics class and try and think with what little brain you've got.

    --
    If telephones are outlawed, then only outlaws will have telephones.
  94. It will be a huge productivity boost by bgspence · · Score: 1

    By increasing taxes on those high earners, who are the most productive people in our society, they will be forced to be even more productive to recoup the lost earnings. We will have a productivity boom that will blow away all past statistics. Maybe.

    But then, look at how hard those 40% work who pay 'no' taxes (If you don't count sales tax, SS tax, and all the other junk taxes.) People who pay 'no' taxes pay a higher percentage of total tax on their earnings than America's largest corporations paying 'no' tax (at the highest corporate tax rate in the world.)

    1. Re:It will be a huge productivity boost by Animats · · Score: 1

      who are the most productive people in our society

      No, they're not. Look at the list of the Forbes 400 and notice how often "hedge fund" appears. Almost all income of hedge fund managers gets treated as capital gains.

  95. aljazeera by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This story is on a hundred US websites and the link you use is aljazeera.net?

  96. How about a solution that addresses both sides by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just a thought, but what about a system that taxes those over a certain threshold even more than the proposed plan, but allows some of those percentage points to be "bought back" through job creation?

    The left worries about fairness in taxation while the right claims that taxing the rich causes economic harm because there is less money around for these people to spend on new businessess and hiring people. That latter argument makes a number of large and faulty assumptions. A VP just makes his or her salary and has no other incentive to hire people or give back to the economy in any fashion other than spending, which is generally not something the rich really need to do much of. That person needs to pay for the benefits of living in the stable legal and social environment the U.S. provides allowing him/her to have such a high paying job.The same is true for plenty of business owners who would much rather purchase contract work or hire part-timers.

    If we provide individual incentives (through tax breaks) for hiring and other desirable ecomonic behaviors we have a good chance of getting both the finances we need to restore the financial health of America's government and the jobs and investments needed to restore its economic health, all without class warfare. In fact, such a scheme would likely encourage class collaboration.

  97. Comparing it to the 50s is pure idiocy by Shivetya · · Score: 1

    The tax rate in the 1950s is irrelevant. You are comparing apples and oranges. Your also playing straight into Class Warfare, which usually involves only giving half the information needed to arrive at the real result. Marginal tax rates had a tendency to let those who fell below the cut off to escape nearly all of it. Plus, no one earning the amounts needed actually paid anywhere close to it. Many knew the tricks and they used them, think the Merriweathers and Kennedys weren't rich then or earning money hand over fist?

    First off, what he is proposing is nothing more than another AMT. We know what that got us, it is hitting people who were never intended to be hit yet is it gone? Hell no, they can't let go of a tax. So we will end up with a new set of rules that will likely bite a lot of people in the butt later on who weren't supposed to ever worry.

    Second higher tax rates do not normally translate into higher tax income to the Federal Government. This has been proven time and time again. The best way to stop someone from doing something is to punish the activity. If taxes go up on certain income levels you can guarantee that your suddenly going to find the number of people earning those numbers falls dramatically.

    So what do we have? We have a politician running for reelection who needs to fire up his base and have a campaign issue because he cannot stand on his record. Hence he is staging tax cuts for the rich versus taking away medicade/medicare for the poor. Got to love how he WONT CUT ONE PENNY WITHOUT THEM RICHIES PAYING THEIR FAIR SHARE. That is not the talk of someone trying to fix a problem, that is someone on the campaign trail.

    This leaves us with our current problem, we spend too much. We also have too many suspended taxes which in turn keeps people that have the money and resources from spending. They won't when they know that not only will the Bush era tax rates possibly revert but in 2013 a whole slew of new taxes begin which will add four to six percent more to their tax load.

    This means the money will go where it can earn tax free. Welcome to munnies, the home of real money. The place where politicians and their rich rich buddies put a lot of money to escape taxes.

    If the goal is to raise revenue then give the markets something concrete to live with. This means setting PERMANENT rates that are not subject to a vote to maintain. Set growth rates. Do not tax to bring the rich down, you don't bring the poor up by bringing someone down.

    1. Bring down our business tax rate, ours is one of highest in the world and one of the few that taxes income made outside of the country. Both are great reasons to relocate off shore or sell yourself to another country's big business (look for China to start buying some up who go willingly)

    2. Capital gains tax, slash it. You do realize that many European counties have this at ZERO PERCENT!. Capitol gains taxes are taxes on income by a company that already had been taxed on that same income!

    3. CAP income tax rates. Set them in stone. None of this "we will renew it next year crap"

    4. Flatten tax rates.

    Every dollar taken by the government out of the economy is another dollar which no longer creates a job, no longer keeps a job, and no longer invests in a job. Government cannot create, it can only move money from one place to the next and considering the fraud rates many government programs suffer that is a tax in itself.

    As for ridiculously inflammatory rhetoric, your dredging up the French and Russian revolutions is so over the top I don't know where to begin.

    Look. Obama has said many times in interviews, you can find some on Youtube if you want to see the words emerge from his mouth. He said he knows that raising capitol gains taxes might not bring in more money, he wants it to be fair.

    Well guess what sunshine, being fair will only mean those at the bottom will suffer more because the bottom moves too. You cannot raise the poor up by bringing those above them down. It never works.

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
    1. Re:Comparing it to the 50s is pure idiocy by HotBBQ · · Score: 1
      Your post is nearly pure idiocy. Juding by the complete lack of any supporting linkage, bullet point ready adages, and general misunderstanding of how our federal book keeping actually works I'm going to go out on a limb here and say you're one of those fair tax rally going big-C conservative types. About the only thing worth salvaging from is that, indeed, we have a spending problem as well a taxation problem.

      This means setting PERMANENT rates that are not subject to a vote to maintain.

      No law or statute in this country is permanent, including those codified in the Constitution. Furthermore, a session of Congress cannot be bound by any previous session of Congress. The best one could hope for would be an amendment to the Constitution, but again, this is reversable.

      Bring down our business tax rate, ours is one of highest in the world and one of the few that taxes income made outside of the country.

      Our corporate tax rate is one of the highest but is one of the lowest in revenue. This rate could be lowered if all/most deductions are removed. Some charts to mull over.

      CAP income tax rates. Set them in stone. None of this "we will renew it next year crap"

      See my previous response.

      Flatten tax rates.

      Having a flatter tax rate does nothing but give the wealthiest Americans more money. If giving more money to wealthy people was such a fantastic driver of economic prosperity I suspect we wouldn't be having this convesation. There a any number of ways we could reduce spending and increase revenues. None of the things you posit will balance our books.

  98. Tax the irresponsible instead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tax the irresponsible instead of the rich.
    Like the person who goes around driving a prewar truck that guzzles on fuel.
    Or the people who make more than 2 kids..

  99. Don't be fooled, this is a tax on the middle class by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, when the hyperinflation strikes, we'll all be fortunate enough to be subject to this tax.
    By 2015, when a loaf of bread costs USD20,000, we'll all be paying the higher income tax.
    Remember that the AMT was originally to bite rich people only. Yet another play from the old playbook. Those who are noting that taxes on capital gains would be what REALLY nail rich people are on the right track.

  100. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  101. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by gatkinso · · Score: 1

    We are discussing Federal taxes.

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    I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
  102. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  103. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by gatkinso · · Score: 1

    Actually, I am a registered Democrat, if you must know, and I have never attended a so called Tea Party rally or read any of their literature.

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    I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
  104. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by gatkinso · · Score: 1

    What is it like to have seen so utterly owned in a political discussion?

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    I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
  105. Flat tax by Bengie · · Score: 2

    We need a flat tax on income with no loop holes. The only "deduction" should be living expenses, which should be pre-calculated by your local county, and you don't fill that out.

    Make $100k/year, but live in an area with $80k/year median living expense cost, your effective income is $20k/year. You pay taxes on that $20k
    Make $40k/year, but live in an area with $20k/year median living expense cost, your effective income is $20k/year. You pay taxes on that $20k

    The local median living expense should never exceed some factor of the national median living expense, that way you can't have a bunch of rich folk buying out a county and skewing the median.

    This is just a start of an idea, I have no idea how it would play out, that would be up to people more knowledgeable than me to find out. But on the surface, it looks like it would allow for a more "fair" taxation.

    Personally, I think corps are tax dodging more than people are. Corps are reporting record net profits during a recession and getting 0% effective taxes.. WTF?!

    1. Re:Flat tax by Courageous · · Score: 2

      Alternatively, the standard deduction is 50% of the average annual salary, with a flat tax rate of 35% after that. While this may seem unfair to workers living in Manhattan, we already know that regions will do their own corrections to attract workers to those regions. Consider Manhattan salaries.

      There might be some issue transitioning to such a system. For example, homeowners with big mortgages relying on the deduction could be teetered into bankruptcy. You'd have to do something to make that not happen.

      Personally I prefer the "Fair Tax". It's the best thought out alternative tax system, and has some major advantages for international trade.

      C//

    2. Re:Flat tax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A tax on income with no loop holes if you please.

      Leave out the flat part.

      Of course loop holes are just valid deductions used improperly, but getting people to not abuse the tax system may be harder than it is worth.

    3. Re:Flat tax by loom_weaver · · Score: 1

      If you want a flat tax with no loop holes then it should be a constant amount regardless of your income.

      Let's say it's 20%. Doesn't matter if you're poor and make 10k a year, or you make 100k. 20% to Uncle Sam please.

    4. Re:Flat tax by dokc · · Score: 1

      Let as suppose that for the basic needs ( what we today consider basic needs, not just food, sleep and sex ) you need 10k per year. With your example if you earn 10k a year with 2k tax you are left with 8k and that is less then what you need for your basic needs. With 100k, 20k are tax, 10k basic needs and you still have 70k more then what you need for the basics. 20% for all is not right.

      --
      In love, war and slashdot discussions, everything is allowed.
  106. And fewer benefits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Which have to be paid for out of taxes.

    So rich people move to China and the demand for policing goes down.

    Result.

  107. tax the irresponsible instead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tax the irresponsible instead.

    Like the person who drives a prewar truck that guzzles on gas
    Or the people who make more than 2 kids..

  108. as your self this...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    so why doesn't buffet and gates *give* money they feel they should go to the government since they have such confidence they'll make wise decisions with it.

    my predictions:
    0 - no way they ever will donate millions to gov. - they know goverment under any administration is beyond stupid when it comes to wise allocations
    1 - they'll discover new levels of buffet's tax dodging
    2 - buffet is playing the current administration like a cheap piano

  109. Re:Welcome to drudgedot, again... by Hatta · · Score: 1

    Correct. It isn't assault when you knee a rapist in the balls either. The rich are clearly the agressors in this class war, and they have been for at least 30 years.

    --
    Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
  110. Lots of "in theory" there... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your high school taught you a lot of theory.

    Now, can we compare the theory to the evidence? Is it true? or does the theory need to be modified?

    That's how science works, isn't it?

    (seems like economics could pay more attention to that...)

    1. Re:Lots of "in theory" there... by AmElder · · Score: 1

      Well, I'm not an economist, as I said. My field is even less scientific. My guess is that incidence differs under different conditions. In the human sciences, any more consistent result would surprise me.

      At a certain point this starts to get into the territory of: go look for the evidence your own darn self. However, because I'm looking for a distraction and I have access to scholarly papers that publish this kind of evidence, I'll point you (and anyone else who's interested, because it's always possible I'm replying to a troll or to a rhetorical question -- those should be banned online, by the way) toward some resources that I've found but haven't read.

      • Corporate Tax Burden in the European Union. By: García, Santiago Álvarez, Rodríguez, Elena Fernández, Arias, Antonio Martínez, EC Tax Review, 09282750, Feb2011, Vol. 20, Issue 1
      • Sales tax equity: Who bears the burden? By: Derrick, Frederick W., Scott, Charles E., Quarterly Review of Economics & Finance, 10629769, Summer98, Vol. 38, Issue 2
      • The Economic Incidence of Replacing a Retail Sales Tax with a Value-Added Tax: Evidence from Canadian Experience. By: SMART, MICHAEL, BIRD, RICHARD M., Canadian Public Policy, 03170861, Mar2009, Vol. 35, Issue 1
      • INCIDENCE AND ACCIDENTS: REGULATION OF EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION THROUGH THE TAX CODE. By: Mullane, Joy Sabino, Lewis & Clark Law Review, 15576582, Summer2009, Vol. 13, Issue 2
      • PERFECT COMPETITION, URBANIZATION, AND TAX INCIDENCE IN THE RETAIL GASOLINE MARKET. By: ALM, JAMES, SENNOGA, EDWARD, SKIDMORE, MARK, Economic Inquiry, 00952583, Jan2009, Vol. 47, Issue 1
  111. But the banks are not lending it out. by Marrow · · Score: 1

    Certainly not to the degree they used to. Because they got underwater gambling in the mortgage securities market.

  112. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by mcgrew · · Score: 1

    I've paid taxes. Whereas most of the poor have not.

    Most of the poor pay no FEDERAL tax; they pay plenty in State, local, and excise taxes.

    Taking from the middle class to give to the rich, who benefit from government far more than anyone else is bad (Warren Buffett paid half the rate his secretary did), but for the rich to then whine about their taxes is obscene. Render unto Ceaser that which is Ceasar's."

  113. Re:Welcome to drudgedot, again... by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

    Based on the summery, President Obama is proposing to increase taxes on those that make over 1mil a year and the republicans are calling it class warfare. Which part of that is wrong / pandering to the conservative base?

    Except that he is looking to place the taxes on their income at the same level that the rest of us peons pay. Currently we have a heavily regressive taxation system, he is looking to flatten it.

    Of course, one would not know that by reading this summary. The summary wants one to believe that he aims to take away all the income from those who are receiving more than $1M in compensation, which is (at the very least) dishonest.

    In other words, it isn't class warfare. In reality it is an attempt to actually level the playing field, but of course the wealthy won't stand for that.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
  114. What?? by QuietLagoon · · Score: 3, Insightful

    GOP Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin said, "Class warfare may make for really good politics but it makes for rotten economics."

    The GOP has been waging a class war on the middle class for over a decade and guess what, the middle class lost. Since 2000 the median income level has been dropping, while the top 1% of income earners has seen a 20% increase. The shift of income from the middle class to the most wealthy has already taken place. Now the GOP wants to assure the top earners do not lose what they stole from the middle class. It is the height of unmitigated gall for Rep. Ryan to use the "class warfare" meme.

  115. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by siride · · Score: 1

    I know, but many folks act like that's the only thing that matters and that it's just a travesty that the poor "don't pay" any taxes and so therefore, they are getting a completely free ride.

  116. Screw income tax, sales tax is where it's at. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sales tax, sales tax, sales tax...

    Set a 3 to 5% national sales tax on all non-essentials purchases... Food, water, utilities.
    Everything else gets taxed. Imported goods get an import tax, plus double sales tax.

    The wealthy that spend, spend, spend, pay pay pay.

    We ought to be out of debt within 15 years if we went to a sales tax, and dropped income tax.

    1. Re:Screw income tax, sales tax is where it's at. by bored · · Score: 1

      Sales taxes sound fine at first, but they are way regressive, although there are a few "tweaks" that might make them work, the most important IMHO, is a 100% estate tax on amounts over some limit defined as 10x the median personal worth or something similar.

      Of course the truly rich would find loopholes and setup trust funds/etc, but given the right laws i'm sure it would be possible to fix that too. But there isn't any political will, even if the trust funds are blatant attempts at avoiding taxes.

  117. Class warfare == "thought terminating cliche" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Listen up, everyone!

    This is a great tip on how the rightist overlords of this country have rooted our brains.

    There's a thing called a "thought-terminating cliche". It's a word or short phrase that you see people tossing out a lot, a sort of a "stop thinking" secret code. It's often a "folksy kinda folk wisdom" phrase, though it doesn't have to be.

    The objective of the thought-terminating cliche is to stop your brain from processing anything further. It's basically a "don't ask questions because the matter is settled and I've done your thinking for you" kind of phrase.

    Here are some typical TTCs we see a lot now:
        * class warfare
        * free market
        * socialist
        * too much regulation

    The idea is that someone says "he's a SOCIALIST" and suddenly we're supposed to dislike the person. We don't ask, what are his policies? We don't ask, what does he want for our city/state/country? Or someone says "it's the FREE MARKET" and, what? that's supposed to settle it? People are dying for lack of health care and someone says "that's the FREE MARKET" .. and when the TTC kicks in, we just say, "Oh. yeah. Free market. Dying. Well, that's the free market for you."

    Or any time one of those bizarre, incoherent rightist economic systems gets brought up (libertarianism, I'm lookin' at you), someone says "x failed because of TOO MUCH REGULATION" and there's no evidence, but when we've internalized TOO MUCH REGULATION as a thought-terminating cliche, we don't stop to ask, "is this so? or is it that it was a badly run business? or is it that a lack of regulation killed off their customers through pollution and corrupt practices?"

    So pay attention when someone says something like "tax-and-spend liberal", because they might be using a little bit of secret brain programming on you to try and stop you from paying attention to who's really robbing us blind.

    Knowing is half the battle and all that.

  118. Republicans Gone Wild by uncholowapo · · Score: 0

    I don't get why people oppose this so much. The people who make $1 million a year barely make use of it. I'm sure they can go with one less house in a very fabulous exotic spot compared to the dozens they already own.

  119. They also take their demands with them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They take their water use with them. They take their use of the courts system with them. They take their use of power and other infrastructure with them.

    These things cost less because the demand has gone down.

    So you're ahead of the game.

    1. Re:They also take their demands with them by smash · · Score: 1

      Not really, because nothing is then being made in your country and no one is employed. If anyone does bother to try and make stuff and employ people, they run into the same problems and leave for more attractive labour markets ASAP.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
  120. Just do it already, it's only fair by Bardwick · · Score: 0

    Tax the rich at 100% of thier income of any kind. Oh hell, skrew it.. ALL income should go to the government first, it will pay for all the programs it wants, do some nation building and foriegn aid. Then you take what's left, divide it by 340 million and cut everyone a check right (add 20 or so million for "undocumented workers"). Well educated CEO's of multinational corperations would be on "level playing field" with stay at home moms. Of course, you have to ban investing at any point, that would just start the whole mess over again. No company would ever be looked down upon for making a profit, cause, hey, that's good for all of us. Keeping in mind that all funds still in your account at the end of the year would be confiscated. Saving money would give you an economic advantage over the guy next door. Take your card down to the grocery store, grab a number and you will be issued your food rations for the week. There it is, we have tackled obesity. Of course the house you are issued will be the exact same square footage as everyone else with the same number of occupants. All cars wil be chevy volts that will be re-issued every 3 years. Just taking FAIR to it's logical conclusion...

    1. Re:Just do it already, it's only fair by Bengie · · Score: 1

      " Just taking FAIR to it's logical conclusion..."

      Slavery
      Just taking UNFAIR to it's logical conclusion...

      Middle ground ever?

  121. Oh Really by hittman007 · · Score: 1

    Oh? Interesting, I'm in that bottom 2/3's, at least twice a year I am able to schedule appointments with my senator and representative (both Democrat and Republican, and on the national as well as state levels) and have a conversation with them about what is happening, where I, a voting member of the populace stand in regards to what the politician has done and why, what my concerns are and such, as well as where we are going in the future. Some of these meetings have gone for hours. On in particular, my current Senator from what most would consider the "other" party is in the habit of scheduling an afternoon off for these meetings. They think its refreshing to hear views and concerns from an opposing viewpoint that does their research rather than spout off with popular one liners as many people in both parties love to do.

    Every time I have done this I have treated them with respect, and they have returned the favor, even if we vehimitly disagree on pretty much everything.

    You would also be surprised as to how much research on pretty much everything I do for these meetings, I am always the better prepared.

    To say that because I'm not rich I have no representation is ridiculous, I have seen first hand that this is NOT true.

    I've been to my state capital for these, and one of these days I intend to make it to Washington DC for a meeting or two. Who knows, I may get a tour out of it...

    Try it. Do your research, be respectful not argumentative, don't be afraid to ask the tough questions and have several examples ready rather then just hearsay and opinion, take notes, rinse, repeat.

    If more people did this it would be better for everyone.

    --
    --- When you start with the conclusion that you want, then throw out any facts that don't agree, is it true?
  122. Re:But what nobody seems to notice or discuss is.. by maxume · · Score: 1

    The nominal median household income has more than doubled since 1980. The inflation adjusted median household income is about the same, but slightly higher (objections to how inflation is calculated are pre-noted).

    A definition of middle class that doesn't include the median household is silly. If you want to claim that incomes have been flat, you need to concede (some level of) inflation adjustment.

    --
    Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
  123. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by Duradin · · Score: 1

    When it happens, I'll tell you, or you could tell me now.

  124. Re:Reflections of Paul Ryan's Notion of Class Warf by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

    That's a rather long-winded way of saying that I shouldn't care because I don't make more than $1 million per year.

  125. Re:Woah, TIMEOUT! by anyGould · · Score: 1

    My sense was that this is noteworthy because of Buffet's involvement (namely, him sticking his neck out and saying "us rich people can TOTALLY afford to pay more in taxes".) It's a lot harder for the "class warfare" arguments to stick when there's a big name saying "no, seriously - we can afford this, we should afford this, and you guys need to stop being such total wusses about it".

    I'm waiting for the Democrats to nail down the big point here - adding taxes to the rich means they go on one less vacation, or having a smaller summer home. Adding taxes to the middle class means that they don't vacation at all, or work a second job to get their kids through school. Adding taxes to the lower class means they start choosing between food and shelter. There's really no moral ground to bitch about a tax hike when the extra money is literally your "screwing around stash".

  126. Fairness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The facts are that the top 1% of earners pay 38% of all income taxes and the bottom 50% of earners paid only 3% of all income taxes. In my view, the rich are already paying more their fair share. If you disagree, then tell me what you think is fair. Should they be paying 100% of all income taxes?

    In my opinion we need either reduce spending so that the government does not need to take so much money from income earners or grow the economy so that the the current income tax rates produce the desired level of revenues. If instead, the government decides to apply punitive tax rates to those who are successful, they will create incentives for people to hide their income (e.g. Warren Buffet pays himself with dividends) and create disincentives for trying to succeed in the economy.

    The democracy will cease to exist when you take away from those who are willing to work and give to those who would not.
    Thomas Jefferson

  127. GDP v. Gini by Bob9113 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    GOP Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin said, "Class warfare may make for really good politics but it makes for rotten economics."

    Class warfare, in the strict sense of guns and bombs, is -- like all civil war -- bad for the economy. Labor resources spending time shooting at each other, and getting shot, is potential productivity lost. Similarly, spending time on arguments that have no basis in reality is a waste of resources. There is evidence, however, that reducing the Gini (a measure of income disparity -- higher Gini means higher disparity) in the United States would increase the GDP growth rate. Here is one example set of data:

    http://beach.traxel.com/img/gdp-gini-4.png

    America's Gini has been rising steadily since the early 1970's (it started before Reagan, because the tax brackets didn't keep up with the rapid inflation resulting from the oil embargo). Our Gini is now high enough to make our PPP (GDP per capita) an outlier. Most nations with our level of income disparity are third world nations. Only Hong Kong and SIngapore -- hybrid economies which mix successful free market economies with the stark poverty resulting from communism -- are in the first world ballpark and have Ginis as high as ours.

    One possible reason is this: In any economic system there is an optimal market price to pay for any resource. If that economic system overpays for some resource or class of resources, it will operate less efficiently. There may be systemic biases in place which cause us to pay more for the labor (and/or capital lending) of our wealthy than their labor (and/or capital lending) is worth. Of course the chart above is insufficient to show the causal relationship, but it would explain why our PPP (GDP per capita) growth rate has fallen during the same period that our Gini has been increasing (I have more charts that show the temporal relationship, but they are not yet ready for publication).

    If, in fact, the increasing Gini is a cause of falling PPP, then increasing the taxation on upper income brackets would increase the GDP growth rate. If that is the case, and assuming one believes (as I do) that the ideal free market is GDP maximizing, there is only one possible explanation: some degree of progressive taxation actually increases the accuracy of our approximation of the free market, by offsetting a systemic bias.

    Disagree? Good, I'd love to see your empirical evidence. Show me the data.

    1. Re:GDP v. Gini by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not disagreeing with your main argument, but ... "stark poverty resulting from communism" in Singapore? You might want to check your facts on that one: Singapore is not and has never been a communist country. What's more likely: Both HK and Singapore are very small countries, thus a few very wealthy individuals will greatly distort the average.

    2. Re:GDP v. Gini by Bob9113 · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the heads up!

    3. Re:GDP v. Gini by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Poverty in Hong Kong and Singapore resulting from communism. Do you really mean that?

    4. Re:GDP v. Gini by Bob9113 · · Score: 1

      Poverty in Hong Kong and Singapore resulting from communism. Do you really mean that?

      Hong Kong, yes -- my brother lived there for a while and I visited for three weeks. There is a very broad chasm between the business community and the unskilled labor class. My hypothesis is that this is because unskilled labor wages are heavily influenced by labor income in mainland China, while the business wages are more closely coupled to first world business wages abroad.

      Singapore, no -- I was confused. I thought Singapore had the same economic background as Hong Kong. Another poster corrected me. I would have to do further research to present a revised hypothesis.

    5. Re:GDP v. Gini by loyukfai · · Score: 1

      By your logic, the low income in the "unskiled" labour class in the US is influenced by the low cost of production in mainland China, which leads companies moving their factories and call support centres there, and so the poverty in the US results from communism as well...?

    6. Re:GDP v. Gini by Bob9113 · · Score: 1

      Yes. The influence on labor income in Hong Kong is far stronger, of course, and affects direct service labor as well as manufacturing labor, but it is the same influence.

    7. Re:GDP v. Gini by loyukfai · · Score: 1

      I agree. But I still don't understand why you called Hong Kong's (and Singapore's also, FWIW) economy "hybrid". It's my understanding that no economy is of pure capitalism, it's always a mixed. But we usually define an economy based on its most prominent and common characteristics, and if the US and European countries have free market/capitalist economies, I think Hong Kong's should be classified as one as well.

      Cheers.

    8. Re:GDP v. Gini by Bob9113 · · Score: 1

      My inclusion of Singapore, as I already said, was a mistake.

      Hong Kong unskilled labor wages are much lower than US and EU labor wages. That is because HK unskilled labor wages are tightly coupled to mainland China labor wages. US and EU labor wages are much higher, because they are only moderately impacted by mainland China wages. Meanwhile, HK, US, and EU business labor wages are similar for similar roles, because HK business labor wages are heavily focused on international commercial banking and international trade. Therefore, the HK income distribution (the portion of the HK economy which is implicitly being discussed when "Gini" is mentioned) is dramatically more hybrid than the US or EU.

      A major part of the reason is that only manufacturing labor wages are significantly impacted in the US and EU, and even that force is tempered by shipping costs. In HK, all labor costs -- including direct service labor costs -- are impacted, and shipping is a much smaller component of the cost of goods produced in mainland China.

      Finally, I would not classify either the US or EU as pure free market or pure capitalist economies, any more than I would classify the HK economy as a pure hybrid. HK is more hybrid, because a major component of its economy, unskilled labor wages, is tightly coupled to communist price levels, while business labor wages are more tightly coupled to free market prices.

    9. Re:GDP v. Gini by loyukfai · · Score: 1

      I thought the major reason that the low-skilled labour wages are higher in the US and EU was because of minimum wage laws and more developed economies...?

      One has to consider that the Hong Kong economy has only really developed in the past 50 years or so.

      Nonetheless, even though low-skilled labours from mainland China are not allowed to come to Hong Kong for work (legally), they do have a major effect on Hong Kong's low-skilled labour market, because the factories have been moved to mainland China.

      Besides, low-skilled labour having higher wages are not necessarily a good indicator, if most of them are unemployed. That was and still is one of the major concerns for Hong Kong's low income public since the minimum wage law went into effect earlier this year.

      Cheers.

    10. Re:GDP v. Gini by Bob9113 · · Score: 1

      Good discourse. While I don't fully agree, we've also gotten far enough afield that I no longer feel strongly enough to argue the point.

  128. class warfare by Tom · · Score: 1

    "Class warfare may make for really good politics but it makes for rotten economics."

    He's damn right.

    So let's stop the class warfare of the rich vs. the poor. You can do that without "socialism" - but you can't explain why the income of the wealthy 5% grows much stronger than the economy, while the income of the lower 50% grows much less than the economy. You can still be rich, I really don't mind. But you're taking more than your share and that is what pisses people off who are not into socialism at all.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  129. Wait, seriously? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    "Class warfare may make for really good politics but it makes for rotten economics."

    That is absolutely true. Cutting social programs and then cutting taxes to the wealthy is a very popular political proposition at the moment, and terrible economic policy. Seeing a republican saying the above quote gave me hope for american politics for a moment. Then I realized what he actually meant.

  130. re: increased taxes as barricade by King_TJ · · Score: 1

    Well, in a literal sense, sure, you're quite correct. A tax increase on a high income earner is not going to put a serious dent in their status, relative to everyone else around them.

    On the other hand, there's another issue worth considering too. Just because someone has earned far more than they need to survive (or to remain relatively wealthy even) doesn't automatically mean their government can better spend some of the excess than they can themselves.

    I'm one of those "struggling to hang onto something resembling middle-class" people myself, and honestly, I don't really ever see myself becoming rich in the future, barring some freak lottery or contest winning putting me there. Yet unlike many people, I don't necessarily see the millionaires of the U.S.A. as the enemy, or cause of my problems. It really depends on HOW they attained their wealth.

    EG. Many of us have read about Warren Buffet and his proclamations that as one of the wealthiest men in America, he thinks he's not taxed enough and wouldn't mind the laws changing to increase taxes on the very wealthy. At the same time though, if one take a good, long look at how he retains and increases his net worth, one quickly realizes something. Buffet's money is closely tied to Federal govt. sponsored activities including "Green" alternate energy production and military contractors. How do such projects get/stay well funded? By ensuring Federal govt. has enough TAX income to keep supporting them! (Never mind the fact that his own investment fund company apparently OWES millions in unpaid back taxes!)

    So IMHO, Buffer is NOT really on my list of super-wealthy folks I greatly admire.

    On the other hand, take someone like Steve Jobs? Whether you really like or despise Apple products, there's no denying he earned his wealth through the success of his own business and personal effort marketing his products and services. If anything, the reason Apple Computer has a lot of money tied up overseas is due to the current tax laws. (If a company like Apple opens a facility in another country and starts making money there, they're taxed at a relatively high rate if they bring the money back into the U.S. That results in the smarter business move being to leave that money where it originated and re-invest/spend it there, by way of such things as expanding the overseas operations and employing more foreign labor.) If the U.S. would get smart about things, we'd start allowing that money to be deposited in our banks at a very LOW tax rate to encourage migration of the earnings back here, where the corporate headquarters are for such companies.)

  131. Spending...or revenue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How sure are you that there isn't a revenue problem instead?

    Do you think we were spending enough money on everything during the Clinton years? Even if so, there's MORE people now. And inflation. So the same amount of money wouldn't cover it.

    And no, you can't just cut spending on highways, on worker safety, pollution control, or energy planning and expect the free market to solve all your problems.

  132. It depends on the elasticities by tepples · · Score: 1

    Prices are set by supply and demand.

    A tax shifts the supply curve. Depending on the elasticities of the supply and demand curves, this shift might cause a large or small shift in price.

    If we lowered corporate taxes, why would Exxon sell petroleum products for any less than it already did?

    If the demand is elastic enough, a tax cut might get Exxon to cut prices in order to fight competition from Shell, BP, and state-owned oil companies.

  133. Just evil by jopsen · · Score: 1

    If you excuse the excesses of government because of some limited good it might do (debatable) then you're just evil disguised as a pragmatist.

    And here I thought I was nice guy. Anyways good luck with your anarchy...
    - I'm not gonna argue, that would be pointless, I'm just gonna lean back and watch my new socialist government offer decent living conditions for long term asylum seekers in Denmark. May God have mercy...

  134. Good. by PotatoHead · · Score: 1

    We can put that money into much needed infrastructure, alternative energy build outs and conversions, and small business.

    After a time, that pays off nicely, at which point, the wealthy people have something to buy with the money they have, getting a return on the tax just like they did last time.

    Remember kids, "your money" is only worth what "your nation" is.

  135. If you tax a thief, you are a thief by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem is not some people being rich, the problem is that many of the rich earned their money at the expense of others through exploitation (e.g. employers paying minimum wages) and corruption (e.g. banks cheating their customers).

    Now if you tax the rich, all you do is take the money that someone else should own.

    The shift of wealth from the bottom to the top is not a fiscal problem, it is a wages/criminal issue and should be dealt with accordingly, by making sure people get wages that allow them to make a living and by creating transparency and making sure that no one can siphon off the money.

  136. Price floor for labor by tepples · · Score: 1

    To put it simpler, when you tax an employee, they raise their required salary to pay that tax.

    It doesn't work so simply for jobs near the state-mandated price floor for labor.

    1. Re:Price floor for labor by Courageous · · Score: 1

      The purpose of the quip wasn't what you think it was.

      For example, there exist market situations in which a corporation cannot raise the price of a good, for a variety of dynamic reasons. Excessive taxation can price a product out of a market. The example you site for minimum wage is just another example of the problem, from a different direction.

      The actual point is that there is no tax that doesn't have the property of somehow getting passed on in various ways. Propose a federal property tax; the consequence will be increased rents, for landlords paying the tax, and increased wage demand, for owners paying the tax. At all points of collection, there is a consequence. To defend one specific one without considering this just exposes partisan thinking.

      Of course most people don't actually think that "they" are partisan. It's everyone else who's lost their objectivity.

      C//

  137. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by Duradin · · Score: 1

    So cancel your subscription to America then if you're not using it.

  138. How much is this *REALLY* going to bring in? by rkhalloran · · Score: 1

    Given the small number of people at the $1M income level, realistically how much money is a surtax going to bring in against the staggering deficit the US has created? Is this an honest effort at increasing revenue or a political effort to point at "Those People Over There Who Aren't Paying Enough" rather than cutting programs like Federal bunny inspectors, etc?

  139. Re:Woah, TIMEOUT! by MichaelusWF · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Is it a slow news day? There's nothing at all happening in the world of science or technology that would be more important to the average nerd than this? What about every other bill the President has proposed? I haven't seen those on slash dot

    Mod parent up. This is just tax policy news. There's no gadget, there's no advanced math - it's pure politics. This isn't news for nerds, this is news that applies to the general public and in no way applies specifically to nerds.

    I'm sorry your crippling autism prevents you from being interested in anything that doesn't explicitly involve shiny gadgetry. Could I make a suggestion? If you don't find an article interesting DON'T READ THE ARTICLE.

  140. A collosally stupid idea... by mark-t · · Score: 1

    All this does is hamper people who may be in the process of starting to become wealthy from actually achieving it.

    A much better solution, IMO, would be a *REAL* wealth tax, where one pays an tax that is based on their net worth, including any assets, that is over a certain dollar amount (excluding certain types of personal held property that could be considered common to all, such as one's primary residence), rather than their net income. Their average net worth over the year would be used to determine the percentage of their gross income that must be paid in income tax for that year, rather than basing the income tax directly on income alone.

    People whose net worth is below that threshold would pay income tax normally. Arguably, the amount of tax that those below that threshold would have to pay might even be able to go down. The threshold initially used should be determined based on how wealth is actually divided in the country, and should increase nominally each year to account for inflation.

    Of course, that smacks of socialism, and America loathes socialism because it's too much like communism.

    1. Re:A collosally stupid idea... by Animats · · Score: 1

      A much better solution, IMO, would be a *REAL* wealth tax, where one pays an tax that is based on their net worth.

      Switzerland does that. The current rate is about 0.6% in the canton of Geneva, and 0.3% in Vaud. This is in addition to an income tax, with a top rate of 51%.

  141. Class warfare? by uvajed_ekil · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You want to know about class warfare? That's when you have people who work fulltime (unlike the unlucky 40 million who can't get jobs or are under-employed) having to rely on food stamps to feed their families because otherwise they can't keep a rented roof over their heads. A federal minimum wage of $7.25, which allows employers to pay wages that employess can not live on, and forcing students to take out huge loans in order to try get a basic education that might allow them to exceed the ridiculous minimum wage, now that is class warfare. There is no American Dream anymore for many millions of American citizens, just dreams of making it to the next paycheck without suffering. Trickle-down economics is class warfare.

    I still think the ol' U S of A is the greatest country in the world, and I feel fortunate to have been born here and be doing alright, but I recognize that a lot of things are broken. People here enjoy a lot of freedom, but if we are as civilized as we claim, don't you think we can still do better? If you make a million dollars a year, you should be doing just fine, and you can afford to pay a little bit more to fix America. Stop whining, since with all your tax breaks and loopholes you don't truly pay a higher rate than those of us who only "earn" $30,000 or $60,000. You will need a strong middle class in the future or it won't be long before our nation's time as the world superpower comes to a close, which will be bad for all of us. If we maintain the status quo, with the rich getting richer, the poor staying poor, and the middle class vanishing, your wealth will evaporate in time, floating away overseas, or we'll rise up and take it from you. Rich people have a chance to fix things now before it is too late, if they are not so greedy as to insist on hoarding every last nickel now. The status quo is class warfare, and prolonged class warfare is our road to doom.

    Vote for me. I'll work to keep wealthy people wealthy, by convincing them to invest in our future, which will also benefit all in our society. You can keep the power, if you choose to, but you can't have all of everything.

    --
    This is a hacked account, for which the owner can not be held responsible.
  142. I love all these hundreds of ideas on how to fix by bryan1945 · · Score: 1

    All kinds of simplistic solutions posted here. "Tax the rich more." "Cut government spending." "Tax corporations more." "National sales tax."

    You think there are not real economic experts that have done a few hundreds/thousands permutations of all these things? Yes, then the politics step in, but really there is no one easy fix-all.

    Before you ask, no, I don't have a comprehensive solution since I don't even have an economics degree. I know just enough that 1 or 2 steps is not enough to provide a long-term solution.

    Flame away.

    --
    Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
  143. Thought terminating cliches by microbox · · Score: 1

    You post is so funny. There is no point arguing with you about it, but spasmotic fits of laughter are oppropriate.

    Politics is more about sides then ideas. If it were about ideas, then Republicans wouldn't take such an untennable position on this issue.

    "Class warfare" and "job creators" are thought terminating cliches, along with "death taxes" and "socialism". These are all actually complex issues, far to complex to talk about in typical political discourse.

    Congratulations of being part of the problem!

    --

    Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
  144. Re:Woah, TIMEOUT! by ColdFury · · Score: 1

    As everyone knows, nerds don't pay taxes!

  145. Getting an idea where the money goes by wonkavader · · Score: 1

    You're right in general, though getting jumped on for your hyperbole.

    This will help you get an idea (it's not the real budget -- but it's not far off) of where the US tax money goes.
    https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2010/02/01/us/budget.html

    We do spend close to "more than the rest of the world (combined)" on our military (we certainly spend more than the other top 18 spenders combined). We should stop. Not just because it's a fifth of our expenditure (and it's more than that, really, the real costs of the military and the wars they fight are hidden elsewhere in the budget or in places which simply don't show up in the budget at all -- "supplementary appropriations") but because the military takes people out of society and turns them from people who'd earn money and enrich the state to people who cost us money.

    If we took half our military budget and popped it into our education budget, we'd be spending roughly SIX times what we currently do on education. I suspect we could come close to promising everyone born in the US a PhD on that budget, if they wanted one. (Some argue that soldiers make better employees. If so, it's the least cost effective way you could imagine to accomplish that goal.)

    And as world war one (and modern US history) teaches us, when you have a military, you find places to use it. Which makes all our other costs go up. If we cut our military budget in half, we'd STILL be spending more than the top five countries combined.

    See https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/List_of_countries_by_military_expenditures -- it's a little out of date but it gets you the general idea.

  146. Maximum revenue is a myth. by bigtrike · · Score: 1

    If there is indeed a maximum revenue peak at a given tax rate, how do you know which side of it we're on? Further, the soviet union had an effective 100% tax rate for decades before collapse. People still worked.

    1. Re:Maximum revenue is a myth. by Jhon · · Score: 1

      And the soviet union still collapsed.

    2. Re:Maximum revenue is a myth. by bigtrike · · Score: 1

      The "maximum revenue" theory says that common sense dictates that nobody will work at all when the tax rate is at 100%. In the science of economics, "common sense" is often at odds with historical facts.

    3. Re:Maximum revenue is a myth. by Jhon · · Score: 1

      Or, more likely, "historical facts" are not included in one's analysis of what is believed to defy "common sense".

  147. Didn't mean to pick on you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and I'm sorry if it came out that way.

    My intent was more to remind everyone that economics is basically a whole lot of hand-waving, and very, very, very little "does this square with the facts?" sort of confirmation of the hand-waving.

    And these are the people who make decisions that affect a great deal of us.

    Scary.

  148. Re:Woah, TIMEOUT! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    955 replies (so far) suggests you are wrong.

  149. I am from wisconsin so i can say this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Paul Ryan is a ass and i am making a point to call him to pint out the errors of the phrase "class war" unless he wants one to happen the IWW has been itching for one for ages.

  150. Oh, please by publiclurker · · Score: 1

    The companies you are so eagerly whoring for have had absolutely no problem with off-shoring in the past. Your insinuation that they would keep any additional jobs here is we give them more handouts is rather insulting to anyone with any knowledge of reality.

    1. Re:Oh, please by adamchou · · Score: 1

      1. I'm not whoring for any companies. I, in fact, absolutely abhor what those companies are doing.
      2. If you had any knowledge about tax laws and how companies are exploiting them instead of your supposed "reality", you'd understand that trying to raise tax rates to "force" companies to pay taxes is in fact counter productive.

    2. Re:Oh, please by publiclurker · · Score: 1

      t makes you think that I'm as ignorant about the tax laws as you appear to be? Remember, laws can be changed. Just because a few self important whiners don't like being expected to act nicely doesn't mean that we should allow them to continue to get their way any more than any other brat on the playground.

    3. Re:Oh, please by adamchou · · Score: 1

      Laws need to be changed because they aren't whining right now. They're exploiting it with big fat freaking smiles on their faces. And raising taxes on them isn't the solution because it won't do anything to them. There are too many loopholes. What needs to be changed is closing the loopholes so they can't exploit them and having a tax rate that is competitive with the nations that they're fleeing to.

    4. Re:Oh, please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How much does the Tea Party pay you to shill for them like that, publiclurker?

    5. Re:Oh, please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You shriek like a child, because you reason like one.

  151. Carefull by publiclurker · · Score: 1

    the baggers out there are wanting to do exactly that.

  152. Don't tax my boss! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's say I make $20k a year, and my boss somewhere up the chain makes >$1m. If you hike his taxes, is he going to be More or Less likely to hire more workers or to give me a raise on my income? Of course not. Let's remember how this works: The government doesn't create a dime of wealth. They can never give out anything that they didn't first take away from people who DO create wealth. The private sector is not a zero-sum system. they create wealth. Likewise, the government is also not zero-sum in that they loose wealth. In order to offer $5 in benefits, they would have to tax greater than $5 out of the economy first! Why would anyone hope to rely on such inefficient and unfair redistribution of wealth?

  153. Best solution is to Tax Political Contributions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This way citizens actually get a little taste of the payola.

  154. It's only evil by publiclurker · · Score: 1

    to the morally bankrupt idiots like yourself who don't like it when your betters prevent you from fucking over everyone else in order to line you own self important pockets. Perhaps if you were able to pretend to be an ethical person, you wouldn't be running into people trying to defend themselves from you quite as much.

    1. Re:It's only evil by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      Whose Morals?

      The Problem for people like you, is that you want YOUR morals, and not MINE.

      And if you realize what I am (Libertarian) you'd realize that I am not amoral, nor immoral, just that I don't think Government should be in the "moral" business at all. Government is there to protect the weak from those that would exploit (true exploitation) them. Not protect people from the consequences of their choices, nor enforce the nanny state that we're currently in.

      I would not have bailed a single bank out, nor offered stupid people getting mortgages they couldn't afford a bail out. I don't feel sorry for either both did it to themselves. Yeah, sucks to be them, but why do I, who didn't make stupid choices, have to bail out both sides, the idiots who wanted the loans and the idiots who wrote the loans.

      In fact, I'd have bankrupted the whole Default Swap perpetrators who got us into this mess, under FRAUD (real crime) charges. Then locked up the CEOs and Board Members that allowed for it, in full Pound Me in the ASS prison. I would not have given 1/2 billion to Soylient Green to keep them from going bankrupt, because ... well ... they went bankrupt anyway. Obama Administration perpetrated FRAUD on the tax payers on behalf of a contributor. Chicago Politics ... yay .

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
  155. Take an Economics course please by stomv · · Score: 1

    "First, companies don't pay taxes. Their customers do."

    No, that's not right. An increase in cost is made up by both customers and owners, unless one of the curves (supply or demand) is perfectly flat or perfectly vertical. Even if 100% of the tax is imposed on price [unlikely, due to the prior sentence], unless the demand curve is vertical the quantity sold will decrease, resulting in lower revenue [and profits] for the corporation, despite the higher price.

    All of this assumes that the government isn't able to invest the tax revenue in a way which increases value to both the owners of the corporation and consumers. If, for example, the added revenue is used to suppress long term transportation costs [invest in bridges, etc], production costs [invest in education, etc], security costs [invest in police], insurance costs [invest in inspectors, fire service, etc] by enough, it might be that the total gain for both consumers and owners is greater due to the government tax. I'm not arguing that this is always the case, but I am arguing that some amount of government tax and spend is a good thing, lest one wants his nation to look like Rwanda.

    P.S. A national sales tax completely screws over the retired -- who paid their income tax back when they were earning more income than they were spending, and who would then have to pay more spending tax than they do now right when their income is close to zero. For that reason alone, it's a no-go.

  156. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by Desler · · Score: 1

    Are we ignoring the fact that most if the ultra wealthy inherited their money and didn't actually do anything to earn it?

  157. scapegoats by migloo · · Score: 1

    When the boss starts looking for scapegoats (the "rich"), it shows he gave up hope of solving the problem (runaway debt).

  158. ObOnion by istartedi · · Score: 2
    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  159. start over by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I see the stalemated arguments between the 2 political powerhouses as a good thing. Eventually these stalemates (which have already become memes) will become convincing reasons to "take a different approach" to the core issue. Hopefully, for taxes, that will mean a complete re-working of the tax code. The end result will be a simpler code without loopholes, better equipped to deal with internet and international commerce, and (most importantly IMO) a fair tax for people of all incomes.

    You won't see political powers advocate this, because the stalemates can be leveraged for votes. There is no reason for entrenched parties to make the first move, but if someone can get the ball rolling they will have to jump on board.

  160. Re:Woah, TIMEOUT! by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

    This is very relevant to geeks! This decides if we're going to move closer to or further from a dystopian cyberpunk future. If you aren't planning your post-apocalyptic gear purchases and future career options in cybercrime and data smuggling around this, you aren't paying attention!

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  161. Instead of taxing the rich, force them to spend by lamer01 · · Score: 1

    Really, do we want the govt taking private money and wasting it on stupid sh1t? I say that if you have more than $1M in earnings you should be forced to show that you spent at least 10% ($100K in my example) in 'Made in USA' goods&services. If you did not, then you forfeit that money to the state. This will get the earners to get something for their money and the money will flow inside the good ol'USA. Someone making $500M/year would need to spend $50M in 'Made in the USA' goods&services.

  162. Hoarding by ProfBooty · · Score: 2, Insightful

    People seem to think that people who are "rich" must be swimming around in their money bins like Scrooge McDuck. They don't seem to realize that if they don't invest that money, its value decreases.

    That is probably why they don't have the understanding of how to build wealth themselves.

    --
    Bring back the old version of slashdot.
    1. Re:Hoarding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Investing money doesn't move the economy if that money ultimately isn't SPENT.

      Paying a window washer worker $8 an hour and then bitching when he doesn't buy a brand new $30,000 car every 4~6 years doesn't help the economy.

  163. Good for them.... by hesaigo999ca · · Score: 1

    I always thought just a straight tax right across the board for everybody would be the best that way they could not get out of paying taxes because they find the loop holes by hiring the best accountants. This said it would also mean that they could just say 20% right across the board, would also ensure that money be saved from needing so many people to work the system, where as if there is a one line payment for tax, then that is it, no need to hire lots of people to run the government system to review all these laws and make sure all the accounting is done right, you just have 1 line to check...end of story....but that is my utopia,....

    In today's world, for sure if you tax someone for becoming successful, it looks pretty crappy to everyone! Being taxed for being good at something is like really stupid.... but at the same time, during these bad times, everyone should be thinking of doing what they can to help...dont ask what your country can do for you, but ask what you can do for your country. In this case, it means if u have 1 million sitting in the bank, for a 1 time "call to arms" ....anyone having 1 million bucks would have to hand over 5000$...end of story....that to me would make sense in a way.

    Warren Buffet is always doing charity stuff, gates is doing some , more should too, but to help it's government in time of need...no one wanted to be told that the US credit line was reclassified as being not so good....had they come up with this idea before then, it might have helped.

    1. Re:Good for them.... by CaptainDefragged · · Score: 1

      I've often thought this would be a great and fair idea. n=20% is probably a good rate too. If you earn a dollar you pay 20 cents tax; if you earn $1million you pay $200,000 tax. No deductions, no offsets. It would put a whole sector of hangers-on out of work, but wouldn't it be great overall. I'd love to see how the actual tax collection figures stack up versus the current system. The claims that it'll deter investment are a nonsense. If there is a dollar to be made, people will be in it.

      --
      Don't tailgate - the end is near!
    2. Re:Good for them.... by hesaigo999ca · · Score: 1

      Especially if there is no other alternative...I mean, when you think of it, it is not like any other industry where competition rules...this has no competition, what is just is...so if you say from one day to the next that the government will save millions from taking away all the tax deduction non sense, and just make it a straight tax collection, no need to spend money to hire tons of people to review all the tax papers to make sure people are not cheating...also less paper spent on explaining all the deductions, so less spent on that...as well as no more hiding behind accountants....so anyone making a million but paying 0$ will now be paying the full amount, and then we would see real cash....maybe even in the trillions.

  164. This isn't an attempt to tax the rich by speed_rrracer · · Score: 1

    This is just politic-speak. All that's happening here is a call for the wealthy to donate more to campaign funds to enrich politicians. After a sufficient amount of money has been donated, this legislation will be defeated, vanish, or be crippled by some compromise. Politicians want their pockets lined. By lobbying for this legislation, Obama is increasing the income of the members of various houses. They will then thank him by permitted some compromise down the line, probably in the 6-person deficit-reduction panel.

  165. Taxing ROGUE Corporations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that set up shop in countries abroad solely to evade the taxman and do business in countries that are unable to tax them would be a better law than taxing a small percentage of people who are actually good at what they do and who already abide by current tax laws.

  166. Re:Welcome to drudgedot, again... by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

    People have free choice, do they not. Most people claiming what you are, don't think they have any choice, hate Walmart but still shop there because it is cheap. They complain about Best Buy but refuse to shop local and buy everything from online, and then wonder why there are no local jobs and Circuit City went bust.

    --
    Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
  167. Infinite buckets by HotBBQ · · Score: 1

    I've always wondered why we have so few marginal tax brackets. I'd like to see a progressive income tax function created and everyone would pay the integral of that function. Perhaps it could be asymptotic at some maximum income. Of course this would mostly rule out filing by paper. I wish.

  168. Tax-the-rich crowd bad at math by AmericanGladiator · · Score: 1

    The top 240,000 filers earn $1M or more each year. The combined income for those 240,000 is $727B. That amounts to only 1/2 of our annual deficit.

    I'm sympathetic to the arguments from Ben Stein (conservative) and Warren Buffet (liberal) who *want* to be taxed at a higher rate. But let's not pretend that it's going to overcome the massive, unsustainable spending that our government engages in.

    1. Re:Tax-the-rich crowd bad at math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which is probably why they're not planning on taxing 100% of their income.

      Sheesh, why does the government have to solve all of its problems in a single fell swoop? If you want that, it would be taxing their wealth, not their income, which would work, since that's somewhere in the 50 trillion range.

      Could just take one out of every three dollars they HAVE and it'd pay the current debt off. Which would reduce the deficit, I admit, since they wouldn't have so much in interest.

      But...this is a bit of a different plan.

    2. Re:Tax-the-rich crowd bad at math by Red_Chaos1 · · Score: 1

      Are you a moron? Oh, sorry, rhetorical question.

      All of you who bleat this stupidity seem to feel we should just continue down the same fucked path. So what if taxing higher "only" amounts to half the deficit. 1/2 is better than nothing, last I checked.

    3. Re:Tax-the-rich crowd bad at math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So if I understand, you are advocating taxing the highest 240,000 incomes at 100%? Really?

      The first law of holes is this: When you find yourself in a hole, stop digging.

      If this country were an individual with a $55K income, it would be spending $96K a year and have $350K in credit card debt. Are you telling me that the first thing this individual should do is try to increase their income? The problem is that they don't make enough? No, they need to stop digging themselves deeper into debt by cutting spending.

    4. Re:Tax-the-rich crowd bad at math by AmericanGladiator · · Score: 1

      Oops - didn't mean to post anonymously above.

  169. Clinton - only half of story being told by drnb · · Score: 1

    Ryan is ignorant of economic history. Remember how awful the economy was when Clinton was president?

    There is a rather important thing missing from your argument. SPENDING was also addressed in the Clinton era. So those wishing to be intellectually honest in their advocacy of Clinton era policies would advocate both returning to Clinton era tax rates and Clinton era spending levels.

  170. Major problem with that. by khasim · · Score: 1

    Two other points about Buffet: as has been mentioned, he's free to give what he thinks is his "fair share" to the government, but he chooses not to.

    Yeah, that sounds logical. Why don't we just cut the tax rate to 0% and everyone can give whatever they feel is appropriate? Who needs a tax code if everyone can give what they want?

    Secondly, part of Buffet's business is capitalizing on businesses that must sell because they cannot pay inheritance taxes.

    And yet inheritance taxes have been cut to their lowest point in years. Isn't that what "estate planning" is for? You want to reward people for failing to plan for death? When everyone knows that they will, eventually, die?

    Some more things: we need to be very careful when discussing this that we say things like "lower percentage" instead of "less tax." Make no mistake - he may be paying a lower percentage than his secretary, but he pays WAY MORE.

    And you think you've just said something insightful?

    The problem is that a lower percentage (even if it is more money) is LESS of a burden than a higher percentage (even if less money).

    When you only make $30K a year, 20% is a lot to you.
    When you make $30M a year, 15% is LESS of a burden.

    Secondly, investing is a big driver in the economy, and higher capital gains taxes have often led to slowing the economy.

    Two fallacies there:

    1. History would disagree with you. The US economy grew faster when the capital gains tax was higher.

    2. We're talking about the US economy. Investing in a company that hires overseas workers has a lesser effect on the US economy than hiring US workers. Even through the capital gains would be the same.

  171. 1950s tax rates - a failed comparison by drnb · · Score: 1

    Remember how awful the economy was when Clinton was president? ... Going back as far as 1950, higher top marginal rates are (weakly) correlated with improved economic growth, not reduced economic growth

    Academic fail.

    Those wishing to be intellectually honest would recall that magic phrase so often used in economics, "all other things being equal". Comparisons to the 1950s completely fail in this regard. In the 1950s the US had very little COMPETITION. This dumbest ideas of a CEO would seem to work in an environment were most of the overseas competition had their industrial based bombed into scrap metal.

  172. Re:Reflections of Paul Ryan's Notion of Class Warf by Overunderrated · · Score: 1

    Point?

    You've exactly described class warfare. One class (that 99%) attacking another (the 1%). The wealthy are simply being treated as an incredibly easy scapegoat.

  173. Re:Reflections of Paul Ryan's Notion of Class Warf by z4ce · · Score: 1

    In other news, the bottom %99 decide the top %1 should pay for their government services. This is the downfall of democracy.

    I can only imagine the shock and awe when it only generates %1 of the revenue they expect as the flood of shell companies and offshore activity spikes.

    Did you know that already the united state and north korea are the only two countries that take based on citizenship and not residency? Argh.

    It seems like no one cares about freedom anymore.

  174. Force projection by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Nobody is going to invade the US, without coming home to a glass parking lot anyway, and all that money is just thrown down a hole

    America doesn't have 12 aircraft carriers because they are worried about invasion. They have them for force projection. They allow the US to influence behavior through the implied threat (sometimes carried out) of military force. Parking an aircraft carrier off the coast of a country tends to get the attention of anyone nearby.

    I agree that the US spends far too much on its military. I'm merely pointing out that it isn't done strictly for defense.

    1. Re:Force projection by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      An approach which led fairly conclusively to 9-11.

    2. Re:Force projection by llZENll · · Score: 1

      It doesn't matter how you label it, borrowing and spending more than every other nation on earth combined on "defense" doesn't make too much sense when your worst threat is a band of rebels without a country to target. 9-11 was a terrible event, no one questions that, but our response and nearly every law, action, and expenditure in the name of it is a total waste of money and slap in the face of freedom. Every single one of those 12 aircraft carriers represents millions of lost jobs, lost productivity, and worse of all a HUGE burden on the future of our country which we have yet to realize.

  175. Buffet a fraud and unpatriotic by drnb · · Score: 1

    Buffet is a fraud. He pays less taxes than his secretary/assistant because he pays her in cash and pays himself in stock. Cash and stocks are taxed in different ways. If Buffet was intellectually honest he would be saying tax cash and capital gains at the same level, not increase the marginal tax rates. If Buffet was truly patriotic he would pay himself in cash and pay taxes just like his employees, rather than use loopholes to "cheat" the tax man.

  176. Clinton was part of deregulation by drnb · · Score: 1

    Goddamn Republicans beating the same fucking drum they've been beating for 10 years "Lower taxes and remove regulations so corporations can compete!"

    Actually the Democrats had a hand in that. The ever popular Bill Clinton signed the laws removing some of the federal regulations that led to the current financial crisis. But there's more. This legislation signed by Clinton also pre-empted the state's ability to regulate in some of these areas. He nullified state regulations that prevented someone from buying insurance for something/someone they did not have a financial interest in. Some of the troublesome financial instruments that were developed required such restrictions be removed.

  177. Mod parent up by Nicolai+Haehnle · · Score: 1

    Thank you so much, good sir (or lady). The whole "you can't raise taxes because they'll evade it" meme is ridiculous and needs to be shot dead.

  178. That was a nice nap. by sgt+scrub · · Score: 1

    If 8% of Americans (the number of millionaires) make more in interest then most do while working all year long, they can afford to pay a larger percentage on that income. If the 100 billionaires in the U.S. can make more than 50% of the populations combined earnings in a single year, they can afford to pay more too.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Household_income_in_the_United_States

    http://money.cnn.com/2011/03/16/news/economy/millionaires/index.htm

    http://www.forbes.com/wealth/billionaires/list?country=225&industry=-1&state=

    --
    Having to work for a living is the root of all evil.
  179. Party Loyalty == FAIL by drnb · · Score: 1

    Vote them out. Vote them all out. And keep doing it until we find some representatives who are more interested in solving the nation's problems than playing political games with American lives as the pieces.

    On a related note. Party loyalty is responsible for many of our current problems. If you loyally vote for *your* party then your party can ignore you because your vote is secure, and the other party can ignore you because they can do nothing to earn your vote. Those who vote based upon a theoretical party platform are a big part of the problem. People need to make politicians realize that they will cross party lines for the slightest reason. This is the only way to make politicians responsive to the voters, to make politicians fear that there is no base they can rely upon.

  180. Re:Woah, TIMEOUT! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're right, Slashdot should only post fawning articles about Ron Paul and Steve Jobs.

  181. Why not just close the loopholes? by msobkow · · Score: 1

    Rather than creating new taxes or increasing them, why not just close some of the loopholes that allow the rich to pay less in taxes than the poor and middle class do as a percentage of their income?

    --
    I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
  182. Re:Reflections of Paul Ryan's Notion of Class Warf by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Number of people unemployed: 14,000,000 (Bureau of Labor Statistics)

    If all the people with an income of 1,000,000 or more hired 60 people, the problem would be solved. Easy peasy. Go for it, "job creators".

  183. Idolatry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Associating wealth with virtue is a form of idolatry.

  184. Mod parent up. by khasim · · Score: 1

    All this talk of cutting taxes to create jobs ... the taxes have been cut and cut and cut again. Now they are at the lowest point in decades.

    Yet the jobs are not being created in the USofA.

    The people arguing for cutting taxes to create jobs are incorrectly conflating wealth / income / job-creation.

    They are NOT the same.

  185. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by Homr+Zodyssey · · Score: 1

    My previous president imprisoned people without trial and tortured them. Then he tanked our economy.

    Against my wishes, by the way.

    So please, continue to complain that your current president is some kind of boogie-man.

  186. Class warfare? Bring it on! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah it's class warfare, but we didn't start the war, and to be honest, we're losing it now. I'd like to see the democrats own up to it and say that they're fighting in the class warfare for those who haven't yet made their first 20 million. Raise the income gap as a rallying cry. Break out those tiny tiny violins for the trust fund babies.

    It is very easy for the rich to sway politics, as politicians can often be bought. So the rich have been tipping the scales in their favor for quite some time. Its time someone tips back.

  187. Close the DAMN loopholes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lets face it our tax system is horribly broken.

    WE need to COMPLETELY revamp the system closing these loopholes and making off-shoring (jobs and money) illegal.

    I had a job where the owners of the company made 30 times the money I did (each) and yet paid less taxes than I did because they were able to run the business off of the money generated here in the US and therefore was able to write off almost everything as business expenses, BUT we did international business and he never used any of the money generated offshore to support the business and therefore paid no income taxes on it. THIS IS WRONG an the kind of crap that goes on all the time.

    The rich say well we already pay more taxes than everyone else combined, and they do. To this I say well you should because you make 100+ times more than most of us well make in our entire lifetimes every year. But many of these same people pay less tax by percentage than I do (15-20%) because they have the ability to cheat, sorry I mean "use", the system that most people do not.

    There is a huge part of the population is so poor that they pay no tax and in some cases get paid by the government. This needs to stop as well I don't mind that those in poverty pay nothing more than sales tax but no one should ever get more than they pay in back ... EVER!!!!

  188. Thought terminating cliche by microbox · · Score: 1

    The term you are looking for is: thought terminating cliche.

    Lifton writes:

    The language of the totalist environment is characterized by the thought-terminating cliché. The most far-reaching and complex of human problems are compressed into brief, highly reductive, definitive-sounding phrases, easily memorized and easily expressed. These become the start and finish of any ideological analysis.

    --

    Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
  189. About time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is long overdue. Of course people will gripe. You may have to wait a whole month for the interest from the trust fund to purchase (in full) a brand new mansion on 91 acres in the Hamptons instead of the 3 days it is now! O.M.G.!!! If you want to call it class warfare, then feel free, but just know that its been going on for more than 15 years now, and the war as attacked the middle class consistently and constantly. There should be retroactive back taxes as well (for at least 15 years). Also, loopholes should be closed for corporations (make 15 billion in revenue and pay no taxes??? BULLSHIT, you better start paying *at least* 350 million on that!). Profits earned can't be offshored. If you make the cash here, you pay the tax here. That should also be on a state by state basis. Next, the tax loopholes should be closed for accrued interest. Make two hundred grand off the trust fund? Pay 45% tax on that! Same with corporations. Oh, and if you offshore jobs, then we will institute a 3% surcharge on all imported goods. We aren't out to kill trade, we are just keep some jobs here. As for rubbish about 'taxing the job creators', they have been doing a shitty job creating jobs! Why is it in other countries where the tax rates are higher, the unemployment rate is less, and they still have jobs, yet here the 'job creators' pay less tax, and don't create crap-all?

  190. Rock on, dude! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Way to go, calling out these little bits of linguistic warfare!

    We need more people to know how they're manipulated through words, because this is one of those times where knowledge itself actually kinda is power.

  191. Good Grief. by TaleSpinner · · Score: 1, Insightful

    This idiot cannot get rid of his hard-on for more and more taxes. After whacking in the trillion and a half for Obamacare, now he wants another 2 trillion on top of that - and then he wonders why businesses are scared to expand?

    Oh - and let me get this straight - the Democrats are going to "save Medicare" - which is already drastically underpaying doctors more than any other insurance - by taking more money out of it? That will save it for Seniors? And this $247 billion more in addition to the half trillion he has already hacked out of it for Obamacare? That's how the Democrats are going to save us from the Evil Republicans? This is what we need saving from!

    "We had to destroy the village in order to save it!"

    Laffer must be laughing in his grave watching Keynes spin in the next plot over.

    1. Re:Good Grief. by haruchai · · Score: 1

      Businesses in America are hoarding $2-3 trillion dollars. If they aren't going to invest it or create jobs, then they should give some of it back to the people they got it from - that would be the American people.

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    2. Re:Good Grief. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      #1 I don't know where you get such facts, but I do not believe that number for an instant.

      #2 Yes, they are hoarding some cash. Of course they are! the President can't open his mouth without announcing more taxes and more regulations on business - from the most anti-business President ever elected. Why aren't they hiring or investing it? Because they expect they'll need it to cushion the next round of taxes and regulations. That is what the economists mean when they say "uncertainty" is holding the economy back. No one really knows how much Obamacare is going to cost or who's going to pay it, half the regulations haven't even been written yet! All employers can count on is that anyone they hire is going to cost a lot more than they can tell up front. In such a climate they cannot take that risk, it's that simple.

      You want companies to get off that money and start hiring?

      1. Repeal Obamacare.
      2. Put a 10 year moratorium on EPA rulemaking.
      3. Put duct tape over Obama's big mouth and don't let him, Pelosi, or Reid say anything in public.

      Do that and we'd have full employment and a bustling economy in less than two years.

    3. Re:Good Grief. by haruchai · · Score: 1

      Americans spend far too much on healthcare for what they (on average) get out of the system. The only good reason to repeal ObawneyCare would be to replace it with what it should have been from the outset - a true, fair, comprehensive single payer system.

      The EPA has been severely weakened during the Bush administration - didn't make a hiring difference.

      The President has tried, albeit weakly, to truly implement shared sacrifice, in a modest way and returning to the Clinton-era tax brackets won't bankrupt any rich folk but ending those 2 expensive wars is a must.
      America needs its manufacturing base back, even if only in part. And that includes expertise in refining. If you're digging up ore but sending it overseas to be processed and then buying it back, you're fighting an uphill battle.
      The only reason that ObawneyCare would be expensive would be that the White House made too many concessions and compromises. See single-payer system above.

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    4. Re:Good Grief. by TaleSpinner · · Score: 1

      > The only good reason to repeal ObawneyCare
      > would be to replace it with what it should have been
      > from the outset - a true, fair, comprehensive single
      > payer system.

      Oh, yes, that worked out real well for all the countries that tried it. Would you like to watch your kid choke to death for lack of a tracheotomy that would at least ease the kid's passing? A tracheotomy is a simple, trivial, cheap procedure that the Canadian bureaucracy refused a dying child because they decided the kid's life wasn't worth it. The parents had to find an American hospital to do the procedure, maybe not significantly extending his life but at least sparing him a more gruesome passing. Way to go, Single Payer.

      "Single Payer" is code for "government run", and the government does too much too badly already. That is the nature of the beast. It can't be changed.

    5. Re:Good Grief. by haruchai · · Score: 1

      Single payer systems have been in place in some civilized countries for decades, most of which have healthier, longer-living citizens than the US. I don't know why the tracheotomy was refused when it has been done for the couple's first child who'd died of a similar condition.
      But that has little to do with single-payer. US insurance companies routinely make contrary decisions that have permanently damaged the health of their customers and cost lives.
      No system is perfect but a well-run, single-payer would be far better than what you have now.
      The biggest challenge would be getting rid of the culture of greed that permeates US politics and corporations - that is, by far, the greatest threat and obstacle to improvement.

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
  192. Who actually pays income tax? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For tax year 2008, the top 10% (Adjusted Gross Income) paid 69.94% of all federal income taxes. The bottom 50% paid 2.7% For more see here: http://ntu.org/tax-basics/who-pays-income-taxes.html The data comes from the IRS.

  193. Re:Reflections of Paul Ryan's Notion of Class Warf by Brannoncyll · · Score: 1

    In other news, the bottom %99 decide the top %1 should pay for their government services. This is the downfall of democracy.

    Democracy is a form of government in which all people have an equal say in the decisions that affect their lives. The 99% imposing something upon the 1% is very democratic.

    I can only imagine the shock and awe when it only generates %1 of the revenue they expect as the flood of shell companies and offshore activity spikes.

    You are probably right. Unfortunately I doubt the partisan government will make any headway in closing the loopholes that allow such tactics.

    It seems like no one cares about freedom anymore.

    So freedom is the luxury to swim in a pool of money while the country collapses around your ears? Or perhaps you don't care?

  194. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by element-o.p. · · Score: 1

    [Citation Needed]

    I remember when I first got a "real" job, by which, I mean one that wasn't a paper route or fast food. One of my coworkers was griping about the taxes taken out of her paycheck, when I commented, "That's more than my entire gross income this pay period!" Say what you will about the upper and (upper-) middle classes, but the fact remains, these are the people who are already footing most of the bill for the services that all of us use.

    --
    MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
  195. How many times should a single dollar be taxed ? by RL78 · · Score: 1

    1, 2, 3......what's really fair?

  196. Obama's plan is not designed to do anything by pnuema · · Score: 2

    And this is not a knock on Obama. Here is the inside baseball on the 2012 election:

    The Republicans have a vested interest in the economy remaining poor. If the economy improves, Obama will be re-elected. This is almost a certainty, given his favorability numbers. Conversely, if the economy remains poor, Obama stands a good chance of losing.
    The people who decide elections in this country are "swing" voters, or LIVs (low information voters). These voters tend to decide who they want to vote for based on their gut feeling, and then find reasons to justify this decision. This is why incumbent presidents almost always win in a good economy, and lose far more often in a bad one. Even if the Obama jobs proposal would completely turn the economy around, and give us all ponies, the Republicans won't let it pass. So, Obama has rolled out this package, knowing Republicans will vote against it, and then will campaign throughout this election cycle on their obstructionism. His only chance is to get those LIVs to think twice at the voting booth - to firmly implant in their minds that Republicans care more about millionaires than them. This jobs bill is not about jobs - it is about exposing Republicans for the obstructionists they (currently) are, in the most public way possible.

    1. Re:Obama's plan is not designed to do anything by smellotron · · Score: 1

      Whoever decided that the POTUS should be spending his time on jearbs was a genius. Seriously, what better way to make the entire executive branch completely beholden to filibustering and other legislative shenanigans?

  197. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by element-o.p. · · Score: 2

    You've been enjoying the Kool-Aid, I see.

    Yes, there certainly are people who lucked into wealth. But if you think that money just makes itself, I humbly submit that you don't know WTF you are talking about. A few years ago, I worked with the wife of a millionaire. That dude worked his butt off, easily doubling the hours I worked every week. The bottom line is this: Obama has fed you a line of crap, that it's the "evil rich" who are the reason you are a have-not. You can buy that story if you want, but while you might be right that "Working hard is by far no guarantee to get wealthy,", IME, it's the best option out there for those of us who weren't born into wealth. I was flat broke a while back (1995), but I'm reasonably comfortable right now. That's not because the government "redistributed" the wealth "fairly"; it's because I worked hard and paid my dues. YMMV, but I've got no patience for this bitterness against the rich. Working hard isn't a guarantee, but jealousy won't get you anywhere.

    --
    MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
  198. Will fail because... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...the rich make the rules.

  199. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by siride · · Score: 1

    What's your point? That poor people don't pay as much in taxes, in absolute terms, as the upper and middle classes? Is it that even by pure percentage, the poor pay less? Duh. Nobody's arguing the opposite. But it is true that for a poor person, having, say 25% of your income spent on taxes, leaves a lot less left over in real terms than what a middle or upper class person would have left over. Say a poor person makes 500 bucks a month (number pulled from ass). If 25% goes to taxes, then they have 375 left over, which might not be enough to cover rent and food. A person making 2000 bucks a month with the same tax rate would have 1500 left over, which probably certainly covers rent and food and gives them some left over for other bills and disposable income.

    It strikes me as strange that it's apparently anathema to have even the slightest discussion about raising taxes a little on the upper class, but it's okay to talk about how the poor just aren't being taxed enough, like that would help them or make a dent in the deficit. You can't get blood from a turnip. I'd be willing to agree that people on the upper end of poor maybe could be moved into a tax-paying bracket so long as that doesn't come with a massive decrease in public services that we, and especially they rely on.

  200. The wealthy need to pay more... Period! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The wealthy need to pay more in taxes. Period. Its the right thing to do. I mean really....how much more money do you need once you have your first 1 million in your pocket? The weathly used to pay a LOT more in taxes and they should again.

    1. Re:The wealthy need to pay more... Period! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Someone starving in India would use the same logic to claim that you should give half of your wealth to him.

      If you haven't, you're nothing more than a hypocrite.

  201. Re:Reflections of Paul Ryan's Notion of Class Warf by YenTheFirst · · Score: 1

    I tend to agree, but there's some devil's advocate arguments that need to be made here

    Firstly and most importantly, percentages of population, even overwhelming majority, do not make an action moral. The legislated murder of an innocent person would only affect ~0.00000032% of the population, but it would not be a correct thing to do. Increased tax rates on incomes above $1,000,000 may be [I believe they are] justifiable, but the small number of people affected is not the justification

    You start with a number of filing households with various incomes, but then switch to count of persons. Stick to one or the other, otherwise it looks like a textbook statistics lie. I realize that the easily available data from the different sources doesn't match up in units of measure, but that's still an important thing to address.

    --
    It's not stupid. It's Advanced.
  202. Re:Reflections of Paul Ryan's Notion of Class Warf by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thank you for posting this.

    The Millionaire Tax helps 99% of Americans and hinders 1% which happen to be millionaires.

    It's a good thing no matter how you look at it. Don't let the Tea Party prevent this from happening.

  203. Don't worry, the Jews will enslave you by Dainsanefh · · Score: 0

    The Jews will never treat gentile with dignity. And they are the one who hold all the money.

    There is only one way to suppress the world wide neo-con movement that threatens the human race: Those who oppose our enemy we will support. Those who support our enemy we will oppose.

    --
    Twitter: @dainsanefh
  204. Who should get that money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, based on the assumption that the "wealthy" (whatever your definition is) do not in fact own their property and it should be belong to the state, what makes you think that there will be any change in the issues in the US and across the world? How about two easy hot button areas like poverty and education.

    Since the introduction of the War on Poverty and the Great Society (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_on_poverty), we've increased our welfare spending by over 700% (http://www.usgovernmentspending.com/downchart_gs.php?year=1960_2021&view=1&expand=&units=b&log=linear&fy=fy12&chart=40-total&bar=1&stack=1&size=l&title=&state=US&color=c&local=s) and yet we can't get below 10% poverty. Oddly, our poverty line is a bar high enough that only 48 countries in the world would count as above the poverty line (http://siteresources.worldbank.org/DATASTATISTICS/Resources/GNIPC.pdf). Even given in context of the US, without regards to the rest of the world (isolationists),

    On the other hot button that we clearly do not spend enough money on, education, we've also experienced some exceptional government intervention. Almost an 800% increase in spending (http://www.usgovernmentspending.com/downchart_gs.php?year=1960_2021&view=1&expand=&units=b&log=linear&fy=fy12&chart=20-total&bar=1&stack=1&size=l&title=&state=US&color=c&local=s), and we've managed to create an environment where people coming out of college can have decades worth of debt to pay off since all the subsidies managed to do was increase the price of education in the first place (http://pages.uoregon.edu/lsingell/Pell_Bennett.pdf).

    So, our solution of throwing trillions of dollars at the federal government has quite clearly worked, and only requires a little more to finally push us all into a golden age of prosperity. I mean, besides the fact that the people who are currently connected to the government and getting bailouts while not not paying taxes (http://www.findingdulcinea.com/news/business/September-08/Warren-Buffett-Buys-Share-of-Goldman-Sachs.html + http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2011/08/25/buffett-to-invest-5-billion-in-bank-of-america/ = http://www.usatoday.com/money/industries/banking/2010-07-24-goldman-bailout-cash_N.htm & http://www.futureofcapitalism.com/2010/07/buffett-cheerleads) will still be connected to the government and helping them run things, it should work out perfectly.

  205. Inflation-indexed? by mrcubehead · · Score: 1

    I don't see how anyone could reasonably reject a call for a higher tax burden on $1m+ individuals/corporations, if it is inflation-indexed so that the other 99.8% of earners aren't all paying this tax in 10 years. We don't need AMT 2.0

  206. Re:Cap Gains vs. Income Re:Strawman by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "What else are they going to do with all their extra money?" Off-shore accounts would no doubt be an option.

  207. Easy. by raehl · · Score: 1

    Defense budget.

  208. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by element-o.p. · · Score: 1

    My point isn't that the poor aren't hurting, or that we should tax the poor more heavily. My point is that this thread is full of people vilifying the rich, but the rich are the one who already pay 85% of the tax collected annually (cited numerous times already in my comments; look at my comment history if you need the citation), and that is --sometimes literally -- biting the hand that feeds you (okay, maybe not literally "biting", but literally "the hand that feeds you" anyway).

    --
    MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
  209. Re:Reflections of Paul Ryan's Notion of Class Warf by Red_Chaos1 · · Score: 1

    Wah wah wah. Cry some more. The top 1% have been fucking the rest for a long time. It's perfectly fair for them to be on the receiving end for once. Cope.

  210. Re:Reflections of Paul Ryan's Notion of Class Warf by Red_Chaos1 · · Score: 1

    Payback's a bitch ain't it.

    Live by the sword, die by the sword.

  211. Libertarian "morals" are incoherent. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your "ethical system" libertarianism is philosophically incoherent. It'd be better called a pseudo-morality, a la pseudo-science. Google "libertarianism critiques" and be educated.

    And before you reply, please do the google search. Seriously. Let go of your deeply-held beliefs (because that is what they are--beliefs, not acknowledgments of any sort of fact or evidence about the world), and open your mind a bit before replying.

    1. Re:Libertarian "morals" are incoherent. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're asking someone to change their beliefs, you don't get to demand that they do the legwork for you. Either present the critiques yourself, or admit that you have no valid argument to make. Those are the ONLY possible choices, and you have selected the latter.

  212. Re:Reflections of Paul Ryan's Notion of Class Warf by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The point is... you are in the 99% sweetheart, not in the 1%. And you will never be.

  213. Re:Welcome to drudgedot, again... by Altus · · Score: 1

    OK.

    Today Obama introduced much more than just a tax proposal, in fact some of that is covered lightly in the summary, however the headline is not: "Obama proposes new economic recovery plan" the headline focuses simply on the "Wealthy tax" which is neither a name of a thing or a technical term, it is actually more of a talking point. The only commentary on the plan is simply another talking point from a prominent republican which says pretty much nothing at all about the plan. All of this is designed to whip people into a frenzy. Its much the same on any of the 24 hour news stations or news papers or political websites. Headlines and summaries like that get people all up in arms rather than getting them to a place where they can rationally discuss the implications of the policy.

    The reason websites and TV shows do this is because whipping people into a frenzy keeps their eyeballs where you want them. When you read something rational and well thought out (as well as written in a calm and neutral way) you don't usually get into a multi page flame war with someone over it. Those flame wars provide advertising dollars that are critical. Politicians are complicit in this (with their talking points and their reframing and redefining of terms and arguments) because the same thing that keeps people flaming keeps them from thinking, from considering other viewpoints and from finding middle ground.

    This is the nature of discourse in our world today. To some degree it has always been like this, but I do think we are getting better and better at fanning the flames. Remember that there was a time when a 24 hour news station seemed crazy... what would they talk about all day. Either there is really a lot more going on (probably not) or these people are getting a lot more milage out of what is going on by keeping people worked up over just about everything.

    --

    "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

  214. Who decides what "fair" is? by laing · · Score: 1

    Why do we even have a tiered tax system?

  215. Big profits = Can afford a tax bill by sjbe · · Score: 1

    A lot of small businesses are either simple proprietorships/partnerships or LLCs, for which the profits are taxed as an addition to personal income.

    As opposed to C-Corps where they are taxed at BOTH the personal level and on the profits of the business. Essentially double dipping by the government. S-Corps and LLCs pay less tax overall in most cases.

    Proprietors and partners will pay these taxes from the cash on hand of the business, meaning that the business has fewer resources to expand and hire more employees.

    All businesses pay for taxes with the cash of the business and that isn't unique to smaller businesses. Most small businesses do not have profits in excess of $1 million. If they do have profits in excess of $1 million, I'm happy for them but then they *should* expect a big tax bill and can damn well afford it.

  216. Why should I pay more? (Equality of outcomes) by Golgafrinchan · · Score: 1
    I'm not even close to the income range that would be affected by this tax, and in general I'm in favor of increasing taxes, but...

    Something about the whole 'progressive tax' thing just seems unfair to me. Some info about me:

    - I grew up in a solidly middle-class family. My parents owned a small house and we never went hungry, but we certainly were not wealthy, or even close to it.

    - I attended public schools throughout K-12.

    - I attended and graduated from a public university. I ended up with a fair amount of debt.

    - I then got two graduate degrees, both of which built up some debt as well.

    In short, there's nothing extraordinary about my background. At the same time, I feel fortunate to be where I am and recognize things could've been a lot tougher for me. I've played by the rules, saved as much as I could, put off starting a family until later in life, etc., and am now reaping the rewards.

    All that said: why should I pay a higher marginal tax rate than a hypothetical person who had the exact same opportunities I had, but is now in a lower-paying job than I am? While I agree that I have a higher -ability- to pay, I have trouble understanding why it's 'fair' that I should. That person could have waited to start a family as well. Or she could have chosen to study a subject where it was easier to get a higher-paying job. Whatever the case, it's hard for me to rationalize that two people with the same opportunities should end up with different outcomes.

    I understand how it's different with people who grew up with all of the advantages -- wealthy family, exclusive boarding schools, Ivy League universities, etc. But not for someone who worked their way up the socioeconomic ladder.

    I'm not trolling in the least. Please enlighten me.

    --
    My userid is prime!
  217. Innovation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What we need is innovation, which of course will lead to higher wages for all and higher tax revenues. To do this we need to bring in a million or so workers from "traditional" cultures on visas, because as we all know traditional people are the most innovative!. What fool can't see this? Vote for Mitt!

    http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9219797/Romney_sees_tech_skills_shortage_and_H_1B_visa_need

  218. Re:Reflections of Paul Ryan's Notion of Class Warf by euroq · · Score: 1

    Exactly. The right (or whoever) needs to stop saying that rich is the exact same thing as job creators. They may be the same, but make it explicit.

    If you are so worried about taxing job creators out of the area, then stop giving tax breaks to the rich - instead, give tax breaks to job creators. Make it based on job creation, not on income.

    --
    Just because the U.S. is a republic does not mean it is not a democracy. Democracy/republic are not mutually exclusive.
  219. Re:Reflections of Paul Ryan's Notion of Class Warf by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How is this an argument for anything other than the proposition that tyranny of the majority is all right by you, just as long as the general interest is symbolically being served? Taxing the wealthy won't close the deficit, nor relieve the middle class. It has no beneficial effect for any of us. It just feels good when you're pissed off. Don't fall for it, we all deserve more coherent policy.

  220. BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This right-wing mythology has been debunked a hundred times over. How this spoiled crap gets 4,Interesting is beyond me. I guess teabaggers must be having a slow evening and trolling slashdot.

    1. Re:BS by sycodon · · Score: 1

      uh huh. Hundreds of times. By you and your pregnant girlfriend?

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
  221. Re: Warren Buffer ...? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The main reason that Warren Buffer, h...

    Wait. If Warren Buffer's taxes are too low, isn't that a "Buffer Underflow"? :-)

  222. It's the corporations, stupid. by choke · · Score: 1

    Rather than taxing the individuals, who are difficult to locate and mobile - why not tax the corporations which are paying the individuals? Why do we have the lowest net corporate taxation in the first world? Why do we continue to have bizarre and absurdly complex tax laws?

    I don't know, but it's puzzling.

    --
    "No good deed goes unpunished"
  223. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by siride · · Score: 1

    Someone has to pay for this country. It isn't vilifying the rich so much as vilifying the silly policies that say that those who own most of the wealth in this country, make most of the income, control most of the resources and derive the most direct and indirect benefit from the government and its services shouldn't have to pay the most for all that. You speak as if it's wrong that the wealthiest pay 85% of the taxes collected, even though they own 90% of the assets of this country.

  224. Re:Woah, TIMEOUT! by ojintoad · · Score: 0

    The irony of you leaving a comment complaining about the content I contributed that complained about the content slashdot editors contributed blows my mind. Could I make a suggestion? If you don't find a comment useful DON'T READ THE COMMENT.

  225. Money doesn't belong to government, but citizens. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know this will ruffle the leftist feathers on here, but to the dismay of everyone reading, all money doesn't belong to the government with government determining who should get how much. Neither do any of you have that right or ability. If I start a business based on an invention that rewards me with $1,000,000 in sales, that money is ENTIRELY MINE to save, keep, invest, or spend as I so please. That is money earned on my hard work and God given ingenuity.

    Though if I see that my invention brought me $1 million, I'd be taking a majority of it, hiring people (yup, creating more jobs than little Barry Obama has) giving them good paychecks to perform their jobs well and watch as $1,000,000 in sales turns into $100,000,000, then maybe $1,000,000,000 in sales. Then if I as owner wish to pay myself several million dollars and buy a ranch in Wyoming, then I have every God given right to do so and not a single person in the government or any other progressive leftie has the right to prevent me from doing so.

    That's what is called American exceptionalism and while America never has guaranteed equal results or outcomes, it promises each person and equal opportunity to make the most of their self and lives to invent, create, and become wealthy beyond their wildest dreams. If they fail, they pickup and start over. If they are lazy and don't want to work, they get nothing and go without.

    Thus to tax someone based on what they have alone is nothing but greedy class warfare by the leftists who are nothing more than angry upset jealous greedy snobs angry that someone else actually worked on an idea and made it successful. That money is rightfully earned, and rightfully belonging to the person who earned it. Not anyone elses, not for redistributing, not for welfare, nothing. If those rich are going to get taxed, then they are to be taxed equally with those of the poor. So if you want to tax the rich at 90%, then tax the poor at 90%. Or if you want to tax the poor at 5%, then tax the rich at 5%.

    It just shows how discriminating (and in many cases, racists) leftists are.

  226. If you think the rich shouldn't pay higher taxes.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...you're an idiot, period. There is no part of the sentence "the rich should get tax breaks" that makes sense. The rich earn lots of money, more money than they EVER need many times, let them HELP for once instead of hoarding it. It makes me facepalm and just DIE inside when I hear idiots on Fox News talking about "class warfare" because they might have to pay an extra 100k from their exorbitant 500k paycheck.

  227. I propose by luk3Z · · Score: 0

    I propose - look in my sig.

    --
    Recipes for USA bankrupt - http://tinypaste.com/0d66f dd = dollar deluge (printed in the infinity)
  228. Whitey Tax ... Kill Whitey by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dis be da time.

    Dis be da place.

    Dis us its ... time to kill whitey.

    Niggers united to Kill Whitey.

  229. Buffet is Bunk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If Warren Buffet is so concerned by the "loop-holes" in the tax code he would have demanded his tax tawyers follow the simple instructions and NOT itemize.

    Just talley up the income, talley up the outgo ... figure the difference. Take a Standard Deduction. Sign at the bottom.

    Its that simple.

    No. Not Uncle Warren. Not in Hell No.

    Warren Buffet may deserved to be killed, but he is not the poster child to get Obama re-elected on the cause of a Whitey tax. That's plain stupid and Obama Savior of the World just put his foot in it.

    No second term for Obama baby. Lights out.

  230. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by justleavealonemmmkay · · Score: 2

    "but I'm reasonably comfortable right now"

    Chance is you're not rich, hence not mooting my point

  231. Same Argument... by raymorphic · · Score: 1

    New taxes by itself rarely reduced the debt. Why? It just gives the Congress another excuse to spent the surplus for 'bridge-to-nowhere' projects.

    Cuttting spedning, taxes, AND regulations is the way to go.

    It's how you reduced the deficits and boost economic growth.

    If they cannot get their spending acts together, new revenue streams will rarely help in the long term.

  232. a proportional tax by ticktickboom · · Score: 0

    why not just end the federal reserve, stop income tax completely, and increase sales tax a slight bit? that would prove to be the income needed, only 2 trillion? end the proportional tax, stop income tax. then no one can complain how the rich don't have to pay as much tax ect ect ect. congress has the right to print money, but they do not use this right. hell, we could then borrow money from ourselves, interest free. as it is now, we pay 20 billion a year in interest, to a pvt bank. without that bank, tehre would be no income tax. without income tax, and congress printing money, the econemy would still grow, just wouldnt have the massive inflation we are used to. a dollar today is worth 99 cent tomorrow.

  233. Government is EVILLL!!1! by Internetuser1248 · · Score: 1

    I know I am not supposed to feed the trolls but this is just too much. Not to mention the comment has +3 insightful. "Government is evil by it's very nature" right... I assume this is coming from an even more warped understanding of the popular lie "more government means less freedom" so I will rebut that. Rebutting the original quote is barely worth the few seconds it takes to say 'what the fuck are you on?'
    If more government so obviously correlated with less freedom, we should be able to see that in evidence. Lets take the measures of government to be number of employees, number of pages of legislation, and amount of yearly government revenue. According to this the countries with the most government are all the old countries, ie western and northern Europe and the UK, and also the newer country, the USA which has been adept at enlarging it's government faster than most. Now we compare these countries to the countries with the least government: Somalia, DRCongo, Southern Sudan, Afghanistan, cambodia, haiti etc. These countries have almost no government. As you can see, less government correlates with less freedom, and also more violence. Does anyone have any evidence whatsoever that points the other way?
    I can explain why this is in a historical context and what government is actually for, for those of us like Archangel Michael here who failed political studies. Government used to be small and simple, there was a ruler called a king (there are many other titles as well but they all mean roughly the same thing) and in essence just one law: 'the kings word is law'. Some people thought this was unfair, and decided to invent the idea of the constitution, which provided a set of laws that the state and king were bound to governing people's basic rights. This worked so well that the idea caught on and got expanded upon, creating more and more laws to protect the rights of individuals and societies from the abuses of unchecked power. From this came such freedoms as emancipation, suffrage, tolerable working conditions, social welfare, healthcare, police protection, a fair judicial system, etc. The list goes on. The logical fallacy here is that government is being equated with power. More power is indeed correlated with less freedom. But less government results in fact in more unchecked power. Taking away the government does not reduce the amount of power being wielded, it merely takes away the controls on how that power is wielded.
    With regard to the tax question, I think someone on this thread should point out that almost a quarter of us children and young people are living in poverty. Perhaps we should contact the UN world food programme.

    1. Re:Government is EVILLL!!1! by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      TSA, DEA, FBI, CIA, NSA, IRS .....

      We used to be FREE here in the US, but do gooders like you keep passing laws "to protect us from the boogie man" evil out there, be it Scary Muslims, or the KKK, or the evil Rich, or whatever. Typical Liberal laws are based on the assumption "people are stupid, we must protect them from their own stupidity"

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
  234. Opposit of Sarkozy's fiscal shield. by Nowhere.Men · · Score: 1

    What I understood of Obama's proposal is the opposit of France Fiscal Shield

    In France, whatever is your incomes and wealth, you should not pay more than 50% of your income in taxes. I guess the top bracket in France is higher than 50% and there is also a wealth tax. So if you are rich in property that do not bring you lots of cash (Old castle), that may help you. So they are in the process of removing the shield and reducing the wealth tax.

    Obama propose that whatever the deduction you can have, whatever is the source of your incomes, if you earn more than a million dollar, you should pay at least the same rate than middle class americans. That make sense to me.

    People may start playing with their money so that they do some do not register as income but If you want to buy a plane, or a house or a cruise ship, you need some income.

    I don't know what to think of wealth tax. If the incomes they generates are taxed, why tax the capital? What about the capital of companies?
    There is always the inheritance taxes to redistribute them from time to time.

  235. President Obama by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This bill and all bills from President Obama will be shot down no matter what it is from now on. The republicians will not allow him to do nothing good for the economy so they can try to get a republician in office so why discuss anything about what he is proposing.

  236. It has nothing to do with fair by pijokela · · Score: 1

    Here in Finland it's a popular right wing strategy to call some taxes "unfair". Most often I hear of how unfair taxing inheritance is, but the same thing can be said about any tax that you personally don't like. Just repeat it enough on air and it will become reality. But when you actually think of it your question does not make any sense at all. The governament has the power and the right to tax you as much as they see fit. Whether it's once or twice or a thousand times doesn't matter at all.

    And when I personally think of taxation my personal tax rate has been falling for the last ten years while my income has doubled (from a student to an experienced developer). So - honestly - I think it would be fair if I and people like me would pay more taxes then we pay now. And then we wonder why there is no money to fund anything anymore. I bet your experience in the US is the same - because it's the same right wing policy that is sweeping everywhere.

    (And yeah, I do agree that if I was living in the US I wouldn't trust my governament to actually start saving instead of wasting the extra tax revenue.)

  237. Put the unemployed back to work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tariffs can also help fix the national debt problem by putting the unemployed back to work.

    "All ordinary people in America will benefit from pro-tariff policies. Such policies include:

            Increasing tariffs on manufactured goods to levels similar to levels in the 1800s and the early 1900s.
            A complete cessation of migration of new foreign workers from Central America/Mexico and the immediate deportation of foreign workers that are in the U.S. illegally.
            A complete cessation of the approval of H1-B visas and all other special workers' visas.

    The effects of these policies will be to put the unemployed back to work in manufacturing, allow ordinary people to have good benefits, and maintain high and appropriate wages."

    http://peoplestarifffront.blogspot.com/p/positive-pro-tariff-policies.html

  238. Re:Reflections of Paul Ryan's Notion of Class Warf by Syberz · · Score: 1

    Granted, 0.144136526118% is not a lot of people, but how much more cash would they bring into the government coffers with these new tax rates? Is there a way to estimate that with the current census data?

    --
    ~Syberz
  239. The facts do not support the partisan hyperbole by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "On average, the wealthiest people in America pay a lot more taxes than the middle class or the poor, according to private and government data. They pay at a higher rate, and as a group, they contribute a much larger share of the overall taxes collected by the federal government."

    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44592106/ns/politics-white_house/t/are-rich-taxed-less-secretaries/

  240. you are wrong by llZENll · · Score: 1

    "The only way for our lives to get better is if the rich have less of the money and we have more."

    This is 100% false, in a growing economy "the rich" can be rich and it benefits everyone, and everyones wealth and standard of living increases. The main problem with these comments is most people don't understand how an economy works and what really drives it. To educate yourself read http://www.amazon.com/How-Economy-Grows-Why-Crashes/dp/047052670X

    Basically:
    government spending is bad
    higher taxes are bad
    regulations are bad
    any government job is a drain on the economy
    printing and borrowing money is bad
    savings are good
    interest rates must be allowed to move
    deficits are very bad
    a strong currency is good

    Nearly everyone posting in this topic has it wrong, and are parroting the same baloney principals that have led us into this economic mess over the last 80 years. The next election is probably the last hope to manage the global financial meltdown coming in less than 5 years. Since the world is following US policy of devaluing its currency into oblivion by printing money, all other countries follow suit, in order to reverse this we must lead by example. The only candidate who not only understands that, but actually has integrity and whose actions reflect his beliefs is Ron Paul. Even if he is elected (which I think is highly unlikely) we are so far in the shit I doubt even a full 180 in policy from top down and fast action can save us.

    So basically the world economic bus is heading for a cliff with our foot squarely on the gas, Ron Paul is ready to hit the brakes but is chained to the back of the bus by the media, after the bus goes off the cliff the only passengers who are going to land safely are those that hold a gold parachute.

  241. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by element-o.p. · · Score: 1

    You speak as if it's wrong that the wealthiest pay 85% of the taxes collected, even though they own 90% of the assets of this country.

    That's my point, though! People keep saying that 85% of the taxes are owned by those who have 90% (or more) of the resources. To that, I reply: "[citation needed]". I keep posting that the group that pays 85% of the taxes, owns 66% of the resources, and I've posted a citation numerous times in this thread showing where that figure comes from. And people like you keep screaming that the rich should shoulder even more of the burden!

    --
    MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
  242. Roman Alternative by DarthVain · · Score: 1

    Maybe the USA should go back to it's "Republic" roots...

    When Rome needed money, just kill off a bunch of the rich elite, and take all their money and land.

    For factual accuracy I cite the TV series "ROME".

    In modern times, it isn't necessary to actually stab them to death, but it is preferable.

  243. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by siride · · Score: 1

    Yes, I think they should shoulder more of the burden. They are the primary beneficiaries of the system. They practically own it anyway. Why shouldn't they pay for it? Who cares what x, y and z are in the sentence "the top x% own y% of the wealth and pay z% of the taxes" when x is small and y is large? I don't give a fuck that instead of owning 90% they own 66%. The numbers are suspect anyways because a lot of the folks who have a great deal of wealth don't pay much in income taxes by way of loopholes, or just not getting paid in a traditional way, but instead through means that don't result in federal income taxes kicking in. So it doesn't really matter if it's 90% or 66%. They own a lot of the wealth and they ought to pay for that. It isn't punishment for being rich, it's simply asking that those who have the most, benefit the most from the system, pay the most to maintain it. I may have said this in a previous post, but I don't have a beef with the rich, so much as the politicians who seem to be doing their damnedest to destroy the middle class and coddle those who already have everything. It doesn't make sense.

    I ask you this: what would be the ideal tax structure in your world? How much should the various income groups and wealth groups pay and for what reason should they pay what you suggest?

    I personally think that income ought to be taxed at a slightly lower rate that currently on a progressive scale, and instead we ought to tax non-earned income and non-business assets at a fairly high rate, with additional taxes on large profits by corporations, here or abroad (if you do business in this country, you pay for the right to do business here). That would need to be tweaked according to the realities of the those forms of income and wealth, but the overall goal is to punish hoarding and seeking out obscene profits and personal gains at the expense of the system. If you are spending that money on job creation, corporate growth, infrastructure, etc., then you shouldn't be punished.

    Another alternative is to reconsider the tax system. Instead of being a system of penalizing "bad behavior" from the point of view of the government or the prevailing ideology, it ought instead to be simply a system to pay for the public good. Everyone has to pony up, but the system is to benefit everyone. It's not punishment or penalization, it's just the cost of doing business and living here. Workers cost money, goods cost money, having a stable nation with good infrastructure costs money too. It saddens me that the GOP language has turned the discussion on its head. Angry liberal talking points are often not much better, unfortunately.

  244. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by element-o.p. · · Score: 1
    Well...you're persistent, I'll grant you that :)

    Yes, I think they should shoulder more of the burden...It doesn't make sense.

    In other words, you are telling me, "Even though you have stats and a source to rebuff my claims, I'm going to stick to my intuition, anyway." That's called prejudice, my friend, and that means we are at an impasse on this point. I won't waste any more time debating it, then.

    I would, however, debate whether the rich or the poor benefit the most from public services. Think about it for a minute. Public schools? Not the rich; they pay taxes, but send their kids to private school. Public transportation? As if. The rich have limousines to take them where they want to go. Police? Yeah, to some extent...but the rich also hire private security firms and bodyguards, so even this service is likely to be used more by the lower and middle classes than the rich. Roads and other transportation infrastructure? That would be a tough call. Without those roads and infrastructure, no goods could get to market, which certainly would impact the rich, but I would argue that it would benefit the other classes just as much. I'd call it even. I am honestly curious, however, which public services the rich use that makes you think they are primary beneficiaries of the services paid for with their (our) tax dollars?

    I ask you this: what would be the ideal tax structure in your world? How much should the various income groups and wealth groups pay and for what reason should they pay what you suggest?

    Now that is a good question, and one I've spent quite a bit of time considering. I'm not dead set on an answer, but for now, at least, I'm pretty much in favor of a flat tax across the board for everyone who is at some threshold above the poverty level. That threshold would have to depend upon what the tax percentage is set at, since it wouldn't make much sense to tax the bottom tier of taxpayers at a rate such that their net income sinks below poverty level, but since their gross is above the poverty level, they don't qualify for any aid or assistance. My reasoning is thus: yes, those who can most afford to pay for public services should therefore be paying the most, and those who can least afford it shouldn't have to choose between feeding their kids and paying taxes.

    I personally think that income ought to be taxed at a slightly lower rate that currently on a progressive scale...

    Okay...not how I would do it, but I don't have any major criticisms of this tax structure so far.

    ...and instead we ought to tax non-earned income and non-business assets at a fairly high rate, with additional taxes on large profits by corporations, here or abroad (if you do business in this country, you pay for the right to do business here). That would need to be tweaked according to the realities of the those forms of income and wealth, but the overall goal is to punish hoarding and seeking out obscene profits and personal gains at the expense of the system.

    But I'm not at all okay with this. Let me ask you a question...what is the difference between a tax and a fine? If you get a fine for speeding, where does that money go? To the state, or muni, or whoever pulled you over, right? And that fine is used to pay for public services, like police departments, road maintenance, etc., right? In other words, it gets used for the "public good" exactly like a tax. The only difference that I can see, is that a fine is a tax for doing something wrong, and a tax is a fine for doing something right. So what you are saying in your argument above, is that you want to fine corporations if they do well ("large profits")? And you contradict yourself -- or at least, you only address half the issue -- when you say that you want these fines^Wtaxes on corporations, whether they operat

    --
    MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
  245. Re:Reflections of Paul Ryan's Notion of Class Warf by Sumtingwong · · Score: 1

    Percentage of people who will take their money overseas to a more tax friendly country: Percentage of households in the United States filing tax returns with incomes of $1,000,000 or more: 0.19959471529%

    Percentage of US citizens who will end up paying for this capital flight: 99.80040528471%

    (Sorry, a bit late to the game here. I seem to be one of the few who actually have a job where I do something and cannot spend most of my day in this forum bitching about Republicans, the wealthy or any other thing I am envious about.)

    --
    Word!
  246. You missed what I was saying. by raehl · · Score: 1

    I didn't say just ANY taxes were preventing job creation.

    I said taxes ON JOBS were preventing job creation.

    Bush didn't lower the tax on jobs at all - it's been 15.3% for over two decades.

    It's that special 15.3% tax on WAGES that is the problem. If I hire a worker in the United states, there's a 15% tax on all the wages I pay to the worker, up to a cap of $106,000, ON TOP of their income taxes. That means that if I *FIRE* an American worker, I get those taxes back.

    That means that, combined with income taxes, wage income is taxed at up to 43%, while PROFITS are taxed as low as 15%. When I pay you $100,000 and the federal government tacks on $43,000 in taxes, I pay $143,000 to give you a job. But if I fire you, the government only gets $20,000 or so instead of $43,000. So, the more people I hire, the more taxes I pay. THAT is the tax problem.

    On the other hand, if I raise income taxes and lower wage taxes, I can fix that problem. If *ALL* income is taxed at 25%, then if I pay you $100,000, you pay the government $25k of that in taxes. If I fire you and keep the $100,000, then I pay $25,000 in taxes. And that's if you don't get $15k or so of free income.

    So, under the current tax system, the more Americans you hire, the higher your tax burden is. If we fix the tax system, the more Americans you hire, the LOWER your tax burden should be. Or at least the same.

    If we want to encourage job growth, we should get rid of the 15% tax on wages that penalizes employers for hiring people.

  247. Re:Work hard, become successful, prosper... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In other words, you are telling me, "Even though you have stats and a source to rebuff my claims, I'm going to stick to my intuition, anyway." That's called prejudice, my friend, and that means we are at an impasse on this point. I won't waste any more time debating it, then.

    Except you do NOT have stats and a source to rebuff his claims. If you bothered to look at your other replies from other posts which you keep claiming your 66%:

    http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=2435108&cid=37454168

    There's one person there giving his source and stats, also pointing out that your citation deals with income, which is not the same as "wealth"

    You might have a point saying that this particular plan by Obama (to raise income taxes) is not addressing "wealth" either, but that would mean your argument and citation is meaningless as well, as you weren't addressing what people were claiming (you were talking about "income", people were talking about "wealth"), even if what people were claiming have nothing to do with Obama's plan (i.e. just because "I have a dollar in my pocket" has nothing to do with Obama's plan, it doesn't mean anybody has refuted the claim... though of course the "wealth" claim is a bit more relevant to the economy than me saying "I have a dollar in my pocket")

  248. On hoarding money. by RogerWilco · · Score: 1

    Go read the Capgemini and Merrill Lynch "World Wealth Report 2011". Currently the "high net worth individuals" which are the ~10 million richest people in the world, hold 29% of their $42.7 Trillion, or about $12.4 Trillion in savings accounts and similar (fixed income). They hold another $4.7 Trillion in cash and deposits like gold.
    That means that of the $42.7 Trillion only $25.6 Trillion is actively being invested into the economy.

    Or in other words, about $12.4 Trillion is locked away in accounts in Switserland, Luxemburg, the Cayman Islands and such, where maybe those banks might indirectly do something with the money, if it's an interest bearing account.
    About $4.7 Trillion is literally sitting in a vault somewhere.

    I would call that hoarding money.

    If I, and 1000 people like me earn $50k and spend it, it's much better for the economy than one person earning $50M and spending $10M. Especially because I'm more likely to spend that money on locally produced goods.

    I also don't agree with your definition of "rich". I think that if you spend your money you don't get rich. And if you're rich you'll soon be poor. You either hoard it, or invest it. I think the numbers in the report speak for themselves that this is exactly what rich people do. 40% of the money is being hoarded, 60% invested.

    --
    RogerWilco the Adventurous Janitor
  249. Re:Reflections of Paul Ryan's Notion of Class Warf by non0score · · Score: 1

    The biggest disservice to the American people is the American Dream and that one day, they will achieve it. And we all know by statistics above, that conservatively 99% won't. So why are there so many people supporting tax breaks for the rich? Because they can't accept the reality that they most likely won't be rich one day.
    Personally, I'd be more than happy if I was taxed at the special $1M tax bracket -- that means I actually made at least $1M that year.

  250. Job Creators - not by jwhitener · · Score: 1

    Old Thread, so no one will likely see this, but just how much profit do these 'job creators' need before they start creating jobs?

    http://www.businessinsider.com/koch-bros-rachel-maddow-gop-jobs-2011-9

    It is similar for many of the wealthiest corporations and people. Record setting profits in the last 5-10 years, yet they continue to lay off workers.