..teddy..jimmy
Member
+1,393|6952

Turquoise wrote:

lowing wrote:

The rich already are paying the VAST majority of the tax bill in the US, so yeah what is happening now is exessive, and since rich people like money just as much as anyone else, to take it from them is punishment, just like if you were going to cut welfare, those who would get small welfare checks would consider it punishemnt and in fact be pissed off thsat they were cut off from what was never theirs.
One thing to consider is that, if you're defining rich as being everyone in the top tax bracket, those people have the vast majority of wealth in this society.

If you want to see good evidence of how much influence the elite rich have on the income tax system, observe the fact that an individual who makes just over $357,000 pays the same percentage as Bill Gates.  There's obviously a vast difference between the wealth of someone making $357,000 and someone making several billion.

So, in effect, you could essentially say that the rich have a flat income tax among themselves.  Obviously, there are multiple levels of wealth, and they all pay the same percentage (although the AMT changes a bit within that income bracket).

Also, it's rare for someone to pay the official tax percentage within that bracket.  Generally speaking, wealthy people have a lot of tax write-offs.  Usually, they end up paying the AMT, which is considerably lower than the official tax percentage.

So, when comparing how much wealthy individuals pay in America in taxes vs. how much they would pay in most of the First World, they actually have it pretty good here.  It seems rather greedy for them to be bitching about taxes, and another thing that benefits the rich is that payroll taxes have a cap.  You don't have to pay Social Security taxes beyond the first $100,000 or so you make in income.  So this makes the payroll tax affect the working class much more than the rich.


I've always thought we needed more payroll tax reform than income tax reform, but few politicians even talk about that.
Well put.

Last edited by ..teddy..jimmy (2009-03-07 07:56:37)

lowing
Banned
+1,662|6954|USA

Turquoise wrote:

lowing wrote:

The rich already are paying the VAST majority of the tax bill in the US, so yeah what is happening now is exessive, and since rich people like money just as much as anyone else, to take it from them is punishment, just like if you were going to cut welfare, those who would get small welfare checks would consider it punishemnt and in fact be pissed off thsat they were cut off from what was never theirs.
One thing to consider is that, if you're defining rich as being everyone in the top tax bracket, those people have the vast majority of wealth in this society.

If you want to see good evidence of how much influence the elite rich have on the income tax system, observe the fact that an individual who makes just over $357,000 pays the same percentage as Bill Gates.  There's obviously a vast difference between the wealth of someone making $357,000 and someone making several billion.

So, in effect, you could essentially say that the rich have a flat income tax among themselves.  Obviously, there are multiple levels of wealth, and they all pay the same percentage (although the AMT changes a bit within that income bracket).

Also, it's rare for someone to pay the official tax percentage within that bracket.  Generally speaking, wealthy people have a lot of tax write-offs.  Usually, they end up paying the AMT, which is considerably lower than the official tax percentage.

So, when comparing how much wealthy individuals pay in America in taxes vs. how much they would pay in most of the First World, they actually have it pretty good here.  It seems rather greedy for them to be bitching about taxes, and another thing that benefits the rich is that payroll taxes have a cap.  You don't have to pay Social Security taxes beyond the first $100,000 or so you make in income.  So this makes the payroll tax affect the working class much more than the rich.

I've always thought we needed more payroll tax reform than income tax reform, but few politicians even talk about that.
try 30% of 357,000 to 30% of 300,000,000 and tell me if the rich are paying the same amount of money to the govt. regardless of income. Or are you suggesting that someone making 300,000,000 should really have to pay 40 or 50 or 60 percent more than the rest?
Bertster7
Confused Pothead
+1,101|6884|SE London

lowing wrote:

Turquoise wrote:

lowing wrote:

The rich already are paying the VAST majority of the tax bill in the US, so yeah what is happening now is exessive, and since rich people like money just as much as anyone else, to take it from them is punishment, just like if you were going to cut welfare, those who would get small welfare checks would consider it punishemnt and in fact be pissed off thsat they were cut off from what was never theirs.
One thing to consider is that, if you're defining rich as being everyone in the top tax bracket, those people have the vast majority of wealth in this society.

If you want to see good evidence of how much influence the elite rich have on the income tax system, observe the fact that an individual who makes just over $357,000 pays the same percentage as Bill Gates.  There's obviously a vast difference between the wealth of someone making $357,000 and someone making several billion.

So, in effect, you could essentially say that the rich have a flat income tax among themselves.  Obviously, there are multiple levels of wealth, and they all pay the same percentage (although the AMT changes a bit within that income bracket).

Also, it's rare for someone to pay the official tax percentage within that bracket.  Generally speaking, wealthy people have a lot of tax write-offs.  Usually, they end up paying the AMT, which is considerably lower than the official tax percentage.

So, when comparing how much wealthy individuals pay in America in taxes vs. how much they would pay in most of the First World, they actually have it pretty good here.  It seems rather greedy for them to be bitching about taxes, and another thing that benefits the rich is that payroll taxes have a cap.  You don't have to pay Social Security taxes beyond the first $100,000 or so you make in income.  So this makes the payroll tax affect the working class much more than the rich.

I've always thought we needed more payroll tax reform than income tax reform, but few politicians even talk about that.
try 30% of 357,000 to 30% of 300,000,000 and tell me if the rich are paying the same amount of money to the govt. regardless of income. Or are you suggesting that someone making 300,000,000 should really have to pay 40 or 50 or 60 percent more than the rest?
It is quite clear what he is saying. As a proportion of their income, the rich pay less.

In total the rich pay less. Because there are fewer of them. It is the middle earners, who are still in the top tax bracket, that provide the bulk of the countries income tax revenue.

Personally I'd like to see them paying an extra 10 or 15% - not 40, 50 or 60% more - @ 93% tax bracket....

Last edited by Bertster7 (2009-03-07 08:09:06)

Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6708|North Carolina

lowing wrote:

Turquoise wrote:

lowing wrote:

The rich already are paying the VAST majority of the tax bill in the US, so yeah what is happening now is exessive, and since rich people like money just as much as anyone else, to take it from them is punishment, just like if you were going to cut welfare, those who would get small welfare checks would consider it punishemnt and in fact be pissed off thsat they were cut off from what was never theirs.
One thing to consider is that, if you're defining rich as being everyone in the top tax bracket, those people have the vast majority of wealth in this society.

If you want to see good evidence of how much influence the elite rich have on the income tax system, observe the fact that an individual who makes just over $357,000 pays the same percentage as Bill Gates.  There's obviously a vast difference between the wealth of someone making $357,000 and someone making several billion.

So, in effect, you could essentially say that the rich have a flat income tax among themselves.  Obviously, there are multiple levels of wealth, and they all pay the same percentage (although the AMT changes a bit within that income bracket).

Also, it's rare for someone to pay the official tax percentage within that bracket.  Generally speaking, wealthy people have a lot of tax write-offs.  Usually, they end up paying the AMT, which is considerably lower than the official tax percentage.

So, when comparing how much wealthy individuals pay in America in taxes vs. how much they would pay in most of the First World, they actually have it pretty good here.  It seems rather greedy for them to be bitching about taxes, and another thing that benefits the rich is that payroll taxes have a cap.  You don't have to pay Social Security taxes beyond the first $100,000 or so you make in income.  So this makes the payroll tax affect the working class much more than the rich.

I've always thought we needed more payroll tax reform than income tax reform, but few politicians even talk about that.
try 30% of 357,000 to 30% of 300,000,000 and tell me if the rich are paying the same amount of money to the govt. regardless of income. Or are you suggesting that someone making 300,000,000 should really have to pay 40 or 50 or 60 percent more than the rest?
Percentage of income matters more than amount.

Someone who makes billions can afford to pay 50%, while someone making $30,000 obviously couldn't.  Also, one could argue that the much greater influence someone who makes billions has on society should cost them more in taxes.

I personally support this idea, because look at the bailouts.  These billionaires on Wall Street obviously have the leverage to get billions more in government money while you and I get screwed.  They should have to pay more into the system percentage wise if they want to continue to have that influence (which they undoubtedly will retain).

Besides, even if we did increase the tax rate to 50% for people like Bill Gates, they'd still only likely pay the AMT percentage instead (which goes up to 28%).  We'd have to increase the AMT to see any real change in what the extremely wealthy pay.

Now, don't get me wrong.  I don't think income taxes should go any higher than 50%.  Back when Reagan first entered office, the highest bracket was 70%.  That was just absurd, and I'm glad he lowered it.
lowing
Banned
+1,662|6954|USA

Bertster7 wrote:

lowing wrote:

Turquoise wrote:


One thing to consider is that, if you're defining rich as being everyone in the top tax bracket, those people have the vast majority of wealth in this society.

If you want to see good evidence of how much influence the elite rich have on the income tax system, observe the fact that an individual who makes just over $357,000 pays the same percentage as Bill Gates.  There's obviously a vast difference between the wealth of someone making $357,000 and someone making several billion.

So, in effect, you could essentially say that the rich have a flat income tax among themselves.  Obviously, there are multiple levels of wealth, and they all pay the same percentage (although the AMT changes a bit within that income bracket).

Also, it's rare for someone to pay the official tax percentage within that bracket.  Generally speaking, wealthy people have a lot of tax write-offs.  Usually, they end up paying the AMT, which is considerably lower than the official tax percentage.

So, when comparing how much wealthy individuals pay in America in taxes vs. how much they would pay in most of the First World, they actually have it pretty good here.  It seems rather greedy for them to be bitching about taxes, and another thing that benefits the rich is that payroll taxes have a cap.  You don't have to pay Social Security taxes beyond the first $100,000 or so you make in income.  So this makes the payroll tax affect the working class much more than the rich.

I've always thought we needed more payroll tax reform than income tax reform, but few politicians even talk about that.
try 30% of 357,000 to 30% of 300,000,000 and tell me if the rich are paying the same amount of money to the govt. regardless of income. Or are you suggesting that someone making 300,000,000 should really have to pay 40 or 50 or 60 percent more than the rest?
It is quite clear what he is saying. As a proportion of their income, the rich pay less.

In total the rich pay less. Because there are fewer of them. It is the middle earners, who are still in the top tax bracket, that provide the bulk of the countries income tax revenue.

Personally I'd like to see them paying an extra 10 or 15% - not 40, 50 or 60% more - @ 93% tax bracket....
Yer right, I mis-typed, I didn't not mean pay 40 50 or 60 percent MORE, I meant a 40 or 50 ot 60 percent bracket.


but regardless, 30% or 300,000 is 90,000 , 30% of 300,000,000 is 90,000,000 so 90,000 compared to 90,000,000 is a vast difference and is punishment enough.
..teddy..jimmy
Member
+1,393|6952

lowing wrote:

Turquoise wrote:

lowing wrote:

The rich already are paying the VAST majority of the tax bill in the US, so yeah what is happening now is exessive, and since rich people like money just as much as anyone else, to take it from them is punishment, just like if you were going to cut welfare, those who would get small welfare checks would consider it punishemnt and in fact be pissed off thsat they were cut off from what was never theirs.
One thing to consider is that, if you're defining rich as being everyone in the top tax bracket, those people have the vast majority of wealth in this society.

If you want to see good evidence of how much influence the elite rich have on the income tax system, observe the fact that an individual who makes just over $357,000 pays the same percentage as Bill Gates.  There's obviously a vast difference between the wealth of someone making $357,000 and someone making several billion.

So, in effect, you could essentially say that the rich have a flat income tax among themselves.  Obviously, there are multiple levels of wealth, and they all pay the same percentage (although the AMT changes a bit within that income bracket).

Also, it's rare for someone to pay the official tax percentage within that bracket.  Generally speaking, wealthy people have a lot of tax write-offs.  Usually, they end up paying the AMT, which is considerably lower than the official tax percentage.

So, when comparing how much wealthy individuals pay in America in taxes vs. how much they would pay in most of the First World, they actually have it pretty good here.  It seems rather greedy for them to be bitching about taxes, and another thing that benefits the rich is that payroll taxes have a cap.  You don't have to pay Social Security taxes beyond the first $100,000 or so you make in income.  So this makes the payroll tax affect the working class much more than the rich.

I've always thought we needed more payroll tax reform than income tax reform, but few politicians even talk about that.
try 30% of 357,000 to 30% of 300,000,000 and tell me if the rich are paying the same amount of money to the govt. regardless of income. Or are you suggesting that someone making 300,000,000 should really have to pay 40 or 50 or 60 percent more than the rest?
That's just unrealistic and using your argument about punishing it seems those who make more than $500 000 to ~ get away quite nicely under America's current rates.  Obviously there is a cap on how much the government can charge but raising the rate upto atleast 40-45% would bring in some serious cash money for the government. The UK did it and they're just as diverse so the US could easily do it as well. You guys got it easy, in Norway it's around 55% for top earners.

Last edited by ..teddy..jimmy (2009-03-07 08:17:00)

mikkel
Member
+383|6904

Bertster7 wrote:

mikkel wrote:

lowing wrote:


I guess, how many of those countries are as big influencial and powerful as the US? you are comparing apples to apples, and calling it success when the US is an orange
Not that I agree with Scandinavian politics, but consider the population.

Scandinavia: ~20mn
US: ~300mn

You're comparing one big orange to five small tangerines when making a point about global presence. That doesn't make much sense.
I'm not - I'm comparing the EU to the US.

~ 500 million EU

~ 300 million US
My post quoted lowing's, and was directed at the absolute concepts and direct comparisons between the US and EU member states that he seems to employ when comparing Scandinavia and the EU in general to the US in terms of global impact.
..teddy..jimmy
Member
+1,393|6952

lowing wrote:

but regardless, 30% or 300,000 is 90,000 , 30% of 300,000,000 is 90,000,000 so 90,000 compared to 90,000,000 is a vast difference and is punishment enough.
...but proportionately it's the exact same punishment.
lowing
Banned
+1,662|6954|USA

..teddy..jimmy wrote:

lowing wrote:

Turquoise wrote:


One thing to consider is that, if you're defining rich as being everyone in the top tax bracket, those people have the vast majority of wealth in this society.

If you want to see good evidence of how much influence the elite rich have on the income tax system, observe the fact that an individual who makes just over $357,000 pays the same percentage as Bill Gates.  There's obviously a vast difference between the wealth of someone making $357,000 and someone making several billion.

So, in effect, you could essentially say that the rich have a flat income tax among themselves.  Obviously, there are multiple levels of wealth, and they all pay the same percentage (although the AMT changes a bit within that income bracket).

Also, it's rare for someone to pay the official tax percentage within that bracket.  Generally speaking, wealthy people have a lot of tax write-offs.  Usually, they end up paying the AMT, which is considerably lower than the official tax percentage.

So, when comparing how much wealthy individuals pay in America in taxes vs. how much they would pay in most of the First World, they actually have it pretty good here.  It seems rather greedy for them to be bitching about taxes, and another thing that benefits the rich is that payroll taxes have a cap.  You don't have to pay Social Security taxes beyond the first $100,000 or so you make in income.  So this makes the payroll tax affect the working class much more than the rich.

I've always thought we needed more payroll tax reform than income tax reform, but few politicians even talk about that.
try 30% of 357,000 to 30% of 300,000,000 and tell me if the rich are paying the same amount of money to the govt. regardless of income. Or are you suggesting that someone making 300,000,000 should really have to pay 40 or 50 or 60 percent more than the rest?
That's just unrealistic and using your argument about punishing it seems those who make more than $500 000 to ~ get away quite nicely under America's current rates.  Obviously there is a cap on how much the government can charge but raising the rate upto atleast 40-45% would bring in some serious cash money for the government. The UK did it and they're just as diverse so the US could easily do it as well. You guys got it easy, in Norway it's around 55% for top earners.
Sorry, to say a person should provide near HALF of his efforts to the govt. in income tax alone is outragous. Not to even mention the sales tax property tax, investments taxes, etc.. would bump it up to more than half....and you do not consider that punishement. You seriously expect these people to feel honored and priviledged to pay more than half of their efforts to you, and NOT consider it punishement? Yet you allow for people to be outraged if they get their welfare cut? Here is your wake up call, they will not stand for it.
Bertster7
Confused Pothead
+1,101|6884|SE London

lowing wrote:

Bertster7 wrote:

lowing wrote:

try 30% of 357,000 to 30% of 300,000,000 and tell me if the rich are paying the same amount of money to the govt. regardless of income. Or are you suggesting that someone making 300,000,000 should really have to pay 40 or 50 or 60 percent more than the rest?
It is quite clear what he is saying. As a proportion of their income, the rich pay less.

In total the rich pay less. Because there are fewer of them. It is the middle earners, who are still in the top tax bracket, that provide the bulk of the countries income tax revenue.

Personally I'd like to see them paying an extra 10 or 15% - not 40, 50 or 60% more - @ 93% tax bracket....
Yer right, I mis-typed, I didn't not mean pay 40 50 or 60 percent MORE, I meant a 40 or 50 ot 60 percent bracket.


but regardless, 30% or 300,000 is 90,000 , 30% of 300,000,000 is 90,000,000 so 90,000 compared to 90,000,000 is a vast difference and is punishment enough.
Which is better; having $210,000 or having $210,000,000?

In any case, as Turq so rightly points out - the very rich won't actually pay that. They will have creative accountants meaning they pay far less in proportional terms....

Last edited by Bertster7 (2009-03-07 08:26:01)

lowing
Banned
+1,662|6954|USA

..teddy..jimmy wrote:

lowing wrote:

but regardless, 30% or 300,000 is 90,000 , 30% of 300,000,000 is 90,000,000 so 90,000 compared to 90,000,000 is a vast difference and is punishment enough.
...but proportionately it's the exact same punishment.
regardless as to how you cut it or justify it, 90,000 is only 90,000 and 90 million IS 90 million.
Bertster7
Confused Pothead
+1,101|6884|SE London

mikkel wrote:

Bertster7 wrote:

mikkel wrote:


Not that I agree with Scandinavian politics, but consider the population.

Scandinavia: ~20mn
US: ~300mn

You're comparing one big orange to five small tangerines when making a point about global presence. That doesn't make much sense.
I'm not - I'm comparing the EU to the US.

~ 500 million EU

~ 300 million US
My post quoted lowing's, and was directed at the absolute concepts and direct comparisons between the US and EU member states that he seems to employ when comparing Scandinavia and the EU in general to the US in terms of global impact.
Exactly as mine have been.
lowing
Banned
+1,662|6954|USA

Bertster7 wrote:

lowing wrote:

Bertster7 wrote:


It is quite clear what he is saying. As a proportion of their income, the rich pay less.

In total the rich pay less. Because there are fewer of them. It is the middle earners, who are still in the top tax bracket, that provide the bulk of the countries income tax revenue.

Personally I'd like to see them paying an extra 10 or 15% - not 40, 50 or 60% more - @ 93% tax bracket....
Yer right, I mis-typed, I didn't not mean pay 40 50 or 60 percent MORE, I meant a 40 or 50 ot 60 percent bracket.


but regardless, 30% or 300,000 is 90,000 , 30% of 300,000,000 is 90,000,000 so 90,000 compared to 90,000,000 is a vast difference and is punishment enough.
Which is better; having $210,000 or having $210,000,000?
You are missing the point that it IS MONEY THEY EARNED, for you to take it from them simply because you feel entitled to it is bullshit. They already pay the vast majority of taxes. It is quite enough.
Bertster7
Confused Pothead
+1,101|6884|SE London

lowing wrote:

Bertster7 wrote:

lowing wrote:

Yer right, I mis-typed, I didn't not mean pay 40 50 or 60 percent MORE, I meant a 40 or 50 ot 60 percent bracket.


but regardless, 30% or 300,000 is 90,000 , 30% of 300,000,000 is 90,000,000 so 90,000 compared to 90,000,000 is a vast difference and is punishment enough.
Which is better; having $210,000 or having $210,000,000?
You are missing the point that it IS MONEY THEY EARNED, for you to take it from them simply because you feel entitled to it is bullshit. They already pay the vast majority of taxes. It is quite enough.
They don't pay the majority of taxes.

Look at the total gross collections and the gross collections from those with an AGI of more than $1M.

Last edited by Bertster7 (2009-03-07 08:30:03)

lowing
Banned
+1,662|6954|USA

Bertster7 wrote:

mikkel wrote:

Bertster7 wrote:


I'm not - I'm comparing the EU to the US.

~ 500 million EU

~ 300 million US
My post quoted lowing's, and was directed at the absolute concepts and direct comparisons between the US and EU member states that he seems to employ when comparing Scandinavia and the EU in general to the US in terms of global impact.
Exactly as mine have been.
We have one central govt. You do not, you have a union that you can either join or not, pick and choose what you want to agree to or not. YOU are not the same as the US.
..teddy..jimmy
Member
+1,393|6952

lowing wrote:

..teddy..jimmy wrote:

lowing wrote:

but regardless, 30% or 300,000 is 90,000 , 30% of 300,000,000 is 90,000,000 so 90,000 compared to 90,000,000 is a vast difference and is punishment enough.
...but proportionately it's the exact same punishment.
regardless as to how you cut it or justify it, 90,000 is only 90,000 and 90 million IS 90 million.
$90 000 is a lot of money to someone who only has 300 and whatever thousand income a year. Theoretically it is an equal "punishment" whichever way you choose to look at.
lowing
Banned
+1,662|6954|USA

Bertster7 wrote:

lowing wrote:

Bertster7 wrote:


Which is better; having $210,000 or having $210,000,000?
You are missing the point that it IS MONEY THEY EARNED, for you to take it from them simply because you feel entitled to it is bullshit. They already pay the vast majority of taxes. It is quite enough.
They don't pay the majority of taxes.
you are wrong and you might wanna look it up.
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6708|North Carolina

lowing wrote:

Bertster7 wrote:

lowing wrote:


Yer right, I mis-typed, I didn't not mean pay 40 50 or 60 percent MORE, I meant a 40 or 50 ot 60 percent bracket.


but regardless, 30% or 300,000 is 90,000 , 30% of 300,000,000 is 90,000,000 so 90,000 compared to 90,000,000 is a vast difference and is punishment enough.
Which is better; having $210,000 or having $210,000,000?
You are missing the point that it IS MONEY THEY EARNED, for you to take it from them simply because you feel entitled to it is bullshit. They already pay the vast majority of taxes. It is quite enough.
If they have the vast majority of wealth, then it only makes since that they would pay a higher portion of the taxes.

For example, even if Bill Gates had a lower tax percentage than you or me, he would pay far more in tax revenue than us.  That doesn't mean he's paying too much, it just means he has that much more money than us.

So, the argument that the rich pay enough already seems to be ignoring the fact that they hold so much of the wealth to begin with.

If you had most of the country's wealth, I'd expect you to pay much more -- even percentage wise.  It's not a punishment, it's a responsibility.
lowing
Banned
+1,662|6954|USA

..teddy..jimmy wrote:

lowing wrote:

..teddy..jimmy wrote:


...but proportionately it's the exact same punishment.
regardless as to how you cut it or justify it, 90,000 is only 90,000 and 90 million IS 90 million.
$90 000 is a lot of money to someone who only has 300 and whatever thousand income a year. Theoretically it is an equal "punishment" whichever way you choose to look at.
to ANY individual, 90,000 is a lot of money, and 90,000,000 is a lot MORE money, whichever way you choose to look at it.
Bertster7
Confused Pothead
+1,101|6884|SE London

lowing wrote:

Bertster7 wrote:

lowing wrote:


You are missing the point that it IS MONEY THEY EARNED, for you to take it from them simply because you feel entitled to it is bullshit. They already pay the vast majority of taxes. It is quite enough.
They don't pay the majority of taxes.
you are wrong and you might wanna look it up.
I have looked it up.
Bertster7
Confused Pothead
+1,101|6884|SE London

lowing wrote:

We have one central govt. You do not, you have a union that you can either join or not, pick and choose what you want to agree to or not. YOU are not the same as the US.
Remember this?

Bertster7 wrote:

You are a bunch of states with a centralised government.

The EU is a bunch of states with a centralised parliament.

The EU is bigger than the US.

There are differences absolutely. But there are also resounding similarities.

Last edited by Bertster7 (2009-03-07 08:34:28)

mikkel
Member
+383|6904
This entire debacle could be avoided with the introduction of a flat tax, the elimination of private write-offs for investments that are not for personal use or consumption, and the elimination of most all tax credits. Pay your taxes, do your own risk management, and save your own ass if you fuck up.
..teddy..jimmy
Member
+1,393|6952

lowing wrote:

..teddy..jimmy wrote:

lowing wrote:


regardless as to how you cut it or justify it, 90,000 is only 90,000 and 90 million IS 90 million.
$90 000 is a lot of money to someone who only has 300 and whatever thousand income a year. Theoretically it is an equal "punishment" whichever way you choose to look at.
to ANY individual, 90,000 is a lot of money, and 90,000,000 is a lot MORE money, whichever way you choose to look at it.
omg, it's still an equal punishment because atleast the high earner will have another god knows how many millions to fall back on. Plus his already mahousive million dollar bank account that counts as wealth is not so heavily taxed so who comes out better?!
lowing
Banned
+1,662|6954|USA

Turquoise wrote:

lowing wrote:

Bertster7 wrote:


Which is better; having $210,000 or having $210,000,000?
You are missing the point that it IS MONEY THEY EARNED, for you to take it from them simply because you feel entitled to it is bullshit. They already pay the vast majority of taxes. It is quite enough.
If they have the vast majority of wealth, then it only makes since that they would pay a higher portion of the taxes.

For example, even if Bill Gates had a lower tax percentage than you or me, he would pay far more in tax revenue than us.  That doesn't mean he's paying too much, it just means he has that much more money than us.

So, the argument that the rich pay enough already seems to be ignoring the fact that they hold so much of the wealth to begin with.

If you had most of the country's wealth, I'd expect you to pay much more -- even percentage wise.  It's not a punishment, it's a responsibility.
and how can you not look at it as punishing achievment?

you have 2 individuals who live in the US

one person makes 20,000 a year didn't start a company has no vested interesting anything he is just along for the ride and pays for his freedoms

another who makes 1,000,000 a year took risks, employed others and brought economic stabilty to a community, yet he has to pay far more for the same freedoms as the other guy, who hasn't done shit, except ask the rich guy for a job. THe rich guy has to pay more EVEN after he has already contributed so much more to society. They are both free to do as they wish in this country, as it is, the more you do, the more you are punished for it. That is the bottom line.
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6708|North Carolina

mikkel wrote:

This entire debacle could be avoided with the introduction of a flat tax, the elimination of private write-offs for investments that are not for personal use or consumption, and the elimination of most all tax credits. Pay your taxes, do your own risk management, and save your own ass if you fuck up.
In principle, I agree.

We could simply enact what the AMT is designed for.  A simple percentage of income you cannot deduct below that you are required to pay.

I still think this percentage should be graduated, not flat, however, mostly because of the influence that the rich have on our system.

As long as the rich run our system, they should pay a higher percentage of their income into it.

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