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THE US Tax Thread (merged)

A forum for discussion of regional topics including oil depletion but also government, society, and the future.

Your current federal tax (as a percentage)?

Poll ended at Sun 03 Apr 2005, 15:29:51

0 to 5 percent
3
No votes
5 to 10 percent
2
No votes
10 to 15 percent
3
No votes
15 to 20 percent
4
No votes
20 to 25 percent
1
No votes
25 to 30 percent
5
No votes
> 30 percent
5
No votes
 
Total votes : 23

Unread postby mindfarkk » Sun 06 Mar 2005, 15:53:13

that's an interesting point Bytesmith. i am a student and have been working less in the last few years than ever before in my life (although not always electively, since finding any job at all was impossible for two of the last four years); i've been relying most on student loans to get by. by the time i get around to making any real money and paying the loans back (assuming that still happens) two or three years from now, i will be supporting another administration. that almost makes my *trillions of dollars in personal loan debt tolerable.

*exaggerated for effect. c. 2005, mfp
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Unread postby Ludi » Sun 06 Mar 2005, 16:08:01

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'N')obody deserves anything for free.


According to you. According to me, however, people deserve the basics of life (food, shelter, clothing) merely by virtue of being human.
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Unread postby TWilliam » Sun 06 Mar 2005, 16:14:23

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Bytesmiths', 'S')o maybe they are deluded into thinking they would benefit under a flat tax. (Which falls into the "stupid" category.)


I have to admit that I haven't really followed the arguments in the media regarding the consumption tax issue, but at least on the surface it seems to me that it makes more sense to tax excessive spending than excessive earning. That is of course, if one's goal is to rein in mass consumption of needless crap. If on the otherhand your goal is to encourage an ever-expanding orgy of wasteful acquisition so the corporate fat cats can get still fatter, then yes, a flat tax would certainly be stupid.

Guess it depends on your priorities... [smilie=dontknow.gif]
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Unread postby JoeW » Mon 07 Mar 2005, 11:52:56

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rerere', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JoeW', 'I')t is starting to look like the consumption tax advocates are all bark and no bite...?


Given you've not been back for almost 24 hours, does that mean that you are all bark and no bite?

Well?


I was just commenting on how people were quick to stand up and say that they prefer the consumption tax, but not-so-quick to figure out if they actually stood to lose money on the deal.
For most of us, the only way we can possibly make out better on the deal is if "necessity"-type items are excluded from the tax, and we stick to purchasing these items only.

I don't oppose the national sales tax as a philosophy. I just oppose every national sales tax proposal that I have seen so far. Like every other taxpayer, I find it cumbersome that I need to fill out a form on an annual basis to determine the federal tax that I owe. With the wealth of technology available to us, you would think that this whole process could be automated and instead of filling out a form, you would receive an annual statement that disclosed to you all of your income, deductions, tax credits, etc. and any refund that you received, or the amount you must pay.

The current graduated income tax in place is largely beneficial to lower-income and middle-income families. The upper income individuals & families are taking it up the wazoo, and all government statistics available confirm this.

The fact that there are those who illegally avoid income taxes (drug dealers, prostitutes, those who use illegal tax shelters) is irrelevent. There are plenty of unlawful ways to avoid a sales tax, and these individuals, having no respect for the law, will continue to do that--illegally avoid the tax. If a pimp or drug dealer tries explaining to you that there is a sales tax on the product, I would be suspicious of whether he is actually sending that sales tax to the appropriate government body.
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Unread postby Bytesmiths » Mon 07 Mar 2005, 16:11:31

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JoeW', 'I') was just commenting on how people were quick to stand up and say that they prefer the consumption tax, but not-so-quick to figure out if they actually stood to lose money on the deal.
You're making an important assumption here: that one cannot be for something that costs him/her money.

If you think a consumption tax is "the right thing," then it might not matter if your personal share went up or down.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JoeW', 'F')or most of us, the only way we can possibly make out better on the deal is if "necessity"-type items are excluded from the tax, and we stick to purchasing these items only.
Or we might all "make out better on the deal" by slowing the plundering of our resources.

This is the classic "Prisoner's Dilemma" of game theory. Humans have not proved very capable of playing that game well -- at least not in groups of more than a couple dozen or so.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JoeW', 'W')ith the wealth of technology available to us, you would think that this whole process could be automated and instead of filling out a form, you would receive an annual statement that disclosed to you all of your income, deductions, tax credits, etc. and any refund that you received, or the amount you must pay.
You're talking "wage slaves" here. I haven't had such a traceable salaray since the '80's. Very few self-employed people or even small businesses can be traced that way.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JoeW', 'T')he current graduated income tax in place is largely beneficial to lower-income and middle-income families. The upper income individuals & families are taking it up the wazoo, and all government statistics available confirm this.
My guess is you're a "GenX" person. Anyone who was rich in the mid-1900's knows what "taking it up the wazoo" is really like. Or if you live in Scandanavia or certain other progressive countries in Europe.

No American who earns six figures is "taking it up the wazoo" in comparison with most of the rest of the world. Stop your whining, and get a Porsche instead of a Lamborghini, while your neighbor a few blocks away struggles trying to keep a $500 rust bucket running.

The growing disparity of rich and poor is the seeds of revolution. If the spoiled, whining "get the gubbamint off my back" upper class fails to realize that, they are going to be in serious trouble.
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Unread postby gg3 » Tue 08 Mar 2005, 03:40:09

TWilliam makes an interesting point by using the phrases "excessive consumption" and "excessive income." The common denominator is "excess." The key question is "When is enough, enough?"

Re. sales tax and drug dealers, pimps, etc.: The point isn't that Dealer McDope will keep a little calculator on him and say "Here's your dime bag, that'll be ten dollars plus... (click click click)... a dollar eighty in Federal Sales Tax, total is $11.80, will that be cash, check, or VISA?" The point is that Dealer McDope, after a hard day's work hooking kids on crack, will go buy stuff with his ill-gotten gains, and have to pay the sales tax on what he buys.

Problem with this though, is it starts to create a perverse incentive to tolerate certain types of predatory activities that are presently illegal. What happens when organized crime's income starts to provide a decent source of sales tax revenue to government...?

Re. "the rich." You want to know what rich really means? Here's an example I've been posting around here lately.

You're moderately successful, you have a house, you have $100k in equity in the house, and perhaps the same in your stock portfolio & retirement accounts. Give yourself a two-inch-tall mark on a graph.

The guy you presently think of as "rich" has a $3-million house, with $1 million in equity, and maybe another million in investments etc. Give him a twenty-inch-tall mark on the graph. Next to you, he looks like he has a lot, doesn't he...?

But in fact if you take a look at the income spread in America, the real aristocracy begins in the B-as-in-Big Billions. Take one of these fatcats and put his net worth on the same graph. His mark on the graph is EIGHT HUNDRED AND THIRTY THREE FEET HIGH.

Go out on the street and put a brick on the curb to mark a starting point, and pace off 833 feet. Put another brick on the curb at that point to mark it. Now go back to your starting point and make a mark that shows two inches and another at twenty inches. And look down the street to your second brick at 833 feet.

"Excess" doesn't even begin to describe that.

What we are talking about here is the difference between mere "wealth" on one hand, and overt "power" on the other hand.
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Unread postby Bytesmiths » Tue 08 Mar 2005, 04:08:19

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gg3', 'G')ive yourself a two-inch-tall mark on a graph...

Give him a twenty-inch-tall mark on the graph. Next to you, he looks like he has a lot, doesn't he...?

But in fact if you take a look at the income spread in America, the real aristocracy begins in the B-as-in-Big Billions. Take one of these fatcats and put his net worth on the same graph. His mark on the graph is EIGHT HUNDRED AND THIRTY THREE FEET HIGH.
I love it!

Another example I made up that I have in my random email signatures:

[quote="Jan Steinman"]ECONOMIST: a person who, upon encountering an auditorium containing 40,000 destitute, unemployed people and Bill Gates, says, “On average, I see a room full of millionaires!â€
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Unread postby TrueKaiser » Tue 08 Mar 2005, 04:22:52

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gg3', '
')Re. "the rich." You want to know what rich really means? Here's an example I've been posting around here lately.

You're moderately successful, you have a house, you have $100k in equity in the house, and perhaps the same in your stock portfolio & retirement accounts. Give yourself a two-inch-tall mark on a graph.

The guy you presently think of as "rich" has a $3-million house, with $1 million in equity, and maybe another million in investments etc. Give him a twenty-inch-tall mark on the graph. Next to you, he looks like he has a lot, doesn't he...?

But in fact if you take a look at the income spread in America, the real aristocracy begins in the B-as-in-Big Billions. Take one of these fatcats and put his net worth on the same graph. His mark on the graph is EIGHT HUNDRED AND THIRTY THREE FEET HIGH.

Go out on the street and put a brick on the curb to mark a starting point, and pace off 833 feet. Put another brick on the curb at that point to mark it. Now go back to your starting point and make a mark that shows two inches and another at twenty inches. And look down the street to your second brick at 833 feet.

"Excess" doesn't even begin to describe that.

What we are talking about here is the difference between mere "wealth" on one hand, and overt "power" on the other hand.


in not so many words the flat tax is made to make the 833 feet rich, richer and the 2 and 22 inch people poorer.

edit: forgot to take out the crack dealer part of the quote sence it holds no point in my reply.
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Unread postby Specop_007 » Tue 08 Mar 2005, 05:07:54

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'N')obody deserves anything for free.


According to you. According to me, however, people deserve the basics of life (food, shelter, clothing) merely by virtue of being human.


I agree!
Long as your paying for it.
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Unread postby Specop_007 » Tue 08 Mar 2005, 05:10:12

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gg3', 'T')William makes an interesting point by using the phrases "excessive consumption" and "excessive income." The common denominator is "excess." The key question is "When is enough, enough?"

Re. sales tax and drug dealers, pimps, etc.: The point isn't that Dealer McDope will keep a little calculator on him and say "Here's your dime bag, that'll be ten dollars plus... (click click click)... a dollar eighty in Federal Sales Tax, total is $11.80, will that be cash, check, or VISA?" The point is that Dealer McDope, after a hard day's work hooking kids on crack, will go buy stuff with his ill-gotten gains, and have to pay the sales tax on what he buys.

Problem with this though, is it starts to create a perverse incentive to tolerate certain types of predatory activities that are presently illegal. What happens when organized crime's income starts to provide a decent source of sales tax revenue to government...?

Re. "the rich." You want to know what rich really means? Here's an example I've been posting around here lately.

You're moderately successful, you have a house, you have $100k in equity in the house, and perhaps the same in your stock portfolio & retirement accounts. Give yourself a two-inch-tall mark on a graph.

The guy you presently think of as "rich" has a $3-million house, with $1 million in equity, and maybe another million in investments etc. Give him a twenty-inch-tall mark on the graph. Next to you, he looks like he has a lot, doesn't he...?

But in fact if you take a look at the income spread in America, the real aristocracy begins in the B-as-in-Big Billions. Take one of these fatcats and put his net worth on the same graph. His mark on the graph is EIGHT HUNDRED AND THIRTY THREE FEET HIGH.

Go out on the street and put a brick on the curb to mark a starting point, and pace off 833 feet. Put another brick on the curb at that point to mark it. Now go back to your starting point and make a mark that shows two inches and another at twenty inches. And look down the street to your second brick at 833 feet.

"Excess" doesn't even begin to describe that.

What we are talking about here is the difference between mere "wealth" on one hand, and overt "power" on the other hand.


Does it bother you?
It really doesnt bother me, in the slightest, that they have that much money. I hear alot of jealous broke ass lazy bastards (not implying you) that are so jealous that rather then get off their duffs and get a job they would rather take away from those who are more fortunate.
Thats not helping the poor, thats Communism (Or Socialism depending on the supporting structures).
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Unread postby dmtu » Tue 08 Mar 2005, 09:21:53

Simple. I know how much I put away this year and approximately what I spent. Assuming that what I spent is all taxed (to include food and services) I will pay 3500 more a year (@13%). Put me in the 55,000 to 75,000 bracket. The rich will still make out because you can bet your ass they put away more of their disposable income than the average Joe. Yes they spend more but typically a lower percentage than the rest of us in relation to total income. Seems to me that the poor will be hit horribly hard, the rich will do just as well as usual and, the middle class will grunt under the weight of the world.
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Unread postby Specop_007 » Tue 08 Mar 2005, 11:05:21

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dmtu', 'S')imple. I know how much I put away this year and approximately what I spent. Assuming that what I spent is all taxed (to include food and services) I will pay 3500 more a year (@13%). Put me in the 55,000 to 75,000 bracket. The rich will still make out because you can bet your ass they put away more of their disposable income than the average Joe. Yes they spend more but typically a lower percentage than the rest of us in relation to total income. Seems to me that the poor will be hit horribly hard, the rich will do just as well as usual and, the middle class will grunt under the weight of the world.


Imagine how much better off us "grunters" would be if we didnt have those damned Socialists in the government who want to redistribute our wealth to the poor.
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Unread postby Tyler_JC » Tue 08 Mar 2005, 16:55:41

Rich is 25% more than I make. That's the definition of rich to most people. If I'm lower middle class, rich is 75,000+ a year. Super rich is 100,000+ a year. That's crazy. Don't go up to someone earning 80k a year in New York City and call him rich. The cost of living is different in each state. That's why federal taxes suck. They tax people equally regardless of where they live. That doesn't make any sense to me. Someone earning $100,000 a year in Kansas is a lot "richer" than someone earning $100,000 in LA.

Middle class people are often called rich by their lower class counterparts. This raises the taxes of a lot of not rich people to the level of the rich. Us "grunters" are paying higher taxes than any American of our class in history.
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Unread postby Bytesmiths » Tue 08 Mar 2005, 17:09:13

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Tyler_JC', 'U')s "grunters" are paying higher taxes than any American of our class in history.
Most of the regressiveness is due to the "payroll tax" -- Social Security -- which I firmly believe most of us will never fully collect.

This 15% tax applies to the first dollar earned by someone earning one dollar a year, and if you make over a certain amount (~$80,000?), it goes away. And of course, if your income is 'unearned', there's no payroll tax on it, either.

<i>"What's this 15%? I only pay 7.5%!"</i> Boy, they fooled you! Your employer pays the other 7.5% -- money they could be paying you -- and if you're self-employed, you pay <b>both</b> the employer and employee amounts!

Social Security was once a noble idea, but has become corrupted. Let Dubya invest it in the stock market, and it will be ALL gone once the Peak hits and the economy (and stock market) goes down the tubes! At least as it is, China is willing to help finance it, but if they get tired of all this unsecured debt, and the dollar crashes, look for Social Security to come down with the entire House Of Cards.

Boy, ain't I a bundle of joy today? That reminds me, "short the dollar" is on today's 'to do' list. I bought Canadian Dollars last week, but their economy is tightly bound to the US economy; think I'll buy Euros this month.
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Unread postby dmtu » Tue 08 Mar 2005, 17:45:59

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Specop_007', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dmtu', 'S')imple. I know how much I put away this year and approximately what I spent. Assuming that what I spent is all taxed (to include food and services) I will pay 3500 more a year (@13%). Put me in the 55,000 to 75,000 bracket. The rich will still make out because you can bet your ass they put away more of their disposable income than the average Joe. Yes they spend more but typically a lower percentage than the rest of us in relation to total income. Seems to me that the poor will be hit horribly hard, the rich will do just as well as usual and, the middle class will grunt under the weight of the world.


Imagine how much better off us "grunters" would be if we didnt have those damned Socialists in the government who want to redistribute our wealth to the poor and allow our corporations to maintain offshore offices in order to evade taxes allong with corporate loopholes.


There, fixed.
You observed it from the start
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Unread postby Specop_007 » Tue 08 Mar 2005, 21:35:29

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dmtu', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Specop_007', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dmtu', 'S')imple. I know how much I put away this year and approximately what I spent. Assuming that what I spent is all taxed (to include food and services) I will pay 3500 more a year (@13%). Put me in the 55,000 to 75,000 bracket. The rich will still make out because you can bet your ass they put away more of their disposable income than the average Joe. Yes they spend more but typically a lower percentage than the rest of us in relation to total income. Seems to me that the poor will be hit horribly hard, the rich will do just as well as usual and, the middle class will grunt under the weight of the world.


Imagine how much better off us "grunters" would be if we didnt have those damned Socialists in the government who want to redistribute our wealth to the poor and allow our corporations to maintain offshore offices in order to evade taxes allong with corporate loopholes.


There, fixed.


Ah yes, the old "Blame the corporations" logic.
Faulty to be sure, but nonetheless amusing. :-D
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Unread postby TrueKaiser » Tue 08 Mar 2005, 23:53:41

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Specop_007', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dmtu', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Specop_007', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dmtu', 'S')imple. I know how much I put away this year and approximately what I spent. Assuming that what I spent is all taxed (to include food and services) I will pay 3500 more a year (@13%). Put me in the 55,000 to 75,000 bracket. The rich will still make out because you can bet your ass they put away more of their disposable income than the average Joe. Yes they spend more but typically a lower percentage than the rest of us in relation to total income. Seems to me that the poor will be hit horribly hard, the rich will do just as well as usual and, the middle class will grunt under the weight of the world.


Imagine how much better off us "grunters" would be if we didnt have those damned Socialists in the government who want to redistribute our wealth to the poor and allow our corporations to maintain offshore offices in order to evade taxes allong with corporate loopholes.


There, fixed.


Ah yes, the old "Blame the corporations" logic.
Faulty to be sure, but nonetheless amusing. :-D


but still true. didn't enron teach you anything?
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Unread postby dmtu » Wed 09 Mar 2005, 10:51:30

If I was a corporation I would take advantage of buying the bastard politicians too. Not blaming them, I'm blaming the corrupted system. The sooner everyone stops sucking the ass of the duopoly the better. I have a feeling PO will finally awaken the sheeple, perhaps sooner than I would like.

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will it make me a poor man?
cause I got an extra dime and I lose it every time
maybe I'm wrong but I think this whip is too long"

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Unread postby Kingcoal » Wed 09 Mar 2005, 12:05:20

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JoeW', 'T')he current graduated income tax in place is largely beneficial to lower-income and middle-income families. The upper income individuals & families are taking it up the wazoo, and all government statistics available confirm this.


What planet do you live on? True, people who are taxpayers pay a lot. You're missing the point, however. According to a former IRS commissioner, 35 million Americans pay zero. That's a lot of people!

Joe, I think you really need to study (read up) on the history of income taxes, the Federal Reserve, the IRS, the 16th amendment. You will be shocked by what you find out. Right now you are speaking from ignorance.
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Taxes

Unread postby JBinKC » Fri 15 Apr 2005, 15:59:57

I know the Europeans complain about the high prices paid for gasoline compared to America but I believe it is hidden in higher taxes in other areas here in the states. I pay about 55% of my total income in taxes (excluding gas taxes) and virtually get no health coverage with those taxes paid.

What are your property, (VAT)sales, or income taxes for instance.
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