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On July 21 2024 06:14 Liquid`Drone wrote: Firstly pretty much everyone who argues for inheritance taxes also argues for a big cutoff. Even the plan suggested by the Communist party of Norway would let you inherit a million dollars untaxed.
Secondly for every capitalist with a professed love for the self made man (and I never see people argue for capitalism because they profess a love for aristocracies), inheritance taxes (with a high cutoff) should be the least objectionable form of taxation there is. I'm honestly supportive, in theory, of 100% above say, $5 million. And if this makes people accumulate less because then they have no reason to accumulate more, that's a benefit, not a loss.
*I'm not running for office but if I were, I'd look at how to best balance the desire for an aggressive inheritance tax with family run companies because I can see how those have some appeal. But looking at a list of the 30 richest Norwegians under 30 years, a group with between $50 million and $2.6 billion, not one of them is remotely self made, they all inherited their wealth. I really can't see the benefit.
Issue with big cut off is inflation and while you can argue that it may be changed in line with inflation, this is for example what happened in UK (it is about personal tax allowance not inheritance but illustrates the problem rather well):
https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/what-a-drag-the-impact-of-the-frozen-personal-allowance-on-those-with-lower-incomes/#:~:text=the tax burden.-,The effect of freezing the Personal Tax Allowance is to,per cent in 2027/28.
In short, freezing tax allowance till 2028 in reality increased tax, due to inflation.
Italic - why do you think people accumulate money? While I cant speak for all, my guess is that majority want to provide they children with comfortable life.
Also while inheritance tax sounds good and gives "stick it to the rich" kind of vibe, it wouldnt actually hit the people you think it would, as presumably their accounts are run by people who very well know what they are doing and would probably even manage to get them tax return. There is a reason why Amazon UK didnt pay a dime of corporation tax 2 years in a row. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/jun/01/amazon-uk-services-main-division-pay-no-corporation-tax-for-second-year-in-row-tax-credit-government-super-deduction-scheme People hit by it would middle/ upper middle class. It wouldnt ensure that absurdly rich people arent rich anymore, it would ensure that no more people get absurdly rich.
Edit:
On July 21 2024 07:48 KwarK wrote:Show nested quote +On July 21 2024 07:38 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:11 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 04:44 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 04:32 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 04:08 Razyda wrote:On July 20 2024 22:21 SC-Shield wrote:On July 20 2024 13:58 KT_Elwood wrote: The Kings own everything, the peasant owns fuck all, yet today he works even harder to keep it that way.
That's because people are in general not taught finances in school. I don't remember being taught at school how to do budgeting, how to live below my means, what credit card debt is, etc. Maybe it's part of school curriculum nowadays, but it wasn't part of mine.Another observation is people like to play fake rich, at least in my country. Buying the latest phone brand for the sake of it, wearing branded clothes, luxury/expensive cars, etc. To realise that you need to read a book like "Rich Dad, Poor Dad" to know what is a liability and what is an asset. The book is oversimplification for sure, but the average person can benefit. While I'm not more than middle class, I'd still ask, why not play "kings' games" and just acquire more assets so you don't end up like "the peasant owns fuck all, yet today he works even harder to keep it that way". Anyway, this topic is probably more suited to investment/trading thread instead. They actually are it is called math. On July 20 2024 04:39 GreenHorizons wrote:On July 20 2024 04:21 KobraKay wrote:On July 20 2024 03:28 GreenHorizons wrote:On July 20 2024 03:07 ZeroByte13 wrote: [quote]For them, I'd say. I can try to adjust my expectations but Swedish IT industry suffers a bit because of it. Talented developers who want more money have to leave Swedish IT market. People who are ok with their salary ceiling here have less incentives to improve/grow.
As soon as the pandemic made remote jobs much more popular and available, the average competence in the company I work at dropped pretty significantly - many best devs got another job somewhere else, often abroad (they didn't move).
Where I'm from we used to joke about Swedish software developers - while good ones are as good as any, the average ones were far worse than our average. Sometimes we couldn't understand how this or that guy even got this job. I might be wrong but now I think this is because there are not many incentives for them to put in a lot of effort to improve - they're ok with what they have and they don't think the reward for extra effort is worth it. Seems the "suffering" is worth it and their society is better off, else you'd be making plans to go back to where they made fun of people like you/your coworkers. How is it better for society when the best and brightest move elsewhere because of it? Based on his feedback alone in the last 2 posts, that scheme is an incentive to be mediocre or at least to half ass the job. Moreover, zero said they arent going back because their wife likes the city. That is a very important piece of it that is completely detached of that payment structure. So im not really following your conclusion. It sounds like Zero, their wife, and Swedes in general have realized there's more to being happy and fulfilled than just maximizing "productivity" (especially "productivity" measured by profit sans externalities) and monetary remuneration while embracing the society developed concurrently with that general concept. Also worth noting the "best and brightest" didn't leave Sweden. You didnt address actually important part: "Based on his feedback alone in the last 2 posts, that scheme is an incentive to be mediocre or at least to half ass the job." Which is actually brutally correct and is exactly what socialism leads to. It is also one of the reasons for saying: "Only people who never lived in socialism want socialism" Regarding topic of inheritance tax mentioned earlier in this thread, I am sorry but I didnt work my a.. off my entire life so government can reap the fruits of my work, I did it so my kids have better start in life. So if any inheritance will be set which i am not a fan of I'll simply move for my last few years to a country with more reasonable government and sort the issue there. Also can people please stop using phrase "redistribution of wealth" and call it for what it is: "Stealing" Stealing what? Even if you’re some go-getting entrepreneur, every employee you’re using to expand your empire was likely educated on the government dime Most inheritance taxes I’ve ever encountered don’t remotely wipe out your wealth anyway, the kids who have wealthy parents still have a huge leg up over their peers who do not. You can still pass on plenty of it, just not all of it. Regular taxation takes far more proportionally of earnings of the poor than wealth taxes do from the rich. Should we just get rid of taxation entirely? Bolded - There is no such thing as government dime, it seems like some people dont understand that, government doesn't earn money. It is taxpayers money and so if you pay taxes you can and should call it even. Italic- pass this wealth enough times and it is wiped away, besides my money are already taxed plenty arent they? Income tax, investment tax, vat and after all those they are going to be taxed again after i die (they obviously will, but it depends how much) Bolded2 - if it were possible I am all for it (TBH I think vast majority of the population would love that, may be good idea for the referendum ) You’re a few layers below in understanding, not above. It’s not that other people don’t understand that government money is taken from people. It’s you that don’t understand that the money itself is inseparable from the idea of government. I think you misunderstood. It was response to part of the Wombat post where he seems to suggest that entrepreneur own something to government because it provided education for his employees. The money for education came from, so to speak, pot to which aforementioned entrepreneur contributed and still contributes hence there is no debt. If the money used for education were taken directly from governments pockets (eg from ministers salary or such) he would have a point, as it is he doesnt. They rely on the existence of a society. You can't separate the accumulation of wealth from the social framework it takes place within. If we were hunter gatherers and you foraged 10 mushrooms only to have me demand 5 of them from you then it would make sense to consider that theft. If we operate in a hugely complicated social network, I get 10 money and the state demands 5 then it's a lot less clear. 10 mushrooms is what I earned in the first scenario because I literally foraged 10 of them. 10 money is no less arbitrary than 5 money and neither of them can be connected to the labour I performed in any meaningful way. I can't separate the paycheck I get from a day on which I elect to "work from home" from the framework that allows me to do that and I can't resort to the labour theory of value to insist that I earned everything through my hard work because I didn't do any.
Again you dont understand. It was reply to specific claim about owning something to government for educating employees. Not about taxes, but against having some sort of additional liability, because your employees are educated.
Edit2: @Kwark Just remembered to ask, as thought kinda amused me. After news about Trump shooting, was your first thought to check if GH posted something on TL, after prodding him on not doing anything revolutionary?
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Northern Ireland22770 Posts
On July 21 2024 08:26 Razyda wrote:Show nested quote +On July 21 2024 06:14 Liquid`Drone wrote: Firstly pretty much everyone who argues for inheritance taxes also argues for a big cutoff. Even the plan suggested by the Communist party of Norway would let you inherit a million dollars untaxed.
Secondly for every capitalist with a professed love for the self made man (and I never see people argue for capitalism because they profess a love for aristocracies), inheritance taxes (with a high cutoff) should be the least objectionable form of taxation there is. I'm honestly supportive, in theory, of 100% above say, $5 million. And if this makes people accumulate less because then they have no reason to accumulate more, that's a benefit, not a loss.
*I'm not running for office but if I were, I'd look at how to best balance the desire for an aggressive inheritance tax with family run companies because I can see how those have some appeal. But looking at a list of the 30 richest Norwegians under 30 years, a group with between $50 million and $2.6 billion, not one of them is remotely self made, they all inherited their wealth. I really can't see the benefit. Issue with big cut off is inflation and while you can argue that it may be changed in line with inflation, this is for example what happened in UK (it is about personal tax allowance not inheritance but illustrates the problem rather well): https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/what-a-drag-the-impact-of-the-frozen-personal-allowance-on-those-with-lower-incomes/#:~:text=the tax burden.-,The effect of freezing the Personal Tax Allowance is to,per cent in 2027/28. In short, freezing tax allowance till 2028 in reality increased tax, due to inflation. Italic - why do you think people accumulate money? While I cant speak for all, my guess is that majority want to provide they children with comfortable life. Also while inheritance tax sounds good and gives "stick it to the rich" kind of vibe, it wouldnt actually hit the people you think it would, as presumably their accounts are run by people who very well know what they are doing and would probably even manage to get them tax return. There is a reason why Amazon UK didnt pay a dime of corporation tax 2 years in a row. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/jun/01/amazon-uk-services-main-division-pay-no-corporation-tax-for-second-year-in-row-tax-credit-government-super-deduction-schemePeople hit by it would middle/ upper middle class. It wouldnt ensure that absurdly rich people arent rich anymore, it would ensure that no more people get absurdly rich. Edit: Show nested quote +On July 21 2024 07:48 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 07:38 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:11 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 04:44 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 04:32 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 04:08 Razyda wrote:On July 20 2024 22:21 SC-Shield wrote:On July 20 2024 13:58 KT_Elwood wrote: The Kings own everything, the peasant owns fuck all, yet today he works even harder to keep it that way.
That's because people are in general not taught finances in school. I don't remember being taught at school how to do budgeting, how to live below my means, what credit card debt is, etc. Maybe it's part of school curriculum nowadays, but it wasn't part of mine.Another observation is people like to play fake rich, at least in my country. Buying the latest phone brand for the sake of it, wearing branded clothes, luxury/expensive cars, etc. To realise that you need to read a book like "Rich Dad, Poor Dad" to know what is a liability and what is an asset. The book is oversimplification for sure, but the average person can benefit. While I'm not more than middle class, I'd still ask, why not play "kings' games" and just acquire more assets so you don't end up like "the peasant owns fuck all, yet today he works even harder to keep it that way". Anyway, this topic is probably more suited to investment/trading thread instead. They actually are it is called math. On July 20 2024 04:39 GreenHorizons wrote:On July 20 2024 04:21 KobraKay wrote:On July 20 2024 03:28 GreenHorizons wrote: [quote] Seems the "suffering" is worth it and their society is better off, else you'd be making plans to go back to where they made fun of people like you/your coworkers. How is it better for society when the best and brightest move elsewhere because of it? Based on his feedback alone in the last 2 posts, that scheme is an incentive to be mediocre or at least to half ass the job. Moreover, zero said they arent going back because their wife likes the city. That is a very important piece of it that is completely detached of that payment structure. So im not really following your conclusion. It sounds like Zero, their wife, and Swedes in general have realized there's more to being happy and fulfilled than just maximizing "productivity" (especially "productivity" measured by profit sans externalities) and monetary remuneration while embracing the society developed concurrently with that general concept. Also worth noting the "best and brightest" didn't leave Sweden. You didnt address actually important part: "Based on his feedback alone in the last 2 posts, that scheme is an incentive to be mediocre or at least to half ass the job." Which is actually brutally correct and is exactly what socialism leads to. It is also one of the reasons for saying: "Only people who never lived in socialism want socialism" Regarding topic of inheritance tax mentioned earlier in this thread, I am sorry but I didnt work my a.. off my entire life so government can reap the fruits of my work, I did it so my kids have better start in life. So if any inheritance will be set which i am not a fan of I'll simply move for my last few years to a country with more reasonable government and sort the issue there. Also can people please stop using phrase "redistribution of wealth" and call it for what it is: "Stealing" Stealing what? Even if you’re some go-getting entrepreneur, every employee you’re using to expand your empire was likely educated on the government dime Most inheritance taxes I’ve ever encountered don’t remotely wipe out your wealth anyway, the kids who have wealthy parents still have a huge leg up over their peers who do not. You can still pass on plenty of it, just not all of it. Regular taxation takes far more proportionally of earnings of the poor than wealth taxes do from the rich. Should we just get rid of taxation entirely? Bolded - There is no such thing as government dime, it seems like some people dont understand that, government doesn't earn money. It is taxpayers money and so if you pay taxes you can and should call it even. Italic- pass this wealth enough times and it is wiped away, besides my money are already taxed plenty arent they? Income tax, investment tax, vat and after all those they are going to be taxed again after i die (they obviously will, but it depends how much) Bolded2 - if it were possible I am all for it (TBH I think vast majority of the population would love that, may be good idea for the referendum ) You’re a few layers below in understanding, not above. It’s not that other people don’t understand that government money is taken from people. It’s you that don’t understand that the money itself is inseparable from the idea of government. I think you misunderstood. It was response to part of the Wombat post where he seems to suggest that entrepreneur own something to government because it provided education for his employees. The money for education came from, so to speak, pot to which aforementioned entrepreneur contributed and still contributes hence there is no debt. If the money used for education were taken directly from governments pockets (eg from ministers salary or such) he would have a point, as it is he doesnt. They rely on the existence of a society. You can't separate the accumulation of wealth from the social framework it takes place within. If we were hunter gatherers and you foraged 10 mushrooms only to have me demand 5 of them from you then it would make sense to consider that theft. If we operate in a hugely complicated social network, I get 10 money and the state demands 5 then it's a lot less clear. 10 mushrooms is what I earned in the first scenario because I literally foraged 10 of them. 10 money is no less arbitrary than 5 money and neither of them can be connected to the labour I performed in any meaningful way. I can't separate the paycheck I get from a day on which I elect to "work from home" from the framework that allows me to do that and I can't resort to the labour theory of value to insist that I earned everything through my hard work because I didn't do any. Again you dont understand. It was reply to specific claim about owning something to government for educating employees. Not about taxes, but against having some sort of additional liability, because your employees are educated. Edit2: @Kwark Just remembered to ask, as thought kinda amused me. After news about Trump shooting, was your first thought to check if GH posted something on TL, after prodding him on not doing anything revolutionary? Well no the central point is the self-made billionaire type is basically a myth, because one cannot get to such a status without a workforce, which is educated on the public dime.
Never mind the consumer base, some of which may only have liquidity due to various government programs, be those targeted tax breaks, benefits (welfare) etc.
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On July 21 2024 08:51 WombaT wrote:Show nested quote +On July 21 2024 08:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:14 Liquid`Drone wrote: Firstly pretty much everyone who argues for inheritance taxes also argues for a big cutoff. Even the plan suggested by the Communist party of Norway would let you inherit a million dollars untaxed.
Secondly for every capitalist with a professed love for the self made man (and I never see people argue for capitalism because they profess a love for aristocracies), inheritance taxes (with a high cutoff) should be the least objectionable form of taxation there is. I'm honestly supportive, in theory, of 100% above say, $5 million. And if this makes people accumulate less because then they have no reason to accumulate more, that's a benefit, not a loss.
*I'm not running for office but if I were, I'd look at how to best balance the desire for an aggressive inheritance tax with family run companies because I can see how those have some appeal. But looking at a list of the 30 richest Norwegians under 30 years, a group with between $50 million and $2.6 billion, not one of them is remotely self made, they all inherited their wealth. I really can't see the benefit. Issue with big cut off is inflation and while you can argue that it may be changed in line with inflation, this is for example what happened in UK (it is about personal tax allowance not inheritance but illustrates the problem rather well): https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/what-a-drag-the-impact-of-the-frozen-personal-allowance-on-those-with-lower-incomes/#:~:text=the tax burden.-,The effect of freezing the Personal Tax Allowance is to,per cent in 2027/28. In short, freezing tax allowance till 2028 in reality increased tax, due to inflation. Italic - why do you think people accumulate money? While I cant speak for all, my guess is that majority want to provide they children with comfortable life. Also while inheritance tax sounds good and gives "stick it to the rich" kind of vibe, it wouldnt actually hit the people you think it would, as presumably their accounts are run by people who very well know what they are doing and would probably even manage to get them tax return. There is a reason why Amazon UK didnt pay a dime of corporation tax 2 years in a row. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/jun/01/amazon-uk-services-main-division-pay-no-corporation-tax-for-second-year-in-row-tax-credit-government-super-deduction-schemePeople hit by it would middle/ upper middle class. It wouldnt ensure that absurdly rich people arent rich anymore, it would ensure that no more people get absurdly rich. Edit: On July 21 2024 07:48 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 07:38 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:11 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 04:44 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 04:32 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 04:08 Razyda wrote:On July 20 2024 22:21 SC-Shield wrote:On July 20 2024 13:58 KT_Elwood wrote: The Kings own everything, the peasant owns fuck all, yet today he works even harder to keep it that way.
That's because people are in general not taught finances in school. I don't remember being taught at school how to do budgeting, how to live below my means, what credit card debt is, etc. Maybe it's part of school curriculum nowadays, but it wasn't part of mine.Another observation is people like to play fake rich, at least in my country. Buying the latest phone brand for the sake of it, wearing branded clothes, luxury/expensive cars, etc. To realise that you need to read a book like "Rich Dad, Poor Dad" to know what is a liability and what is an asset. The book is oversimplification for sure, but the average person can benefit. While I'm not more than middle class, I'd still ask, why not play "kings' games" and just acquire more assets so you don't end up like "the peasant owns fuck all, yet today he works even harder to keep it that way". Anyway, this topic is probably more suited to investment/trading thread instead. They actually are it is called math. On July 20 2024 04:39 GreenHorizons wrote:On July 20 2024 04:21 KobraKay wrote: [quote]
How is it better for society when the best and brightest move elsewhere because of it? Based on his feedback alone in the last 2 posts, that scheme is an incentive to be mediocre or at least to half ass the job.
Moreover, zero said they arent going back because their wife likes the city. That is a very important piece of it that is completely detached of that payment structure. So im not really following your conclusion. It sounds like Zero, their wife, and Swedes in general have realized there's more to being happy and fulfilled than just maximizing "productivity" (especially "productivity" measured by profit sans externalities) and monetary remuneration while embracing the society developed concurrently with that general concept. Also worth noting the "best and brightest" didn't leave Sweden. You didnt address actually important part: "Based on his feedback alone in the last 2 posts, that scheme is an incentive to be mediocre or at least to half ass the job." Which is actually brutally correct and is exactly what socialism leads to. It is also one of the reasons for saying: "Only people who never lived in socialism want socialism" Regarding topic of inheritance tax mentioned earlier in this thread, I am sorry but I didnt work my a.. off my entire life so government can reap the fruits of my work, I did it so my kids have better start in life. So if any inheritance will be set which i am not a fan of I'll simply move for my last few years to a country with more reasonable government and sort the issue there. Also can people please stop using phrase "redistribution of wealth" and call it for what it is: "Stealing" Stealing what? Even if you’re some go-getting entrepreneur, every employee you’re using to expand your empire was likely educated on the government dime Most inheritance taxes I’ve ever encountered don’t remotely wipe out your wealth anyway, the kids who have wealthy parents still have a huge leg up over their peers who do not. You can still pass on plenty of it, just not all of it. Regular taxation takes far more proportionally of earnings of the poor than wealth taxes do from the rich. Should we just get rid of taxation entirely? Bolded - There is no such thing as government dime, it seems like some people dont understand that, government doesn't earn money. It is taxpayers money and so if you pay taxes you can and should call it even. Italic- pass this wealth enough times and it is wiped away, besides my money are already taxed plenty arent they? Income tax, investment tax, vat and after all those they are going to be taxed again after i die (they obviously will, but it depends how much) Bolded2 - if it were possible I am all for it (TBH I think vast majority of the population would love that, may be good idea for the referendum ) You’re a few layers below in understanding, not above. It’s not that other people don’t understand that government money is taken from people. It’s you that don’t understand that the money itself is inseparable from the idea of government. I think you misunderstood. It was response to part of the Wombat post where he seems to suggest that entrepreneur own something to government because it provided education for his employees. The money for education came from, so to speak, pot to which aforementioned entrepreneur contributed and still contributes hence there is no debt. If the money used for education were taken directly from governments pockets (eg from ministers salary or such) he would have a point, as it is he doesnt. They rely on the existence of a society. You can't separate the accumulation of wealth from the social framework it takes place within. If we were hunter gatherers and you foraged 10 mushrooms only to have me demand 5 of them from you then it would make sense to consider that theft. If we operate in a hugely complicated social network, I get 10 money and the state demands 5 then it's a lot less clear. 10 mushrooms is what I earned in the first scenario because I literally foraged 10 of them. 10 money is no less arbitrary than 5 money and neither of them can be connected to the labour I performed in any meaningful way. I can't separate the paycheck I get from a day on which I elect to "work from home" from the framework that allows me to do that and I can't resort to the labour theory of value to insist that I earned everything through my hard work because I didn't do any. Again you dont understand. It was reply to specific claim about owning something to government for educating employees. Not about taxes, but against having some sort of additional liability, because your employees are educated. Edit2: @Kwark Just remembered to ask, as thought kinda amused me. After news about Trump shooting, was your first thought to check if GH posted something on TL, after prodding him on not doing anything revolutionary? Well no the central point is the self-made billionaire type is basically a myth, because one cannot get to such a status without a workforce, which is educated on the public dime.
Never mind the consumer base, some of which may only have liquidity due to various government programs, be those targeted tax breaks, benefits (welfare) etc.
Which doesnt matter because entrepreneur is part of public so it was his money to which funded this education.
Also while self made billionaire is basically a myth, what you have against family made billionaires? Lets take JK Rowling (lets disregard her views which may be considered controversial) far as I know she made herself rich purely by herself, should she be robbed of possibility to pass her money to her children? should government really be allowed to take all her money except, like Drone suggested, 5kk per child? Lets say you won lottery, how happy would it make you, that your kids get 5kk each, and with rest government would establish department to correct use of toothpicks? (because that what would happen, it wouldnt go to the poor)
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United States41470 Posts
On July 21 2024 09:26 Razyda wrote:Show nested quote +On July 21 2024 08:51 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 08:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:14 Liquid`Drone wrote: Firstly pretty much everyone who argues for inheritance taxes also argues for a big cutoff. Even the plan suggested by the Communist party of Norway would let you inherit a million dollars untaxed.
Secondly for every capitalist with a professed love for the self made man (and I never see people argue for capitalism because they profess a love for aristocracies), inheritance taxes (with a high cutoff) should be the least objectionable form of taxation there is. I'm honestly supportive, in theory, of 100% above say, $5 million. And if this makes people accumulate less because then they have no reason to accumulate more, that's a benefit, not a loss.
*I'm not running for office but if I were, I'd look at how to best balance the desire for an aggressive inheritance tax with family run companies because I can see how those have some appeal. But looking at a list of the 30 richest Norwegians under 30 years, a group with between $50 million and $2.6 billion, not one of them is remotely self made, they all inherited their wealth. I really can't see the benefit. Issue with big cut off is inflation and while you can argue that it may be changed in line with inflation, this is for example what happened in UK (it is about personal tax allowance not inheritance but illustrates the problem rather well): https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/what-a-drag-the-impact-of-the-frozen-personal-allowance-on-those-with-lower-incomes/#:~:text=the tax burden.-,The effect of freezing the Personal Tax Allowance is to,per cent in 2027/28. In short, freezing tax allowance till 2028 in reality increased tax, due to inflation. Italic - why do you think people accumulate money? While I cant speak for all, my guess is that majority want to provide they children with comfortable life. Also while inheritance tax sounds good and gives "stick it to the rich" kind of vibe, it wouldnt actually hit the people you think it would, as presumably their accounts are run by people who very well know what they are doing and would probably even manage to get them tax return. There is a reason why Amazon UK didnt pay a dime of corporation tax 2 years in a row. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/jun/01/amazon-uk-services-main-division-pay-no-corporation-tax-for-second-year-in-row-tax-credit-government-super-deduction-schemePeople hit by it would middle/ upper middle class. It wouldnt ensure that absurdly rich people arent rich anymore, it would ensure that no more people get absurdly rich. Edit: On July 21 2024 07:48 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 07:38 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:11 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 04:44 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 04:32 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 04:08 Razyda wrote:On July 20 2024 22:21 SC-Shield wrote: [quote]
That's because people are in general not taught finances in school. I don't remember being taught at school how to do budgeting, how to live below my means, what credit card debt is, etc. Maybe it's part of school curriculum nowadays, but it wasn't part of mine.
Another observation is people like to play fake rich, at least in my country. Buying the latest phone brand for the sake of it, wearing branded clothes, luxury/expensive cars, etc. To realise that you need to read a book like "Rich Dad, Poor Dad" to know what is a liability and what is an asset. The book is oversimplification for sure, but the average person can benefit. While I'm not more than middle class, I'd still ask, why not play "kings' games" and just acquire more assets so you don't end up like "the peasant owns fuck all, yet today he works even harder to keep it that way". Anyway, this topic is probably more suited to investment/trading thread instead. They actually are it is called math. On July 20 2024 04:39 GreenHorizons wrote: [quote]It sounds like Zero, their wife, and Swedes in general have realized there's more to being happy and fulfilled than just maximizing "productivity" (especially "productivity" measured by profit sans externalities) and monetary remuneration while embracing the society developed concurrently with that general concept. Also worth noting the "best and brightest" didn't leave Sweden. You didnt address actually important part: "Based on his feedback alone in the last 2 posts, that scheme is an incentive to be mediocre or at least to half ass the job." Which is actually brutally correct and is exactly what socialism leads to. It is also one of the reasons for saying: "Only people who never lived in socialism want socialism" Regarding topic of inheritance tax mentioned earlier in this thread, I am sorry but I didnt work my a.. off my entire life so government can reap the fruits of my work, I did it so my kids have better start in life. So if any inheritance will be set which i am not a fan of I'll simply move for my last few years to a country with more reasonable government and sort the issue there. Also can people please stop using phrase "redistribution of wealth" and call it for what it is: "Stealing" Stealing what? Even if you’re some go-getting entrepreneur, every employee you’re using to expand your empire was likely educated on the government dime Most inheritance taxes I’ve ever encountered don’t remotely wipe out your wealth anyway, the kids who have wealthy parents still have a huge leg up over their peers who do not. You can still pass on plenty of it, just not all of it. Regular taxation takes far more proportionally of earnings of the poor than wealth taxes do from the rich. Should we just get rid of taxation entirely? Bolded - There is no such thing as government dime, it seems like some people dont understand that, government doesn't earn money. It is taxpayers money and so if you pay taxes you can and should call it even. Italic- pass this wealth enough times and it is wiped away, besides my money are already taxed plenty arent they? Income tax, investment tax, vat and after all those they are going to be taxed again after i die (they obviously will, but it depends how much) Bolded2 - if it were possible I am all for it (TBH I think vast majority of the population would love that, may be good idea for the referendum ) You’re a few layers below in understanding, not above. It’s not that other people don’t understand that government money is taken from people. It’s you that don’t understand that the money itself is inseparable from the idea of government. I think you misunderstood. It was response to part of the Wombat post where he seems to suggest that entrepreneur own something to government because it provided education for his employees. The money for education came from, so to speak, pot to which aforementioned entrepreneur contributed and still contributes hence there is no debt. If the money used for education were taken directly from governments pockets (eg from ministers salary or such) he would have a point, as it is he doesnt. They rely on the existence of a society. You can't separate the accumulation of wealth from the social framework it takes place within. If we were hunter gatherers and you foraged 10 mushrooms only to have me demand 5 of them from you then it would make sense to consider that theft. If we operate in a hugely complicated social network, I get 10 money and the state demands 5 then it's a lot less clear. 10 mushrooms is what I earned in the first scenario because I literally foraged 10 of them. 10 money is no less arbitrary than 5 money and neither of them can be connected to the labour I performed in any meaningful way. I can't separate the paycheck I get from a day on which I elect to "work from home" from the framework that allows me to do that and I can't resort to the labour theory of value to insist that I earned everything through my hard work because I didn't do any. Again you dont understand. It was reply to specific claim about owning something to government for educating employees. Not about taxes, but against having some sort of additional liability, because your employees are educated. Edit2: @Kwark Just remembered to ask, as thought kinda amused me. After news about Trump shooting, was your first thought to check if GH posted something on TL, after prodding him on not doing anything revolutionary? Well no the central point is the self-made billionaire type is basically a myth, because one cannot get to such a status without a workforce, which is educated on the public dime.
Never mind the consumer base, some of which may only have liquidity due to various government programs, be those targeted tax breaks, benefits (welfare) etc. Which doesnt matter because entrepreneur is part of public so it was his money to which funded this education. Also while self made billionaire is basically a myth, what you have against family made billionaires? Lets take JK Rowling (lets disregard her views which may be considered controversial) far as I know she made herself rich purely by herself, should she be robbed of possibility to pass her money to her children? should government really be allowed to take all her money except, like Drone suggested, 5kk per child? Lets say you won lottery, how happy would it make you, that your kids get 5kk each, and with rest government would establish department to correct use of toothpicks? (because that what would happen, it wouldnt go to the poor) Gotta take money from someone. Is it better to take half of the billion JK is passing to her kids or half the paychecks of a bunch of working people.
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Northern Ireland22770 Posts
On July 21 2024 09:26 Razyda wrote:Show nested quote +On July 21 2024 08:51 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 08:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:14 Liquid`Drone wrote: Firstly pretty much everyone who argues for inheritance taxes also argues for a big cutoff. Even the plan suggested by the Communist party of Norway would let you inherit a million dollars untaxed.
Secondly for every capitalist with a professed love for the self made man (and I never see people argue for capitalism because they profess a love for aristocracies), inheritance taxes (with a high cutoff) should be the least objectionable form of taxation there is. I'm honestly supportive, in theory, of 100% above say, $5 million. And if this makes people accumulate less because then they have no reason to accumulate more, that's a benefit, not a loss.
*I'm not running for office but if I were, I'd look at how to best balance the desire for an aggressive inheritance tax with family run companies because I can see how those have some appeal. But looking at a list of the 30 richest Norwegians under 30 years, a group with between $50 million and $2.6 billion, not one of them is remotely self made, they all inherited their wealth. I really can't see the benefit. Issue with big cut off is inflation and while you can argue that it may be changed in line with inflation, this is for example what happened in UK (it is about personal tax allowance not inheritance but illustrates the problem rather well): https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/what-a-drag-the-impact-of-the-frozen-personal-allowance-on-those-with-lower-incomes/#:~:text=the tax burden.-,The effect of freezing the Personal Tax Allowance is to,per cent in 2027/28. In short, freezing tax allowance till 2028 in reality increased tax, due to inflation. Italic - why do you think people accumulate money? While I cant speak for all, my guess is that majority want to provide they children with comfortable life. Also while inheritance tax sounds good and gives "stick it to the rich" kind of vibe, it wouldnt actually hit the people you think it would, as presumably their accounts are run by people who very well know what they are doing and would probably even manage to get them tax return. There is a reason why Amazon UK didnt pay a dime of corporation tax 2 years in a row. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/jun/01/amazon-uk-services-main-division-pay-no-corporation-tax-for-second-year-in-row-tax-credit-government-super-deduction-schemePeople hit by it would middle/ upper middle class. It wouldnt ensure that absurdly rich people arent rich anymore, it would ensure that no more people get absurdly rich. Edit: On July 21 2024 07:48 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 07:38 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:11 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 04:44 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 04:32 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 04:08 Razyda wrote:On July 20 2024 22:21 SC-Shield wrote: [quote]
That's because people are in general not taught finances in school. I don't remember being taught at school how to do budgeting, how to live below my means, what credit card debt is, etc. Maybe it's part of school curriculum nowadays, but it wasn't part of mine.
Another observation is people like to play fake rich, at least in my country. Buying the latest phone brand for the sake of it, wearing branded clothes, luxury/expensive cars, etc. To realise that you need to read a book like "Rich Dad, Poor Dad" to know what is a liability and what is an asset. The book is oversimplification for sure, but the average person can benefit. While I'm not more than middle class, I'd still ask, why not play "kings' games" and just acquire more assets so you don't end up like "the peasant owns fuck all, yet today he works even harder to keep it that way". Anyway, this topic is probably more suited to investment/trading thread instead. They actually are it is called math. On July 20 2024 04:39 GreenHorizons wrote: [quote]It sounds like Zero, their wife, and Swedes in general have realized there's more to being happy and fulfilled than just maximizing "productivity" (especially "productivity" measured by profit sans externalities) and monetary remuneration while embracing the society developed concurrently with that general concept. Also worth noting the "best and brightest" didn't leave Sweden. You didnt address actually important part: "Based on his feedback alone in the last 2 posts, that scheme is an incentive to be mediocre or at least to half ass the job." Which is actually brutally correct and is exactly what socialism leads to. It is also one of the reasons for saying: "Only people who never lived in socialism want socialism" Regarding topic of inheritance tax mentioned earlier in this thread, I am sorry but I didnt work my a.. off my entire life so government can reap the fruits of my work, I did it so my kids have better start in life. So if any inheritance will be set which i am not a fan of I'll simply move for my last few years to a country with more reasonable government and sort the issue there. Also can people please stop using phrase "redistribution of wealth" and call it for what it is: "Stealing" Stealing what? Even if you’re some go-getting entrepreneur, every employee you’re using to expand your empire was likely educated on the government dime Most inheritance taxes I’ve ever encountered don’t remotely wipe out your wealth anyway, the kids who have wealthy parents still have a huge leg up over their peers who do not. You can still pass on plenty of it, just not all of it. Regular taxation takes far more proportionally of earnings of the poor than wealth taxes do from the rich. Should we just get rid of taxation entirely? Bolded - There is no such thing as government dime, it seems like some people dont understand that, government doesn't earn money. It is taxpayers money and so if you pay taxes you can and should call it even. Italic- pass this wealth enough times and it is wiped away, besides my money are already taxed plenty arent they? Income tax, investment tax, vat and after all those they are going to be taxed again after i die (they obviously will, but it depends how much) Bolded2 - if it were possible I am all for it (TBH I think vast majority of the population would love that, may be good idea for the referendum ) You’re a few layers below in understanding, not above. It’s not that other people don’t understand that government money is taken from people. It’s you that don’t understand that the money itself is inseparable from the idea of government. I think you misunderstood. It was response to part of the Wombat post where he seems to suggest that entrepreneur own something to government because it provided education for his employees. The money for education came from, so to speak, pot to which aforementioned entrepreneur contributed and still contributes hence there is no debt. If the money used for education were taken directly from governments pockets (eg from ministers salary or such) he would have a point, as it is he doesnt. They rely on the existence of a society. You can't separate the accumulation of wealth from the social framework it takes place within. If we were hunter gatherers and you foraged 10 mushrooms only to have me demand 5 of them from you then it would make sense to consider that theft. If we operate in a hugely complicated social network, I get 10 money and the state demands 5 then it's a lot less clear. 10 mushrooms is what I earned in the first scenario because I literally foraged 10 of them. 10 money is no less arbitrary than 5 money and neither of them can be connected to the labour I performed in any meaningful way. I can't separate the paycheck I get from a day on which I elect to "work from home" from the framework that allows me to do that and I can't resort to the labour theory of value to insist that I earned everything through my hard work because I didn't do any. Again you dont understand. It was reply to specific claim about owning something to government for educating employees. Not about taxes, but against having some sort of additional liability, because your employees are educated. Edit2: @Kwark Just remembered to ask, as thought kinda amused me. After news about Trump shooting, was your first thought to check if GH posted something on TL, after prodding him on not doing anything revolutionary? Well no the central point is the self-made billionaire type is basically a myth, because one cannot get to such a status without a workforce, which is educated on the public dime.
Never mind the consumer base, some of which may only have liquidity due to various government programs, be those targeted tax breaks, benefits (welfare) etc. Which doesnt matter because entrepreneur is part of public so it was his money to which funded this education. Also while self made billionaire is basically a myth, what you have against family made billionaires? Lets take JK Rowling (lets disregard her views which may be considered controversial) far as I know she made herself rich purely by herself, should she be robbed of possibility to pass her money to her children? should government really be allowed to take all her money except, like Drone suggested, 5kk per child? Lets say you won lottery, how happy would it make you, that your kids get 5kk each, and with rest government would establish department to correct use of toothpicks? (because that what would happen, it wouldnt go to the poor) She wouldn’t be a billionaire without various distribution networks, film workers of various kinds etc.
Indeed, rather famously she wrote the first Harry Potter book while on welfare as a single mother.
One could quite easily make the argument that she owes the state for enabling her success, and should help fund it so the next JK Rowling can have the opportunities she did.
Also I don’t think people in here by and large are advocating seizing all of the wealthy’s money, just some reasonable portion of it.
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On July 21 2024 10:59 WombaT wrote:Show nested quote +On July 21 2024 09:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 08:51 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 08:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:14 Liquid`Drone wrote: Firstly pretty much everyone who argues for inheritance taxes also argues for a big cutoff. Even the plan suggested by the Communist party of Norway would let you inherit a million dollars untaxed.
Secondly for every capitalist with a professed love for the self made man (and I never see people argue for capitalism because they profess a love for aristocracies), inheritance taxes (with a high cutoff) should be the least objectionable form of taxation there is. I'm honestly supportive, in theory, of 100% above say, $5 million. And if this makes people accumulate less because then they have no reason to accumulate more, that's a benefit, not a loss.
*I'm not running for office but if I were, I'd look at how to best balance the desire for an aggressive inheritance tax with family run companies because I can see how those have some appeal. But looking at a list of the 30 richest Norwegians under 30 years, a group with between $50 million and $2.6 billion, not one of them is remotely self made, they all inherited their wealth. I really can't see the benefit. Issue with big cut off is inflation and while you can argue that it may be changed in line with inflation, this is for example what happened in UK (it is about personal tax allowance not inheritance but illustrates the problem rather well): https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/what-a-drag-the-impact-of-the-frozen-personal-allowance-on-those-with-lower-incomes/#:~:text=the tax burden.-,The effect of freezing the Personal Tax Allowance is to,per cent in 2027/28. In short, freezing tax allowance till 2028 in reality increased tax, due to inflation. Italic - why do you think people accumulate money? While I cant speak for all, my guess is that majority want to provide they children with comfortable life. Also while inheritance tax sounds good and gives "stick it to the rich" kind of vibe, it wouldnt actually hit the people you think it would, as presumably their accounts are run by people who very well know what they are doing and would probably even manage to get them tax return. There is a reason why Amazon UK didnt pay a dime of corporation tax 2 years in a row. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/jun/01/amazon-uk-services-main-division-pay-no-corporation-tax-for-second-year-in-row-tax-credit-government-super-deduction-schemePeople hit by it would middle/ upper middle class. It wouldnt ensure that absurdly rich people arent rich anymore, it would ensure that no more people get absurdly rich. Edit: On July 21 2024 07:48 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 07:38 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:11 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 04:44 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 04:32 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 04:08 Razyda wrote: [quote]
They actually are it is called math.
[quote]
You didnt address actually important part:
"Based on his feedback alone in the last 2 posts, that scheme is an incentive to be mediocre or at least to half ass the job."
Which is actually brutally correct and is exactly what socialism leads to. It is also one of the reasons for saying: "Only people who never lived in socialism want socialism"
Regarding topic of inheritance tax mentioned earlier in this thread, I am sorry but I didnt work my a.. off my entire life so government can reap the fruits of my work, I did it so my kids have better start in life. So if any inheritance will be set which i am not a fan of I'll simply move for my last few years to a country with more reasonable government and sort the issue there.
Also can people please stop using phrase "redistribution of wealth" and call it for what it is: "Stealing"
Stealing what? Even if you’re some go-getting entrepreneur, every employee you’re using to expand your empire was likely educated on the government dime Most inheritance taxes I’ve ever encountered don’t remotely wipe out your wealth anyway, the kids who have wealthy parents still have a huge leg up over their peers who do not. You can still pass on plenty of it, just not all of it. Regular taxation takes far more proportionally of earnings of the poor than wealth taxes do from the rich. Should we just get rid of taxation entirely? Bolded - There is no such thing as government dime, it seems like some people dont understand that, government doesn't earn money. It is taxpayers money and so if you pay taxes you can and should call it even. Italic- pass this wealth enough times and it is wiped away, besides my money are already taxed plenty arent they? Income tax, investment tax, vat and after all those they are going to be taxed again after i die (they obviously will, but it depends how much) Bolded2 - if it were possible I am all for it (TBH I think vast majority of the population would love that, may be good idea for the referendum ) You’re a few layers below in understanding, not above. It’s not that other people don’t understand that government money is taken from people. It’s you that don’t understand that the money itself is inseparable from the idea of government. I think you misunderstood. It was response to part of the Wombat post where he seems to suggest that entrepreneur own something to government because it provided education for his employees. The money for education came from, so to speak, pot to which aforementioned entrepreneur contributed and still contributes hence there is no debt. If the money used for education were taken directly from governments pockets (eg from ministers salary or such) he would have a point, as it is he doesnt. They rely on the existence of a society. You can't separate the accumulation of wealth from the social framework it takes place within. If we were hunter gatherers and you foraged 10 mushrooms only to have me demand 5 of them from you then it would make sense to consider that theft. If we operate in a hugely complicated social network, I get 10 money and the state demands 5 then it's a lot less clear. 10 mushrooms is what I earned in the first scenario because I literally foraged 10 of them. 10 money is no less arbitrary than 5 money and neither of them can be connected to the labour I performed in any meaningful way. I can't separate the paycheck I get from a day on which I elect to "work from home" from the framework that allows me to do that and I can't resort to the labour theory of value to insist that I earned everything through my hard work because I didn't do any. Again you dont understand. It was reply to specific claim about owning something to government for educating employees. Not about taxes, but against having some sort of additional liability, because your employees are educated. Edit2: @Kwark Just remembered to ask, as thought kinda amused me. After news about Trump shooting, was your first thought to check if GH posted something on TL, after prodding him on not doing anything revolutionary? Well no the central point is the self-made billionaire type is basically a myth, because one cannot get to such a status without a workforce, which is educated on the public dime.
Never mind the consumer base, some of which may only have liquidity due to various government programs, be those targeted tax breaks, benefits (welfare) etc. Which doesnt matter because entrepreneur is part of public so it was his money to which funded this education. Also while self made billionaire is basically a myth, what you have against family made billionaires? Lets take JK Rowling (lets disregard her views which may be considered controversial) far as I know she made herself rich purely by herself, should she be robbed of possibility to pass her money to her children? should government really be allowed to take all her money except, like Drone suggested, 5kk per child? Lets say you won lottery, how happy would it make you, that your kids get 5kk each, and with rest government would establish department to correct use of toothpicks? (because that what would happen, it wouldnt go to the poor) She wouldn’t be a billionaire without various distribution networks, film workers of various kinds etc. Indeed, rather famously she wrote the first Harry Potter book while on welfare as a single mother. One could quite easily make the argument that she owes the state for enabling her success, and should help fund it so the next JK Rowling can have the opportunities she did. Also I don’t think people in here by and large are advocating seizing all of the wealthy’s money, just some reasonable portion of it.
Yeah, but the question is how much "help fund it" is fair. Obviously she will have paid taxes in some capacity, and presumably more than your average person. We can all agree that the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, because we're the many and they're the few. It's easy for us to vote that JK gives half a billion dollars to us because of what side we're on.
What I think Razyda is trying to point to is that the money wouldn't go to 'us' and we're naive to think it would.
I don't know that such an argument is particularly strong, and I'd argue in favour of some kind of inheritance cap and if the best argument against it is that the whole system is too corrupt for it to mean anything then... I dunno, that just feels defeatist.
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On July 21 2024 09:44 KwarK wrote:Show nested quote +On July 21 2024 09:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 08:51 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 08:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:14 Liquid`Drone wrote: Firstly pretty much everyone who argues for inheritance taxes also argues for a big cutoff. Even the plan suggested by the Communist party of Norway would let you inherit a million dollars untaxed.
Secondly for every capitalist with a professed love for the self made man (and I never see people argue for capitalism because they profess a love for aristocracies), inheritance taxes (with a high cutoff) should be the least objectionable form of taxation there is. I'm honestly supportive, in theory, of 100% above say, $5 million. And if this makes people accumulate less because then they have no reason to accumulate more, that's a benefit, not a loss.
*I'm not running for office but if I were, I'd look at how to best balance the desire for an aggressive inheritance tax with family run companies because I can see how those have some appeal. But looking at a list of the 30 richest Norwegians under 30 years, a group with between $50 million and $2.6 billion, not one of them is remotely self made, they all inherited their wealth. I really can't see the benefit. Issue with big cut off is inflation and while you can argue that it may be changed in line with inflation, this is for example what happened in UK (it is about personal tax allowance not inheritance but illustrates the problem rather well): https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/what-a-drag-the-impact-of-the-frozen-personal-allowance-on-those-with-lower-incomes/#:~:text=the tax burden.-,The effect of freezing the Personal Tax Allowance is to,per cent in 2027/28. In short, freezing tax allowance till 2028 in reality increased tax, due to inflation. Italic - why do you think people accumulate money? While I cant speak for all, my guess is that majority want to provide they children with comfortable life. Also while inheritance tax sounds good and gives "stick it to the rich" kind of vibe, it wouldnt actually hit the people you think it would, as presumably their accounts are run by people who very well know what they are doing and would probably even manage to get them tax return. There is a reason why Amazon UK didnt pay a dime of corporation tax 2 years in a row. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/jun/01/amazon-uk-services-main-division-pay-no-corporation-tax-for-second-year-in-row-tax-credit-government-super-deduction-schemePeople hit by it would middle/ upper middle class. It wouldnt ensure that absurdly rich people arent rich anymore, it would ensure that no more people get absurdly rich. Edit: On July 21 2024 07:48 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 07:38 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:11 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 04:44 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 04:32 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 04:08 Razyda wrote: [quote]
They actually are it is called math.
[quote]
You didnt address actually important part:
"Based on his feedback alone in the last 2 posts, that scheme is an incentive to be mediocre or at least to half ass the job."
Which is actually brutally correct and is exactly what socialism leads to. It is also one of the reasons for saying: "Only people who never lived in socialism want socialism"
Regarding topic of inheritance tax mentioned earlier in this thread, I am sorry but I didnt work my a.. off my entire life so government can reap the fruits of my work, I did it so my kids have better start in life. So if any inheritance will be set which i am not a fan of I'll simply move for my last few years to a country with more reasonable government and sort the issue there.
Also can people please stop using phrase "redistribution of wealth" and call it for what it is: "Stealing"
Stealing what? Even if you’re some go-getting entrepreneur, every employee you’re using to expand your empire was likely educated on the government dime Most inheritance taxes I’ve ever encountered don’t remotely wipe out your wealth anyway, the kids who have wealthy parents still have a huge leg up over their peers who do not. You can still pass on plenty of it, just not all of it. Regular taxation takes far more proportionally of earnings of the poor than wealth taxes do from the rich. Should we just get rid of taxation entirely? Bolded - There is no such thing as government dime, it seems like some people dont understand that, government doesn't earn money. It is taxpayers money and so if you pay taxes you can and should call it even. Italic- pass this wealth enough times and it is wiped away, besides my money are already taxed plenty arent they? Income tax, investment tax, vat and after all those they are going to be taxed again after i die (they obviously will, but it depends how much) Bolded2 - if it were possible I am all for it (TBH I think vast majority of the population would love that, may be good idea for the referendum ) You’re a few layers below in understanding, not above. It’s not that other people don’t understand that government money is taken from people. It’s you that don’t understand that the money itself is inseparable from the idea of government. I think you misunderstood. It was response to part of the Wombat post where he seems to suggest that entrepreneur own something to government because it provided education for his employees. The money for education came from, so to speak, pot to which aforementioned entrepreneur contributed and still contributes hence there is no debt. If the money used for education were taken directly from governments pockets (eg from ministers salary or such) he would have a point, as it is he doesnt. They rely on the existence of a society. You can't separate the accumulation of wealth from the social framework it takes place within. If we were hunter gatherers and you foraged 10 mushrooms only to have me demand 5 of them from you then it would make sense to consider that theft. If we operate in a hugely complicated social network, I get 10 money and the state demands 5 then it's a lot less clear. 10 mushrooms is what I earned in the first scenario because I literally foraged 10 of them. 10 money is no less arbitrary than 5 money and neither of them can be connected to the labour I performed in any meaningful way. I can't separate the paycheck I get from a day on which I elect to "work from home" from the framework that allows me to do that and I can't resort to the labour theory of value to insist that I earned everything through my hard work because I didn't do any. Again you dont understand. It was reply to specific claim about owning something to government for educating employees. Not about taxes, but against having some sort of additional liability, because your employees are educated. Edit2: @Kwark Just remembered to ask, as thought kinda amused me. After news about Trump shooting, was your first thought to check if GH posted something on TL, after prodding him on not doing anything revolutionary? Well no the central point is the self-made billionaire type is basically a myth, because one cannot get to such a status without a workforce, which is educated on the public dime.
Never mind the consumer base, some of which may only have liquidity due to various government programs, be those targeted tax breaks, benefits (welfare) etc. Which doesnt matter because entrepreneur is part of public so it was his money to which funded this education. Also while self made billionaire is basically a myth, what you have against family made billionaires? Lets take JK Rowling (lets disregard her views which may be considered controversial) far as I know she made herself rich purely by herself, should she be robbed of possibility to pass her money to her children? should government really be allowed to take all her money except, like Drone suggested, 5kk per child? Lets say you won lottery, how happy would it make you, that your kids get 5kk each, and with rest government would establish department to correct use of toothpicks? (because that what would happen, it wouldnt go to the poor) Gotta take money from someone. Is it better to take half of the billion JK is passing to her kids or half the paychecks of a bunch of working people.
Oh really? Why??? and for what exactly? Invasion of Iraq? As I said she made herself (havent heard anything questioning it), it is option open to everyone, why exactly she/ her kids should be punished for standing out? Seems to me you have more in common with GH than you would like to admit.
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United States41470 Posts
On July 21 2024 11:11 Razyda wrote:Show nested quote +On July 21 2024 09:44 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 09:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 08:51 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 08:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:14 Liquid`Drone wrote: Firstly pretty much everyone who argues for inheritance taxes also argues for a big cutoff. Even the plan suggested by the Communist party of Norway would let you inherit a million dollars untaxed.
Secondly for every capitalist with a professed love for the self made man (and I never see people argue for capitalism because they profess a love for aristocracies), inheritance taxes (with a high cutoff) should be the least objectionable form of taxation there is. I'm honestly supportive, in theory, of 100% above say, $5 million. And if this makes people accumulate less because then they have no reason to accumulate more, that's a benefit, not a loss.
*I'm not running for office but if I were, I'd look at how to best balance the desire for an aggressive inheritance tax with family run companies because I can see how those have some appeal. But looking at a list of the 30 richest Norwegians under 30 years, a group with between $50 million and $2.6 billion, not one of them is remotely self made, they all inherited their wealth. I really can't see the benefit. Issue with big cut off is inflation and while you can argue that it may be changed in line with inflation, this is for example what happened in UK (it is about personal tax allowance not inheritance but illustrates the problem rather well): https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/what-a-drag-the-impact-of-the-frozen-personal-allowance-on-those-with-lower-incomes/#:~:text=the tax burden.-,The effect of freezing the Personal Tax Allowance is to,per cent in 2027/28. In short, freezing tax allowance till 2028 in reality increased tax, due to inflation. Italic - why do you think people accumulate money? While I cant speak for all, my guess is that majority want to provide they children with comfortable life. Also while inheritance tax sounds good and gives "stick it to the rich" kind of vibe, it wouldnt actually hit the people you think it would, as presumably their accounts are run by people who very well know what they are doing and would probably even manage to get them tax return. There is a reason why Amazon UK didnt pay a dime of corporation tax 2 years in a row. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/jun/01/amazon-uk-services-main-division-pay-no-corporation-tax-for-second-year-in-row-tax-credit-government-super-deduction-schemePeople hit by it would middle/ upper middle class. It wouldnt ensure that absurdly rich people arent rich anymore, it would ensure that no more people get absurdly rich. Edit: On July 21 2024 07:48 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 07:38 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:11 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 04:44 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 04:32 WombaT wrote: [quote] Stealing what? Even if you’re some go-getting entrepreneur, every employee you’re using to expand your empire was likely educated on the government dime
Most inheritance taxes I’ve ever encountered don’t remotely wipe out your wealth anyway, the kids who have wealthy parents still have a huge leg up over their peers who do not. You can still pass on plenty of it, just not all of it.
Regular taxation takes far more proportionally of earnings of the poor than wealth taxes do from the rich. Should we just get rid of taxation entirely? Bolded - There is no such thing as government dime, it seems like some people dont understand that, government doesn't earn money. It is taxpayers money and so if you pay taxes you can and should call it even. Italic- pass this wealth enough times and it is wiped away, besides my money are already taxed plenty arent they? Income tax, investment tax, vat and after all those they are going to be taxed again after i die (they obviously will, but it depends how much) Bolded2 - if it were possible I am all for it (TBH I think vast majority of the population would love that, may be good idea for the referendum ) You’re a few layers below in understanding, not above. It’s not that other people don’t understand that government money is taken from people. It’s you that don’t understand that the money itself is inseparable from the idea of government. I think you misunderstood. It was response to part of the Wombat post where he seems to suggest that entrepreneur own something to government because it provided education for his employees. The money for education came from, so to speak, pot to which aforementioned entrepreneur contributed and still contributes hence there is no debt. If the money used for education were taken directly from governments pockets (eg from ministers salary or such) he would have a point, as it is he doesnt. They rely on the existence of a society. You can't separate the accumulation of wealth from the social framework it takes place within. If we were hunter gatherers and you foraged 10 mushrooms only to have me demand 5 of them from you then it would make sense to consider that theft. If we operate in a hugely complicated social network, I get 10 money and the state demands 5 then it's a lot less clear. 10 mushrooms is what I earned in the first scenario because I literally foraged 10 of them. 10 money is no less arbitrary than 5 money and neither of them can be connected to the labour I performed in any meaningful way. I can't separate the paycheck I get from a day on which I elect to "work from home" from the framework that allows me to do that and I can't resort to the labour theory of value to insist that I earned everything through my hard work because I didn't do any. Again you dont understand. It was reply to specific claim about owning something to government for educating employees. Not about taxes, but against having some sort of additional liability, because your employees are educated. Edit2: @Kwark Just remembered to ask, as thought kinda amused me. After news about Trump shooting, was your first thought to check if GH posted something on TL, after prodding him on not doing anything revolutionary? Well no the central point is the self-made billionaire type is basically a myth, because one cannot get to such a status without a workforce, which is educated on the public dime.
Never mind the consumer base, some of which may only have liquidity due to various government programs, be those targeted tax breaks, benefits (welfare) etc. Which doesnt matter because entrepreneur is part of public so it was his money to which funded this education. Also while self made billionaire is basically a myth, what you have against family made billionaires? Lets take JK Rowling (lets disregard her views which may be considered controversial) far as I know she made herself rich purely by herself, should she be robbed of possibility to pass her money to her children? should government really be allowed to take all her money except, like Drone suggested, 5kk per child? Lets say you won lottery, how happy would it make you, that your kids get 5kk each, and with rest government would establish department to correct use of toothpicks? (because that what would happen, it wouldnt go to the poor) Gotta take money from someone. Is it better to take half of the billion JK is passing to her kids or half the paychecks of a bunch of working people. Oh really? Why??? and for what exactly? Invasion of Iraq? As I said she made herself (havent heard anything questioning it), it is option open to everyone, why exactly she/ her kids should be punished for standing out? Seems to me you have more in common with GH than you would like to admit. I believe that the government uses money for things other than invading Iraq. Most governments don't invade Iraq most years and most governments that do invade Iraq in a given year don't use most of their tax revenue to do so. I know you think you're making some kind of point by bringing up Iraq but trust me, you're not.
Kids inheriting half a billion rather than a billion doesn't seem like the harshest of punishments. Especially when the alternative is taking half the paycheck of someone living paycheck to paycheck.
Also GH and I are very in common. We're both fully committed members of the imaginary revolution. I genuinely don't think you know what is going on.
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On July 21 2024 11:07 Fleetfeet wrote:Show nested quote +On July 21 2024 10:59 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 09:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 08:51 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 08:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:14 Liquid`Drone wrote: Firstly pretty much everyone who argues for inheritance taxes also argues for a big cutoff. Even the plan suggested by the Communist party of Norway would let you inherit a million dollars untaxed.
Secondly for every capitalist with a professed love for the self made man (and I never see people argue for capitalism because they profess a love for aristocracies), inheritance taxes (with a high cutoff) should be the least objectionable form of taxation there is. I'm honestly supportive, in theory, of 100% above say, $5 million. And if this makes people accumulate less because then they have no reason to accumulate more, that's a benefit, not a loss.
*I'm not running for office but if I were, I'd look at how to best balance the desire for an aggressive inheritance tax with family run companies because I can see how those have some appeal. But looking at a list of the 30 richest Norwegians under 30 years, a group with between $50 million and $2.6 billion, not one of them is remotely self made, they all inherited their wealth. I really can't see the benefit. Issue with big cut off is inflation and while you can argue that it may be changed in line with inflation, this is for example what happened in UK (it is about personal tax allowance not inheritance but illustrates the problem rather well): https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/what-a-drag-the-impact-of-the-frozen-personal-allowance-on-those-with-lower-incomes/#:~:text=the tax burden.-,The effect of freezing the Personal Tax Allowance is to,per cent in 2027/28. In short, freezing tax allowance till 2028 in reality increased tax, due to inflation. Italic - why do you think people accumulate money? While I cant speak for all, my guess is that majority want to provide they children with comfortable life. Also while inheritance tax sounds good and gives "stick it to the rich" kind of vibe, it wouldnt actually hit the people you think it would, as presumably their accounts are run by people who very well know what they are doing and would probably even manage to get them tax return. There is a reason why Amazon UK didnt pay a dime of corporation tax 2 years in a row. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/jun/01/amazon-uk-services-main-division-pay-no-corporation-tax-for-second-year-in-row-tax-credit-government-super-deduction-schemePeople hit by it would middle/ upper middle class. It wouldnt ensure that absurdly rich people arent rich anymore, it would ensure that no more people get absurdly rich. Edit: On July 21 2024 07:48 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 07:38 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:11 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 04:44 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 04:32 WombaT wrote: [quote] Stealing what? Even if you’re some go-getting entrepreneur, every employee you’re using to expand your empire was likely educated on the government dime
Most inheritance taxes I’ve ever encountered don’t remotely wipe out your wealth anyway, the kids who have wealthy parents still have a huge leg up over their peers who do not. You can still pass on plenty of it, just not all of it.
Regular taxation takes far more proportionally of earnings of the poor than wealth taxes do from the rich. Should we just get rid of taxation entirely? Bolded - There is no such thing as government dime, it seems like some people dont understand that, government doesn't earn money. It is taxpayers money and so if you pay taxes you can and should call it even. Italic- pass this wealth enough times and it is wiped away, besides my money are already taxed plenty arent they? Income tax, investment tax, vat and after all those they are going to be taxed again after i die (they obviously will, but it depends how much) Bolded2 - if it were possible I am all for it (TBH I think vast majority of the population would love that, may be good idea for the referendum ) You’re a few layers below in understanding, not above. It’s not that other people don’t understand that government money is taken from people. It’s you that don’t understand that the money itself is inseparable from the idea of government. I think you misunderstood. It was response to part of the Wombat post where he seems to suggest that entrepreneur own something to government because it provided education for his employees. The money for education came from, so to speak, pot to which aforementioned entrepreneur contributed and still contributes hence there is no debt. If the money used for education were taken directly from governments pockets (eg from ministers salary or such) he would have a point, as it is he doesnt. They rely on the existence of a society. You can't separate the accumulation of wealth from the social framework it takes place within. If we were hunter gatherers and you foraged 10 mushrooms only to have me demand 5 of them from you then it would make sense to consider that theft. If we operate in a hugely complicated social network, I get 10 money and the state demands 5 then it's a lot less clear. 10 mushrooms is what I earned in the first scenario because I literally foraged 10 of them. 10 money is no less arbitrary than 5 money and neither of them can be connected to the labour I performed in any meaningful way. I can't separate the paycheck I get from a day on which I elect to "work from home" from the framework that allows me to do that and I can't resort to the labour theory of value to insist that I earned everything through my hard work because I didn't do any. Again you dont understand. It was reply to specific claim about owning something to government for educating employees. Not about taxes, but against having some sort of additional liability, because your employees are educated. Edit2: @Kwark Just remembered to ask, as thought kinda amused me. After news about Trump shooting, was your first thought to check if GH posted something on TL, after prodding him on not doing anything revolutionary? Well no the central point is the self-made billionaire type is basically a myth, because one cannot get to such a status without a workforce, which is educated on the public dime.
Never mind the consumer base, some of which may only have liquidity due to various government programs, be those targeted tax breaks, benefits (welfare) etc. Which doesnt matter because entrepreneur is part of public so it was his money to which funded this education. Also while self made billionaire is basically a myth, what you have against family made billionaires? Lets take JK Rowling (lets disregard her views which may be considered controversial) far as I know she made herself rich purely by herself, should she be robbed of possibility to pass her money to her children? should government really be allowed to take all her money except, like Drone suggested, 5kk per child? Lets say you won lottery, how happy would it make you, that your kids get 5kk each, and with rest government would establish department to correct use of toothpicks? (because that what would happen, it wouldnt go to the poor) She wouldn’t be a billionaire without various distribution networks, film workers of various kinds etc. Indeed, rather famously she wrote the first Harry Potter book while on welfare as a single mother. One could quite easily make the argument that she owes the state for enabling her success, and should help fund it so the next JK Rowling can have the opportunities she did. Also I don’t think people in here by and large are advocating seizing all of the wealthy’s money, just some reasonable portion of it. Yeah, but the question is how much "help fund it" is fair. Obviously she will have paid taxes in some capacity, and presumably more than your average person. We can all agree that the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, because we're the many and they're the few. It's easy for us to vote that JK gives half a billion dollars to us because of what side we're on. What I think Razyda is trying to point to is that the money wouldn't go to 'us' and we're naive to think it would.I don't know that such an argument is particularly strong, and I'd argue in favour of some kind of inheritance cap and if the best argument against it is that the whole system is too corrupt for it to mean anything then... I dunno, that just feels defeatist.
Bolded: Thats part of it, but also she earned this money by herself, so everyone who didn't should quite frankly FO rather than say "I want piece of it myself", or deploy them as I would like to. Wanna redistribute money? earn them and then redistribute, dont take them from people who earned them. Far as I know there are no laws preventing people from making fortune for writing, being entrepreneur, or a movie actor and many others. Do that and then spread your wealth, nobody stops you.
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United States24471 Posts
On July 21 2024 11:26 Razyda wrote: Bolded: Thats part of it, but also she earned this money by herself, so everyone who didn't should quite frankly FO rather than say "I want piece of it myself", or deploy them as I would like to. Wanna redistribute money? earn them and then redistribute, dont take them from people who earned them. Far as I know there are no laws preventing people from making fortune for writing, being entrepreneur, or a movie actor and many others. Do that and then spread your wealth, nobody stops you.
I completely agree with this, although I note that I put JK Rowling's children in the same camp as you and me: People who didn't earn the money and should probably earn it if they want it.
To be fair, they should get a nice cut of it. A cut. A bigger cut than random citizens get in the form of government services, of course.
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United States41470 Posts
On July 21 2024 11:26 Razyda wrote:Show nested quote +On July 21 2024 11:07 Fleetfeet wrote:On July 21 2024 10:59 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 09:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 08:51 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 08:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:14 Liquid`Drone wrote: Firstly pretty much everyone who argues for inheritance taxes also argues for a big cutoff. Even the plan suggested by the Communist party of Norway would let you inherit a million dollars untaxed.
Secondly for every capitalist with a professed love for the self made man (and I never see people argue for capitalism because they profess a love for aristocracies), inheritance taxes (with a high cutoff) should be the least objectionable form of taxation there is. I'm honestly supportive, in theory, of 100% above say, $5 million. And if this makes people accumulate less because then they have no reason to accumulate more, that's a benefit, not a loss.
*I'm not running for office but if I were, I'd look at how to best balance the desire for an aggressive inheritance tax with family run companies because I can see how those have some appeal. But looking at a list of the 30 richest Norwegians under 30 years, a group with between $50 million and $2.6 billion, not one of them is remotely self made, they all inherited their wealth. I really can't see the benefit. Issue with big cut off is inflation and while you can argue that it may be changed in line with inflation, this is for example what happened in UK (it is about personal tax allowance not inheritance but illustrates the problem rather well): https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/what-a-drag-the-impact-of-the-frozen-personal-allowance-on-those-with-lower-incomes/#:~:text=the tax burden.-,The effect of freezing the Personal Tax Allowance is to,per cent in 2027/28. In short, freezing tax allowance till 2028 in reality increased tax, due to inflation. Italic - why do you think people accumulate money? While I cant speak for all, my guess is that majority want to provide they children with comfortable life. Also while inheritance tax sounds good and gives "stick it to the rich" kind of vibe, it wouldnt actually hit the people you think it would, as presumably their accounts are run by people who very well know what they are doing and would probably even manage to get them tax return. There is a reason why Amazon UK didnt pay a dime of corporation tax 2 years in a row. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/jun/01/amazon-uk-services-main-division-pay-no-corporation-tax-for-second-year-in-row-tax-credit-government-super-deduction-schemePeople hit by it would middle/ upper middle class. It wouldnt ensure that absurdly rich people arent rich anymore, it would ensure that no more people get absurdly rich. Edit: On July 21 2024 07:48 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 07:38 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:11 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 04:44 Razyda wrote:[quote] Bolded - There is no such thing as government dime, it seems like some people dont understand that, government doesn't earn money. It is taxpayers money and so if you pay taxes you can and should call it even. Italic- pass this wealth enough times and it is wiped away, besides my money are already taxed plenty arent they? Income tax, investment tax, vat and after all those they are going to be taxed again after i die (they obviously will, but it depends how much) Bolded2 - if it were possible I am all for it (TBH I think vast majority of the population would love that, may be good idea for the referendum ) You’re a few layers below in understanding, not above. It’s not that other people don’t understand that government money is taken from people. It’s you that don’t understand that the money itself is inseparable from the idea of government. I think you misunderstood. It was response to part of the Wombat post where he seems to suggest that entrepreneur own something to government because it provided education for his employees. The money for education came from, so to speak, pot to which aforementioned entrepreneur contributed and still contributes hence there is no debt. If the money used for education were taken directly from governments pockets (eg from ministers salary or such) he would have a point, as it is he doesnt. They rely on the existence of a society. You can't separate the accumulation of wealth from the social framework it takes place within. If we were hunter gatherers and you foraged 10 mushrooms only to have me demand 5 of them from you then it would make sense to consider that theft. If we operate in a hugely complicated social network, I get 10 money and the state demands 5 then it's a lot less clear. 10 mushrooms is what I earned in the first scenario because I literally foraged 10 of them. 10 money is no less arbitrary than 5 money and neither of them can be connected to the labour I performed in any meaningful way. I can't separate the paycheck I get from a day on which I elect to "work from home" from the framework that allows me to do that and I can't resort to the labour theory of value to insist that I earned everything through my hard work because I didn't do any. Again you dont understand. It was reply to specific claim about owning something to government for educating employees. Not about taxes, but against having some sort of additional liability, because your employees are educated. Edit2: @Kwark Just remembered to ask, as thought kinda amused me. After news about Trump shooting, was your first thought to check if GH posted something on TL, after prodding him on not doing anything revolutionary? Well no the central point is the self-made billionaire type is basically a myth, because one cannot get to such a status without a workforce, which is educated on the public dime.
Never mind the consumer base, some of which may only have liquidity due to various government programs, be those targeted tax breaks, benefits (welfare) etc. Which doesnt matter because entrepreneur is part of public so it was his money to which funded this education. Also while self made billionaire is basically a myth, what you have against family made billionaires? Lets take JK Rowling (lets disregard her views which may be considered controversial) far as I know she made herself rich purely by herself, should she be robbed of possibility to pass her money to her children? should government really be allowed to take all her money except, like Drone suggested, 5kk per child? Lets say you won lottery, how happy would it make you, that your kids get 5kk each, and with rest government would establish department to correct use of toothpicks? (because that what would happen, it wouldnt go to the poor) She wouldn’t be a billionaire without various distribution networks, film workers of various kinds etc. Indeed, rather famously she wrote the first Harry Potter book while on welfare as a single mother. One could quite easily make the argument that she owes the state for enabling her success, and should help fund it so the next JK Rowling can have the opportunities she did. Also I don’t think people in here by and large are advocating seizing all of the wealthy’s money, just some reasonable portion of it. Yeah, but the question is how much "help fund it" is fair. Obviously she will have paid taxes in some capacity, and presumably more than your average person. We can all agree that the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, because we're the many and they're the few. It's easy for us to vote that JK gives half a billion dollars to us because of what side we're on. What I think Razyda is trying to point to is that the money wouldn't go to 'us' and we're naive to think it would.I don't know that such an argument is particularly strong, and I'd argue in favour of some kind of inheritance cap and if the best argument against it is that the whole system is too corrupt for it to mean anything then... I dunno, that just feels defeatist. Bolded: Thats part of it, but also she earned this money by herself, so everyone who didn't should quite frankly FO rather than say "I want piece of it myself", or deploy them as I would like to. Wanna redistribute money? earn them and then redistribute, dont take them from people who earned them. Far as I know there are no laws preventing people from making fortune for writing, being entrepreneur, or a movie actor and many others. Do that and then spread your wealth, nobody stops you. This is one of the most childish posts I’ve read in a while. The idea that if you want to be a billionaire you should go out there and earn a billion is nonsense. It’s not jealousy or greed that leads people to want the government to tax the rich, it’s that the rich have the money. Money can’t be separated from the social context that includes taxation, the idea that they would keep all of it was never on the table.
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On July 21 2024 11:22 KwarK wrote:Show nested quote +On July 21 2024 11:11 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 09:44 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 09:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 08:51 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 08:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:14 Liquid`Drone wrote: Firstly pretty much everyone who argues for inheritance taxes also argues for a big cutoff. Even the plan suggested by the Communist party of Norway would let you inherit a million dollars untaxed.
Secondly for every capitalist with a professed love for the self made man (and I never see people argue for capitalism because they profess a love for aristocracies), inheritance taxes (with a high cutoff) should be the least objectionable form of taxation there is. I'm honestly supportive, in theory, of 100% above say, $5 million. And if this makes people accumulate less because then they have no reason to accumulate more, that's a benefit, not a loss.
*I'm not running for office but if I were, I'd look at how to best balance the desire for an aggressive inheritance tax with family run companies because I can see how those have some appeal. But looking at a list of the 30 richest Norwegians under 30 years, a group with between $50 million and $2.6 billion, not one of them is remotely self made, they all inherited their wealth. I really can't see the benefit. Issue with big cut off is inflation and while you can argue that it may be changed in line with inflation, this is for example what happened in UK (it is about personal tax allowance not inheritance but illustrates the problem rather well): https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/what-a-drag-the-impact-of-the-frozen-personal-allowance-on-those-with-lower-incomes/#:~:text=the tax burden.-,The effect of freezing the Personal Tax Allowance is to,per cent in 2027/28. In short, freezing tax allowance till 2028 in reality increased tax, due to inflation. Italic - why do you think people accumulate money? While I cant speak for all, my guess is that majority want to provide they children with comfortable life. Also while inheritance tax sounds good and gives "stick it to the rich" kind of vibe, it wouldnt actually hit the people you think it would, as presumably their accounts are run by people who very well know what they are doing and would probably even manage to get them tax return. There is a reason why Amazon UK didnt pay a dime of corporation tax 2 years in a row. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/jun/01/amazon-uk-services-main-division-pay-no-corporation-tax-for-second-year-in-row-tax-credit-government-super-deduction-schemePeople hit by it would middle/ upper middle class. It wouldnt ensure that absurdly rich people arent rich anymore, it would ensure that no more people get absurdly rich. Edit: On July 21 2024 07:48 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 07:38 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:11 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 04:44 Razyda wrote:[quote] Bolded - There is no such thing as government dime, it seems like some people dont understand that, government doesn't earn money. It is taxpayers money and so if you pay taxes you can and should call it even. Italic- pass this wealth enough times and it is wiped away, besides my money are already taxed plenty arent they? Income tax, investment tax, vat and after all those they are going to be taxed again after i die (they obviously will, but it depends how much) Bolded2 - if it were possible I am all for it (TBH I think vast majority of the population would love that, may be good idea for the referendum ) You’re a few layers below in understanding, not above. It’s not that other people don’t understand that government money is taken from people. It’s you that don’t understand that the money itself is inseparable from the idea of government. I think you misunderstood. It was response to part of the Wombat post where he seems to suggest that entrepreneur own something to government because it provided education for his employees. The money for education came from, so to speak, pot to which aforementioned entrepreneur contributed and still contributes hence there is no debt. If the money used for education were taken directly from governments pockets (eg from ministers salary or such) he would have a point, as it is he doesnt. They rely on the existence of a society. You can't separate the accumulation of wealth from the social framework it takes place within. If we were hunter gatherers and you foraged 10 mushrooms only to have me demand 5 of them from you then it would make sense to consider that theft. If we operate in a hugely complicated social network, I get 10 money and the state demands 5 then it's a lot less clear. 10 mushrooms is what I earned in the first scenario because I literally foraged 10 of them. 10 money is no less arbitrary than 5 money and neither of them can be connected to the labour I performed in any meaningful way. I can't separate the paycheck I get from a day on which I elect to "work from home" from the framework that allows me to do that and I can't resort to the labour theory of value to insist that I earned everything through my hard work because I didn't do any. Again you dont understand. It was reply to specific claim about owning something to government for educating employees. Not about taxes, but against having some sort of additional liability, because your employees are educated. Edit2: @Kwark Just remembered to ask, as thought kinda amused me. After news about Trump shooting, was your first thought to check if GH posted something on TL, after prodding him on not doing anything revolutionary? Well no the central point is the self-made billionaire type is basically a myth, because one cannot get to such a status without a workforce, which is educated on the public dime.
Never mind the consumer base, some of which may only have liquidity due to various government programs, be those targeted tax breaks, benefits (welfare) etc. Which doesnt matter because entrepreneur is part of public so it was his money to which funded this education. Also while self made billionaire is basically a myth, what you have against family made billionaires? Lets take JK Rowling (lets disregard her views which may be considered controversial) far as I know she made herself rich purely by herself, should she be robbed of possibility to pass her money to her children? should government really be allowed to take all her money except, like Drone suggested, 5kk per child? Lets say you won lottery, how happy would it make you, that your kids get 5kk each, and with rest government would establish department to correct use of toothpicks? (because that what would happen, it wouldnt go to the poor) Gotta take money from someone. Is it better to take half of the billion JK is passing to her kids or half the paychecks of a bunch of working people. Oh really? Why??? and for what exactly? Invasion of Iraq? As I said she made herself (havent heard anything questioning it), it is option open to everyone, why exactly she/ her kids should be punished for standing out? Seems to me you have more in common with GH than you would like to admit. I believe that the government uses money for things other than invading Iraq. Most governments don't invade Iraq most years and most governments that do invade Iraq in a given year don't use most of their tax revenue to do so. I know you think you're making some kind of point by bringing up Iraq but trust me, you're not. Kids inheriting half a billion rather than a billion doesn't seem like the harshest of punishments. Especially when the alternative is taking half the paycheck of someone living paycheck to paycheck.Also GH and I are very in common. We're both fully committed members of the imaginary revolution. I genuinely don't think you know what is going on.
Bolded - of course they do, they use them for things like this also:
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/dec/17/how-the-michelle-mone-scandal-unfolded-200m-of-ppe-contracts-denials-and-a-government-lawsuit
Similar case happened in UK, meanwhile I drive here on asphalt street which feels like forest path.
Italic - It seems like it is for a parent? would you be happy paying 50% taxes on your income? (if you are and dont meet requirements you can donate the difference to charity, you know).
Bolded 2 - I dont think you do. I am pretty sure GH understand that his revolution would require using second amendment to its fullest extent, but he also knows that this is not his selling point.
Edit:
On July 21 2024 11:36 KwarK wrote:Show nested quote +On July 21 2024 11:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 11:07 Fleetfeet wrote:On July 21 2024 10:59 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 09:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 08:51 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 08:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:14 Liquid`Drone wrote: Firstly pretty much everyone who argues for inheritance taxes also argues for a big cutoff. Even the plan suggested by the Communist party of Norway would let you inherit a million dollars untaxed.
Secondly for every capitalist with a professed love for the self made man (and I never see people argue for capitalism because they profess a love for aristocracies), inheritance taxes (with a high cutoff) should be the least objectionable form of taxation there is. I'm honestly supportive, in theory, of 100% above say, $5 million. And if this makes people accumulate less because then they have no reason to accumulate more, that's a benefit, not a loss.
*I'm not running for office but if I were, I'd look at how to best balance the desire for an aggressive inheritance tax with family run companies because I can see how those have some appeal. But looking at a list of the 30 richest Norwegians under 30 years, a group with between $50 million and $2.6 billion, not one of them is remotely self made, they all inherited their wealth. I really can't see the benefit. Issue with big cut off is inflation and while you can argue that it may be changed in line with inflation, this is for example what happened in UK (it is about personal tax allowance not inheritance but illustrates the problem rather well): https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/what-a-drag-the-impact-of-the-frozen-personal-allowance-on-those-with-lower-incomes/#:~:text=the tax burden.-,The effect of freezing the Personal Tax Allowance is to,per cent in 2027/28. In short, freezing tax allowance till 2028 in reality increased tax, due to inflation. Italic - why do you think people accumulate money? While I cant speak for all, my guess is that majority want to provide they children with comfortable life. Also while inheritance tax sounds good and gives "stick it to the rich" kind of vibe, it wouldnt actually hit the people you think it would, as presumably their accounts are run by people who very well know what they are doing and would probably even manage to get them tax return. There is a reason why Amazon UK didnt pay a dime of corporation tax 2 years in a row. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/jun/01/amazon-uk-services-main-division-pay-no-corporation-tax-for-second-year-in-row-tax-credit-government-super-deduction-schemePeople hit by it would middle/ upper middle class. It wouldnt ensure that absurdly rich people arent rich anymore, it would ensure that no more people get absurdly rich. Edit: On July 21 2024 07:48 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 07:38 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:11 KwarK wrote: [quote] You’re a few layers below in understanding, not above. It’s not that other people don’t understand that government money is taken from people. It’s you that don’t understand that the money itself is inseparable from the idea of government. I think you misunderstood. It was response to part of the Wombat post where he seems to suggest that entrepreneur own something to government because it provided education for his employees. The money for education came from, so to speak, pot to which aforementioned entrepreneur contributed and still contributes hence there is no debt. If the money used for education were taken directly from governments pockets (eg from ministers salary or such) he would have a point, as it is he doesnt. They rely on the existence of a society. You can't separate the accumulation of wealth from the social framework it takes place within. If we were hunter gatherers and you foraged 10 mushrooms only to have me demand 5 of them from you then it would make sense to consider that theft. If we operate in a hugely complicated social network, I get 10 money and the state demands 5 then it's a lot less clear. 10 mushrooms is what I earned in the first scenario because I literally foraged 10 of them. 10 money is no less arbitrary than 5 money and neither of them can be connected to the labour I performed in any meaningful way. I can't separate the paycheck I get from a day on which I elect to "work from home" from the framework that allows me to do that and I can't resort to the labour theory of value to insist that I earned everything through my hard work because I didn't do any. Again you dont understand. It was reply to specific claim about owning something to government for educating employees. Not about taxes, but against having some sort of additional liability, because your employees are educated. Edit2: @Kwark Just remembered to ask, as thought kinda amused me. After news about Trump shooting, was your first thought to check if GH posted something on TL, after prodding him on not doing anything revolutionary? Well no the central point is the self-made billionaire type is basically a myth, because one cannot get to such a status without a workforce, which is educated on the public dime.
Never mind the consumer base, some of which may only have liquidity due to various government programs, be those targeted tax breaks, benefits (welfare) etc. Which doesnt matter because entrepreneur is part of public so it was his money to which funded this education. Also while self made billionaire is basically a myth, what you have against family made billionaires? Lets take JK Rowling (lets disregard her views which may be considered controversial) far as I know she made herself rich purely by herself, should she be robbed of possibility to pass her money to her children? should government really be allowed to take all her money except, like Drone suggested, 5kk per child? Lets say you won lottery, how happy would it make you, that your kids get 5kk each, and with rest government would establish department to correct use of toothpicks? (because that what would happen, it wouldnt go to the poor) She wouldn’t be a billionaire without various distribution networks, film workers of various kinds etc. Indeed, rather famously she wrote the first Harry Potter book while on welfare as a single mother. One could quite easily make the argument that she owes the state for enabling her success, and should help fund it so the next JK Rowling can have the opportunities she did. Also I don’t think people in here by and large are advocating seizing all of the wealthy’s money, just some reasonable portion of it. Yeah, but the question is how much "help fund it" is fair. Obviously she will have paid taxes in some capacity, and presumably more than your average person. We can all agree that the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, because we're the many and they're the few. It's easy for us to vote that JK gives half a billion dollars to us because of what side we're on. What I think Razyda is trying to point to is that the money wouldn't go to 'us' and we're naive to think it would.I don't know that such an argument is particularly strong, and I'd argue in favour of some kind of inheritance cap and if the best argument against it is that the whole system is too corrupt for it to mean anything then... I dunno, that just feels defeatist. Bolded: Thats part of it, but also she earned this money by herself, so everyone who didn't should quite frankly FO rather than say "I want piece of it myself", or deploy them as I would like to. Wanna redistribute money? earn them and then redistribute, dont take them from people who earned them. Far as I know there are no laws preventing people from making fortune for writing, being entrepreneur, or a movie actor and many others. Do that and then spread your wealth, nobody stops you. This is one of the most childish posts I’ve read in a while. The idea that if you want to be a billionaire you should go out there and earn a billion is nonsense. It’s not jealousy or greed that leads people to want the government to tax the rich, it’s that the rich have the money. Money can’t be separated from the social context that includes taxation, the idea that they would keep all of it was never on the table.
bolded - WTF??
Edit 2 -
On July 21 2024 11:36 micronesia wrote:Show nested quote +On July 21 2024 11:26 Razyda wrote: Bolded: Thats part of it, but also she earned this money by herself, so everyone who didn't should quite frankly FO rather than say "I want piece of it myself", or deploy them as I would like to. Wanna redistribute money? earn them and then redistribute, dont take them from people who earned them. Far as I know there are no laws preventing people from making fortune for writing, being entrepreneur, or a movie actor and many others. Do that and then spread your wealth, nobody stops you.
I completely agree with this, although I note that I put JK Rowling's children in the same camp as you and me: People who didn't earn the money and should probably earn it if they want it. To be fair, they should get a nice cut of it. A cut. A bigger cut than random citizens get in the form of government services, of course.
Then we are different because I earned everything I have myself. I moved to UK with 0 money and worked for 140+ hours a week to start myself off.
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United States41470 Posts
On July 21 2024 11:50 Razyda wrote:Show nested quote +On July 21 2024 11:22 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 11:11 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 09:44 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 09:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 08:51 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 08:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:14 Liquid`Drone wrote: Firstly pretty much everyone who argues for inheritance taxes also argues for a big cutoff. Even the plan suggested by the Communist party of Norway would let you inherit a million dollars untaxed.
Secondly for every capitalist with a professed love for the self made man (and I never see people argue for capitalism because they profess a love for aristocracies), inheritance taxes (with a high cutoff) should be the least objectionable form of taxation there is. I'm honestly supportive, in theory, of 100% above say, $5 million. And if this makes people accumulate less because then they have no reason to accumulate more, that's a benefit, not a loss.
*I'm not running for office but if I were, I'd look at how to best balance the desire for an aggressive inheritance tax with family run companies because I can see how those have some appeal. But looking at a list of the 30 richest Norwegians under 30 years, a group with between $50 million and $2.6 billion, not one of them is remotely self made, they all inherited their wealth. I really can't see the benefit. Issue with big cut off is inflation and while you can argue that it may be changed in line with inflation, this is for example what happened in UK (it is about personal tax allowance not inheritance but illustrates the problem rather well): https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/what-a-drag-the-impact-of-the-frozen-personal-allowance-on-those-with-lower-incomes/#:~:text=the tax burden.-,The effect of freezing the Personal Tax Allowance is to,per cent in 2027/28. In short, freezing tax allowance till 2028 in reality increased tax, due to inflation. Italic - why do you think people accumulate money? While I cant speak for all, my guess is that majority want to provide they children with comfortable life. Also while inheritance tax sounds good and gives "stick it to the rich" kind of vibe, it wouldnt actually hit the people you think it would, as presumably their accounts are run by people who very well know what they are doing and would probably even manage to get them tax return. There is a reason why Amazon UK didnt pay a dime of corporation tax 2 years in a row. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/jun/01/amazon-uk-services-main-division-pay-no-corporation-tax-for-second-year-in-row-tax-credit-government-super-deduction-schemePeople hit by it would middle/ upper middle class. It wouldnt ensure that absurdly rich people arent rich anymore, it would ensure that no more people get absurdly rich. Edit: On July 21 2024 07:48 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 07:38 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:11 KwarK wrote: [quote] You’re a few layers below in understanding, not above. It’s not that other people don’t understand that government money is taken from people. It’s you that don’t understand that the money itself is inseparable from the idea of government. I think you misunderstood. It was response to part of the Wombat post where he seems to suggest that entrepreneur own something to government because it provided education for his employees. The money for education came from, so to speak, pot to which aforementioned entrepreneur contributed and still contributes hence there is no debt. If the money used for education were taken directly from governments pockets (eg from ministers salary or such) he would have a point, as it is he doesnt. They rely on the existence of a society. You can't separate the accumulation of wealth from the social framework it takes place within. If we were hunter gatherers and you foraged 10 mushrooms only to have me demand 5 of them from you then it would make sense to consider that theft. If we operate in a hugely complicated social network, I get 10 money and the state demands 5 then it's a lot less clear. 10 mushrooms is what I earned in the first scenario because I literally foraged 10 of them. 10 money is no less arbitrary than 5 money and neither of them can be connected to the labour I performed in any meaningful way. I can't separate the paycheck I get from a day on which I elect to "work from home" from the framework that allows me to do that and I can't resort to the labour theory of value to insist that I earned everything through my hard work because I didn't do any. Again you dont understand. It was reply to specific claim about owning something to government for educating employees. Not about taxes, but against having some sort of additional liability, because your employees are educated. Edit2: @Kwark Just remembered to ask, as thought kinda amused me. After news about Trump shooting, was your first thought to check if GH posted something on TL, after prodding him on not doing anything revolutionary? Well no the central point is the self-made billionaire type is basically a myth, because one cannot get to such a status without a workforce, which is educated on the public dime.
Never mind the consumer base, some of which may only have liquidity due to various government programs, be those targeted tax breaks, benefits (welfare) etc. Which doesnt matter because entrepreneur is part of public so it was his money to which funded this education. Also while self made billionaire is basically a myth, what you have against family made billionaires? Lets take JK Rowling (lets disregard her views which may be considered controversial) far as I know she made herself rich purely by herself, should she be robbed of possibility to pass her money to her children? should government really be allowed to take all her money except, like Drone suggested, 5kk per child? Lets say you won lottery, how happy would it make you, that your kids get 5kk each, and with rest government would establish department to correct use of toothpicks? (because that what would happen, it wouldnt go to the poor) Gotta take money from someone. Is it better to take half of the billion JK is passing to her kids or half the paychecks of a bunch of working people. Oh really? Why??? and for what exactly? Invasion of Iraq? As I said she made herself (havent heard anything questioning it), it is option open to everyone, why exactly she/ her kids should be punished for standing out? Seems to me you have more in common with GH than you would like to admit. I believe that the government uses money for things other than invading Iraq. Most governments don't invade Iraq most years and most governments that do invade Iraq in a given year don't use most of their tax revenue to do so. I know you think you're making some kind of point by bringing up Iraq but trust me, you're not. Kids inheriting half a billion rather than a billion doesn't seem like the harshest of punishments. Especially when the alternative is taking half the paycheck of someone living paycheck to paycheck.Also GH and I are very in common. We're both fully committed members of the imaginary revolution. I genuinely don't think you know what is going on. Bolded - of course they do, they use them for things like this also: https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/dec/17/how-the-michelle-mone-scandal-unfolded-200m-of-ppe-contracts-denials-and-a-government-lawsuitSimilar case happened in UK, meanwhile I drive here on asphalt street which feels like forest path. Italic - It seems like it is for a parent? would you be happy paying 50% taxes on your income? (if you are and dont meet requirements you can donate the difference to charity, you know). Bolded 2 - I dont think you do. I am pretty sure GH understand that his revolution would require using second amendment to its fullest extent, but he also knows that this is not his selling point. Edit: Show nested quote +On July 21 2024 11:36 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 11:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 11:07 Fleetfeet wrote:On July 21 2024 10:59 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 09:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 08:51 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 08:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:14 Liquid`Drone wrote: Firstly pretty much everyone who argues for inheritance taxes also argues for a big cutoff. Even the plan suggested by the Communist party of Norway would let you inherit a million dollars untaxed.
Secondly for every capitalist with a professed love for the self made man (and I never see people argue for capitalism because they profess a love for aristocracies), inheritance taxes (with a high cutoff) should be the least objectionable form of taxation there is. I'm honestly supportive, in theory, of 100% above say, $5 million. And if this makes people accumulate less because then they have no reason to accumulate more, that's a benefit, not a loss.
*I'm not running for office but if I were, I'd look at how to best balance the desire for an aggressive inheritance tax with family run companies because I can see how those have some appeal. But looking at a list of the 30 richest Norwegians under 30 years, a group with between $50 million and $2.6 billion, not one of them is remotely self made, they all inherited their wealth. I really can't see the benefit. Issue with big cut off is inflation and while you can argue that it may be changed in line with inflation, this is for example what happened in UK (it is about personal tax allowance not inheritance but illustrates the problem rather well): https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/what-a-drag-the-impact-of-the-frozen-personal-allowance-on-those-with-lower-incomes/#:~:text=the tax burden.-,The effect of freezing the Personal Tax Allowance is to,per cent in 2027/28. In short, freezing tax allowance till 2028 in reality increased tax, due to inflation. Italic - why do you think people accumulate money? While I cant speak for all, my guess is that majority want to provide they children with comfortable life. Also while inheritance tax sounds good and gives "stick it to the rich" kind of vibe, it wouldnt actually hit the people you think it would, as presumably their accounts are run by people who very well know what they are doing and would probably even manage to get them tax return. There is a reason why Amazon UK didnt pay a dime of corporation tax 2 years in a row. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/jun/01/amazon-uk-services-main-division-pay-no-corporation-tax-for-second-year-in-row-tax-credit-government-super-deduction-schemePeople hit by it would middle/ upper middle class. It wouldnt ensure that absurdly rich people arent rich anymore, it would ensure that no more people get absurdly rich. Edit: On July 21 2024 07:48 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 07:38 Razyda wrote: [quote]
I think you misunderstood. It was response to part of the Wombat post where he seems to suggest that entrepreneur own something to government because it provided education for his employees. The money for education came from, so to speak, pot to which aforementioned entrepreneur contributed and still contributes hence there is no debt. If the money used for education were taken directly from governments pockets (eg from ministers salary or such) he would have a point, as it is he doesnt.
They rely on the existence of a society. You can't separate the accumulation of wealth from the social framework it takes place within. If we were hunter gatherers and you foraged 10 mushrooms only to have me demand 5 of them from you then it would make sense to consider that theft. If we operate in a hugely complicated social network, I get 10 money and the state demands 5 then it's a lot less clear. 10 mushrooms is what I earned in the first scenario because I literally foraged 10 of them. 10 money is no less arbitrary than 5 money and neither of them can be connected to the labour I performed in any meaningful way. I can't separate the paycheck I get from a day on which I elect to "work from home" from the framework that allows me to do that and I can't resort to the labour theory of value to insist that I earned everything through my hard work because I didn't do any. Again you dont understand. It was reply to specific claim about owning something to government for educating employees. Not about taxes, but against having some sort of additional liability, because your employees are educated. Edit2: @Kwark Just remembered to ask, as thought kinda amused me. After news about Trump shooting, was your first thought to check if GH posted something on TL, after prodding him on not doing anything revolutionary? Well no the central point is the self-made billionaire type is basically a myth, because one cannot get to such a status without a workforce, which is educated on the public dime.
Never mind the consumer base, some of which may only have liquidity due to various government programs, be those targeted tax breaks, benefits (welfare) etc. Which doesnt matter because entrepreneur is part of public so it was his money to which funded this education. Also while self made billionaire is basically a myth, what you have against family made billionaires? Lets take JK Rowling (lets disregard her views which may be considered controversial) far as I know she made herself rich purely by herself, should she be robbed of possibility to pass her money to her children? should government really be allowed to take all her money except, like Drone suggested, 5kk per child? Lets say you won lottery, how happy would it make you, that your kids get 5kk each, and with rest government would establish department to correct use of toothpicks? (because that what would happen, it wouldnt go to the poor) She wouldn’t be a billionaire without various distribution networks, film workers of various kinds etc. Indeed, rather famously she wrote the first Harry Potter book while on welfare as a single mother. One could quite easily make the argument that she owes the state for enabling her success, and should help fund it so the next JK Rowling can have the opportunities she did. Also I don’t think people in here by and large are advocating seizing all of the wealthy’s money, just some reasonable portion of it. Yeah, but the question is how much "help fund it" is fair. Obviously she will have paid taxes in some capacity, and presumably more than your average person. We can all agree that the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, because we're the many and they're the few. It's easy for us to vote that JK gives half a billion dollars to us because of what side we're on. What I think Razyda is trying to point to is that the money wouldn't go to 'us' and we're naive to think it would.I don't know that such an argument is particularly strong, and I'd argue in favour of some kind of inheritance cap and if the best argument against it is that the whole system is too corrupt for it to mean anything then... I dunno, that just feels defeatist. Bolded: Thats part of it, but also she earned this money by herself, so everyone who didn't should quite frankly FO rather than say "I want piece of it myself", or deploy them as I would like to. Wanna redistribute money? earn them and then redistribute, dont take them from people who earned them. Far as I know there are no laws preventing people from making fortune for writing, being entrepreneur, or a movie actor and many others. Do that and then spread your wealth, nobody stops you. This is one of the most childish posts I’ve read in a while. The idea that if you want to be a billionaire you should go out there and earn a billion is nonsense. It’s not jealousy or greed that leads people to want the government to tax the rich, it’s that the rich have the money. Money can’t be separated from the social context that includes taxation, the idea that they would keep all of it was never on the table. bolded - WTF?? Go pick up some extra shifts at work, maybe get a second job. With overtime you’ll be at a billion in no time.
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On July 21 2024 11:56 KwarK wrote:Show nested quote +On July 21 2024 11:50 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 11:22 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 11:11 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 09:44 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 09:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 08:51 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 08:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:14 Liquid`Drone wrote: Firstly pretty much everyone who argues for inheritance taxes also argues for a big cutoff. Even the plan suggested by the Communist party of Norway would let you inherit a million dollars untaxed.
Secondly for every capitalist with a professed love for the self made man (and I never see people argue for capitalism because they profess a love for aristocracies), inheritance taxes (with a high cutoff) should be the least objectionable form of taxation there is. I'm honestly supportive, in theory, of 100% above say, $5 million. And if this makes people accumulate less because then they have no reason to accumulate more, that's a benefit, not a loss.
*I'm not running for office but if I were, I'd look at how to best balance the desire for an aggressive inheritance tax with family run companies because I can see how those have some appeal. But looking at a list of the 30 richest Norwegians under 30 years, a group with between $50 million and $2.6 billion, not one of them is remotely self made, they all inherited their wealth. I really can't see the benefit. Issue with big cut off is inflation and while you can argue that it may be changed in line with inflation, this is for example what happened in UK (it is about personal tax allowance not inheritance but illustrates the problem rather well): https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/what-a-drag-the-impact-of-the-frozen-personal-allowance-on-those-with-lower-incomes/#:~:text=the tax burden.-,The effect of freezing the Personal Tax Allowance is to,per cent in 2027/28. In short, freezing tax allowance till 2028 in reality increased tax, due to inflation. Italic - why do you think people accumulate money? While I cant speak for all, my guess is that majority want to provide they children with comfortable life. Also while inheritance tax sounds good and gives "stick it to the rich" kind of vibe, it wouldnt actually hit the people you think it would, as presumably their accounts are run by people who very well know what they are doing and would probably even manage to get them tax return. There is a reason why Amazon UK didnt pay a dime of corporation tax 2 years in a row. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/jun/01/amazon-uk-services-main-division-pay-no-corporation-tax-for-second-year-in-row-tax-credit-government-super-deduction-schemePeople hit by it would middle/ upper middle class. It wouldnt ensure that absurdly rich people arent rich anymore, it would ensure that no more people get absurdly rich. Edit: On July 21 2024 07:48 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 07:38 Razyda wrote: [quote]
I think you misunderstood. It was response to part of the Wombat post where he seems to suggest that entrepreneur own something to government because it provided education for his employees. The money for education came from, so to speak, pot to which aforementioned entrepreneur contributed and still contributes hence there is no debt. If the money used for education were taken directly from governments pockets (eg from ministers salary or such) he would have a point, as it is he doesnt.
They rely on the existence of a society. You can't separate the accumulation of wealth from the social framework it takes place within. If we were hunter gatherers and you foraged 10 mushrooms only to have me demand 5 of them from you then it would make sense to consider that theft. If we operate in a hugely complicated social network, I get 10 money and the state demands 5 then it's a lot less clear. 10 mushrooms is what I earned in the first scenario because I literally foraged 10 of them. 10 money is no less arbitrary than 5 money and neither of them can be connected to the labour I performed in any meaningful way. I can't separate the paycheck I get from a day on which I elect to "work from home" from the framework that allows me to do that and I can't resort to the labour theory of value to insist that I earned everything through my hard work because I didn't do any. Again you dont understand. It was reply to specific claim about owning something to government for educating employees. Not about taxes, but against having some sort of additional liability, because your employees are educated. Edit2: @Kwark Just remembered to ask, as thought kinda amused me. After news about Trump shooting, was your first thought to check if GH posted something on TL, after prodding him on not doing anything revolutionary? Well no the central point is the self-made billionaire type is basically a myth, because one cannot get to such a status without a workforce, which is educated on the public dime.
Never mind the consumer base, some of which may only have liquidity due to various government programs, be those targeted tax breaks, benefits (welfare) etc. Which doesnt matter because entrepreneur is part of public so it was his money to which funded this education. Also while self made billionaire is basically a myth, what you have against family made billionaires? Lets take JK Rowling (lets disregard her views which may be considered controversial) far as I know she made herself rich purely by herself, should she be robbed of possibility to pass her money to her children? should government really be allowed to take all her money except, like Drone suggested, 5kk per child? Lets say you won lottery, how happy would it make you, that your kids get 5kk each, and with rest government would establish department to correct use of toothpicks? (because that what would happen, it wouldnt go to the poor) Gotta take money from someone. Is it better to take half of the billion JK is passing to her kids or half the paychecks of a bunch of working people. Oh really? Why??? and for what exactly? Invasion of Iraq? As I said she made herself (havent heard anything questioning it), it is option open to everyone, why exactly she/ her kids should be punished for standing out? Seems to me you have more in common with GH than you would like to admit. I believe that the government uses money for things other than invading Iraq. Most governments don't invade Iraq most years and most governments that do invade Iraq in a given year don't use most of their tax revenue to do so. I know you think you're making some kind of point by bringing up Iraq but trust me, you're not. Kids inheriting half a billion rather than a billion doesn't seem like the harshest of punishments. Especially when the alternative is taking half the paycheck of someone living paycheck to paycheck.Also GH and I are very in common. We're both fully committed members of the imaginary revolution. I genuinely don't think you know what is going on. Bolded - of course they do, they use them for things like this also: https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/dec/17/how-the-michelle-mone-scandal-unfolded-200m-of-ppe-contracts-denials-and-a-government-lawsuitSimilar case happened in UK, meanwhile I drive here on asphalt street which feels like forest path. Italic - It seems like it is for a parent? would you be happy paying 50% taxes on your income? (if you are and dont meet requirements you can donate the difference to charity, you know). Bolded 2 - I dont think you do. I am pretty sure GH understand that his revolution would require using second amendment to its fullest extent, but he also knows that this is not his selling point. Edit: On July 21 2024 11:36 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 11:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 11:07 Fleetfeet wrote:On July 21 2024 10:59 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 09:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 08:51 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 08:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:14 Liquid`Drone wrote: Firstly pretty much everyone who argues for inheritance taxes also argues for a big cutoff. Even the plan suggested by the Communist party of Norway would let you inherit a million dollars untaxed.
Secondly for every capitalist with a professed love for the self made man (and I never see people argue for capitalism because they profess a love for aristocracies), inheritance taxes (with a high cutoff) should be the least objectionable form of taxation there is. I'm honestly supportive, in theory, of 100% above say, $5 million. And if this makes people accumulate less because then they have no reason to accumulate more, that's a benefit, not a loss.
*I'm not running for office but if I were, I'd look at how to best balance the desire for an aggressive inheritance tax with family run companies because I can see how those have some appeal. But looking at a list of the 30 richest Norwegians under 30 years, a group with between $50 million and $2.6 billion, not one of them is remotely self made, they all inherited their wealth. I really can't see the benefit. Issue with big cut off is inflation and while you can argue that it may be changed in line with inflation, this is for example what happened in UK (it is about personal tax allowance not inheritance but illustrates the problem rather well): https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/what-a-drag-the-impact-of-the-frozen-personal-allowance-on-those-with-lower-incomes/#:~:text=the tax burden.-,The effect of freezing the Personal Tax Allowance is to,per cent in 2027/28. In short, freezing tax allowance till 2028 in reality increased tax, due to inflation. Italic - why do you think people accumulate money? While I cant speak for all, my guess is that majority want to provide they children with comfortable life. Also while inheritance tax sounds good and gives "stick it to the rich" kind of vibe, it wouldnt actually hit the people you think it would, as presumably their accounts are run by people who very well know what they are doing and would probably even manage to get them tax return. There is a reason why Amazon UK didnt pay a dime of corporation tax 2 years in a row. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/jun/01/amazon-uk-services-main-division-pay-no-corporation-tax-for-second-year-in-row-tax-credit-government-super-deduction-schemePeople hit by it would middle/ upper middle class. It wouldnt ensure that absurdly rich people arent rich anymore, it would ensure that no more people get absurdly rich. Edit: On July 21 2024 07:48 KwarK wrote: [quote] They rely on the existence of a society. You can't separate the accumulation of wealth from the social framework it takes place within. If we were hunter gatherers and you foraged 10 mushrooms only to have me demand 5 of them from you then it would make sense to consider that theft. If we operate in a hugely complicated social network, I get 10 money and the state demands 5 then it's a lot less clear. 10 mushrooms is what I earned in the first scenario because I literally foraged 10 of them. 10 money is no less arbitrary than 5 money and neither of them can be connected to the labour I performed in any meaningful way. I can't separate the paycheck I get from a day on which I elect to "work from home" from the framework that allows me to do that and I can't resort to the labour theory of value to insist that I earned everything through my hard work because I didn't do any. Again you dont understand. It was reply to specific claim about owning something to government for educating employees. Not about taxes, but against having some sort of additional liability, because your employees are educated. Edit2: @Kwark Just remembered to ask, as thought kinda amused me. After news about Trump shooting, was your first thought to check if GH posted something on TL, after prodding him on not doing anything revolutionary? Well no the central point is the self-made billionaire type is basically a myth, because one cannot get to such a status without a workforce, which is educated on the public dime.
Never mind the consumer base, some of which may only have liquidity due to various government programs, be those targeted tax breaks, benefits (welfare) etc. Which doesnt matter because entrepreneur is part of public so it was his money to which funded this education. Also while self made billionaire is basically a myth, what you have against family made billionaires? Lets take JK Rowling (lets disregard her views which may be considered controversial) far as I know she made herself rich purely by herself, should she be robbed of possibility to pass her money to her children? should government really be allowed to take all her money except, like Drone suggested, 5kk per child? Lets say you won lottery, how happy would it make you, that your kids get 5kk each, and with rest government would establish department to correct use of toothpicks? (because that what would happen, it wouldnt go to the poor) She wouldn’t be a billionaire without various distribution networks, film workers of various kinds etc. Indeed, rather famously she wrote the first Harry Potter book while on welfare as a single mother. One could quite easily make the argument that she owes the state for enabling her success, and should help fund it so the next JK Rowling can have the opportunities she did. Also I don’t think people in here by and large are advocating seizing all of the wealthy’s money, just some reasonable portion of it. Yeah, but the question is how much "help fund it" is fair. Obviously she will have paid taxes in some capacity, and presumably more than your average person. We can all agree that the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, because we're the many and they're the few. It's easy for us to vote that JK gives half a billion dollars to us because of what side we're on. What I think Razyda is trying to point to is that the money wouldn't go to 'us' and we're naive to think it would.I don't know that such an argument is particularly strong, and I'd argue in favour of some kind of inheritance cap and if the best argument against it is that the whole system is too corrupt for it to mean anything then... I dunno, that just feels defeatist. Bolded: Thats part of it, but also she earned this money by herself, so everyone who didn't should quite frankly FO rather than say "I want piece of it myself", or deploy them as I would like to. Wanna redistribute money? earn them and then redistribute, dont take them from people who earned them. Far as I know there are no laws preventing people from making fortune for writing, being entrepreneur, or a movie actor and many others. Do that and then spread your wealth, nobody stops you. This is one of the most childish posts I’ve read in a while. The idea that if you want to be a billionaire you should go out there and earn a billion is nonsense. It’s not jealousy or greed that leads people to want the government to tax the rich, it’s that the rich have the money. Money can’t be separated from the social context that includes taxation, the idea that they would keep all of it was never on the table. bolded - WTF?? Go pick up some extra shifts at work, maybe get a second job. With overtime you’ll be at a billion in no time.
Oh come on Kwark, I expected better. You do have valid points eg:
On July 21 2024 04:37 KwarK wrote:
Your moving plan doesn’t work. The IRS thought of that.
but the above is not up to your standards. Must admit somewhat disapointed .
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United States41470 Posts
On July 21 2024 12:10 Razyda wrote:Show nested quote +On July 21 2024 11:56 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 11:50 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 11:22 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 11:11 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 09:44 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 09:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 08:51 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 08:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:14 Liquid`Drone wrote: Firstly pretty much everyone who argues for inheritance taxes also argues for a big cutoff. Even the plan suggested by the Communist party of Norway would let you inherit a million dollars untaxed.
Secondly for every capitalist with a professed love for the self made man (and I never see people argue for capitalism because they profess a love for aristocracies), inheritance taxes (with a high cutoff) should be the least objectionable form of taxation there is. I'm honestly supportive, in theory, of 100% above say, $5 million. And if this makes people accumulate less because then they have no reason to accumulate more, that's a benefit, not a loss.
*I'm not running for office but if I were, I'd look at how to best balance the desire for an aggressive inheritance tax with family run companies because I can see how those have some appeal. But looking at a list of the 30 richest Norwegians under 30 years, a group with between $50 million and $2.6 billion, not one of them is remotely self made, they all inherited their wealth. I really can't see the benefit. Issue with big cut off is inflation and while you can argue that it may be changed in line with inflation, this is for example what happened in UK (it is about personal tax allowance not inheritance but illustrates the problem rather well): https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/what-a-drag-the-impact-of-the-frozen-personal-allowance-on-those-with-lower-incomes/#:~:text=the tax burden.-,The effect of freezing the Personal Tax Allowance is to,per cent in 2027/28. In short, freezing tax allowance till 2028 in reality increased tax, due to inflation. Italic - why do you think people accumulate money? While I cant speak for all, my guess is that majority want to provide they children with comfortable life. Also while inheritance tax sounds good and gives "stick it to the rich" kind of vibe, it wouldnt actually hit the people you think it would, as presumably their accounts are run by people who very well know what they are doing and would probably even manage to get them tax return. There is a reason why Amazon UK didnt pay a dime of corporation tax 2 years in a row. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/jun/01/amazon-uk-services-main-division-pay-no-corporation-tax-for-second-year-in-row-tax-credit-government-super-deduction-schemePeople hit by it would middle/ upper middle class. It wouldnt ensure that absurdly rich people arent rich anymore, it would ensure that no more people get absurdly rich. Edit: On July 21 2024 07:48 KwarK wrote: [quote] They rely on the existence of a society. You can't separate the accumulation of wealth from the social framework it takes place within. If we were hunter gatherers and you foraged 10 mushrooms only to have me demand 5 of them from you then it would make sense to consider that theft. If we operate in a hugely complicated social network, I get 10 money and the state demands 5 then it's a lot less clear. 10 mushrooms is what I earned in the first scenario because I literally foraged 10 of them. 10 money is no less arbitrary than 5 money and neither of them can be connected to the labour I performed in any meaningful way. I can't separate the paycheck I get from a day on which I elect to "work from home" from the framework that allows me to do that and I can't resort to the labour theory of value to insist that I earned everything through my hard work because I didn't do any. Again you dont understand. It was reply to specific claim about owning something to government for educating employees. Not about taxes, but against having some sort of additional liability, because your employees are educated. Edit2: @Kwark Just remembered to ask, as thought kinda amused me. After news about Trump shooting, was your first thought to check if GH posted something on TL, after prodding him on not doing anything revolutionary? Well no the central point is the self-made billionaire type is basically a myth, because one cannot get to such a status without a workforce, which is educated on the public dime.
Never mind the consumer base, some of which may only have liquidity due to various government programs, be those targeted tax breaks, benefits (welfare) etc. Which doesnt matter because entrepreneur is part of public so it was his money to which funded this education. Also while self made billionaire is basically a myth, what you have against family made billionaires? Lets take JK Rowling (lets disregard her views which may be considered controversial) far as I know she made herself rich purely by herself, should she be robbed of possibility to pass her money to her children? should government really be allowed to take all her money except, like Drone suggested, 5kk per child? Lets say you won lottery, how happy would it make you, that your kids get 5kk each, and with rest government would establish department to correct use of toothpicks? (because that what would happen, it wouldnt go to the poor) Gotta take money from someone. Is it better to take half of the billion JK is passing to her kids or half the paychecks of a bunch of working people. Oh really? Why??? and for what exactly? Invasion of Iraq? As I said she made herself (havent heard anything questioning it), it is option open to everyone, why exactly she/ her kids should be punished for standing out? Seems to me you have more in common with GH than you would like to admit. I believe that the government uses money for things other than invading Iraq. Most governments don't invade Iraq most years and most governments that do invade Iraq in a given year don't use most of their tax revenue to do so. I know you think you're making some kind of point by bringing up Iraq but trust me, you're not. Kids inheriting half a billion rather than a billion doesn't seem like the harshest of punishments. Especially when the alternative is taking half the paycheck of someone living paycheck to paycheck.Also GH and I are very in common. We're both fully committed members of the imaginary revolution. I genuinely don't think you know what is going on. Bolded - of course they do, they use them for things like this also: https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/dec/17/how-the-michelle-mone-scandal-unfolded-200m-of-ppe-contracts-denials-and-a-government-lawsuitSimilar case happened in UK, meanwhile I drive here on asphalt street which feels like forest path. Italic - It seems like it is for a parent? would you be happy paying 50% taxes on your income? (if you are and dont meet requirements you can donate the difference to charity, you know). Bolded 2 - I dont think you do. I am pretty sure GH understand that his revolution would require using second amendment to its fullest extent, but he also knows that this is not his selling point. Edit: On July 21 2024 11:36 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 11:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 11:07 Fleetfeet wrote:On July 21 2024 10:59 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 09:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 08:51 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 08:26 Razyda wrote:[quote] Issue with big cut off is inflation and while you can argue that it may be changed in line with inflation, this is for example what happened in UK (it is about personal tax allowance not inheritance but illustrates the problem rather well): https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/what-a-drag-the-impact-of-the-frozen-personal-allowance-on-those-with-lower-incomes/#:~:text=the tax burden.-,The effect of freezing the Personal Tax Allowance is to,per cent in 2027/28. In short, freezing tax allowance till 2028 in reality increased tax, due to inflation. Italic - why do you think people accumulate money? While I cant speak for all, my guess is that majority want to provide they children with comfortable life. Also while inheritance tax sounds good and gives "stick it to the rich" kind of vibe, it wouldnt actually hit the people you think it would, as presumably their accounts are run by people who very well know what they are doing and would probably even manage to get them tax return. There is a reason why Amazon UK didnt pay a dime of corporation tax 2 years in a row. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/jun/01/amazon-uk-services-main-division-pay-no-corporation-tax-for-second-year-in-row-tax-credit-government-super-deduction-schemePeople hit by it would middle/ upper middle class. It wouldnt ensure that absurdly rich people arent rich anymore, it would ensure that no more people get absurdly rich. Edit: [quote] Again you dont understand. It was reply to specific claim about owning something to government for educating employees. Not about taxes, but against having some sort of additional liability, because your employees are educated. Edit2: @Kwark Just remembered to ask, as thought kinda amused me. After news about Trump shooting, was your first thought to check if GH posted something on TL, after prodding him on not doing anything revolutionary? Well no the central point is the self-made billionaire type is basically a myth, because one cannot get to such a status without a workforce, which is educated on the public dime.
Never mind the consumer base, some of which may only have liquidity due to various government programs, be those targeted tax breaks, benefits (welfare) etc. Which doesnt matter because entrepreneur is part of public so it was his money to which funded this education. Also while self made billionaire is basically a myth, what you have against family made billionaires? Lets take JK Rowling (lets disregard her views which may be considered controversial) far as I know she made herself rich purely by herself, should she be robbed of possibility to pass her money to her children? should government really be allowed to take all her money except, like Drone suggested, 5kk per child? Lets say you won lottery, how happy would it make you, that your kids get 5kk each, and with rest government would establish department to correct use of toothpicks? (because that what would happen, it wouldnt go to the poor) She wouldn’t be a billionaire without various distribution networks, film workers of various kinds etc. Indeed, rather famously she wrote the first Harry Potter book while on welfare as a single mother. One could quite easily make the argument that she owes the state for enabling her success, and should help fund it so the next JK Rowling can have the opportunities she did. Also I don’t think people in here by and large are advocating seizing all of the wealthy’s money, just some reasonable portion of it. Yeah, but the question is how much "help fund it" is fair. Obviously she will have paid taxes in some capacity, and presumably more than your average person. We can all agree that the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, because we're the many and they're the few. It's easy for us to vote that JK gives half a billion dollars to us because of what side we're on. What I think Razyda is trying to point to is that the money wouldn't go to 'us' and we're naive to think it would.I don't know that such an argument is particularly strong, and I'd argue in favour of some kind of inheritance cap and if the best argument against it is that the whole system is too corrupt for it to mean anything then... I dunno, that just feels defeatist. Bolded: Thats part of it, but also she earned this money by herself, so everyone who didn't should quite frankly FO rather than say "I want piece of it myself", or deploy them as I would like to. Wanna redistribute money? earn them and then redistribute, dont take them from people who earned them. Far as I know there are no laws preventing people from making fortune for writing, being entrepreneur, or a movie actor and many others. Do that and then spread your wealth, nobody stops you. This is one of the most childish posts I’ve read in a while. The idea that if you want to be a billionaire you should go out there and earn a billion is nonsense. It’s not jealousy or greed that leads people to want the government to tax the rich, it’s that the rich have the money. Money can’t be separated from the social context that includes taxation, the idea that they would keep all of it was never on the table. bolded - WTF?? Go pick up some extra shifts at work, maybe get a second job. With overtime you’ll be at a billion in no time. Oh come on Kwark, I expected better. You do have valid points eg: Show nested quote +On July 21 2024 04:37 KwarK wrote:
Your moving plan doesn’t work. The IRS thought of that.
but the above is not up to your standards. Must admit somewhat disapointed . But you don’t have valid points. You have the existence of the Iraq war, a bumpy road, and JK Rowling. That is not enough for a debate. You are not pulling your weight here.
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On July 21 2024 12:26 KwarK wrote:Show nested quote +On July 21 2024 12:10 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 11:56 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 11:50 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 11:22 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 11:11 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 09:44 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 09:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 08:51 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 08:26 Razyda wrote:[quote] Issue with big cut off is inflation and while you can argue that it may be changed in line with inflation, this is for example what happened in UK (it is about personal tax allowance not inheritance but illustrates the problem rather well): https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/what-a-drag-the-impact-of-the-frozen-personal-allowance-on-those-with-lower-incomes/#:~:text=the tax burden.-,The effect of freezing the Personal Tax Allowance is to,per cent in 2027/28. In short, freezing tax allowance till 2028 in reality increased tax, due to inflation. Italic - why do you think people accumulate money? While I cant speak for all, my guess is that majority want to provide they children with comfortable life. Also while inheritance tax sounds good and gives "stick it to the rich" kind of vibe, it wouldnt actually hit the people you think it would, as presumably their accounts are run by people who very well know what they are doing and would probably even manage to get them tax return. There is a reason why Amazon UK didnt pay a dime of corporation tax 2 years in a row. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/jun/01/amazon-uk-services-main-division-pay-no-corporation-tax-for-second-year-in-row-tax-credit-government-super-deduction-schemePeople hit by it would middle/ upper middle class. It wouldnt ensure that absurdly rich people arent rich anymore, it would ensure that no more people get absurdly rich. Edit: [quote] Again you dont understand. It was reply to specific claim about owning something to government for educating employees. Not about taxes, but against having some sort of additional liability, because your employees are educated. Edit2: @Kwark Just remembered to ask, as thought kinda amused me. After news about Trump shooting, was your first thought to check if GH posted something on TL, after prodding him on not doing anything revolutionary? Well no the central point is the self-made billionaire type is basically a myth, because one cannot get to such a status without a workforce, which is educated on the public dime.
Never mind the consumer base, some of which may only have liquidity due to various government programs, be those targeted tax breaks, benefits (welfare) etc. Which doesnt matter because entrepreneur is part of public so it was his money to which funded this education. Also while self made billionaire is basically a myth, what you have against family made billionaires? Lets take JK Rowling (lets disregard her views which may be considered controversial) far as I know she made herself rich purely by herself, should she be robbed of possibility to pass her money to her children? should government really be allowed to take all her money except, like Drone suggested, 5kk per child? Lets say you won lottery, how happy would it make you, that your kids get 5kk each, and with rest government would establish department to correct use of toothpicks? (because that what would happen, it wouldnt go to the poor) Gotta take money from someone. Is it better to take half of the billion JK is passing to her kids or half the paychecks of a bunch of working people. Oh really? Why??? and for what exactly? Invasion of Iraq? As I said she made herself (havent heard anything questioning it), it is option open to everyone, why exactly she/ her kids should be punished for standing out? Seems to me you have more in common with GH than you would like to admit. I believe that the government uses money for things other than invading Iraq. Most governments don't invade Iraq most years and most governments that do invade Iraq in a given year don't use most of their tax revenue to do so. I know you think you're making some kind of point by bringing up Iraq but trust me, you're not. Kids inheriting half a billion rather than a billion doesn't seem like the harshest of punishments. Especially when the alternative is taking half the paycheck of someone living paycheck to paycheck.Also GH and I are very in common. We're both fully committed members of the imaginary revolution. I genuinely don't think you know what is going on. Bolded - of course they do, they use them for things like this also: https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/dec/17/how-the-michelle-mone-scandal-unfolded-200m-of-ppe-contracts-denials-and-a-government-lawsuitSimilar case happened in UK, meanwhile I drive here on asphalt street which feels like forest path. Italic - It seems like it is for a parent? would you be happy paying 50% taxes on your income? (if you are and dont meet requirements you can donate the difference to charity, you know). Bolded 2 - I dont think you do. I am pretty sure GH understand that his revolution would require using second amendment to its fullest extent, but he also knows that this is not his selling point. Edit: On July 21 2024 11:36 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 11:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 11:07 Fleetfeet wrote:On July 21 2024 10:59 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 09:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 08:51 WombaT wrote: [quote] Well no the central point is the self-made billionaire type is basically a myth, because one cannot get to such a status without a workforce, which is educated on the public dime.
Never mind the consumer base, some of which may only have liquidity due to various government programs, be those targeted tax breaks, benefits (welfare) etc. Which doesnt matter because entrepreneur is part of public so it was his money to which funded this education. Also while self made billionaire is basically a myth, what you have against family made billionaires? Lets take JK Rowling (lets disregard her views which may be considered controversial) far as I know she made herself rich purely by herself, should she be robbed of possibility to pass her money to her children? should government really be allowed to take all her money except, like Drone suggested, 5kk per child? Lets say you won lottery, how happy would it make you, that your kids get 5kk each, and with rest government would establish department to correct use of toothpicks? (because that what would happen, it wouldnt go to the poor) She wouldn’t be a billionaire without various distribution networks, film workers of various kinds etc. Indeed, rather famously she wrote the first Harry Potter book while on welfare as a single mother. One could quite easily make the argument that she owes the state for enabling her success, and should help fund it so the next JK Rowling can have the opportunities she did. Also I don’t think people in here by and large are advocating seizing all of the wealthy’s money, just some reasonable portion of it. Yeah, but the question is how much "help fund it" is fair. Obviously she will have paid taxes in some capacity, and presumably more than your average person. We can all agree that the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, because we're the many and they're the few. It's easy for us to vote that JK gives half a billion dollars to us because of what side we're on. What I think Razyda is trying to point to is that the money wouldn't go to 'us' and we're naive to think it would.I don't know that such an argument is particularly strong, and I'd argue in favour of some kind of inheritance cap and if the best argument against it is that the whole system is too corrupt for it to mean anything then... I dunno, that just feels defeatist. Bolded: Thats part of it, but also she earned this money by herself, so everyone who didn't should quite frankly FO rather than say "I want piece of it myself", or deploy them as I would like to. Wanna redistribute money? earn them and then redistribute, dont take them from people who earned them. Far as I know there are no laws preventing people from making fortune for writing, being entrepreneur, or a movie actor and many others. Do that and then spread your wealth, nobody stops you. This is one of the most childish posts I’ve read in a while. The idea that if you want to be a billionaire you should go out there and earn a billion is nonsense. It’s not jealousy or greed that leads people to want the government to tax the rich, it’s that the rich have the money. Money can’t be separated from the social context that includes taxation, the idea that they would keep all of it was never on the table. bolded - WTF?? Go pick up some extra shifts at work, maybe get a second job. With overtime you’ll be at a billion in no time. Oh come on Kwark, I expected better. You do have valid points eg: On July 21 2024 04:37 KwarK wrote:
Your moving plan doesn’t work. The IRS thought of that.
but the above is not up to your standards. Must admit somewhat disapointed . But you don’t have valid points. You have the existence of the Iraq war, a bumpy road, and JK Rowling. That is not enough for a debate. You are not pulling your weight here.
Oh please, you stick to particular examples knowing that I cant be bothered to list every single failed policy. Also seems to me that self made millionaire would be somewhat of a good example when it comes to inheriting wealth?
Frankly it seems like you dont want to continue discussion because you know I am right. What would warrant debate about inheritance tax according to you? ( I mean something better than self made millionaire?). I mean you earned your money, you paid taxes on it, why your kids should be paying for it?
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Northern Ireland22770 Posts
On July 21 2024 11:26 Razyda wrote:Show nested quote +On July 21 2024 11:07 Fleetfeet wrote:On July 21 2024 10:59 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 09:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 08:51 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 08:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:14 Liquid`Drone wrote: Firstly pretty much everyone who argues for inheritance taxes also argues for a big cutoff. Even the plan suggested by the Communist party of Norway would let you inherit a million dollars untaxed.
Secondly for every capitalist with a professed love for the self made man (and I never see people argue for capitalism because they profess a love for aristocracies), inheritance taxes (with a high cutoff) should be the least objectionable form of taxation there is. I'm honestly supportive, in theory, of 100% above say, $5 million. And if this makes people accumulate less because then they have no reason to accumulate more, that's a benefit, not a loss.
*I'm not running for office but if I were, I'd look at how to best balance the desire for an aggressive inheritance tax with family run companies because I can see how those have some appeal. But looking at a list of the 30 richest Norwegians under 30 years, a group with between $50 million and $2.6 billion, not one of them is remotely self made, they all inherited their wealth. I really can't see the benefit. Issue with big cut off is inflation and while you can argue that it may be changed in line with inflation, this is for example what happened in UK (it is about personal tax allowance not inheritance but illustrates the problem rather well): https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/what-a-drag-the-impact-of-the-frozen-personal-allowance-on-those-with-lower-incomes/#:~:text=the tax burden.-,The effect of freezing the Personal Tax Allowance is to,per cent in 2027/28. In short, freezing tax allowance till 2028 in reality increased tax, due to inflation. Italic - why do you think people accumulate money? While I cant speak for all, my guess is that majority want to provide they children with comfortable life. Also while inheritance tax sounds good and gives "stick it to the rich" kind of vibe, it wouldnt actually hit the people you think it would, as presumably their accounts are run by people who very well know what they are doing and would probably even manage to get them tax return. There is a reason why Amazon UK didnt pay a dime of corporation tax 2 years in a row. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/jun/01/amazon-uk-services-main-division-pay-no-corporation-tax-for-second-year-in-row-tax-credit-government-super-deduction-schemePeople hit by it would middle/ upper middle class. It wouldnt ensure that absurdly rich people arent rich anymore, it would ensure that no more people get absurdly rich. Edit: On July 21 2024 07:48 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 07:38 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:11 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 04:44 Razyda wrote:[quote] Bolded - There is no such thing as government dime, it seems like some people dont understand that, government doesn't earn money. It is taxpayers money and so if you pay taxes you can and should call it even. Italic- pass this wealth enough times and it is wiped away, besides my money are already taxed plenty arent they? Income tax, investment tax, vat and after all those they are going to be taxed again after i die (they obviously will, but it depends how much) Bolded2 - if it were possible I am all for it (TBH I think vast majority of the population would love that, may be good idea for the referendum ) You’re a few layers below in understanding, not above. It’s not that other people don’t understand that government money is taken from people. It’s you that don’t understand that the money itself is inseparable from the idea of government. I think you misunderstood. It was response to part of the Wombat post where he seems to suggest that entrepreneur own something to government because it provided education for his employees. The money for education came from, so to speak, pot to which aforementioned entrepreneur contributed and still contributes hence there is no debt. If the money used for education were taken directly from governments pockets (eg from ministers salary or such) he would have a point, as it is he doesnt. They rely on the existence of a society. You can't separate the accumulation of wealth from the social framework it takes place within. If we were hunter gatherers and you foraged 10 mushrooms only to have me demand 5 of them from you then it would make sense to consider that theft. If we operate in a hugely complicated social network, I get 10 money and the state demands 5 then it's a lot less clear. 10 mushrooms is what I earned in the first scenario because I literally foraged 10 of them. 10 money is no less arbitrary than 5 money and neither of them can be connected to the labour I performed in any meaningful way. I can't separate the paycheck I get from a day on which I elect to "work from home" from the framework that allows me to do that and I can't resort to the labour theory of value to insist that I earned everything through my hard work because I didn't do any. Again you dont understand. It was reply to specific claim about owning something to government for educating employees. Not about taxes, but against having some sort of additional liability, because your employees are educated. Edit2: @Kwark Just remembered to ask, as thought kinda amused me. After news about Trump shooting, was your first thought to check if GH posted something on TL, after prodding him on not doing anything revolutionary? Well no the central point is the self-made billionaire type is basically a myth, because one cannot get to such a status without a workforce, which is educated on the public dime.
Never mind the consumer base, some of which may only have liquidity due to various government programs, be those targeted tax breaks, benefits (welfare) etc. Which doesnt matter because entrepreneur is part of public so it was his money to which funded this education. Also while self made billionaire is basically a myth, what you have against family made billionaires? Lets take JK Rowling (lets disregard her views which may be considered controversial) far as I know she made herself rich purely by herself, should she be robbed of possibility to pass her money to her children? should government really be allowed to take all her money except, like Drone suggested, 5kk per child? Lets say you won lottery, how happy would it make you, that your kids get 5kk each, and with rest government would establish department to correct use of toothpicks? (because that what would happen, it wouldnt go to the poor) She wouldn’t be a billionaire without various distribution networks, film workers of various kinds etc. Indeed, rather famously she wrote the first Harry Potter book while on welfare as a single mother. One could quite easily make the argument that she owes the state for enabling her success, and should help fund it so the next JK Rowling can have the opportunities she did. Also I don’t think people in here by and large are advocating seizing all of the wealthy’s money, just some reasonable portion of it. Yeah, but the question is how much "help fund it" is fair. Obviously she will have paid taxes in some capacity, and presumably more than your average person. We can all agree that the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, because we're the many and they're the few. It's easy for us to vote that JK gives half a billion dollars to us because of what side we're on. What I think Razyda is trying to point to is that the money wouldn't go to 'us' and we're naive to think it would.I don't know that such an argument is particularly strong, and I'd argue in favour of some kind of inheritance cap and if the best argument against it is that the whole system is too corrupt for it to mean anything then... I dunno, that just feels defeatist. Bolded: Thats part of it, but also she earned this money by herself, so everyone who didn't should quite frankly FO rather than say "I want piece of it myself", or deploy them as I would like to. Wanna redistribute money? earn them and then redistribute, dont take them from people who earned them. Far as I know there are no laws preventing people from making fortune for writing, being entrepreneur, or a movie actor and many others. Do that and then spread your wealth, nobody stops you. How did she earn it by herself?
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On July 21 2024 12:55 WombaT wrote:Show nested quote +On July 21 2024 11:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 11:07 Fleetfeet wrote:On July 21 2024 10:59 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 09:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 08:51 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 08:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:14 Liquid`Drone wrote: Firstly pretty much everyone who argues for inheritance taxes also argues for a big cutoff. Even the plan suggested by the Communist party of Norway would let you inherit a million dollars untaxed.
Secondly for every capitalist with a professed love for the self made man (and I never see people argue for capitalism because they profess a love for aristocracies), inheritance taxes (with a high cutoff) should be the least objectionable form of taxation there is. I'm honestly supportive, in theory, of 100% above say, $5 million. And if this makes people accumulate less because then they have no reason to accumulate more, that's a benefit, not a loss.
*I'm not running for office but if I were, I'd look at how to best balance the desire for an aggressive inheritance tax with family run companies because I can see how those have some appeal. But looking at a list of the 30 richest Norwegians under 30 years, a group with between $50 million and $2.6 billion, not one of them is remotely self made, they all inherited their wealth. I really can't see the benefit. Issue with big cut off is inflation and while you can argue that it may be changed in line with inflation, this is for example what happened in UK (it is about personal tax allowance not inheritance but illustrates the problem rather well): https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/what-a-drag-the-impact-of-the-frozen-personal-allowance-on-those-with-lower-incomes/#:~:text=the tax burden.-,The effect of freezing the Personal Tax Allowance is to,per cent in 2027/28. In short, freezing tax allowance till 2028 in reality increased tax, due to inflation. Italic - why do you think people accumulate money? While I cant speak for all, my guess is that majority want to provide they children with comfortable life. Also while inheritance tax sounds good and gives "stick it to the rich" kind of vibe, it wouldnt actually hit the people you think it would, as presumably their accounts are run by people who very well know what they are doing and would probably even manage to get them tax return. There is a reason why Amazon UK didnt pay a dime of corporation tax 2 years in a row. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/jun/01/amazon-uk-services-main-division-pay-no-corporation-tax-for-second-year-in-row-tax-credit-government-super-deduction-schemePeople hit by it would middle/ upper middle class. It wouldnt ensure that absurdly rich people arent rich anymore, it would ensure that no more people get absurdly rich. Edit: On July 21 2024 07:48 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 07:38 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:11 KwarK wrote: [quote] You’re a few layers below in understanding, not above. It’s not that other people don’t understand that government money is taken from people. It’s you that don’t understand that the money itself is inseparable from the idea of government. I think you misunderstood. It was response to part of the Wombat post where he seems to suggest that entrepreneur own something to government because it provided education for his employees. The money for education came from, so to speak, pot to which aforementioned entrepreneur contributed and still contributes hence there is no debt. If the money used for education were taken directly from governments pockets (eg from ministers salary or such) he would have a point, as it is he doesnt. They rely on the existence of a society. You can't separate the accumulation of wealth from the social framework it takes place within. If we were hunter gatherers and you foraged 10 mushrooms only to have me demand 5 of them from you then it would make sense to consider that theft. If we operate in a hugely complicated social network, I get 10 money and the state demands 5 then it's a lot less clear. 10 mushrooms is what I earned in the first scenario because I literally foraged 10 of them. 10 money is no less arbitrary than 5 money and neither of them can be connected to the labour I performed in any meaningful way. I can't separate the paycheck I get from a day on which I elect to "work from home" from the framework that allows me to do that and I can't resort to the labour theory of value to insist that I earned everything through my hard work because I didn't do any. Again you dont understand. It was reply to specific claim about owning something to government for educating employees. Not about taxes, but against having some sort of additional liability, because your employees are educated. Edit2: @Kwark Just remembered to ask, as thought kinda amused me. After news about Trump shooting, was your first thought to check if GH posted something on TL, after prodding him on not doing anything revolutionary? Well no the central point is the self-made billionaire type is basically a myth, because one cannot get to such a status without a workforce, which is educated on the public dime.
Never mind the consumer base, some of which may only have liquidity due to various government programs, be those targeted tax breaks, benefits (welfare) etc. Which doesnt matter because entrepreneur is part of public so it was his money to which funded this education. Also while self made billionaire is basically a myth, what you have against family made billionaires? Lets take JK Rowling (lets disregard her views which may be considered controversial) far as I know she made herself rich purely by herself, should she be robbed of possibility to pass her money to her children? should government really be allowed to take all her money except, like Drone suggested, 5kk per child? Lets say you won lottery, how happy would it make you, that your kids get 5kk each, and with rest government would establish department to correct use of toothpicks? (because that what would happen, it wouldnt go to the poor) She wouldn’t be a billionaire without various distribution networks, film workers of various kinds etc. Indeed, rather famously she wrote the first Harry Potter book while on welfare as a single mother. One could quite easily make the argument that she owes the state for enabling her success, and should help fund it so the next JK Rowling can have the opportunities she did. Also I don’t think people in here by and large are advocating seizing all of the wealthy’s money, just some reasonable portion of it. Yeah, but the question is how much "help fund it" is fair. Obviously she will have paid taxes in some capacity, and presumably more than your average person. We can all agree that the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, because we're the many and they're the few. It's easy for us to vote that JK gives half a billion dollars to us because of what side we're on. What I think Razyda is trying to point to is that the money wouldn't go to 'us' and we're naive to think it would.I don't know that such an argument is particularly strong, and I'd argue in favour of some kind of inheritance cap and if the best argument against it is that the whole system is too corrupt for it to mean anything then... I dunno, that just feels defeatist. Bolded: Thats part of it, but also she earned this money by herself, so everyone who didn't should quite frankly FO rather than say "I want piece of it myself", or deploy them as I would like to. Wanna redistribute money? earn them and then redistribute, dont take them from people who earned them. Far as I know there are no laws preventing people from making fortune for writing, being entrepreneur, or a movie actor and many others. Do that and then spread your wealth, nobody stops you. How did she earn it by herself?
Oh please thats not even hard question. She wrote the books (like had an idea which resonated with lots of people and made them buy it) then everyone involved paid actual taxes!! there wasn't an situation when parliament decided that people involved in Rowling work dont pay taxes. Every single person involved made money out of it and government took its share by taxing those people
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United States41470 Posts
On July 21 2024 12:55 Razyda wrote:Show nested quote +On July 21 2024 12:26 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 12:10 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 11:56 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 11:50 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 11:22 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 11:11 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 09:44 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 09:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 08:51 WombaT wrote: [quote] Well no the central point is the self-made billionaire type is basically a myth, because one cannot get to such a status without a workforce, which is educated on the public dime.
Never mind the consumer base, some of which may only have liquidity due to various government programs, be those targeted tax breaks, benefits (welfare) etc. Which doesnt matter because entrepreneur is part of public so it was his money to which funded this education. Also while self made billionaire is basically a myth, what you have against family made billionaires? Lets take JK Rowling (lets disregard her views which may be considered controversial) far as I know she made herself rich purely by herself, should she be robbed of possibility to pass her money to her children? should government really be allowed to take all her money except, like Drone suggested, 5kk per child? Lets say you won lottery, how happy would it make you, that your kids get 5kk each, and with rest government would establish department to correct use of toothpicks? (because that what would happen, it wouldnt go to the poor) Gotta take money from someone. Is it better to take half of the billion JK is passing to her kids or half the paychecks of a bunch of working people. Oh really? Why??? and for what exactly? Invasion of Iraq? As I said she made herself (havent heard anything questioning it), it is option open to everyone, why exactly she/ her kids should be punished for standing out? Seems to me you have more in common with GH than you would like to admit. I believe that the government uses money for things other than invading Iraq. Most governments don't invade Iraq most years and most governments that do invade Iraq in a given year don't use most of their tax revenue to do so. I know you think you're making some kind of point by bringing up Iraq but trust me, you're not. Kids inheriting half a billion rather than a billion doesn't seem like the harshest of punishments. Especially when the alternative is taking half the paycheck of someone living paycheck to paycheck.Also GH and I are very in common. We're both fully committed members of the imaginary revolution. I genuinely don't think you know what is going on. Bolded - of course they do, they use them for things like this also: https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/dec/17/how-the-michelle-mone-scandal-unfolded-200m-of-ppe-contracts-denials-and-a-government-lawsuitSimilar case happened in UK, meanwhile I drive here on asphalt street which feels like forest path. Italic - It seems like it is for a parent? would you be happy paying 50% taxes on your income? (if you are and dont meet requirements you can donate the difference to charity, you know). Bolded 2 - I dont think you do. I am pretty sure GH understand that his revolution would require using second amendment to its fullest extent, but he also knows that this is not his selling point. Edit: On July 21 2024 11:36 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 11:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 11:07 Fleetfeet wrote:On July 21 2024 10:59 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 09:26 Razyda wrote: [quote]
Which doesnt matter because entrepreneur is part of public so it was his money to which funded this education.
Also while self made billionaire is basically a myth, what you have against family made billionaires? Lets take JK Rowling (lets disregard her views which may be considered controversial) far as I know she made herself rich purely by herself, should she be robbed of possibility to pass her money to her children? should government really be allowed to take all her money except, like Drone suggested, 5kk per child? Lets say you won lottery, how happy would it make you, that your kids get 5kk each, and with rest government would establish department to correct use of toothpicks? (because that what would happen, it wouldnt go to the poor)
She wouldn’t be a billionaire without various distribution networks, film workers of various kinds etc. Indeed, rather famously she wrote the first Harry Potter book while on welfare as a single mother. One could quite easily make the argument that she owes the state for enabling her success, and should help fund it so the next JK Rowling can have the opportunities she did. Also I don’t think people in here by and large are advocating seizing all of the wealthy’s money, just some reasonable portion of it. Yeah, but the question is how much "help fund it" is fair. Obviously she will have paid taxes in some capacity, and presumably more than your average person. We can all agree that the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, because we're the many and they're the few. It's easy for us to vote that JK gives half a billion dollars to us because of what side we're on. What I think Razyda is trying to point to is that the money wouldn't go to 'us' and we're naive to think it would.I don't know that such an argument is particularly strong, and I'd argue in favour of some kind of inheritance cap and if the best argument against it is that the whole system is too corrupt for it to mean anything then... I dunno, that just feels defeatist. Bolded: Thats part of it, but also she earned this money by herself, so everyone who didn't should quite frankly FO rather than say "I want piece of it myself", or deploy them as I would like to. Wanna redistribute money? earn them and then redistribute, dont take them from people who earned them. Far as I know there are no laws preventing people from making fortune for writing, being entrepreneur, or a movie actor and many others. Do that and then spread your wealth, nobody stops you. This is one of the most childish posts I’ve read in a while. The idea that if you want to be a billionaire you should go out there and earn a billion is nonsense. It’s not jealousy or greed that leads people to want the government to tax the rich, it’s that the rich have the money. Money can’t be separated from the social context that includes taxation, the idea that they would keep all of it was never on the table. bolded - WTF?? Go pick up some extra shifts at work, maybe get a second job. With overtime you’ll be at a billion in no time. Oh come on Kwark, I expected better. You do have valid points eg: On July 21 2024 04:37 KwarK wrote:
Your moving plan doesn’t work. The IRS thought of that.
but the above is not up to your standards. Must admit somewhat disapointed . But you don’t have valid points. You have the existence of the Iraq war, a bumpy road, and JK Rowling. That is not enough for a debate. You are not pulling your weight here. Oh please, you stick to particular examples knowing that I cant be bothered to list every single failed policy. Also seems to me that self made millionaire would be somewhat of a good example when it comes to inheriting wealth? Frankly it seems like you dont want to continue discussion because you know I am right. What would warrant debate about inheritance tax according to you? ( I mean something better than self made millionaire?). I mean you earned your money, you paid taxes on it, why your kids should be paying for it? No, actually you don't want to continue the discussion with me because you know I'm right.
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United States41470 Posts
On July 21 2024 13:10 Razyda wrote:Show nested quote +On July 21 2024 12:55 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 11:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 11:07 Fleetfeet wrote:On July 21 2024 10:59 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 09:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 08:51 WombaT wrote:On July 21 2024 08:26 Razyda wrote:On July 21 2024 06:14 Liquid`Drone wrote: Firstly pretty much everyone who argues for inheritance taxes also argues for a big cutoff. Even the plan suggested by the Communist party of Norway would let you inherit a million dollars untaxed.
Secondly for every capitalist with a professed love for the self made man (and I never see people argue for capitalism because they profess a love for aristocracies), inheritance taxes (with a high cutoff) should be the least objectionable form of taxation there is. I'm honestly supportive, in theory, of 100% above say, $5 million. And if this makes people accumulate less because then they have no reason to accumulate more, that's a benefit, not a loss.
*I'm not running for office but if I were, I'd look at how to best balance the desire for an aggressive inheritance tax with family run companies because I can see how those have some appeal. But looking at a list of the 30 richest Norwegians under 30 years, a group with between $50 million and $2.6 billion, not one of them is remotely self made, they all inherited their wealth. I really can't see the benefit. Issue with big cut off is inflation and while you can argue that it may be changed in line with inflation, this is for example what happened in UK (it is about personal tax allowance not inheritance but illustrates the problem rather well): https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/what-a-drag-the-impact-of-the-frozen-personal-allowance-on-those-with-lower-incomes/#:~:text=the tax burden.-,The effect of freezing the Personal Tax Allowance is to,per cent in 2027/28. In short, freezing tax allowance till 2028 in reality increased tax, due to inflation. Italic - why do you think people accumulate money? While I cant speak for all, my guess is that majority want to provide they children with comfortable life. Also while inheritance tax sounds good and gives "stick it to the rich" kind of vibe, it wouldnt actually hit the people you think it would, as presumably their accounts are run by people who very well know what they are doing and would probably even manage to get them tax return. There is a reason why Amazon UK didnt pay a dime of corporation tax 2 years in a row. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/jun/01/amazon-uk-services-main-division-pay-no-corporation-tax-for-second-year-in-row-tax-credit-government-super-deduction-schemePeople hit by it would middle/ upper middle class. It wouldnt ensure that absurdly rich people arent rich anymore, it would ensure that no more people get absurdly rich. Edit: On July 21 2024 07:48 KwarK wrote:On July 21 2024 07:38 Razyda wrote: [quote]
I think you misunderstood. It was response to part of the Wombat post where he seems to suggest that entrepreneur own something to government because it provided education for his employees. The money for education came from, so to speak, pot to which aforementioned entrepreneur contributed and still contributes hence there is no debt. If the money used for education were taken directly from governments pockets (eg from ministers salary or such) he would have a point, as it is he doesnt.
They rely on the existence of a society. You can't separate the accumulation of wealth from the social framework it takes place within. If we were hunter gatherers and you foraged 10 mushrooms only to have me demand 5 of them from you then it would make sense to consider that theft. If we operate in a hugely complicated social network, I get 10 money and the state demands 5 then it's a lot less clear. 10 mushrooms is what I earned in the first scenario because I literally foraged 10 of them. 10 money is no less arbitrary than 5 money and neither of them can be connected to the labour I performed in any meaningful way. I can't separate the paycheck I get from a day on which I elect to "work from home" from the framework that allows me to do that and I can't resort to the labour theory of value to insist that I earned everything through my hard work because I didn't do any. Again you dont understand. It was reply to specific claim about owning something to government for educating employees. Not about taxes, but against having some sort of additional liability, because your employees are educated. Edit2: @Kwark Just remembered to ask, as thought kinda amused me. After news about Trump shooting, was your first thought to check if GH posted something on TL, after prodding him on not doing anything revolutionary? Well no the central point is the self-made billionaire type is basically a myth, because one cannot get to such a status without a workforce, which is educated on the public dime.
Never mind the consumer base, some of which may only have liquidity due to various government programs, be those targeted tax breaks, benefits (welfare) etc. Which doesnt matter because entrepreneur is part of public so it was his money to which funded this education. Also while self made billionaire is basically a myth, what you have against family made billionaires? Lets take JK Rowling (lets disregard her views which may be considered controversial) far as I know she made herself rich purely by herself, should she be robbed of possibility to pass her money to her children? should government really be allowed to take all her money except, like Drone suggested, 5kk per child? Lets say you won lottery, how happy would it make you, that your kids get 5kk each, and with rest government would establish department to correct use of toothpicks? (because that what would happen, it wouldnt go to the poor) She wouldn’t be a billionaire without various distribution networks, film workers of various kinds etc. Indeed, rather famously she wrote the first Harry Potter book while on welfare as a single mother. One could quite easily make the argument that she owes the state for enabling her success, and should help fund it so the next JK Rowling can have the opportunities she did. Also I don’t think people in here by and large are advocating seizing all of the wealthy’s money, just some reasonable portion of it. Yeah, but the question is how much "help fund it" is fair. Obviously she will have paid taxes in some capacity, and presumably more than your average person. We can all agree that the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, because we're the many and they're the few. It's easy for us to vote that JK gives half a billion dollars to us because of what side we're on. What I think Razyda is trying to point to is that the money wouldn't go to 'us' and we're naive to think it would.I don't know that such an argument is particularly strong, and I'd argue in favour of some kind of inheritance cap and if the best argument against it is that the whole system is too corrupt for it to mean anything then... I dunno, that just feels defeatist. Bolded: Thats part of it, but also she earned this money by herself, so everyone who didn't should quite frankly FO rather than say "I want piece of it myself", or deploy them as I would like to. Wanna redistribute money? earn them and then redistribute, dont take them from people who earned them. Far as I know there are no laws preventing people from making fortune for writing, being entrepreneur, or a movie actor and many others. Do that and then spread your wealth, nobody stops you. How did she earn it by herself? Oh please thats not even hard question. She wrote the books (like had an idea which resonated with lots of people and made them buy it) then everyone involved paid actual taxes!! there wasn't an situation when parliament decided that people involved in Rowling work dont pay taxes. Every single person involved made money out of it and government took its share by taxing those people All the taxes have not yet been paid as evidenced by the fact that you're arguing that her estate shouldn't have to pay the remaining tax. If all the taxes had been paid then there wouldn't be any argument here. Your very premise is that there is a remaining unpaid tax. The government has yet to take its full share.
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