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I feel left out
For First Time It Takes A Billion To Make Magazine's List Of The Richest Americans
And I'm not even a millionaire... This is another case of the rich get richer. Here's one reason from here: Quote:
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No, that's not the reason you're not even a millionaire. It's because you don't make enough money.......or your spouse has a credit card. :lol:
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The obvious solution is get a better accountant.
The less obvious is to find ways to be content with what you have, rather than wallow in the envy at what others seem to have. You can also seek opportunities to improve. |
Are you saying you don't pay taxes wolf?
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I probably end up overpaying my taxes. I do not have an accountant. In fact, this year was the first that I had tax preparation software. It did not find any interesting or hidden deductions for me.
But I still got a refund. I know it's my money, and I paid the government for the privilege of letting them use it for 12 months and all, but there is just something special about getting that rainbow-colored check in the mail, even if I do miss the punch-card holes that used to be in it. |
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I'm not wallowing in envy. I just think our country would be better off with a smaller gap between rich and poor. |
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First, there are plenty of poor people without cars and cell phones. Just look at the buses. And do you really need to specify "color" TV? Your "capitalism yay!" cliche is a couple of decades out of date.
Second, all of that is worthless if you have no health insurance in today's society. That's where the real distinction between rich and poor is made these days. |
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2: Yes I do need to specify "color" TV because black and white TVs are less expensive. And that is the term that most surveys use. 3: I wasn't necessarily promoting capitalism (I never said that I approve of our capitalist society)...I actually admire what Karl Marx was trying to do with communism. And wish that it had been successful but our current communist countries and the USSR are examples of how ineffective communism is on a large scale. Not that capitalism is much better but atleast members of a capitalist society have a better chance of changing things. Which we have done throughout our history. 4: I know many people who have/ have had no health insurance, and I would not and they would not consider themselves poor. I have health insurance and I consider myself poor. Even if you don't have health insurance...you can still recieve health care. 5: I am not including the homeless in any of my arguments...they are a different class altogether. 6: Please do not misread my post and then make a poorly developed hostile response to it. |
I have no health insurance. Does that mean I'm poor? :eek:
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And don't forget, Spexx, that those billionaires use all that extra tax free income to stimulate our economy, which benefits us all. For example, Jose might not have his own pickup and weedeater for his lawn service. LaShawna might not have that Merry Maids position. My own son might not have that pizza delivery opportunity.
Yes, billionaires and their tax free income are the backbone of this country. Don't forget..the Trickle Down theory does *not* refer to urine! |
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She didn't say they're living like kings, only that they lead much better lives than the poor in other countries.
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Thank you 9th. |
Trust me, veryveryveryveryVERY few Americans are as poor as most Chinese, or (and ESPECIALLY) North Koreans... not to mention Thais, Indonesians, Vietnamese, Cambodians...
Poor in America is still poor, and not a good thing, but its better than MIDDLE-CLASS lots of places. And yes, I've SEEN those places. |
But what is the purpose of making that comparison? Is being better off than third world countries something worth bragging about? Is something good enough as long as it could be worse?
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I'm not making any judgement ON the fact, I'm just backing up that it is true.
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The problem in the US is that the gulf between the rich and the poor has been getting wider for quite some now. The lower and middle classes bear the lion's share of the tax burden, while the billionaire skates. Meanwhile funding for stuff like education and public health keeps getting cut, and we spend zillions of dollars on an immoral foreign war. In the end, comparing the US to some poor third world country is a cop-out. Its like saying, "I may be a thief, but at least I don't kill people." True enough, but its still wrong to steal, and since when did the US need to compare itself to the likes of Cambodia or Brazil? |
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Before we get carried away with statements about how the rich are getting away without paying taxes lets look at some numbers
Income Class tax generation top 25% - 83.9 % of US tax revenue top 10% - 65.8% of US tax revenue top 5% - 54.4% of US tax revenue top 1% - 34.3% of US tax revenue http://www.nationalreview.com/nrof_b...0512070900.asp |
How does that compare to wealth distribution?
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From original article:
... But in 1960, it was also the case that over two-thirds of Americans said they trusted government to do the right thing most of the time. ... These days I trust individuals to do the right thing more than government. I think that The Gates and The Bono should decide rather than The Bushes. I paid $970,000 in Federal Taxes in 1999, so I appreciated reducing to that level by my own decisions to fund specific schools and charities of my own choice. (note: my tax rate was 50%, being "new money"). My newest stock options in several companies may pay out again. I'd rather decide where my donations go rather than the government decide. What's wrong with that? Also, the federal government should allow stock dividends to be expensed by the company rather than the idiotic double-taxation of corporate dividends to investors. Current law favors risky growth-first stocks, at what national interest? |
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This is seriously unconvincing. I know a lot of people making a lot less than they did in 2001. I can't believe that 20% of Americans make more than $180K a year. That's just ridiculous. |
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Yeah, but what about the guys from Enron and Worldcom deciding? Quote:
In regards to the taxation issue. I can't find the resultant tax rate or tax dollars paid by these groups of folks. If your income is, say, $1 million, how much tax do you really pay? What percentage of their income does that represent? How much for the $51K to $75K range? What is their disposable income? I've searched for this info, but I can't seem to find what I'm looking for. The question remains: Is the US better off with a large gap between rich and poor, or a small gap? |
The US is best off when there is mobility: opportunity for the poor to become rich, no matter what the definition of those two things is.
One of the biggest factors creating a rich/poor "gap" is the Social Security system. SS is a regressive system that takes from the poor and gives to the rich. |
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It doesn't say 20% make more than $180k, it says 180K is the average for the top 20 %. That can be a very few making much more and a whole lot making less. It would be clearer as a mean or percentile, but it's not. :confused: |
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But, looking at any single year for a taxpayer can be deceptive. Part of what I did resulted in overpaying Alt Min. A couple of years later, we had big medical deductions that took our taxable income to zero. Normally that would initate Alt Min, but we had credit towards that. So, we paid no federal taxes that year. But this was from real losses, real past taxes paid, and real medical expenses. It wasn't exactly the "money growing on trees" scenario of popular myth. |
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I'm not quite sure of what you mean about the Social Security system either. Everyone pays into it, and at age 65 or if you become disabled, everyone draws from it, even those with private retirement/disability plans that give them a pretty good income. For example, I know of a disabled vet who gets almost $3,000/month from the VA and, in addition, draws an SSDI check for $730.00/month. I think SS needs to be treated more like a sort of catastrophe insurance. If you have over a certain amount of income from other sources, you shouldn't be able to draw SS. I know most folks probably will disagree with me on this, but it would have the effect of making a big dent in the SS "crisis," as well as allow SS payments for those who truly need it to be raised to a more livable amount. Right now, a disabled person on SSI gets something like $570.00/month. Pretty pathetic. SSDI is somewhat better, I think people can get as much as $1200/month from that, but you have to luck out and meet the complex formula SSDI uses to figure your benefits. |
Why SS is regressive.
One, your income under SS is only taxed to a certain point, about $90,000, and then it stops. You are not taxed above that point. Everyone under that exemption point is paying full percentage. Everyone who makes more than that is paying a lower percentage. People who make a ton more than that, pay a ton less. Two, rich people live longer than poor people. A person who pays into the system their entire life, and then dies at age 65, is effectively hosed. Poor people are more likely to do that. Three, rich people are more likely to be contractors and/or schedule C S-corporation or use other such practices to avoid paying the employer portion of the tax. Four, rich people are more likely to put in close to the max their entire life which means they will take out close to the max during their entire senior years. |
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I didn't mean to imply you could duck all taxes if you made big money. Just that those who do, will vary greatly in what they actually pay depending on the things I mentioned. It's hard to give 100k to a charity when you only make 20. :D |
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