• @Kerred
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    1 year ago

    So I felt like I had helped pushing debt relief forward in the US, hope that is okay with you folks here.

    And I would agree with the image. But can I be risky and question some things? I can delete my post if people don’t like it.

    But, Ok regarding tax increases on wealthy and corporations: won’t they just find loopholes? Heck wasn’t the tax rate raised to like 80% for the wealthy as one point in the US?

    I would prefer if culture steps away from tax the rich to either simplify tax rules or remove loopholes, which I would think both sides of voters in the US would be happy for? (Assuming both sides hate the current tax system)

    Or assuming politicians are in in the loopholes too, making the tax easier or the loopholes more complicated that labor wise it would be better to just pay taxes?

    • Flying SquidOP
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      361 year ago

      Sorry… why do you think people on the left wouldn’t be in favor of removing tax loopholes for rich people?

      • @Kerred
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        1 year ago

        Sorry I didn’t intend to bring sides into this, I am referring to the super rich and poor. Not left or right. Is that okay?

        I think both voters on both sides would be in favor of removing tax loopholes. But I imagine the wealthy on both sides would be hesitant?

        Assuming if you are super rich that takes priority over political parties. Would the Military Industrial Complex be a similar example?

        • Flying SquidOP
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          381 year ago

          The wealthy are only on one side- their own. The aren’t left or right, they’re just greedy hoarders. Their ideology goes as far as their wallet. They give to politics to get their way and they give to charities to get tax write-offs.

          • Cosmonaut_Collin
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            1 year ago

            I think he problem is that the wealthy are lobbying for laws to keep their loopholes or make new ones. Unless we can find a way to keep lawmakers from accepting bribes, the lower class will always be at a disadvantage even if we do vote for better taxing of the rich.

          • @DarthBueller
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            21 year ago

            This goes along with some of the scholarship that talks about class morality. The moral calculus of one social class is essentially alien to other social classes. The upper class sees morality as a tool of controlling the masses and of limited personal utility, but middle class and working class have different concepts of morality as well (e.g., perceptions of theft vary dramtically, if I recall correctly). This is a concept I encountered ages ago in an anthropology course, but I can’t for the life of me give you a citation.

          • @Kerred
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            -91 year ago

            Okay good I felt like I was alone in that respect. Sometimes I feel like causing two partiess to fight is what the richest want so they can get away with anything sometimes lol.

            But I’m sure that’s not true, and if it is I would be sad people have been tricked into choosing sides and being brainwashed to hate for the gain of others who couldn’t care.

            • norbert
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              31 year ago

              It’s unfortunate that our entire culture has been boiled down to a few wedge issues by people with no interest in bettering the common persons life. Your stance on Gods/Guns/Gays pretty much determines how you’ll vote at this point.

      • @Kerred
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        1 year ago

        Oh another Q I had was the student debt relief.

        Isn’t student debt relief just a short term fix? Yes debt relief is something I would vote for, but Like that money has to go somewhere right? Wouldn’t it be better to lower the cost of the out of control education or health care first to make it easier to provide more affordable universal care in the future?

        Unless other country with universal care charge $20 for a cough drop at the distributor level for hospitals, then disregard my statement 😄

        • Flying SquidOP
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          311 year ago

          Why not give people student debt relief and make college free and have universal healthcare? It’s not like you have to pick one.

          • @Strangle
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            -11 year ago

            How much are you willing to give up of your own pay cheque to fund that?

            • @vongraff
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              31 year ago

              I’m more than willing to pay more in taxes as it will be offset by not paying my expensive monthly health insurance premium. Even bureaucrats would be better than insurance “for profit” flunkies in deciding what health decisions I’m allowed to make.

          • @Kerred
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            -101 year ago

            I am just going to guess no one will make that happen for another 150 years, but it’s a nice dream isn’t it.

            But my rationality is if you start with a long term plan for universal health and education, debt relief would follow suit.

            I am just confused why debt relief is headlined and no long term solutions, as if the culture wants to hide long term solutions.

        • @AA5B
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          1 year ago

          Yes, forgiving student loans can realistically only be a one time fix, but:

          — most of these are for a previously existing forgiveness program that was managed so poorly no one could qualify

          — halting payments as part of COViD relief while continuing to accrue interest means that some people are getting hit with ballooning payments after year of none

          But of course the real problem is how to get college education costs back under control. They have been going up much faster than inflation for decades, making a good education much harder to afford than for the rich devious generation

          — a big part of this is reduced state spending on education, so public school costs go up as fast as private. States need to start investing more in public universities again. Top tier private schools will always command any price but most private schools would need to compete if public universities were affordable

          — some states are starting to offer some amount of college free

      • diprount_tomato
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        -151 year ago

        Because current measures only make rich people flee elsewhere, which moves the tax burden to the middle class, which becomes poorer due to this and other factors, and then we have a few rich guys living elsewhere and a poor mass

        • Flying SquidOP
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          161 year ago

          Flee where exactly? If this were national, they’d have to flee the country. And good riddance to them and their hoarding. They improve nothing.

          • Andjhostet
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            61 year ago

            If all the leeches on society fled we’d be much better off. Let them leave. They don’t pay their fair share anyways, and their neoliberal lobbying has destroyed this country.

          • diprount_tomato
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            1 year ago

            Tax havens. Ever heard of the Caymans, the Bahamas and so on?

            • Flying SquidOP
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              101 year ago

              You mean the things they already use and wouldn’t be able to if they lived in the U.S. and the loopholes were closed? What about them?

                • Flying SquidOP
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                  81 year ago

                  What? No, I want people to pay taxes in the country they live in. What on Earth are you talking about?

                  • diprount_tomato
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                    -131 year ago

                    So you want to close the borders and not allow someone to migrate? Like, you move to another country but you still have to pay taxes to your native country + your new one?

            • Chetzemoka
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              1 year ago

              Have you ever LIVED in one of those tax havens? Because I have, and trust me, rich folks ain’t up and moving to a tiny wild west country controlled by black people anytime soon. Especially when they can get the exact same tax havens benefits in Delaware, Wyoming, Nevada…

              Stop falling for the propaganda that the Caribbean is causing problems for us. They’re not. Our tax code created the incentives. We’re the problem.

                • Chetzemoka
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                  1 year ago

                  You’re wrong. Accept it. The idea that the rich will flee if we tax them is propaganda perpetuated by the rich to keep us from trying.

                  • diprount_tomato
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                    11 year ago

                    You think it’s propaganda, I know it has already happened several times, just not in the US because they’re in charge of it

          • diprount_tomato
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            11 year ago

            Yes, they as people don’t move elsewhere, but their companies sure do, and that affects tax collection

    • IWantToFuckSpez
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      91 year ago

      How do you think loopholes creep into the tax laws? It’s done by politicians who accept bribes from lobbyists who work for the mega corporations and the ultra wealthy. Yes those kind of politicians are in both camps. But one side is full of them and the other is slightly less full of them. Vote for better politicians and show up to every election even the local ones. That’s how you can put a “radical” into power who might want to do something about the current system. And those “radicals” aren’t a member of the Republican Party.

      • @Kerred
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        21 year ago

        So the next question is what can be done, like today, where can I go who should should I contact other than my usual reps?

          • @Kerred
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            11 year ago

            I like to think my support in third parties on the rise in 200 years has helped then 😄

              • @Kerred
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                21 year ago

                The party I am registered as primarily focuses on spreading word on Ranked Choice, only because there’s no other way to compete.

    • @AA5B
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      1 year ago

      Edit to tldr: one of the richest men in the world “ paid a total tax rate of 17.7%, the average tax rate for people in his office was 32.9%.”

      — No one is advocating for the old days with 90% tax on the wealthy. We all know that won’t work

      — we have a progressive tax, meaning wealthier pay a higher rate, which is good. However many “tweaks” have eroded that so it’s no longer as true. Most people just want to undo those tweaks

      — There are multiple tax brackets so you pay a higher percentage as you earn more. I do earn more than average so I pay more, fair. But I’m far from wealthy, so why am I in the highest tax bracket? Why do the Elon Musks of the world pay the same rate on income as my upper middle income?

      — our income taxes are more complex than people realize, but many tax cuts of the last few Republican administrations have been for sources of income that mostly benefit the wealthy. Why is my salary income taxed at such a high rate compared to Elon Musk’s capital gains income?

      — why do I pay taxes on all my income while a well known real estate grifter can incorporate hundreds of times and play shell games with his money, and claim to be both a billionaire with huge income AND writing off all that income as a business loss to avoid taxed

      — but this fiasco really tells the story. How is it that when even one of the wealthiest thinks it’s unfair, we keep doing it? https://www.fool.com/taxes/2020/09/25/why-does-billionaire-warren-buffett-pay-a-lower-ta/

      • @Kerred
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        21 year ago

        Interesting stuff to look into, thanks!