DawnODay
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Dec 19, 2015
- Posts
- 3,120
That's an income tax rebate... minus income they're double-taxed on because their SALT deductions are now disallowed. And minus extra fees they'll be charged for services, and increased SALTs resulting from federal cutbacks, and rising healthcare costs....
What "rebate"? Please define what you mean by that.
"Extra fees"? Fees for what? Please give specific examples of what you mean.
Rising healthcare costs? The only way the bill affects healthcare is that it does away with the individual mandate. This, if anything, reduces demand and thus lowers insurance costs....
No answer?
You just can't see beyond the end of your nose. That's what the Republicans who put forth this bill wanted you to do. They constructed the bill that way. Congrats. you fell for it.
And, actually, I think you deserve to be screwed for your short-sighted ignorance, so I don't feel the need to open your eyes to where you're going wrong.![]()
Likewise, even though even the left-leaning parts of the media admit pretty much everyone is going to see their taxes go down at least a little, you just keep saying we're getting "screwed," but you don't say how.
How?
To the thread in general. I don't think it's a matter so much of the percentage the rich and corporations pay in taxes--it's more getting them to pay any taxes at all. The Trumps are a classic case of wealth shielding--both individually in corporately.
Do you mean like this?
D. Greenfield, How Obama and Senate Democrats Freed GE from Paying Corporate Taxes, Frontpage (Jan. 7, 2013);
B. Montopoli, White House Defends Embrace of G.E. CEO Despite Report Company Didn't Owe Taxes in 2010, CBS News (Mar. 25, 2011).
B. Montopoli, White House Defends Embrace of G.E. CEO Despite Report Company Didn't Owe Taxes in 2010, CBS News (Mar. 25, 2011).
Actually, that's one of the good things about the Trump tax reform. It eliminates a lot of the deductions, exemptions, and credits that allowed "the rich and corporations" to avoid taxation. If the House had gotten its way, pretty much all of them would be gone. It was the more "moderate" Senate that maintained them.
The more complex a tax code is, the more it benefits the rich and powerful to the detriment of the poor and middle class. The rich can afford the lawyers and CPAs necessary to come up with strategies that allow tax avoidance (e.g., right now, those with sufficient disposable income to do so [i.e., the wealthy] are trying to avoid the coming years' $10,000 limit on SALT deductions by prepaying future property taxes this year). The goal of the President and the House conservatives was to simplify the tax code to make it more fair. The Senate frustrated much of that. (Why did no Democrats support the more fair House version, so at least that could have passed over the less fair Senate Republicans' version?)