• fafferlicious@lemmy.world
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    18 days ago

    Every fucking year hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of Americans pay a tax on an illiquid asset: the property tax.

    Don’t fucking tell me “oh it’s too difficult, there’s too many effects.” Tax. Them.

    Progressive tax rate on long term and short term capital gains. 95 % upper limit for income tax. Kneecap their bullshit “buy, borrow, die” cycle.

    Get back to the fucking WW2 tax levels, back when we had a middle class, and then we can maybe finally have a balanced budget, at least.

    • MareOfNights@discuss.tchncs.de
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      13 days ago

      95% income is wild. But capital gains increase might not be a bad idea. Higher top brackets also probably a good idea. Taxing debt that you borrow against assets might be difficult because of mortgages. Technically I think the state gets taxes on that but only when they die. If there is a good proposal that works, I’d have no problem with it.

      Just Wealth tax is not a good idea. The problem in my opinion is not that people get too rich, it’s that companies get too big. We need to break those monopolies up.

      • fafferlicious@lemmy.world
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        12 days ago

        https://taxpolicycenter.org/statistics/historical-highest-marginal-income-tax-rates

        95 is not that high For 20 years it was over 90

        Now I know I hear people in the back “but it was world war time!” True. True.

        How long have we been at war? Since Vietnam? How many fucking desert storms have we had? Cold war?

        And not one person that has complained about the percentile has asked about what the top bracket would be.

        Are you really going to argue that a 95% tax rate on every $1 over $1,000,000 is excessive or “wild”? Or does it actually represent the marginal utility of income?

        Because the first 80k someone makes is waayyyyyyyyyyy more impactful than the next 80k. One makes sure you don’t die of starvation and exposure. The other is all pleasure.

        I like your counterpoint about the wealth tax being more about monopolistic power. Hadn’t considered that angle. I do believe that the government must be larger than the entities it governs. If we ever want a smaller, more agile government, we need to shrink what it’s supposed to govern.

        Here is why I argue for a wealth tax: Most things in life are not simply exponential. They’re logarithmic. At least for biology and natural systems. We need some corrective force that pushes back aggressively against wealth accumulation -regardless of source.

    • ryannathans@aussie.zone
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      17 days ago

      What would happen to America and the USD if all of those people left the country and took their “wealth” with them?

          • fafferlicious@lemmy.world
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            17 days ago

            95 % upper limit for income tax.

            Don’t argue against things I didn’t say.

            You don’t see an exodus of homeowners for their property tax.

            Why is that? Hmmm? Is it the case that rich people wanna be where money is? And nice services are? Where the culture is? Where the art is? Where their family is? Their friends? Their children’s life?

            Show me a study that unequivocally shows that raising taxes leads to mass capital flight. I haven’t seen one yet. At best, its mixed.

            They say this about minimum wage “you can’t raise it to $15 business will leave and go under!”

            And every fucking time states or cities increase the minimum wage, that doesn’t happen.

            Stop fucking carrying water for the rich

            • MareOfNights@discuss.tchncs.de
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              13 days ago

              A few percent land tax is no comparison to 95% income tax. Also, people at the level of wealth we’re talking about don’t have a lot of income. They have capital gains.

              Also, 15$ minimum wage would destroy economies of many places. In California it’s not a big problem. But in bumfuck nowhere with a median income of 25k it will destroy the local economy.

              • fafferlicious@lemmy.world
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                12 days ago

                https://taxpolicycenter.org/statistics/historical-highest-marginal-income-tax-rates

                95 is not that high For 20 years it was over 90

                And not one person that has complained about the percentile has asked about what the top bracket would be.

                Are you really going to argue that a 95% tax rate on every $1 over $1,000,000 is not comparable to a 95% income tax when fully contextualized to being their one million and first dollar made in a year?

                Find me a place where raising the minimum wage devastated a local economy. I legitimately can’t find one so I’m hoping you can help me learn. Here’s a write up about how Walmart devastated local economies though.

                Honestly? The fact that we can even entertain, in America, that a state would have a median income of 25k shows truly just how fucked we are.

                  • fafferlicious@lemmy.world
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                    12 days ago

                    So your answer is “Trust me, bro. We don’t need to study this. It’s obvious bro everyone knows or. Just don’t do it. Don’t raise wages bro it’s bad. I promise. Everyone already knows this. There’s no research for it But we know it’s true. Trust me.”

                    I just want to make sure I understand your logic correctly.