'This Is Insanity': Democrats Discuss New Plan to Help Pay for Massive Spending Bill

Jacuzzme's Avatar
There’s nowhere near enough billionaires out there for this proposal to have an effect on the budget. Not to mention that it’ll drive wealth out of the country. People smart enough to make that kind of dough aren’t going to just give it up willingly. They’ll move or find some other tax shelter or do something else we mere mortals don’t understand.
lustylad's Avatar
to the dims lack of taxation is a government spending and a subsidy
..
how can one deal with a mindset like that?

if its not impossible, its nigh impossible, to understand how anyone can think like that
lustylad's Avatar
Every dollar you make belongs to the government... if you're nice enough to them, they may even let you keep some of it!
All of these “billionaires” need to keep in mind. When dealing with the Criminal Justice System, ,you are innocent until proven guilty.

When dealing with the IRS and the Bureaucracy, you are guilty until you can prove yourself innocent.
Unique_Carpenter's Avatar
Lusty,
You bring up the key phrase: illusionary

That is exactly the Dims issue

I'll also note I saw the phrase non-liquid unrealized gains would not be taxed. Geeze, I would think any millionaire, let alone a billionaire, has a tax geek on staff that can easily rearrange assets.

So yes the middle class will be left holding the bag, again.
The_Waco_Kid's Avatar
The Democrats’ Wealth-Tax Mirage

Their last fiscal resort is taxing unrealized capital gains of ‘billionaires.’


By The Editorial Board
Oct. 25, 2021 6:59 pm ET


Democrats are scrambling to finance their spending bill after Arizona Sen. Kyrsten Sinema shot down their plans to raise corporate and individual income-tax rates. Thank you, Senator. But now Democrats are reaching deep into their grab-bag of revenue tricks and may pull out a wealth tax on “billionaires.”

Nancy Pelosi confirmed on CNN’s State of the Union Sunday that the Democrats’ spending bill will probably “have a wealth tax.” Give the Speaker credit for candor. The Biden Administration is pretending that Oregon Sen. Ron Wyden’s plan to tax unrealized capital gains of “billionaires” is something else.

“It’s not a wealth tax, but a tax on unrealized capital gains of exceptionally wealthy individuals,” Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen was at pains to explain. The Treasury gig hasn’t been good for her reputation. But she certainly knows that a tax on unrealized capital gains is a de facto wealth tax, which would be levied on property rather than income.

For example, if Jeff Bezos’s Beverly Hills estate appreciates by 10% in a year, he could be taxed on its increase in value. Ditto for his Amazon stock holdings. Currently such assets are only taxed when they’re sold, which is when the income is realized.

Democrats claim the tax will only hit some 700 uber-rich Americans with more than $1 billion in assets or who have more than $100 million in income for three consecutive years. That’s what they always say.

The first income tax enacted after ratification of the Sixteenth Amendment in 1913 had seven tax brackets with rates from 1% on income over $3,000 ($83,972 in current dollars) to 7% on income exceeding $500,000 ($14 million). You know what rates are now. The alternative minimum tax also only applied initially to the richest Americans, but with time expanded to hit millions in the middle class.

Maybe the only impediment to extending the wealth tax more broadly is the challenge of administering it. Even House Ways and Means Chairman Richard Neal acknowledges it would be a logistical nightmare.

Details of Mr. Wyden’s plan haven’t been released, so it’s not clear if the tax would apply to non-financial assets like artwork, jewelry and intellectual property. If so, more Americans could get soaked since the IRS will no doubt inflate the value of non-financial assets, as it often does with the estates of high earners.

A tax court this year ruled that the late entertainer Michael Jackson’s “likeness and image” were worth about $157 million less than the IRS claimed. Will the Wyden plan tax Americans’ likeness and image? How about copyrights and patents? The IRS will have to hire many more auditors to assess the value of property, which will mean more tax litigation.

The Washington Post reports that a summary of the draft plan would allow taxpayers to deduct losses on the value of assets. Does that including deducting the full value of paper losses from stock-market corrections? Don’t count on it. Under current law taxpayers can only deduct $3,000 in net losses from the sale of financial assets in a year.

Complexity is one reason European countries, including France, Germany and Sweden, abandoned broad-based wealth taxes. Many of the rich dodged wealth taxes by exploiting carve-outs or moving. The very rich will find ways to avoid confiscatory taxes, but bad tax policy distorts investment.

Sweden abolished its wealth tax in 2007 following an exodus of capital and business tycoons. France repealed its net wealth tax in 2018, estimating that some 10,000 people with 35 billion euros worth of assets had left in the previous 15 years for tax reasons. The government was losing revenue from income taxes that the wealthy would have paid. Mrs. Pelosi says Democrats’ wealth tax will raise $200 billion to $250 billion over a decade, but that won’t cover even their green energy, electric-vehicle and other climate tax credits.

By the way, a wealth tax is also probably illegal. The Constitution says Congress can only impose “direct taxes” that are “apportioned among the several states” according to population. While the Sixteenth Amendment authorized Congress to tax “incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment,” unrealized capital gains aren’t income.

Democrats figure that’s a fight for another day. Their sole goal now is to come up with some way, any way, to raise enough revenue on paper, however illusory, to fund their spending bill without losing the votes of Sens. Sinema and Joe Manchin. The AP reports that Mr. Manchin is fine with the wealth tax.Democrats will take any refuge in a political storm, even if it’s a mirage.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-dem...in-11635197950 Originally Posted by lustylad

“It’s not a wealth tax, but a tax on unrealized capital gains of exceptionally wealthy individuals,” Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen was at pains to explain


yes Janet Planet .. it's a wealth tax.


A tax court this year ruled that the late entertainer Michael Jackson’s “likeness and image” were worth about $157 million less than the IRS claimed. Will the Wyden plan tax Americans’ likeness and image? How about copyrights and patents? The IRS will have to hire many more auditors to assess the value of property, which will mean more tax litigation.


do these clowns really think the wealthy won't lawyer up and fight the valuation? yeah .. they will.


By the way, a wealth tax is also probably illegal. The Constitution says Congress can only impose “direct taxes” that are “apportioned among the several states” according to population. While the Sixteenth Amendment authorized Congress to tax “incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment,” unrealized capital gains aren’t income.


this makes it "legal". because when did the DNC .. Democratic National CRIMINALS ever care about the Constitution or what's legal?


BAHHAAAHAAAAA
rexdutchman's Avatar
Tax"s spend
“A tax court this year ruled that the late entertainer Michael Jackson’s “likeness and image” were worth about $157 million less than the IRS claimed. Will the Wyden plan tax Americans’ likeness and image? How about copyrights and patents? The IRS will have to hire many more auditors to assess the value of property, which will mean more tax litigation.
Originally Posted by The_Waco_Kid
djt included in his net worth the worth of his brand

his brand might be tarnished after 6 years of lies and assaults by the dims and their media. maybe he gets a refund?

so do others have a "brand"

the kardashians are both either billionaires or close to it what is their brand worth?

how do you sell a portion of your brand to get the money to pay the tax?
  • oeb11
  • 10-27-2021, 10:25 AM
Good question - NGIT
if the kardashians approached teh national committee of teh Democraticommunist party - announcing they are supporting 'climate change initiatives " to support polar bears" - they could sell shares in their brand EASY!!!
And fleece the proletariat out of More Monies!
the clown car that is the dimocrat party

brings out one thought after another only to not agree on anything

the whole thing might fall apart because they cant agree
  • oeb11
  • 10-27-2021, 04:54 PM
That would be a major blessing for teh Peoples of the nation of America!!!!!
for once - god Bless the obstinate idiot AOC!!!
the_real_Barleycorn's Avatar
It is insane. The 3.5 trillion costs nothing so why does it have to be paid for? Ohhhhhh....okay, I get it.
rexdutchman's Avatar
Comon man -zero I said zero ( we are going to pay, theys continue to lie without any media accountability
the proximate problem is they are trying to pass a massive ideologically stuffed bill that should only be in times of an overwhelming mandate with but the thinnest of political margins