For those who oppose an inheritance tax ...

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smack Down

Diamond Member
Sep 10, 2005
4,507
0
0
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: smack Down
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: smack Down
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: smack Down
All taxes are unfair, if they were fair then people would pay them voluntarily. So it say the inheritance tax is unfair and should be done away with is stupid. You need to say it is more unfair then some other tax so do away with the inheritance and raise of the other tax.

Do you want to pay higher income tax, so the Walton family can have a few more billions?

Most liberals in here have wet dreams about higher taxes. And personally, I think the Walton family deserves every penny they have. Their father's company employ millions of people for Christ's sake.

The question isn't if they deserves ever penny they have, but do they deserves their money more or less then you or I deserves our own money.

They deserve it equally.

Ok, then so lets give the government about 30% because that is what it is taking from my paycheck.

What? Income and inheritance are two completely different things. Besides, the Walton family has to be making an income for the government to tax it. What's the government going to tax, interest on their billions?

Who says they have to be making an income to be taxed? I think we can tax the transfer of wealth just fine income, inheritance or otherwise.
 

ntdz

Diamond Member
Aug 5, 2004
6,989
0
0
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: JD50
Originally posted by: techs

Sorry, Walton family, but you have enough money for the next twenty generations even with the estate tax.

What gives you, or anyone else the right to decide how much money someone needs?
What gives you the right to keep me from taking your money? Why is your assumptions about what is right better than mine? If you want to waste your life accumulating what is worthless why complain if I take your money to fund art or feed the poor. If you want riches you deserve to keep go in the forest and collect grubs. It was my family that made it possible for you to be rich. My family created the culture you are a parasite in.

Wow, just wow. You don't take what doesn't believe to you. What makes you deserve HIS FAMILY'S money more than him?!?!?!

You mean you just say I don't take what belongs to you and voilà, it is suddenly true. No, I take it because your claim to own it is false. You borrow what belongs to me, what you would never have without me and my family and I don't take it, it was always mine.

That's bordering on communism.
 

ntdz

Diamond Member
Aug 5, 2004
6,989
0
0
Originally posted by: smack Down
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: smack Down
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: smack Down
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: smack Down
All taxes are unfair, if they were fair then people would pay them voluntarily. So it say the inheritance tax is unfair and should be done away with is stupid. You need to say it is more unfair then some other tax so do away with the inheritance and raise of the other tax.

Do you want to pay higher income tax, so the Walton family can have a few more billions?

Most liberals in here have wet dreams about higher taxes. And personally, I think the Walton family deserves every penny they have. Their father's company employ millions of people for Christ's sake.

The question isn't if they deserves ever penny they have, but do they deserves their money more or less then you or I deserves our own money.

They deserve it equally.

Ok, then so lets give the government about 30% because that is what it is taking from my paycheck.

What? Income and inheritance are two completely different things. Besides, the Walton family has to be making an income for the government to tax it. What's the government going to tax, interest on their billions?

Who says they have to be making an income to be taxed? I think we can tax the transfer of wealth just fine income, inheritance or otherwise.

You aren't making sense. Clarify your position please.
 

smack Down

Diamond Member
Sep 10, 2005
4,507
0
0
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: smack Down
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: smack Down
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: smack Down
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: smack Down
All taxes are unfair, if they were fair then people would pay them voluntarily. So it say the inheritance tax is unfair and should be done away with is stupid. You need to say it is more unfair then some other tax so do away with the inheritance and raise of the other tax.

Do you want to pay higher income tax, so the Walton family can have a few more billions?

Most liberals in here have wet dreams about higher taxes. And personally, I think the Walton family deserves every penny they have. Their father's company employ millions of people for Christ's sake.

The question isn't if they deserves ever penny they have, but do they deserves their money more or less then you or I deserves our own money.

They deserve it equally.

Ok, then so lets give the government about 30% because that is what it is taking from my paycheck.

What? Income and inheritance are two completely different things. Besides, the Walton family has to be making an income for the government to tax it. What's the government going to tax, interest on their billions?

Who says they have to be making an income to be taxed? I think we can tax the transfer of wealth just fine income, inheritance or otherwise.

You aren't making sense. Clarify your position please.

I'm not talking about taxing people yearly just because they have money. I'm saying that tax inheritance is no different then any other tax.
 

smack Down

Diamond Member
Sep 10, 2005
4,507
0
0
Originally posted by: Shivetya
Originally posted by: smack Down
Originally posted by: Shivetya
Do you not believe that the money or item that comprises the gift was not already taxed? Just like the inheritance?


Both are double taxation.

My costumers have already been taxed on their income so why should I have to pay tax when they pay me for a services?


your confusing two taxes.

Umm no I'm not. My costumer earned money and paid income tax on it. I earned money by providing a services to said costumer and I pay income tax on that money. We both paid tax on the same money.
 

Martin

Lifer
Jan 15, 2000
29,178
1
81
Originally posted by: magomago
While I haven't fully formed my opinion on this I still want to toss in my two cents...

Ideally, if we all work through our own merit - then 100% "death tax" shouldn't worry anyone.

I think the fear is maybe our kids - the people who are direct descendants of us biologically - may NOT be as successful as we were. However - if given that extra capital, they can get put "ahead" of the pack and be as successful as we were. Its clear none of us pray for the failure of the generation that comes after us.

With a death/inheritance tax - we are essentially saying that our kids are on their own~ that if we did not TRAIN them to have the skills to be successful, than they might be SOL and end up like some people that we tried VERY hard to avoid to be. And considering the world's population is growing is all the time - probability dictates that it is exponentially harder to succeed because we will be competing against many others who are also trying to succeed. But if we can give them money - if we can pass on inheritances, then clearly a person give their children - his or her biological descendants - a HUGE advantage. It reminds me of when Rockefeller was asked what was the fastest way to make a million dollars, and he replied that you should have 940,000 dollars first.

Its MUCH easier to pass on money, than to pass on skills, ideas, and a process of thinking that will allow a person to succeed based on merit.

However at the same time I can see how we can be scared of this - because rather than eliminating inheritance, what is really done is that it moves all the inheritance to the government - this makes the government exponentially more powerful~ And with the way that governments have had more control over our lives as time moves on...its not something that I would want to rush towards

What do you guys think?

There no need to assume that the government has to take more money than it does now - instead of paying instalments over you life, you simply pay your taxes when when die.

Based on replies in this and the other thread, I'd say most people are scared of a meritocracy. They either want to get a head start themselves or ensure their children get it. They oppose wealth redistribution in general, but not amongst family, since they claim some kind of special made up 'relationship' between a sibling and their parent's wealth.
 

Starbuck1975

Lifer
Jan 6, 2005
14,698
1,909
126
It was my family that made it possible for you to be rich. My family created the culture you are a parasite in.
Well if your family created the culture, don't try to take away from those who leveraged said culture to accumulate wealth.

If you want to waste your life accumulating what is worthless why complain if I take your money to fund art or feed the poor. If you want riches you deserve to keep go in the forest and collect grubs.
Money isn't worthless, or it wouldn't be money.

What gives you the right to keep me from taking your money? Why is your assumptions about what is right better than mine?
News brief...the revolution failed...the great socialist experiment is over.
 

Moonbeam

Elite Member
Nov 24, 1999
74,765
6,770
126
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: JD50
Originally posted by: techs

Sorry, Walton family, but you have enough money for the next twenty generations even with the estate tax.

What gives you, or anyone else the right to decide how much money someone needs?
What gives you the right to keep me from taking your money? Why is your assumptions about what is right better than mine? If you want to waste your life accumulating what is worthless why complain if I take your money to fund art or feed the poor. If you want riches you deserve to keep go in the forest and collect grubs. It was my family that made it possible for you to be rich. My family created the culture you are a parasite in.

Wow, just wow. You don't take what doesn't believe to you. What makes you deserve HIS FAMILY'S money more than him?!?!?!

You mean you just say I don't take what belongs to you and voilà, it is suddenly true. No, I take it because your claim to own it is false. You borrow what belongs to me, what you would never have without me and my family and I don't take it, it was always mine.

That's bordering on communism.

Oh boy, what thinkers we have today. You just have to say communism and the debate is over. Can I stick a badge on you that says moron and turn you into one? Were is the intellectual foundations of your case? I believe your ideas are based on nothing at all bur assumptions you have never thought about. It's not a good idea to have irrational belief, no?
 

ntdz

Diamond Member
Aug 5, 2004
6,989
0
0
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: JD50
Originally posted by: techs

Sorry, Walton family, but you have enough money for the next twenty generations even with the estate tax.

What gives you, or anyone else the right to decide how much money someone needs?
What gives you the right to keep me from taking your money? Why is your assumptions about what is right better than mine? If you want to waste your life accumulating what is worthless why complain if I take your money to fund art or feed the poor. If you want riches you deserve to keep go in the forest and collect grubs. It was my family that made it possible for you to be rich. My family created the culture you are a parasite in.

Wow, just wow. You don't take what doesn't believe to you. What makes you deserve HIS FAMILY'S money more than him?!?!?!

You mean you just say I don't take what belongs to you and voilà, it is suddenly true. No, I take it because your claim to own it is false. You borrow what belongs to me, what you would never have without me and my family and I don't take it, it was always mine.

That's bordering on communism.

Oh boy, what thinkers we have today. You just have to say communism and the debate is over. Can I stick a badge on you that says moron and turn you into one? Were is the intellectual foundations of your case? I believe your ideas are based on nothing at all bur assumptions you have never thought about. It's not a good idea to have irrational belief, no?

You're the one saying we don't own anything that we "own." Like I said, that thought process borders on communism. You're the one believing in irrational beliefs.
 

CPA

Elite Member
Nov 19, 2001
30,322
4
0
Originally posted by: mfs378
How is inheritance any different than a gift? In both cases the wealth is not earned, it is transfered.

As far as I know, gifts are taxed, so why should inheritance not be taxed?

What are you talking about? Both, well technically gifts and estates are taxed after exclusions are factored in.

And, as a reminder, both (gifts and estates) are taxable to the giver, not the recipient.
 

Jhhnn

IN MEMORIAM
Nov 11, 1999
62,365
14,685
136
Some of thee most amazing rightwing doublespeak ever created has to do with inheritance taxes. And that shouldn't come as a surprise- those affected by it have more than enough money to hire the best mouthpieces available.

The first thing we need to clear up is the notion that taxes have already been paid on inheritances by the grantor. That's not true. Stocks, bonds, art, antiques, and real estate purchased decades ago and never sold have appreciated tremendously, and no taxes have been paid on that appreciation, ever. If there were no inheritance tax, there would never be any tax on it...

As has been pointed out, estate taxes only affect .2% of all estates, and even that figure is deceptive. A $2M estate would pay nothing this year under current law, but a $2.1M estate would be "affected", with estate taxes having to be paid only on the amount over $2M... meaning that an even smaller % are "affected" in ways truly significant...

And I think it's important to realize that virtually all earned income is subject to income taxes. So if the grantor of the estate has employees, they pay taxes on their money... Which we don't see as "double taxation", at all... but when the grantor dies, the heirs are taxed on money they didn't even earn, which is somehow interpreted to be "double taxation".... which is malarkey...

One of the biggest problems with untaxed inter-generational accumulations of wealth is that it tends to concentrate wealth and power into the hands of a very, very few people, who have done nothing to earn it, at all, other than being members of the lucky sperm club... and many of the assertions and conceptualizations used to defend such are based on the infinite pie theory, which is an entirely false view of finite resources available to the human race.

Sam Walton, just for example, became exceedingly wealthy on the merits of his own endeavor, and I have no problem with that. His heirs are another story entirely, particularly those who will arrive several generations down the road. Which is not to say that they shouldn't be allowed to inherit, at all, to not be financially secure from cradle to grave, nor does current law demand that. But it's important to realize that huge accumulations of wealth are near static, actually contributing little to the economy thru turnover. And that's what's fundamentally wrong with many third world economies- all the wealth is held by a very, very few at the top, so much so that what we see as a middle class simply can't develop. Even as such economies can be said to "grow", the benefits of it go straight to the top, and stay there...

Many of America's wealthiest families are old money, and much of that money is held in Trusts, an artifact of the compromises of the New Deal. Their problem is that trusts can only benefit persons living at the time the trust was created, and they're running out of such heirs... That wealth has grown tax free for generations, but when the last of the eligible heirs pass on, that inheritance becomes taxable, something they're desperate to avoid... It's not like any of the affected heirs will be made destitute- they still stand to inherit vast sums...

But those at the top really hate paying any taxes, ever- to them, the govt is something they make money off of, not vice-versa, so they've engaged in a decades old campaign to sway public opinion and congress that almost worked- the recipients of their largesse were so desperate to get it through that they even tried to make it a condition of raising minimum wage. Pretty shameful, really, but not at all surprising...
 

ntdz

Diamond Member
Aug 5, 2004
6,989
0
0
Originally posted by: Jhhnn
Some of thee most amazing rightwing doublespeak ever created has to do with inheritance taxes. And that shouldn't come as a surprise- those affected by it have more than enough money to hire the best mouthpieces available.

The first thing we need to clear up is the notion that taxes have already been paid on inheritances by the grantor. That's not true. Stocks, bonds, art, antiques, and real estate purchased decades ago and never sold have appreciated tremendously, and no taxes have been paid on that appreciation, ever. If there were no inheritance tax, there would never be any tax on it...

As has been pointed out, estate taxes only affect .2% of all estates, and even that figure is deceptive. A $2M estate would pay nothing this year under current law, but a $2.1M estate would be "affected", with estate taxes having to be paid only on the amount over $2M... meaning that an even smaller % are "affected" in ways truly significant...

And I think it's important to realize that virtually all earned income is subject to income taxes. So if the grantor of the estate has employees, they pay taxes on their money... Which we don't see as "double taxation", at all... but when the grantor dies, the heirs are taxed on money they didn't even earn, which is somehow interpreted to be "double taxation".... which is malarkey...

One of the biggest problems with untaxed inter-generational accumulations of wealth is that it tends to concentrate wealth and power into the hands of a very, very few people, who have done nothing to earn it, at all, other than being members of the lucky sperm club... and many of the assertions and conceptualizations used to defend such are based on the infinite pie theory, which is an entirely false view of finite resources available to the human race.

Sam Walton, just for example, became exceedingly wealthy on the merits of his own endeavor, and I have no problem with that. His heirs are another story entirely, particularly those who will arrive several generations down the road. Which is not to say that they shouldn't be allowed to inherit, at all, to not be financially secure from cradle to grave, nor does current law demand that. But it's important to realize that huge accumulations of wealth are near static, actually contributing little to the economy thru turnover. And that's what's fundamentally wrong with many third world economies- all the wealth is held by a very, very few at the top, so much so that what we see as a middle class simply can't develop. Even as such economies can be said to "grow", the benefits of it go straight to the top, and stay there...

Many of America's wealthiest families are old money, and much of that money is held in Trusts, an artifact of the compromises of the New Deal. Their problem is that trusts can only benefit persons living at the time the trust was created, and they're running out of such heirs... That wealth has grown tax free for generations, but when the last of the eligible heirs pass on, that inheritance becomes taxable, something they're desperate to avoid... It's not like any of the affected heirs will be made destitute- they still stand to inherit vast sums...

But those at the top really hate paying any taxes, ever- to them, the govt is something they make money off of, not vice-versa, so they've engaged in a decades old campaign to sway public opinion and congress that almost worked- the recipients of their largesse were so desperate to get it through that they even tried to make it a condition of raising minimum wage. Pretty shameful, really, but not at all surprising...

Who have done nothing to earn it. Who have done nothing to earn it? Taking risks, making good decisions, saving, being successful...I guess that doesn't count as earning it. Just because you're a conformist who will never break out and earn money doesn't mean people who do didn't earn it.
 

TheSlamma

Diamond Member
Sep 6, 2005
7,625
5
81
Inheritance tax is complete BS. The money has already been taxed, now because the person dies you want to punish their family more and give their money to the government? So they can spend it on what!?
 

Jhhnn

IN MEMORIAM
Nov 11, 1999
62,365
14,685
136
Who have done nothing to earn it. Who have done nothing to earn it? Taking risks, making good decisions, saving, being successful...I guess that doesn't count as earning it. Just because you're a conformist who will never break out and earn money doesn't mean people who do didn't earn it.

That's a complete non-sequiter in relation to my post, ntdz- just more of the same anti-tax mantra, repeated ad nauseum...

Inheritance tax is complete BS. The money has already been taxed, now because the person dies you want to punish their family more and give their money to the government? So they can spend it on what!?

Do you actually read other people's posts? Or have the slightest comprehension of the tax code?

Let's say, for example, that I bought Microsoft in the original stock offering, simply held it all these years. When I die, I will it to my children. Under your scenario, no taxes will be paid on the capital gains by anybody, ever- not by me, not by my inheritors...

Tell me again how the money has already been taxed...
 

Moonbeam

Elite Member
Nov 24, 1999
74,765
6,770
126
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: JD50
Originally posted by: techs

Sorry, Walton family, but you have enough money for the next twenty generations even with the estate tax.

What gives you, or anyone else the right to decide how much money someone needs?
What gives you the right to keep me from taking your money? Why is your assumptions about what is right better than mine? If you want to waste your life accumulating what is worthless why complain if I take your money to fund art or feed the poor. If you want riches you deserve to keep go in the forest and collect grubs. It was my family that made it possible for you to be rich. My family created the culture you are a parasite in.

Wow, just wow. You don't take what doesn't believe to you. What makes you deserve HIS FAMILY'S money more than him?!?!?!

You mean you just say I don't take what belongs to you and voilà, it is suddenly true. No, I take it because your claim to own it is false. You borrow what belongs to me, what you would never have without me and my family and I don't take it, it was always mine.

That's bordering on communism.

Oh boy, what thinkers we have today. You just have to say communism and the debate is over. Can I stick a badge on you that says moron and turn you into one? Were is the intellectual foundations of your case? I believe your ideas are based on nothing at all bur assumptions you have never thought about. It's not a good idea to have irrational belief, no?

You're the one saying we don't own anything that we "own." Like I said, that thought process borders on communism. You're the one believing in irrational beliefs.

Please try to think. I asked why his claim to property was more valid than mine. First you counter by calling me a communist, as if that meant anything, and now you call me irrational as if that now does. As I said, apparently your embedded belief in your own rectitude precludes you from seeing you need to make a case. You are just labeling me and calling me names, all logically meaningless operations.
 

ElFenix

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Mar 20, 2000
102,402
8,574
126
inheritance and gifts are part of the same tax regime and should always be taxed the same to prevent gaming the system. what is the difference between a testamentary gift made via will and a living gift made on the deathbed (or earlier)? if you try to make a distinction (as was the case in the past) people gamed the system to ensure the largest gift passes to the object of their bounty.

and jhnn does have a point about it not being taxed. appreciated assets receive a step-up in basis upon transfer, so that when they are (eventually) sold, no tax is ever paid on the portion that was stepped-up. you could simply get rid of that rule, rather than scraping the whole inheritance/gift tax system and rolling it into the standard income tax system.
 

3chordcharlie

Diamond Member
Mar 30, 2004
9,859
1
81
It would be awfully simple to just put inheritance under income - if you inherit cash, you pay income tax on it. If you inherit a business, or investment, you pay the income tax when you sell it. That way no one has to sell an inherited business to pay the taxes.

I don't pay tax on investment earnings until I either sell the investment, or 'crystalize' (sell and buy at the same time, because it happens to be a 'good' year to do so).

There's no need for an actual 'inheritance' tax.
 

Orsorum

Lifer
Dec 26, 2001
27,631
5
81
Gifts and inheritances are almost NEVER taxed to the recipient. The giftor or decedent bears the burden of taxation, and even then only above the amount of tax covered by the Uniform Transfer Tax Credit.

Assuming we're talking about the US.
 

ntdz

Diamond Member
Aug 5, 2004
6,989
0
0
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: JD50
Originally posted by: techs

Sorry, Walton family, but you have enough money for the next twenty generations even with the estate tax.

What gives you, or anyone else the right to decide how much money someone needs?
What gives you the right to keep me from taking your money? Why is your assumptions about what is right better than mine? If you want to waste your life accumulating what is worthless why complain if I take your money to fund art or feed the poor. If you want riches you deserve to keep go in the forest and collect grubs. It was my family that made it possible for you to be rich. My family created the culture you are a parasite in.

Wow, just wow. You don't take what doesn't believe to you. What makes you deserve HIS FAMILY'S money more than him?!?!?!

You mean you just say I don't take what belongs to you and voilà, it is suddenly true. No, I take it because your claim to own it is false. You borrow what belongs to me, what you would never have without me and my family and I don't take it, it was always mine.

That's bordering on communism.

Oh boy, what thinkers we have today. You just have to say communism and the debate is over. Can I stick a badge on you that says moron and turn you into one? Were is the intellectual foundations of your case? I believe your ideas are based on nothing at all bur assumptions you have never thought about. It's not a good idea to have irrational belief, no?

You're the one saying we don't own anything that we "own." Like I said, that thought process borders on communism. You're the one believing in irrational beliefs.

Please try to think. I asked why his claim to property was more valid than mine. First you counter by calling me a communist, as if that meant anything, and now you call me irrational as if that now does. As I said, apparently your embedded belief in your own rectitude precludes you from seeing you need to make a case. You are just labeling me and calling me names, all logically meaningless operations.

First of all, I never called you names. I said your beliefs border on communism, which I haven't heard you deny yet, btw. Second of all, do you understand the concept of a will? They are legally recognized and allow people to give their possessions to other people when they die. So clearly, you don't have a right to property that isn't yours.
 

miketheidiot

Lifer
Sep 3, 2004
11,060
1
0
Originally posted by: Genx87
Originally posted by: techs
Let's see. Eliminating the estate tax would give the Sam Walton family 34 BILLION dollars over the next ten years. And Bush wants to cut Medicaid and Medicare 28 Billion dollars over the next ten years.
Sorry, Walton family, but you have enough money for the next twenty generations even with the estate tax.
btw did you know that the Walton family has been pouring tens of millions of dollars into the elimination of the estate tax?

And? Did you know the trial lawyers of america pours millions into the democrat party to keep tort laws in check? btw lawsuits costs our economy about 243 billion last year. Lots of that went to lawyers. I bet trial lawyers as a group made more money than big oil.

I had an economics prof tell me that lawyers are to market economics like oil is to an engine.
 

miketheidiot

Lifer
Sep 3, 2004
11,060
1
0
Originally posted by: JD50
Originally posted by: magomago
While I haven't fully formed my opinion on this I still want to toss in my two cents...

Ideally, if we all work through our own merit - then 100% "death tax" shouldn't worry anyone.

I think the fear is maybe our kids - the people who are direct descendants of us biologically - may NOT be as successful as we were. However - if given that extra capital, they can get put "ahead" of the pack and be as successful as we were. Its clear none of us pray for the failure of the generation that comes after us.

With a death/inheritance tax - we are essentially saying that your kids are on their own~ that if you did not TRAIN them to have the skills to be successful, than they might be SOL and end up like some people that we tried VERY hard to avoid to be. And considering the world's population is growing is all the time - probability dictates that it is exponentially harder to succeed because we will be competing against many others who are also trying to succeed. But if you can give them money - if you can pass on inheritances, then clearly you give your children - your biological descendants - a HUGE advantage. It reminds me of when Rockefeller was asked what was the fastest way to make a million dollars, and he replied that you should have 940,000 dollars first.

Its MUCH easier to pass on money, than to pass on skills, ideas, and a process of thinking that will allow a person to succeed based on merit.

However at the same time I can see how we can be scared of this - because rather than eliminating inheritance, what is really done is simply moves all the inheritance to the government - this makes the government exponentially more powerful~ And with the way that governments have had more control over our lives as time moves on...its not something that I would want to rush towards

What do you guys think?

Personally, I think that its much more simple than that.

I made the money, I paid taxes on the money that I made, I saved money, I can do whatever I want with it. The government already got their cut when they took it out of my paycheck.

The inheiritance taxes things that were not taxes in your lifttime, such as capital gains that had not been realized
 

miketheidiot

Lifer
Sep 3, 2004
11,060
1
0
Originally posted by: JD50
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: JD50
Originally posted by: techs

Sorry, Walton family, but you have enough money for the next twenty generations even with the estate tax.

What gives you, or anyone else the right to decide how much money someone needs?

What gives you the right to keep me from taking your money? blah blah blah

My 9mm Glock 19

Seriously though, isn't that basically what our country was founded on, the right to keep what is ours?
like slaves?

and no that is not what this country was founded on, try again.
 

miketheidiot

Lifer
Sep 3, 2004
11,060
1
0
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: smack Down
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: smack Down
Originally posted by: Shivetya
Do you not believe that the money or item that comprises the gift was not already taxed? Just like the inheritance?


Both are double taxation.

My costumers have already been taxed on their income so why should I have to pay tax when they pay me for a services?

Because now you're the one earning the money.

And that is the reason that the inheritance tax is ok with me because now different people have the money.

It's different. Besides, the government will get it's money without the inheritance tax. They'll get it when the people spend it and whoever provides goods or services to them pays their income taxes.

I've got a scenario for you...suppose a small farmer somewhere in the midwest owns a farm and runs it with his family. The family doesn't make much money, and the farmer dies unexpectedly. Now, here comes the government trying to collect hundreds of thousands of dollars of taxes based on the value of the farm. The family obviously can't afford to pay this, and is forced to sell the farm. Is that a good thing?

talk about a situation that doesn't exist :roll: There are *very* few farmers that would qualify for the estate tax. *very* few.