First off I think it's important to establish "WHAT IS RICH". IMO rich is not having income like a NBA players 17M a year becasue it's fully taxable as income so sorry no real breaks for him. Yes he's very wealthy but not rich. Rich is the guy who has his money though investments and/or inheritance and watches that money grow though other investments. He has a phalyx of accountants to find the loop-holes in the tax law and work them so his profits are not taxed like us "income" workers and investors. The middle and upper middle class do pay most of the taxes and thats a sad state. But not as sad as the super rich paying little to nothing...
Here is a REAL example how they escape paying what we do.
K.C. STAR, 4/18/97. "More rich pay no tax, IRS says";
"Many receive exempt interest from municipal bonds, records show" "Nearly 2,400 of the Americans with the highest incomes paid no federal income taxes in 1993, up from just 85 individuals and couples in 1977, the latest available information from the Internal Revenue Service shows. While the number of Americans who make $200,000 or more grew more than 15-fold from 1977 to 1993, the number of people in that income category who paid no income taxes grew 28-fold, or nearly twice as fast, according to a quarterly statistical bulletin issued by the IRS. The report also shows that 18,000 Americans with high incomes paid less than 5 percent of their income in taxes. And it cast doubt on the effectiveness of the Alternative Minimum Tax, which was designed to ensure that the wealthy paid at least some income taxes.
"Tax lawyers and other tax experts said on Thursday that the number of Americans with incomes of more than $300,000 who pay little or no income taxes had certainly grown since 1993. - On one-fourth of the returns, a combination of interest deductions and taxes paid to states and local governments was the most frequent reason for eliminating federal income taxes, the information shows. Income taxes paid to foreign governments, which generally are offset dollar for dollar against U.S. income taxes, were the primary reason no taxes were due in about one-fifth of the cases. - Release of the latest IRS Statistics of Income Bulletin follows by days the posting on the Internet of IRS information showing that in the last decade the IRS has significantly reduced its audits on the highest-income Americans while increasing audits of the poorest. - The number of high-income Americans who pay little or no taxes will continue to rise, the experts said, in part because in 1993 Congress gave a tax break to landlords, allowing unlimited deductions for depreciation and other accounting losses."