wifeisafurd said:
OaktownBear said:
wifeisafurd said:
dajo9 said:
wifeisafurd said:
dajo9 said:
calbear93 said:
Income and education do not make you elitist. Thinking that the regular folks are ignorant and need to be led like little children is elitist. Yeah, I would take that bet that most working folks would know the difference between capital gain and ordinary income. Most regular folks file tax returns and own homes.
Very few folks file any kind of sizeable capital gain on any kind of regular basis. I would love to see this polled and I would bet money you are wrong on what the average American knows about ordinary income vs. capital gain tax treatment.
Let us test that theory about all the masses beings so dumb:
Per a April 17, 2017 NPR study (with excerpts copied):
1)Americans underestimate the share of Americans who don't pay federal income taxes
Given four choices of how many Americans pay zero or negative federal income taxes (11, 27, 45, or 63 percent), fully 70 percent of poll respondents chose the options under the correct answer, which was 45 percent. Some of these people simply have no taxable income, and others get money back as a result of refundable tax credits like the Earned Income Tax Credit. (Of course, these people might pay other taxes, like payroll taxes, as well as whatever sales and property taxes their states impose.)
2) Americans didn't appreciate that for the highest earners, the percent of federal income taxes they pay now is significantly higher than it was in 1980. How does that work? As the Tax Policy Center's Roberton Williams explained to NPR, the share of income going to the rich has climbed in a big way over the last few decades. So how Americans think about this could affect what they think should happen to the top tax rates on the richest. In 1980, the top 10 percent brought in 32 percent of all adjusted gross income, according to the Tax Foundation. In 2013, it was 46 percent. For example, many Americans also believe taxes should be raised on the richest. In contrast, a sizable majority said their taxes should be reduced, including those in the highest income tax brackets.
3) Americans also appear to have strong views on how people earn their money. We asked people to what degree they agreed with this statement: "The tax rate on income from work should be lower than the tax rate on income from wealth.
75 percent said they did, including 77 percent of Democrats, 71 percent of Republicans and 84 percent of independents. This is another result that might make the richest Americans squirm. The polling showed taxpayers understood the rich tend to earn their income in a different way from most other Americans. Besides paychecks, many make money from capital gains income they get from selling investments like stocks. Most of those capital gains are taxed at a rate far below that top income tax rate. (People at any income level of course can have those kinds of investments, but capital gains are overwhelmingly concentrated at the top of the income spectrum.)
4) Americans overestimate how important income taxes are to government revenue. About half of the poll's respondents (with very little variance by party) said they believe 75 percent of the federal government's revenue comes from income taxes. In reality, it's just under half. Of all the taxes Americans pay, income tax probably requires the most thought. After all, payroll tax comes automatically out of each paycheck. Sales tax is imposed at the cash register. And so on. So maybe it makes sense that Americans think all that work they put into filling out their forms ends up doing the lion's share of funding the government.
5)On tax policy, views aren't always all that partisan. Our poll, nearly half of Democrats 45 percent agreed with the proposition that "federal income taxes should be cut for all income levels." Likewise, Republicans the party that has spoken of "makers" and "takers" were split roughly evenly on the idea that tax cuts for the wealthy lead to economic growth. (Democrats and independents tended to disagree slightly more that is, to say that tax cuts for the wealthy do not lead to that growth.)These are only two examples, but they suggest that partisan messaging in Washington on some specific issues doesn't necessarily filter down to Americans.
6)Americans agree: Taxes are too complicated (but that's no reason to cheat). My comment: that won't change with this legislation.
Hopefully, you didn't bet much.
Nothing in that poll shows me to be wrong. The author explaining differences between capital gains and ordinary income tax treatment doesn't say anything about what the average American knows about it.
Yes, if you ignore wording "The polling showed taxpayers understood the rich tend to earn their income in a different way from most other Americans. Besides paychecks, many make money from capital gains income they get from selling investments like stocks."
According to the IRS, 53.9% of those stupid masses have a taxable gain or loss each year. Guess their stupid to know what is on their tax return. Elite on dude.
Your last sentence is completely wrong. 53.9% of those earning $200K-$1M have a taxable gain. To the contrary "Fewer than one in seven individual taxpayers report taxable capital gains in any year. In 2006 just 13.4 million out of 138.3 million taxpayers reported taxable net gains (net long-term gains in excess of net short-term capital losses and capital gains distributions, which are taxed at favorable capital gains rates)
Quite honestly, I would argue it is pretty out of touch (one might say elitist) to think that over half of Americans have taxable capital gains each year.
yup, I misread the number. Just so we know that everyone can make a mistake, you said the following:
"I'm sorry, but you are a sucker. Rich people do not ever pay more, least of all with this proposal. First of all, they don't give a damn about a couple percentage points on the upper tax bracket because most of their income is taxed at the much lower capital gains rate." Set forth below are the average tax rates by income levels.
How Much Do People Pay in Taxes? https://taxfoundation.org/how-much-do-people-pay-taxes/
Guess we are both elitist.
This reminds me of a NYT article that I read about why people excuse the Patriots' cheating past. I see so much of that in how we discuss politics.
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/02/05/sports/football/new-england-patriots-super-bowl-cheating.htmlThere was a funny video I watched where certain students, when asked to provide their opinion on the tax reform proposed by the Republicans, expressed how it was unfair, benefits the rich executives, corporations, etc. When told of specific proposals but presented it as something Bernie Sanders proposed, they praised how progressive the ideas were.
When I read things like "capital gains every year" as if you need to have capital gains every year and not just one year to understand what it is, I just shake my head. When I read that stock options are not just for the rich (i.e., most people have it and elimination of deferral of taxes on the options beyond vesting impacts unfairly the working stiff), but those same workers who get and understand options don't understand the concept of capital gain, I have to shake my head. If Sanders had proposed limiting deductions for annual compensation in excess of a million dollars to covered persons (e.g., top paid executives), most liberals would praise it. If Bernie had said it is not fair for executives to defer payment of taxes and get basically an interest free loan, most liberals would praise it. But who proposes an idea is infinitely more important than what is proposed. I hate many of the components of the tax proposals (while recognizing the absolute need for a reduction in corporate tax rate without increasing the deficit). However, my point in my earlier posts was to have people defend why they hate certain proposals. What I got was they hate the proposals because they hate rich people who were not like them but liked the rich people who were like them. But ultimately, I suspect they hate it because they hate who was proposing the reforms (i.e., the clan opposite their clan).
And it is not a liberal thing or a conservative thing. It is the same reason why sane people would excuse Trump for his behavior when they would discipline their own kids for the same behavior.
You can debate most things, but when it comes to sports, politics, etc. where you have claimed your identity to your position, logic has no role in the discussions because no one will think logically when their identity is threatened. We will twist points, twist our brains, twist our words, to keep our sense of identity secured. That is why political discussions are so fun and so stupid at the same time and so appropriate for a sports forum. No one will ever change their mind on politics or sports.