So you're suggesting that on April 15th the government sees how much you have-as opposed to how much you made that year-and take a percentage of that? Interesting...The Duchess of Zeon wrote:Furthermore, that is not due to "loopholes" -- but due to the simple fact that estates are, obviously, not taxed by an income tax! There is nothing equitable about a progressive income tax, nothing at all--some people have to pay bigger percentages than other, which is inherent unfair, while the real disparity of wealth is totally ignored.The Duchess of Zeon wrote:
A tax on income is not a tax on wealth, Mark--it's a tax on income. You can easily have tremendous wealth that is not coming in as income, and is thus not taxed by an income tax. In fact, I could be the richest person in the U.S., and, theoretically, receive money back from the IRS under the current system under the right conditions!
Also, I feel I must point out that although estates are not affected by income tax, they were affected by it before they BECAME estates.[/i]