Probably not how it works

Source: https://oslo.town/@luftvaffel/115327708667457159

“tax the rich” is a scam?

The wealth tax typically proposed by these campaigns (like 2 or 3%) would raise money but it would not stop billionaires from getting richer. (That’s why even billionaires advocate for it.)

The finish line should not be “raise money to fund public programs.”

The finish line should be “tax wealth billionaires out of existence.”

"tax the rich" is a scam?

YouTube
There literally should just be a cap. Make it something ridiculous like “billionaires are not allowed to exist, so everything you earn past $999,999,999.99 is public property” and I don’t see any way how someone could disagree with this. That is more than enough money to buy a yacht for your yacht.

I’ve always liked the idea of the cap being an immediate loss of any legal property protection.

This would not be through any process, they simply instantly legally cease to have any property rights anytime they cannot prove their net worth is below the limit.

Any member of the public can reclaim any piexe of their ex-property, until the not-quite-billiomaire gets a court ruling confirming their not-a-billionaire status.

Then the not-yet-billionaires can figure out how to constantly stay comfortably below the limit.

Or…they can file an updated wealth disclosure every time they attempt to keep anyone from walking away with any piece of their former property.

If they want to avoid the inconvenience of their yachts, cars, pets, plants, fences, lamps, and television sets being repossessed, they can negotiate with their employees unions for collective ownership in good faith, instead.

It’ll be fun to see how many of them are too stupid to take a good deal, and lose their stupid toys.

Oh, so we put the bar at proving a negative? Easy peasy.
Just reinstate 1950s top marginal rates. Then have a drink after a job well done.

Despite the headline tax rate being over 90% in the 1950s, the federal government collects about 3 times more real revenue per person today (with a top rate of 37%) than it did then.

The only reason it was ever that high is because the tax code at that time was so full of loopholes/deductions/etc. (that are closed today) that you could have that be the rate with practically no one actually paying it.

What I’m trying to say is, don’t hold your breath for that to ever return in present day.

That quote and image combo don’t seem directly back up your justification.

And I’m not holding my breath. Our country is now run by those same rich people.

The finish line should not be “raise money to fund public programs.”

The finish line should be “billionaires don’t exist.”

Financially speaking, helping the poor and hurting the rich are not the same thing, and it’s honestly concerning when I see people prioritize the latter over the former. Eradicating poverty matters infinitely more than keeping people’s net worth (which as a reminder, is just a guessed (there is no billionaire whose net worth is precisely known), hypothetical, fluctuating price tag on the stuff they own, should they decide to sell it) under some arbitrary maximum.

And that’s without even mentioning how much tax revenue is wasted on things that don’t actually serve the population at large. What good is an extra $X billion in tax revenue if it’s all pissed away anyway? As one example, the US government spends more per capita on healthcare than any other country, and yet we’re far from #1 in most healthcare categories. How does that make sense? We’re already not getting what we’re paying for, fixing things like that is more important than simply increasing the amount of money going down the same wasteful hole, I think.

I disagree.

Billionaires have outsize influence. They buy politicians to set public policies that affect the working class and divert billions of our dollars into their pockets.

If you put all of their money on a pit and set it on fire, it would have a greater impact than taxing them 2% and spending all of it on public programs, because they would no longer be able to do harm on a billionaire scale.

The people could heal.

We’d still have other beasts to deal with, but the existence of billionaires is a cap on the lives of the working class.

the existence of billionaires is a cap on the lives of the working class.

Billionaires per capita in the US increased by about 7x over the past 100 years, while the percentage of the population living in poverty was 4-6x higher 100 years ago, compared to what it is today.

The correlation is in literally the opposite direction as what you claim. How do you reconcile these facts with your assertion?

  • Correlation is not causation.

  • Even if I had asserted that billionaires cap the lives of the working class to the poverty line (which I didn’t), the poverty line is an outdated, unserious measure of how Americans are doing.

    More about the FPL

    My assertion is that billionaires are a cap on the lives of the working class, not that the cap is set at the federal poverty line. But even if I had, the poverty line itself is an outdated measure and should not be trusted as a simple measure of how the working class is doing. I can’t see your links (imgur says their servers are overloaded), but I’ll use US figures for the sake of argument. > The [federal poverty line is] derived from the official poverty thresholds, which were originally developed in the 1960s based on the cost of a minimum food diet multiplied by three — reflecting the “fact” [quotations mine] that food makes up about one-third of a typical family’s budget. (What is the federal poverty level?) Look up “average American monthly expenses”, and you’ll see that food consistently accounts for less than 15%. The FPL is outdated and has been for decades. There’s controversy about the right way to measure poverty, but no one serious on either side of the argument points at “the percentage of the population living in poverty” and calls it a day.

  • The majority of Americans support progressive policies. But whether or not a policy is passed depends on whether or not it has the support of the billionaire class.

    ::: spoiler More on the popularity of progressive policies and the impact of wealth on policy change Over half of Americans say they lack the cash to cover a $1,000 unexpected emergency expense. Increased earnings — not lower spending — is main driver for boosting emergency funds. The most common cause of emergency expenses in the United States is a medical emergency. Regardless of whether or not they meet a 1960’s definition of poverty, Americans are not, by and large, financially well.

    The majority of Americans support progressive programs that address the causes of this precarity: paid maternity leave, childcare support, boosting the minimum wage, free college, and Medicare for All.

    But what we want doesn’t get passed.

    When the preferences of economic elites and the stands of organized interest groups are controlled for, the preferences of the average American appear to have only a minuscule, near-zero, statistically non-significant impact upon public policy. … When a majority of citizens disagrees with economic elites and/or with organized interests, they generally lose. Moreover, because of the strong status quo bias built into the U.S. political system, even when fairly large majorities of Americans favor policy change, they generally do not get it.

    Working class Americans (and not just those at or below the federal poverty line) support policy changes that would materially improve their lives. When those policies conflict with the interests of billionaires, the billionaires stop them from passing.

    In other words, they put a cap on it.

  • Irrelevant, as I never claimed such. I pointed out the lack of correlation. Not all correlation is causally linked, but all causally linked things are also necessarily correlated. But if two things are not correlated, then they can’t be causally linked, either (at least not to a statistically-significant degree that isn’t wiped out by other factors), and that’s what I pointed out.
  • So, by which financial measure would you say that working-class Americans in 1925 are doing better than they are in 2025, then? There must be at least one, if your assertion is correct.
  • Then that should make the question above, all the easier to answer.
  • Working class Americans (and not just those at or below the federal poverty line) support policy changes that would materially improve their lives. When those policies conflict with the interests of billionaires, the billionaires stop them from passing.

    Are you seriously suggesting that legislation that is detrimental to billionaires never becomes law?

    The Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, among other things, imposed an excise tax on stock buybacks, something that will literally never impact anyone who isn’t significantly wealthy, and that passed. A year before, the Corporate Transparency Act passed, and basically struck the death knell for shell company schemes, (not a whole lot of that happening among the working class, lol) by requiring “Beneficial Owners” to be reported to FinCEN, so they know who the actual human beings who own them are. Billionaires lost the ability to hide assets and real estate within anonymous LLCs.

    It’s ridiculous to think that billionaires are all just smiting any and all legislation that would negatively impact them at will. You are clearly deep in some echo chambers.

    A year before, the Corporate Transparency Act passed, and basically struck the death knell for shell company schemes… by requiring “Beneficial Owners” to be reported to FinCEN, so they know who the actual human beings who own them are. Billionaires lost the ability to hide assets and real estate within anonymous LLCs.

    You mean the one that Trump and Musk (both billionaires, btw) killed the enforcement of after a tweet? Doesn’t sound like the billionaires lost the ability to hide anything.

    The Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, among other things, imposed an excise tax on stock buybacks, something that will literally never impact anyone who isn’t significantly wealthy, and that passed.

    Are you arguing that a 1% excise tax limited to stock buybacks (even lower than the 2 and 3% we were initially discussing) in any way counters the well-documented fact that billionaires and corporations have hundreds of ways to avoid paying taxes.

    Part of the IRA (2022) was budget for hiring more tax auditors. Corporations underpay every chance they get and won’t pay a penny more until an auditor can prove the difference. Under Trump, the IRS has shrunk. They’ve had to repeatedly provide relief and extended relief from penalties due to underpayment.

    The headline of “we passed a law that says they’ll pay” doesn’t match the reality of “but not this year because they say it’s too complicated, we don’t have enough staff to audit them, and they have more accountants than we have people who specialize in legally hiding their assets and cooking the numbers.”

    For every legal loophole that is closed, the ultra-wealthy find and create two more.

    Every program to serve the needs of the working class is pushed back with “how are you going to pay for it?” With the money that billionaires and corporations should be paying, but aren’t.

    The existence of billionaires is a cap on the lives of the working class.

    Trump Calls Beneficial Ownership Reporting a 'Disaster' for Small Businesses as Treasury Kills Enforcement

    Turns out procrastination worked out after all for the millions of businesses who held off on submitting their beneficial ownership reports.

    Inc

    You mean the same Beneficial Ownership Information (BOI) that Trump and Musk killed the enforcement of after a tweet? (Both billionaires, btw.)

    Goalpost move, you said billionaires prevent those laws from passing. They passed. You lied. The end.

    Are you arguing that a 1% excise tax limited to stock buybacks (even lower than the 2 and 3% I already argued won’t change the status quo) in any way counters [anything]?

    Nope. A new tax that applies only to the wealthiest demographic successfully passing is just another refutation of your assertion that billionaires prevent legislation that affects them negatively from passing, and that’s the only reason I mentioned it. More desperate goalpost moves.

    For every legal loophole that is closed

    So you admit they do get closed. I thought billionaires never let detrimental legislation pass?

    It would be convenient for you, if I were to suggest that, or any other argument you try to put in my mouth.

    Behold, your words, verbatim:

    When those policies conflict with the interests of billionaires, the billionaires stop them from passing.

    For anyone who’s read this far, I hope you got something useful from it.

    Hopefully you’ve seen enough evidence that billionaires and corporations consistently avoid paying the taxes they owe, and that counterclaims (like the assertion that the BOI ended their ability to hide their assets) often fall apart when you look into what’s actually happening.

    With the last response above, it has become clear that damnedfurry isn’t interested in good faith argument, but in childishly scoring points by intentionally misinterpreting my words.

    I’m done with damnedfurry, and I’ll block them if their comments further devolve into childish sneers or personal attacks.

    The correlation is in literally the opposite direction as what you claim. How do you reconcile these facts with your assertion?

    Its very easy to make an incorrect correlation like this when you are using faulty data like the FPL.

    All it takes two seconds to find out the poverty line in the US is literally just 3 times the monthly minimum speed for food for one person. That doesnt factor in the extreme inflation on housing, medical, student debt, utilities, phone plan costs, taxes, etc. While food prices are inflated they are not nearly as inflated as the other areas critical to survival which are not calculated for the reporting of offical poverty figures. Once you actually account for all of this and look at what percentage of the population fails to meet basic needs you get to a more staggering 43% of the US living in poverty and even thats a rough estimate due to missing data points that might make it higher.

    brookings.edu/…/how-many-are-in-need-in-the-us-th….

    How many are in need in the US? The poverty rate is the tip of the iceberg.

    For a shockingly high proportion of families, total family resources do not cover the expenses for their basic necessities.

    Brookings

    Its very easy to make an incorrect correlation

    I think you don’t understand what “correlation” means. The correlation is clearly and inarguably what I showed it to be: billionaires per capita went up as poverty went down. That’s a plain fact.

    43% of the US living in poverty

    Even if I just take this at face value, what is that compared to the 40-60% I cited? It still does nothing to support the point that billionaires are ‘holding the working class down’ to any statistically-significant degree. If we take the bottom of the range of the estimate I got, 40%, and took your figure as-is, 43%, then a 7x increase in billionaires per capita increased poverty by 3%, which is almost certainly within the margin of error of any measure of nationwide poverty—effectively no difference.

    That doesn’t do much of anything to support the assertion that billionaires are ‘capping the lives of the working class’, when there being seven times more of them makes no statistically-significant difference in the poverty rate.

    Not to mention that 1925 is in the midst of the roaring twenties, before the Great Depression, and your article was written a few years after a global pandemic that wreaked havoc on the world’s economy—two facts that both skew things in favor of your claim.

    Yeah I was gonna say, that persons picture of two percentages wasn’t very convincing.

    Don’t let perfect be the enemy of good, don’t let good be the enemy of okay, and don’t let okay be the enemy of “not as bad as it could be”

    Because it’s starting to get as bad as it can be.

    Agreed.

    Pass what you can pass.

    But don’t let that be the finish line.

    Support everything that is an improvement.
    How about putting a cap onto inheritance?
    Where’s the beans?
    Pretty much how it works.
    Pst. Hey kid wanna try some Linux distros!?
    I’ve got some real nice Gentoo.  You’ll be compiling for days.
    Jeez, you can’t just go straight for the hard stuff like that! You gotta ease into it with some Bazzite or somethin’ first.
    Arch or nothing.

    “Also, I run Arch now, BTW. But I might try Gentoo.”

    “…I’ve lost him.”

    Fuck cars
    “Mom, I don’t know what to do! My sweet baby boy just used the Internet for mere hours, and now he’s talking about having intercourse with motor vehicles!”
    Abolish the commodity form
    Where’s the gay flag? The programming socks? The kitty ears? Smdh
    They are united in one symbol: Tux the penguin
    Way she goes, lady. Way she goes.

    is that kid even wearing any beans?

    it’s like the artist wasn’t even trying to capture our essence.

    I also don’t see Taylor Swift’s jet… wearing jeans.

    Oh, nvm.

    My cousin smoked a Fedi once and now he’s an addict. One time he even sold his clothes for a hit of beans
    False. The last frame should have said “I have ADHD” cause I feel that shit in my bones.
    Half of these don’t apply to me. I’m not necessarily anti AI, pro Palestine, or a leftist. While the fediverse is ultimately dominated by specific groups, it’s still more diverse than we give it credit for.
    Here, have an upvote, I have a more leftist mindset but I’m here to exchange info and memes, rather than fight over philosophical differences.
    One of the reasons I stopped using Reddit was because the bots there lacked this type nuance find in real people
    Personally I am here to fight over philosophical differences, but memes let me rest and I thank you for it.

    Ok fuck you then, Heidegger.

    /J/k

    <3

    Aww, they’re all good though.
    And the constant politics is exhausting and difficult to squelch.
    That’s just called living in the world
    No, it’s really not. It’s actually inappropriate in polite society to talk about politics outside of certain contexts. Here on lemmy, folks will use every excuse to shoehorn US politics into every thread and every post. It sucks, it’s like there’s nowhere to go anymore online without politics folks throwing in their two cents. I spend more time doing irl activities just to get away from it which is a shame because I grew up on BBSs and the internet and I really like communicating with people this way. Just not about that.
    Everything is politics. The decision to not talk about politics is also politics

    Everything is politics

    Blocked.

    block me too twat, make a piefed account if you want to live in a little rainbow world

    unlimited genocide on the west

    This too is politics
    We aren’t all Americans though.