Recently it's been learned that a prominent SB'er is living off of daddy while simultaneously saying things like:
10/31/2008 10:19:19 PM
daddy's boi?
10/31/2008 10:21:46 PM
Inherited money has sustained me through a period of fairly constant unemployment over the past year and a half or so. It also bought my car (used and cheap) and allowed me to participate in some educational programs I would not otherwise have had the chance to enjoy.I am also very much in favor of a higher estate tax.[self-justification](Now I'm going to dig myself into the awkward position of having to ask people to take me at my word on some things regarding what I'm about to say. This inheritance is a fairly recent thing and it's not enough to keep me cruising for much longer. The opinions on inheritance I am about to state were formed before I received or expected to receive the money. If I were another person on this board I would find that hard to believe given that what I'm about to say seems pretty self-serving given the circumstances, but it's the truth and you can take it or leave it.)[/self-justification]By "inherited wealth" I assume you mean wealth in the way most people tend to think of it -- a lot of money, enough to set you up pretty much for life or at least a few years of very extravagant living. In that case I agree with your sentiment and have done so vocally on this board for some time. Aristocracy is essentially the practice of heriditary power, and since money largely equates to power, large inheritances with no strings attached tend to fly in the face of American ideals of equality and meritocracy. It's for the same reason that I am rabidly opposed to the idea of "legacies" in universities.Then again, there's not many people who would raise the same concerns over a modest inheritance, something that might provide for a college education or future nest-egg but which won't sustain a reasonable standard of living for any length of time.I don't know how much money TKEshultz or TreeTwista10 have, or, for that matter, whether they even have it, so I won't comment on them specifically. I also realize that it's pretty goddamn hard to draw a line between "this much inheritance is OK" and "this much is getting pretty ridiculous, and would you please not land your private helicopter in my yard anymore because it scares the dogs."The common argument against the estate tax is, "So it's wrong for a man to want to leave something to his family?" And of course that's not the case. I would argue that it's wrong for a man to give his kids no motivation to study and work hard, but it's not the sort of thing I'd legislate. But legislatively speaking, I am willing to see inheritance as income. "But that's double-taxing the same income!" No it isn't, at least not any more than taxing a company's income and then taxing its employees' income. The dead person has no grounds for complaint because he's fucking dead. The live person has tenuous grounds for complaint, given that they're getting a lapful of free fucking money.Long story short: tax the shit out of it on a progressive scale like the one we use for income. Inherit a fuckton? Get taxed a fuckton. Inherit $300 and a nonfunctioning Yugo? Not so much.
10/31/2008 10:51:04 PM
10/31/2008 10:54:39 PM
tinyurl.com plz
10/31/2008 10:57:53 PM
To quote Dogbert:"There are two ways to get rich in America. 1: Steal, and 2: Inherit. Preferably you have your parents steal, and then you just inherit."
10/31/2008 11:27:21 PM
I call bullshit. The estate tax is bad because it damages economic efficiency. What I think would be much more fair would be an accumulated wealth tax. Set the rate ungodly low. But it should exist. For those already rich it will act as an income tax you cannot avoid just by retiring or offshoring your income. That increase in payment from the unproductive rich would be offset by a reduction in the income tax which would allow small and medium firms to grow faster and compete more vigorously. It would also tax Tony Soprano, which may be able to hide his income but would find it difficult to hide his house.
10/31/2008 11:59:58 PM
11/1/2008 12:20:10 AM
"The Sidbury Group"AHAHA, what a douchey name for a contracting company.But, seriously, is anybody surprised?Young people, especially college kids, often suffer financial hardship. It's not until they're older and distanced from that time in their lives that they starting douching it up. So when you meet a young person who is wholly unsympathetic to the plight of the poor, you can safely assume they're being provided for by another party.Unless they're like super amazing and "make it" really young. But Twista doesn't seem particularly bright or talented or creative or original so...
11/1/2008 12:34:43 AM
what do you expect. he's a customer support rep for some two-bit blackberry service provider. he obviously can't support himself. no wonder he lashes out at people who can cut it on their own.
11/1/2008 1:03:42 AM
Part of the problem with taxes like this is that because there's no clear line that we're willing to draw in the sand and say "here and no further" it means that the tax often hurts those close to the line, while having no effect on the people we're really targeting. For example, does anyone really think that anything other than a completely unreasonable and burdensome estate tax is going to affect Paris Hilton's inheritance? On the other hand, consider a family farmer, who's wealth is tied up in land rather than liquid cash. When he passes that on to his offspring, they either need to come up with the cash for the tax, or sell off part or most of the farm to pay for it.
11/1/2008 9:24:29 AM
11/1/2008 10:16:07 AM
I missed it, did TreeTwista ask Obama a question or something? Why the personal attack? You envious of his money too?BTW, the estate tax blows. Tax has already been paid on that money.
11/1/2008 10:39:00 AM
this thread reeks of sour grapes[Edited on November 1, 2008 at 11:31 AM. Reason : oops]
11/1/2008 11:18:44 AM
reeks?
11/1/2008 11:24:43 AM
this thread reeks of dads money
11/1/2008 12:11:50 PM
11/1/2008 12:12:48 PM
Most folks leech off of the parents to some extent, to use your wording. I doubt any of us earned a living at eight. Must this immediately and completely change at eighteen?
11/1/2008 12:16:45 PM
11/1/2008 1:25:59 PM
hey look at me I earned my money because my dad got me a job!
11/1/2008 1:44:42 PM
[Edited on November 1, 2008 at 2:01 PM. Reason : -]
11/1/2008 2:01:23 PM
my dad has been retired, somebody lock this stupid fucking thread and suspend Boone
11/1/2008 2:32:00 PM
Hypocrites cry so hard when they get exposed.
11/1/2008 2:44:03 PM
tell your boy Ch Dizzle he needs to do some fact checkingi've never inherited shit
11/1/2008 2:45:15 PM
you do not live in a vacuum.
11/1/2008 2:54:11 PM
surprised
11/1/2008 5:28:57 PM
fantastic personal attack, Boone. keep up the good work seriously, though, the estate tax is bullshit. Why should I work half my life to give the government something that should have gone to my kids? That is absolute and utter bullshit. You've already taxed my income, you've already taxed my savings for retirement. At least let me pass on to my kids what you didn't fucking steal from me already and leave me the hell alone.What's that? you are mad that someone else might get some money "tax free?" Boo-fucking-hoo. Guess what, when that person SPENDS it, it'll get taxed. Quit stealing what others have worked hard for
11/1/2008 5:50:15 PM
the people inheriting someone else's money worked hard for it?
11/1/2008 6:37:19 PM
11/1/2008 6:40:57 PM
good answer
11/1/2008 6:41:49 PM
remind where I mentioned that those who inherit money "earned it." Never did. thus, the
11/1/2008 6:44:15 PM
11/1/2008 6:47:16 PM
it's pretty fucking obvious from THE REST OF THE POST that I am talking about the hard work of the deceased, fucktard. thanks for a brilliant show of reading comprehension, though]
11/1/2008 6:49:43 PM
but he's deadand the money is no longer his?how is that stealing from him?
11/1/2008 6:51:02 PM
well shit, why don't we just take everything, then?
11/1/2008 6:51:39 PM
11/1/2008 6:52:39 PM
oh shit, a racism argument! good work! If a guy can impose the financial responsibility on himself in order to live off of the capital gains, then good for him! But you know that won't happen enough to matter. In the cases where it could reasonably happen, the person gaining the wealth is so used to a lavish lifestyle that he won't be able to do that. Do you really think Paris Hilton will live off of the interest on what she inherits?Furthermore, an inheritance tax would hurt blacks far more than it hurts whites, especially due to the fact that blacks don't have the accumulated wealth of whites. Those today who do manage to accumulate some wealth will have that money stolen from them, leaving them unable to pass it along to their children. More than likely, though, they will have a business stolen from them in the manner LoneSnark has already mentioned, thus perpetuating the cycle against which you so viciously rant.]
11/1/2008 7:05:37 PM
Estate tax is retarded.Not quite as much as TreeTwista claiming to be a hardworking blue color man though.
11/1/2008 7:06:03 PM
^^ You realize that your argument is not based on reality, instead you're depending on a few outside cases?What do you think the net effect on inheritances on society is? Do you think it has no effect?
11/1/2008 7:08:21 PM
you do realize that almost all liberal arguments are based on outside cases, right?I accept that wealth can accumulate. But, the effect of such a dastardly estate tax will hit blacks much harder than it will whites when said groups try to accumulate new wealth. that was my point[Edited on November 1, 2008 at 7:12 PM. Reason : ]
11/1/2008 7:11:09 PM
okay...?do you realize all conservative arguments are based off their own delusions?
11/1/2008 7:12:23 PM
...
11/1/2008 7:13:21 PM
11/1/2008 7:15:40 PM
11/1/2008 7:24:09 PM
even if it is progressive, forcing someone to have a firesale on a successful business in order to pay a ludicrous tax will still destroy the wealth that was accumulated. And, last time I checked, there aren't all that many ludicrously rich black people out there. So, my point stands.
11/1/2008 7:26:51 PM
11/1/2008 7:31:15 PM
Yes AaronborroBecause a tax established nearly a century ago has truly prevented Americans from becoming wealthy. In fact, one can say "because of the estate tax, American's today aren't an order of magnitude richer then American's a century ago."But you actually can't, because American's are an order of magnitude richer. So using traditional TSB conservative linear thinking, I say that American's are richer because of the estate tax.[Edited on November 1, 2008 at 7:39 PM. Reason : .<.]
11/1/2008 7:39:08 PM
give me a break. It's easy to have a business that on paper is worth in excess of several million dollars. Few businesses at that size, though, have the monetary assets to pay off 16% of their value. You know this^ if only the tax were the only thing that affected the accumulation of wealth Tell me, though, since its inception, how many JP Morgans or Rothschilds have been created from absolutely nothing? I can't think of very many. The few that existed were absolute flukes, such as Gates. The net effect of the estate tax is to preserve the status of the super-wealthy, and that's mainly why they instituted it in the first place. it's why we have such high tax-rates in the first place. The truly wealthy can avoid the tax, and the aspiring-to-be-wealthy cannot.]
11/1/2008 7:39:23 PM
11/1/2008 7:43:55 PM
11/1/2008 7:45:11 PM