I misread the article. They still arent taxing estates worth less than 3.5 million.
12/3/2009 6:25:01 PM
12/3/2009 6:32:13 PM
12/3/2009 6:40:25 PM
12/3/2009 7:00:26 PM
I always thought the estate tax was bullshit. Why not just tax the transfer of wealth to a trust fund baby as any other "capital gains".
12/3/2009 7:04:30 PM
12/3/2009 7:05:19 PM
In my opinion if i save all my life to give my kids a better life its bullshit for the government "punish" my responsible behavior by taking a big chunk out my estate at death. Is the capital gains my children will pay, the sales tax from purchases they make, and/or property taxes not be enough???
12/3/2009 7:11:59 PM
^not in the socialist republic of america.
12/3/2009 7:15:33 PM
12/3/2009 7:23:18 PM
12/3/2009 7:26:07 PM
We routinely tax money when it's transferred. When your employer transfers it to you, it's taxed. When you transfer it to the guy behind the cash register at a store, it's taxed. I don't understand why anybody is up in arms about this particular variation on the theme. It's especially confusing given that nobody here has any damn $3.5 million. And I'm downright flabbergasted that people are trying to sell a woe-is-me story about a kid whose dad died with $10 million "only" being able to get $5 million. I mean, I get it that a man should be entitled to the fruits of his labor and all, but virtually everybody here (except maybe Megaloman, who with any luck is in a padded room wearing a Hannibal Lecter-style mask) is OK with paying some taxes. Clearly your devotion to the ideal isn't perfect. So why you freak out over estate taxes is, I admit, beyond me.
12/3/2009 7:42:50 PM
^ The problem is, this is treated as a special tax. It isn't taxed like income, or capital gains, and there's also the fact that since most of an estate is usually tied up in investments or property, these things will continue to be taxed just by staying right where they are.The argument of stopping trust fund babies also might be more convincing if the vast majority of wealth didn't only lasts 3 generations and if anyone actually had a right to care whether you live off investments or busting you ass. The argument that this encourages investing might hold water except for the fact that it also encourages wealth hiding, and discourages keeping money in investments since you have to sell those investments off to pay the tax.Never mind that the estate tax is detrimental to a lot of things that could be a public good. Say for example, instead of using the government to bully people into giving up their land, a rich environmentalist decided instead to buy up a bunch of habitat to preserve it. When he dies, his kids, unless they have a lot of their own money will likely have to sell off parts of that land just to be able to keep some of it.Ideally, if they wanted to tax inheritance, then they should tax it as income or capital gains. Even better, they should only tax the money and real property should go untaxed since it's somewhat difficult to sell 30% of your house and they'll be collecting property taxes on that anyway.
12/3/2009 7:59:16 PM
12/3/2009 8:03:48 PM
12/3/2009 8:19:49 PM
12/3/2009 8:31:07 PM
12/3/2009 8:58:42 PM
12/3/2009 9:41:03 PM
12/3/2009 9:43:49 PM
^^^So, if I owned a farm and I allowed it to lay fallow, I should be charged with manslaughter for the death of anyone who died from starvation?
12/3/2009 9:53:05 PM
I can't believe some of the views posted in this thread....kind of scary
12/3/2009 10:00:53 PM
Nah, what's scary is that the President and Congress hold a lot of the same views.
12/3/2009 10:17:05 PM
^ Was that ok with Bush and 'pubs were in control of the WH and Congress? Just to clarify why you said that.
12/3/2009 10:18:11 PM
I don't think Bush and the GOP held the views we've been talking about. You wouldn't hear Bush or Republicans advocating redistribution of wealth on a massive scale, even if their government spending through military or other expenditures resulted in budget deficits. On the other hand, congressional Democrats show support for that kind of thing on a daily basis.[Edited on December 3, 2009 at 10:27 PM. Reason : ]
12/3/2009 10:25:59 PM
12/3/2009 10:28:28 PM
12/3/2009 11:06:17 PM
Why is it fair that the government can come and take a good portion of your paycheck just because you worked? Why is it fair that the government can come and take another portion of your money just because you own land/a car? Why is the situation of your grandparents any different?The fact is that in either case, when they die their heirs receive a bunch of land, and in the first case they receive a bunch of stock. Maybe it's less than what the grandparents had, but it's a damn sight more than what the inheritors had.
12/3/2009 11:21:22 PM
Boo hoo I am not getting as much free stuff as I could be getting
12/3/2009 11:25:23 PM
12/3/2009 11:26:40 PM
people talking about having to sell houses to pay taxes are forgetting that you keep the first 3.5 million. taxes aren't going to be more than that unless its like 300million worth of houses.
12/3/2009 11:52:27 PM
12/3/2009 11:53:52 PM
12/4/2009 12:35:14 AM
12/4/2009 12:40:20 AM
12/4/2009 3:53:20 AM
GrumpyGOP, your point seems to be that all taxes involve the government taking something that doesn't belong to them, and I agree. It's just that the estate tax seems especially wrong, because you'd actually get taxed less if sold the property the day before you died than if you just suddenly died and were subject to the estate tax. It's the whole "additional tax" for dying that seems absurd.
12/4/2009 8:41:21 AM
quote]your same people don't support a federal education system where everyone gets the same good education[/quote]DOES NOT COMPUTE. ERROR. MALFUNCTION.A good education and federal education system are not mutually inclusive. If anything they are exclusive of one another. Each additionallayer of government is exponentially more money not spend on children but bureaucracy.The quote you are replying to is correct though except unfortuneatly some CHOOSE not to partake in such education program b.cdoing so is "acting white," they have poor parenting, or just are not smart enough to understand the consequences of nottaking advantage of the opportunities given to them.
12/4/2009 9:17:57 AM
12/4/2009 9:31:42 AM
This wealth "gain" is already taxed as a capital gains tax.
12/4/2009 9:43:57 AM
You only pay capital gains if you sell the property you inherited, and only if you're selling it above what was paid for them originally. You're being taxed on the increase-in-value of the property.[Edited on December 4, 2009 at 10:22 AM. Reason : And only if the deceased didn't pay capital gains]
12/4/2009 10:01:57 AM
Maybe this has been addressed, but I wonder about one thing. On the one hand we are talking about taxing (in the future) a million dollar estate. Then you people are bitching and moaning about trust fund babies. Does anyone here really think that a million dollar estate is anywhere even remotely close to the realm of estates that sustain those oh so hated trust fund babies? One million dollar estates aren't shit these days.
12/4/2009 10:22:53 AM
It's 3.5 million before estate tax, and then you only pay estate on the amount OVER 3.5 million. Thus you'd have to be inheriting upwards of $400 million to be truly taxed 45% of the total inheritance.And yes, 3.5 million is a lot of money TODAY.
12/4/2009 10:37:08 AM
12/4/2009 11:24:02 AM
I bet a lot more people would be up in arms about this if there were no "limit" and anything in an estate counted, rather than taxing the amount above some arbitrary number.But, as with anything else, most people will ignore it until it directly affects them.[Edited on December 4, 2009 at 11:46 AM. Reason : ]
12/4/2009 11:45:26 AM
^Wait. All sizes of estates would be eligible? My parents aren't collectors, their houses are falling apart, and they actively plan to die broke. So...what do you mean? Like the government would come in to appraise our family trinkets and force me to pay an estate tax on shit like the Christmas stockings that my mother sewed?Well, you're right, I'd have a serious problem with that since it would be a massive waste of everybody's time and money.[Edited on December 4, 2009 at 12:32 PM. Reason : Plus, I dare somebody to put a price on home-made Christmas stockings!]
12/4/2009 12:30:17 PM
12/4/2009 1:41:47 PM
12/4/2009 1:48:16 PM
This is why I'm glad my grandparents have been distributing their wealth amongst their childen and grandchildren incrementally every year for the last 15 + years.
12/4/2009 3:33:36 PM
12/4/2009 3:51:49 PM
^^Yeah, that's typical of everybody. Less affluent people gift to their kids each year until they're poor enough to qualify for Medicare and Medicaid. Then they live off the money they gifted to their kids.
12/4/2009 4:01:13 PM
^you also shouldn't care and have no right to someone else's money who has done all that and accumulated a mass wealth that he then passes down to his children or whatever person/charity of his choosing. He paid his debt to society in terms of income taxes, etc...thats all you/government get, end of story.
12/4/2009 4:03:54 PM
Guys, no need in arguing with them anymore. You cant change an apple to an orange. Its an ideological philosophy. While its easy to see their philosophy as punative and communistic, it still is a matter of opinion, and thankfully most of inherited wealth is still not taxed. Lets hope it stays that way.
12/4/2009 4:06:16 PM