darksiege wrote:
Monte wrote:
I just don't understand why someone who lives on investments and does no actual work should pay a smaller percent of their income than someone who busts their *** every day building houses, enforcing the law, or educating people.
It is good to see that you have learned absolutely nothing new since you have been gone.
What prevents a person who "busts their ***" from having investments?
What prevents someone who busted their *** and was successful with their investments from retiring and enjoying the fruits of their labors?
You need a certain amount of money to live on. Let's say $30,000. A person that makes $35,000 has $5,000 available for investments, or 1/7 of their income. A person who makes $3 million has $2,970,000 available for investments, or 99% of their income. Also, a person with more money to invest has dramatically greater profit potential, because he can diversify in high risk, high-EV investments with a far, far smaller risk of losing everything.
That said, the current system would be patently unfair to the wealthy if it actually worked as advertised. It's absolutely unfair for them to have to pay taxes twice on the same income. But most capital gains of the very wealthy are never recorded as income, they sit in the investments for the person's whole life then get funneled through various trusts and tax shelters to their heirs when they die to dodge the high income taxes.
Quote:
What gives you the right to determine who is allowed to receive the fruits of anothers labor?
The exact same thing that gives "me" the right to levy any taxes at all, for any purpose. Pretty much every government function is wealth redistribution in some form.