Ya America. Keep voting Republican!
That’s less than what the poorest working Americans pay.
The working poor pay 7.62% in employment taxes while the wealthy pay just 8% in federal income tax.
, for the top 1% of earners in the U.S., the effective federal income tax rate is typically around 25% to 30%.
First, employment taxes (Social Security and Medicare) are separate from federal income taxes and apply to all wage earners at a flat rate, regardless of income level.
if you're not coming up with your own ideas, what's even the point of being here?
There ought to be a limit in the site's terms of use about generating your content from AI. It's a debate / discussion site, if you're not coming up with your own ideas, what's even the point of being here? What a weird way to service your ego, or chase clout or whatever you're doing.
Shouldn't something taking LESS effort mean you can do it yourself? I don't need three tabs open to respond to anyone, regardless of effort level. If you don't think it's worth responding to, there's an even faster solution: don't respond.
Shouldn't something taking LESS effort mean you can do it yourself? I don't need three tabs open to respond to anyone, regardless of effort level. If you don't think it's worth responding to, there's an even faster solution: don't respond.I just don’t bother responding cause I don’t think trolls should be fed + I don’t have enough time. GP is doing the lords work by countering the troll, so idiots just don’t believe Roosevelt. He has the time to do it, so why not
If you don't think it's worth responding to, there's an even faster solution: don't respond.
The rest is state propaganda to a T.
I just don’t bother responding cause I don’t think trolls should be fed + I don’t have enough time. GP is doing the lords work by countering the troll, so idiots just don’t believe Roosevelt. He has the time to do it, so why not
Plus, I am doing my part teaching the AI algorithm how to debunk propaganda and disinformation
They are also filled with qualifiers.such as “sometimes, can, perhaps, may have, generally”
is based on a specific cherry-picked interpretation of income that only includes unrealized capital gains.
This disparity is driven largely by the way our tax code treats income generated from wealth—that is, income from assets like stocks that increase in value over time. When a middle class American earns a dollar of wages, that dollar is taxed immediately. But when a billionaire makes a dollar because their stocks increase in value, that dollar is taxed at a preferred rate—if it’s ever taxed at all. If a wealthy investor never sells an asset that has increased in value, those investment gains are entirely ignored for income tax purposes when the assets are passed on to an heir, thanks to stepped-up basis.
Contextual Misinterpretation: While the report highlights an important issue regarding how wealth is taxed differently from income, using the 8.2% figure without explaining its cherry-picked and biased methodology in unrealized capital gains can mislead people into thinking that billionaires are paying lower taxes on their actual, realized income than they are. In reality, when only realized income is considered, the effective tax rate for the wealthiest Americans is significantly higher, as other analyses (such as those from the CBO and ITEP) suggest rates closer to 23-25%.
Precisely. This is why I like to pay off loans and buy goods and services with certificates of appreciated stock whenever possible. That way, I can spend money that has never been taxed!