I second that position
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As to the "it's already been taxed" canard, all income has been taxed (over and over). My wages were taxed previously, yet there's no problem with taxing it. Because it is new to me. Just as an inheritance would be new to me.Dan Patrick: What was your reaction to [Urban Meyer being hired]?
Brady Hoke: You know.....not....good.
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all income has been taxed (over and over). My wages were taxed previously, yet there's no problem with taxing it.
Even when limited to "it's new to me" it's still such a massive generalization that, IMO, it's meaningless. It literally directly and indisputably supports taxing any gift of any sort, including, e.g., Christmas presents.
It's a statement that only shows that Government "can" tax it. Well, duh. "Can" is never the question; should is the question. The government CAN set up a hugely regressive tax system if it wants. That doesn't get to the SHOULD at all.
And there's no question, whatsoever, that folks making the argument against the Death Tax are aruging the should/should not when they talk about the "morality" of taxing your money twice. There are specific policy-based reasons as to why the government SHOULD be allowed to do so. But merely responding that they "can" is nonresponsive.Last edited by iam416; October 3, 2016, 08:35 AM.Dan Patrick: What was your reaction to [Urban Meyer being hired]?
Brady Hoke: You know.....not....good.
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I don't necessarily disagree that estates shouldn't be taxed. Were it up to me, I'd explore allowing free transfers of real property, in whole, without any stepped up basis. Then when it is sold, paying normal tax rates. I'd also tax the rest of the inherited property as income to the heir. I don't know why inherited wealth should be given priority treatment over earned wealth.
Most good estate lawyers can avoid the brunt of this already by, as you said, getting the funds to folks before death.Dan Patrick: What was your reaction to [Urban Meyer being hired]?
Brady Hoke: You know.....not....good.
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And if a husband and wife are in the 50's and died in a car accident only to leave their children with farm land or a salvage yard, the kids have no choice but to sell..
So we have a tax system with "outs" for those who can lawyer up or plan in advance. Makes zero sense to punish some while the elite rich class work around it. Any changes to the tax will only impact the middle class, imo.Grammar... The difference between feeling your nuts and feeling you're nuts.
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Right. That's why I'd exempt real property from the calculation, Entropy. So the farm or salvage yard wouldn't count. If you're only taxing money or financial instruments, then you necessarily have the money available to you -- you may not think it's fair that you only get 75% (or whatever) of that money, but it's something you can manage.
But, you're right, when you factor in real property that means you may have to come up with money pay the death tax.
SLF, as I read his post, agrees with you (and me) on that front.Dan Patrick: What was your reaction to [Urban Meyer being hired]?
Brady Hoke: You know.....not....good.
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Originally posted by entropy View PostComing from a farming community, I'm not a fan of inheritance tax. Fundamentally, I think we should be promoting savings, not discouraging it.
That injustice aside, the concept is probably due for a upgrade in a the modern economy. The retention of family farms doesn’t seem to be a pressing threat to our democracy in 2016...not in a time when Talent is roaming the digital countryside, unfettered and unchecked.
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