July 1 Obama Law to Seize Your Assets
The full implementation of FATCA may, as some critics have maintained, ultimately prove more harmful to U.S. business interests and U.S. citizens living and working abroad than its benefits will merit. But no credible source that isn't an investment firm trying to scare potential customers into forking over money for a newsletter subscription is seriously maintaining that a law passed four years ago will, within the next few months, collapse the entire U.S. economic system, destroy the American way of life, and lead to the imposition of martial law.
Read more at http://www.snopes.com/politics/conspirac...
Read more at http://www.snopes.com/politics/conspirac...
Canada noted this as well:
http://www.thenewamerican.com/usnews/con...
You _are_ right about the (ahem) super-rich, though it applies to many, really: anyone with "capital" _especially_ social capital_ such as a professional tax accountant, will not be so much hurt by these laws as those who are (socially) poor, i.e., structurally disenfranchised.
It is a tactic of the ruling class to pit the "rich" against the "poor".
Perfect example is the special excise tax for people who have more than a million in income as promoted by Warren "no more billionaires" Buffett.
am not
starving to death (yet).
I am trying to lose weight however.
Give me a million dollars. That will not change my dietary habits. So much for poverty-induced obesity.
I don't see how 15% is food on or off the table for the welfare parasites? For the rest of us, it's incentive to get better jobs, get training, and make more money.
15% of a million dollars is 150 thousand dollars, or about what I would gross in 7 years or so.
15% of 20 thousand dollars is 3 thousand dollars. With a flat tax, I have no incentive to work less to get into a lower income bracket and qualify for food stamps et al. Nor do I have a disincentive to work harder and make more money, thereby shoving me into a higher income bracket.
It is not the creator of great wealth's fault that I lacked the ability, the talent, the wisdom, the discipline or anything else that s/he didn't lack, in order to acquire his/her fortune.
It's not a zero-sum game; your wealth is not at the expense of my poverty. If I have trouble paying my bills, it's not because you're not paying enough taxes.
By your implication, the "rich" is anybody making more than subsistence.
But, I'm reasonable. If for some bizarre reason 15% is too much of a burden on me and the rest of the poor, then let's drop it to 10%... for *everybody*. It has the benefit of starving the beast, as well.