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Biden's weaponized IRS is coming for your Venmo account

#1

These damn DemocRATS would tax the air you  breathe if they could..........

Biden's weaponized IRS is coming for your Venmo account

Biden's new IRS $600 threshold will hit families and small businesses with more paperwork, and higher taxes

If you use Venmo or PayPal, filing your taxes will look much different this year. The Biden Administration and congressional Democrats have used their one-party rule in Washington to supercharge the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), expanding its size and authority to wage war on hardworking American families and small businesses across the nation.

https://www.foxbusiness.com/politics/bid...mo-account
Instead of a sign that says "Do Not Disturb" I need one that says "Already Disturbed Proceed With Caution."
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#2

"Democrats’ Inflation Reduction Act, which should more accurately be titled the Inflation Expansion Act, authorized $80 billion for the IRS to hire 87,000 new agents to target taxpayers. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) confirmed that this move will lead to more audits and enforcement measures for households making less than $400,000. Ultimately, this will raise taxes on all Americans."

That's true if you think stopping people from cheating on their taxes is actually a "tax increase."
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#3

(12-21-2022, 08:33 AM)The Real Marty Wrote: "Democrats’ Inflation Reduction Act, which should more accurately be titled the Inflation Expansion Act, authorized $80 billion for the IRS to hire 87,000 new agents to target taxpayers. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) confirmed that this move will lead to more audits and enforcement measures for households making less than $400,000. Ultimately, this will raise taxes on all Americans."

That's true if you think stopping people from cheating on their taxes is actually a "tax increase."

Using this logic, we should increase police patrols exponentially to write tickets for anyone going 1 mph over the speed limit, changing lanes without using a turn signal, or any other minor traffic infraction.
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#4

(12-21-2022, 08:45 AM)homebiscuit Wrote:
(12-21-2022, 08:33 AM)The Real Marty Wrote: "Democrats’ Inflation Reduction Act, which should more accurately be titled the Inflation Expansion Act, authorized $80 billion for the IRS to hire 87,000 new agents to target taxpayers. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) confirmed that this move will lead to more audits and enforcement measures for households making less than $400,000. Ultimately, this will raise taxes on all Americans."

That's true if you think stopping people from cheating on their taxes is actually a "tax increase."

Using this logic, we should increase police patrols exponentially to write tickets for anyone going 1 mph over the speed limit, changing lanes without using a turn signal, or any other minor traffic infraction.

I didn't express an opinion on whether we should or should not hire more IRS agents.  I was simply saying, stopping people from cheating on their taxes is not a "tax increase."
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#5
(This post was last modified: 12-21-2022, 08:54 AM by mikesez. Edited 1 time in total.)

This podcast I was listening to brought in a British-Indian economist, and he commented that Americans already comply with taxes far beyond what most people in other countries do. He pointed out that most Americans will spend hours to check math that only adds up to a few dollars of difference in their tax liability, just because we have a cultural obsession with accuracy and compliance, according to him. And he thought this new effort to create even greater levels of compliance was just nutty.

Anyhow this is all a good thing in my opinion. The alternative is to increase the tax rates. I prefer no increased rates. So do you. And a population that spends too much effort trying to meet the letter of the law is preferable to one that spends too little.
My fellow southpaw Mark Brunell will probably always be my favorite Jaguar.
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#6

(12-21-2022, 08:51 AM)The Real Marty Wrote:
(12-21-2022, 08:45 AM)homebiscuit Wrote: Using this logic, we should increase police patrols exponentially to write tickets for anyone going 1 mph over the speed limit, changing lanes without using a turn signal, or any other minor traffic infraction.

I didn't express an opinion on whether we should or should not hire more IRS agents.  I was simply saying, stopping people from cheating on their taxes is not a "tax increase."

Okay, I see now.
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#7

(12-21-2022, 08:53 AM)mikesez Wrote: This podcast I was listening to brought in a British-Indian economist, and he commented that Americans already comply with taxes far beyond what most people in other countries do.  He pointed out that most Americans will spend hours to check math that only adds up to a few dollars of difference in their tax liability, just because we have a cultural obsession with accuracy and compliance, according to him. And he thought this new effort to create even greater levels of compliance was just nutty. 

Anyhow this is all a good thing in my opinion.  The alternative is to increase the tax rates.  I prefer no increased rates. So do you.  And a population that spends too much effort trying to meet the letter of the law is preferable to one that spends too little.

A cultural obsession with accuracy and compliance? Way to let us know he's never lived here without directly stating it.
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#8

(12-21-2022, 09:27 AM)SeldomRite Wrote:
(12-21-2022, 08:53 AM)mikesez Wrote: This podcast I was listening to brought in a British-Indian economist, and he commented that Americans already comply with taxes far beyond what most people in other countries do.  He pointed out that most Americans will spend hours to check math that only adds up to a few dollars of difference in their tax liability, just because we have a cultural obsession with accuracy and compliance, according to him. And he thought this new effort to create even greater levels of compliance was just nutty. 

Anyhow this is all a good thing in my opinion.  The alternative is to increase the tax rates.  I prefer no increased rates. So do you.  And a population that spends too much effort trying to meet the letter of the law is preferable to one that spends too little.

A cultural obsession with accuracy and compliance? Way to let us know he's never lived here without directly stating it.

To be fair, I've never lived in India or in the UK.  Maybe they really do care a lot less than we do.
My fellow southpaw Mark Brunell will probably always be my favorite Jaguar.
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#9

(12-21-2022, 08:53 AM)mikesez Wrote: This podcast I was listening to brought in a British-Indian economist, and he commented that Americans already comply with taxes far beyond what most people in other countries do.  He pointed out that most Americans will spend hours to check math that only adds up to a few dollars of difference in their tax liability, just because we have a cultural obsession with accuracy and compliance, according to him. And he thought this new effort to create even greater levels of compliance was just nutty. 

Anyhow this is all a good thing in my opinion.  The alternative is to increase the tax rates.  I prefer no increased rates. So do you.  And a population that spends too much effort trying to meet the letter of the law is preferable to one that spends too little.

No. That is not the alternative. If you truly wanted no increased tax rates, the alternative would be to reduce spending. 

Truth be told, I have no problem with the government enforcing the tax code. However, ours is so convoluted, that it's inevitable you can and will miss something, not too unlike our legal system. Collecting said taxes could also be made easier by simplifying the tax code. Yet, leftists are not attempting to solve either of those issues. Why not? 

I know in your establishment little brain there exists no room for the possibility of tyranny. However, leftists simultaneously support modern monetary theory AND a bigger IRS. Why? That doesn't make sense. Modern monetary theory is the idea that so long as it is accepted as a public good, people will trade it regardless of value. Meaning, the government can print as much as they want as long as the people are spending it. In other words, there is no need to tax anyone since revenue is not gained through taxation, but rather the manufactured value of the currency by the existing powers. The same people who designed that theory also reimagined taxes as a public disciplinary tool. You reward those who do well and punish those who attack the system. The IRS will either end up becoming a police force or, at the very least, the legal impetus for arresting people who become a public nuisance. 

If you could at all come off this position that the government works for us, you could start seeing the writing on the wall, man. You are such a naive ideologue. You could be a great thinker if you'd just challenge some of these ideas instead of warping the entire world to make them make sense.
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#10
(This post was last modified: 12-21-2022, 10:45 AM by mikesez. Edited 1 time in total.)

(12-21-2022, 10:17 AM)Lucky2Last Wrote:
(12-21-2022, 08:53 AM)mikesez Wrote: This podcast I was listening to brought in a British-Indian economist, and he commented that Americans already comply with taxes far beyond what most people in other countries do.  He pointed out that most Americans will spend hours to check math that only adds up to a few dollars of difference in their tax liability, just because we have a cultural obsession with accuracy and compliance, according to him. And he thought this new effort to create even greater levels of compliance was just nutty. 

Anyhow this is all a good thing in my opinion.  The alternative is to increase the tax rates.  I prefer no increased rates. So do you.  And a population that spends too much effort trying to meet the letter of the law is preferable to one that spends too little.

No. That is not the alternative. If you truly wanted no increased tax rates, the alternative would be to reduce spending. 

Truth be told, I have no problem with the government enforcing the tax code. However, ours is so convoluted, that it's inevitable you can and will miss something, not too unlike our legal system. Collecting said taxes could also be made easier by simplifying the tax code. Yet, leftists are not attempting to solve either of those issues. Why not? 

I know in your establishment little brain there exists no room for the possibility of tyranny. However, leftists simultaneously support modern monetary theory AND a bigger IRS. Why? That doesn't make sense. Modern monetary theory is the idea that so long as it is accepted as a public good, people will trade it regardless of value. Meaning, the government can print as much as they want as long as the people are spending it. In other words, there is no need to tax anyone since revenue is not gained through taxation, but rather the manufactured value of the currency by the existing powers. The same people who designed that theory also reimagined taxes as a public disciplinary tool. You reward those who do well and punish those who attack the system. The IRS will either end up becoming a police force or, at the very least, the legal impetus for arresting people who become a public nuisance. 

If you could at all come off this position that the government works for us, you could start seeing the writing on the wall, man. You are such a naive ideologue. You could be a great thinker if you'd just challenge some of these ideas instead of warping the entire world to make them make sense.

Conceptually, yes, reduced spending is an alternative.  But in reality, even Trump wasn't willing to spend much capital on it. It's not politically feasible to adopt a policy most people don't want 

I agree that folks like AOC endorse MMT, but I doubt Biden or most of his advisors do.  If they did, 8% inflation disabused them of it.

And I definitely wish the tax code was simpler.  I was a fair tax guy and a flat tax guy.  I fully agree with everything you said about that.  But again, not feasible unless you're willing to endure an onslaught from all the wealthy special interests exploiting loopholes today - not just corporations but many scions you have never heard of.

Perhaps some stricter enforcement might be the harsh medicine we need to unlock some consensus around simplifying the code.
My fellow southpaw Mark Brunell will probably always be my favorite Jaguar.
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#11

(12-21-2022, 10:24 AM)mikesez Wrote:
(12-21-2022, 10:17 AM)Lucky2Last Wrote: No. That is not the alternative. If you truly wanted no increased tax rates, the alternative would be to reduce spending. 

Truth be told, I have no problem with the government enforcing the tax code. However, ours is so convoluted, that it's inevitable you can and will miss something, not too unlike our legal system. Collecting said taxes could also be made easier by simplifying the tax code. Yet, leftists are not attempting to solve either of those issues. Why not? 

I know in your establishment little brain there exists no room for the possibility of tyranny. However, leftists simultaneously support modern monetary theory AND a bigger IRS. Why? That doesn't make sense. Modern monetary theory is the idea that so long as it is accepted as a public good, people will trade it regardless of value. Meaning, the government can print as much as they want as long as the people are spending it. In other words, there is no need to tax anyone since revenue is not gained through taxation, but rather the manufactured value of the currency by the existing powers. The same people who designed that theory also reimagined taxes as a public disciplinary tool. You reward those who do well and punish those who attack the system. The IRS will either end up becoming a police force or, at the very least, the legal impetus for arresting people who become a public nuisance. 

If you could at all come off this position that the government works for us, you could start seeing the writing on the wall, man. You are such a naive ideologue. You could be a great thinker if you'd just challenge some of these ideas instead of warping the entire world to make them make sense.

Conceptually, yes, reduced spending is an alternative.  But in reality, even Trump wasn't willing to spend much capital on it. It's not politically feasible to adopt a policy most people don't want 

I agree that folks like AOC endorse MMT, but I doubt Biden or most of his advisors do.  If they did, 8% inflation disabused them of it.

And I definitely wish the tax code was simpler.  I was a fair tax guy and a flat tax guy.  I fully agree with everything you said about that.  But again, not feasible unless you're willing to endure an onslaught from all the wealthy special interests exploiting loopholes today - not just corporations but many scions you have never heard of.

I think most people do want a simpler policy, just not the ones funding the politicians.
Original Season Ticket Holder - Retired  1995 - 2020


At some point you just have to let go of what you thought should happen and live in what is happening.
 

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#12

We don't have a government that works for us. Enforcement is not the problem.
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#13

(12-21-2022, 08:53 AM)mikesez Wrote: This podcast I was listening to brought in a British-Indian economist, and he commented that Americans already comply with taxes far beyond what most people in other countries do.  He pointed out that most Americans will spend hours to check math that only adds up to a few dollars of difference in their tax liability, just because we have a cultural obsession with accuracy and compliance, according to him. And he thought this new effort to create even greater levels of compliance was just nutty. 

Anyhow this is all a good thing in my opinion.  The alternative is to increase the tax rates.  I prefer no increased rates. So do you.  And a population that spends too much effort trying to meet the letter of the law is preferable to one that spends too little.

Man, there's a classic False Dilemma fallacy.
“An empty vessel makes the loudest sound, so they that have the least wit are the greatest babblers.”. - Plato

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