Gary82
Called Up to the Major Leagues
I paid 20k in federal taxes last year and 7k in state taxes. How much did you pay?
Oh yeah, well I paid a million gajillion eleventy blue in taxes.
I paid 20k in federal taxes last year and 7k in state taxes. How much did you pay?
Then you have a right to whine about taxes.
Where in the constitution is the right to whine about taxes?
Not sure why it surprises people that folks aren't pleased as punch to give 20%-40% of their earnings to the government.
It surprises me...don't these folks realize they'd earn nothing if not for government roads?
What does the constitution say about 50% of people not paying taxes while others pay 40% of their earnings?
You guys don't know tax law, obviously.
(I don't pay 40%)
Who pays 40% of their earnings?
I'd like to see that person and offer to do their taxes for them for the difference in cost. Even if you file standard deductible and nothing else you don't get 40%.
That being said, I'm not shocked about your lack of knowledge on the subject. The 50% who didn't pay income tax still paid payroll taxes, state income taxes, etc. Now if you want to talk to me about an injustice, let's talk about the payroll tax cap. Why do people earning over 108.6K pay the same effective payrolltax as someone making 108.6K. Think about that while you're crying in your tax forms.
Payroll taxes are not taxes, at least not in the same sense as income or property taxes.
With FICA and Medicare "taxes", the payer is putting money into an account that he or she will draw from at some point. I can't draw your Social Security or Medicare, at least not in theory. It's not the same as putting all the tax receipts into a pool and using that money for the "common good." We all receive benefits from the income taxes we pay, but not a direct benefit that can be tied back to the amount we contributed. The person who pays no income tax isn't contributing one dime to roads, social programs, national defense, or other government agencies. He or she is only paying into what is basically a retirement program that covers his or her post-retirement income and healthcare. And he or she is only paying half of that, as his/her employer is matching it dollar for dollar. You and I (and others who pay income tax) are funding the government. Those who pay no income tax are funding themselves, assuming they live long enough to draw their benefits.
Sorry, but that is a pet peeve of mine, when people throw payroll "taxes" out to imply that those who pay no income tax are still paying their fair share. The 50% that aren't paying income taxes are riding in that respect.
Tax law, which caps federal income at 39.6. Effective tax rate has pretty consistently been 25-27%
This is an average, correct?
Herp-de-derp. Average of the top 1% to be specific.
So, in theory some are above this and some below?
Just making sure you know what an average is.
Just making sure you know what an average is.