Habs72 wrote:Italy has now officially more coronavirus deaths than China. Italy´s closed cases death % is brutal(43%).
https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/italy/
Yikes.
I don’t believe China’s numbers for one second though.
Moderators: HomoSapien, AshyLarrysDiaper, coldfish, Payt10, Ice Man, dougthonus, Michael Jackson, Tommy Udo 6 , kulaz3000, fleet, DASMACKDOWN, GimmeDat, RedBulls23
Habs72 wrote:Italy has now officially more coronavirus deaths than China. Italy´s closed cases death % is brutal(43%).
https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/italy/

dougthonus wrote:dice wrote:no meaningful correlation between billionaires in residence and state tax rate
The only thing that matters in this instance are the 0 states.
If you're going to set up an address to move to and avoid taxes you aren't going to go to low, you're only going to go to a 0 state.
The difference in state tax is also paltry compared to the tax rise you are wanting to do, so people would be way more aggressive on switching.
the real question is why there are 9 billionaires living in wyoming
The answer is 0% tax rate.
At any rate, it's somewhat of a moot point. I agree overall with your theory that you need to, at some point, provide universal income, and I agree you have to figure out at some point how to get money from the wealthy.


dice wrote:it merely requires cultural norms to shift. which is obviously a long process. again, other nations already have total tax rates at or above that which i would favor. and they didn't always. hell, we as a nation have only been averse to high marginal tax rates since the '80s!
dougthonus wrote:dice wrote:it merely requires cultural norms to shift. which is obviously a long process. again, other nations already have total tax rates at or above that which i would favor. and they didn't always. hell, we as a nation have only been averse to high marginal tax rates since the '80s!
Times are different now which is a challenge. It's much easier to move around than it was in the past. You see tons of corporations whom have started off shoring resources, but that's a relatively new phenomenon, and they're doing it for relatively little tax benefit comparatively.

moorhosj wrote:League Circles wrote:I've already addressed this in previous posts. You can't include "millionaires" because now days, tons and tons of people have over a million dollars in assets. That's not rich. You'd really have to look at people with assets over 10 or 20 million to see the trend that I'm very confident is widespread.
Also important is what I previously mentioned - that most actual rich people don't necessarily have much taxable income, because they hold massive amounts of tax exempt bonds. If you're rich, smart and conservative, you basically live off of tax free bond yields and just watch unrealized capital gains grow and grow and grow untaxed because you rarely sell, and/or because you have other tax sheltered investment vehicles like variable life insurance contracts where the money in drastically outweighs the death benefit.
You've said all of these things, but you haven't provided anything to back it up (data, articles, research, etc.). You just keep insisting that you are very confident it's true.
How many of the people that you describe exist? Is it larger than the 7.9% of Maryland residents that we know are millionaires based on actual, verifiable data? Is it possible your original assumption was incorrect?
MrSparkle wrote:One positive (with a set of negative side-effects) is this will perhaps give the big cities of the world a solid example that the old "9-5 commute to work" and business travel culture probably can be greatly reduced with work-at-home/video-conferencing/etc., and that it was long overdue. Holding hope that my friends and family who have NO source of income right now will get temporary bail-outs until the street infrastructure is safe and normal again, but I also have a lot of folks who at least have part-time or full-time work transitioned to at-home, and in many ways haven't missed a beat.
The amount of driving and flying for day-to-day corporations and companies has been inflated and senseless. Raise your hand if you or your spouse have had a job that would fly you to a different across the country/world, house you for a week, basically to have a few meetings and social gatherings. And this would happen regularly. There are many industries where travel or commuting is required, but the desk/cpu/admin jobs, schools, etc. there are obviously plenty of reasons to have physical interactions be a big part of our lives, but "40+ hours a week" with frequent travel trips for conferences and meetings? It can easily be adjusted down in HALF or more (depending on the profession) imo with similarly productive results.
I don't think the airline, automobile and gas industries like the sound of that, though. Also as a person who is probably 60% introvert , I am biased.
dice wrote:dougthonus wrote:dice wrote:it merely requires cultural norms to shift. which is obviously a long process. again, other nations already have total tax rates at or above that which i would favor. and they didn't always. hell, we as a nation have only been averse to high marginal tax rates since the '80s!
Times are different now which is a challenge. It's much easier to move around than it was in the past. You see tons of corporations whom have started off shoring resources, but that's a relatively new phenomenon, and they're doing it for relatively little tax benefit comparatively.
that chart has nothing to do with corporate taxation though
The report, issued Wednesday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, found that — as in other countries — the oldest patients had the greatest likelihood of dying and of being hospitalized. But of the 508 patients known to have been hospitalized, 38 percent were notably younger — between 20 and 54. And nearly half of the 121 patients who were admitted to intensive care units were adults under 65, the C.D.C. reported.
League Circles wrote:It's as if you're suggesting that people who are rich don't like (more) money? Is that your claim? If not, my claim should be agreed on as the default. The unknown is the extent to which it happens. It obviously happens. I know for a fact. Obviously.
dougthonus wrote:This is the first day in awhile where the stock market isn't going nuts with volume or huge percentage swings. Of course, we'll see if some breaking news hits in the next few hours to change all that.
moorhosj wrote:League Circles wrote:It's as if you're suggesting that people who are rich don't like (more) money? Is that your claim? If not, my claim should be agreed on as the default. The unknown is the extent to which it happens. It obviously happens. I know for a fact. Obviously.
I'm not suggesting anything, I provided data which shows little correlation between higher income and lower taxes. If you want to claim that isn't true, or carve out some small group of people where it is true, then you are welcome to bring some (any?) data to support your stance. Absent that information, why would an unverified claim be accepted as the default? It doesn't make any logical sense.
As far as why the data shows us this type of activity, maybe people that are rich figure they can get even more rich in higher tax states, maybe they care more about amenities than taxes, maybe they are tied to families or businesses that operate in higher tax states, maybe you and I have different definitions of the word "rich", maybe the rich like high tax cities more than low tax cities, maybe they prefer the politics in high tax states to low tax states. All of those could be true without aligning to your binary options.
moorhosj wrote:League Circles wrote:It's as if you're suggesting that people who are rich don't like (more) money? Is that your claim? If not, my claim should be agreed on as the default. The unknown is the extent to which it happens. It obviously happens. I know for a fact. Obviously.
I'm not suggesting anything
Chi town wrote:Habs72 wrote:Italy has now officially more coronavirus deaths than China. Italy´s closed cases death % is brutal(43%).
https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/italy/
Yikes.
I don’t believe China’s numbers for one second though.
dice wrote:moorhosj wrote:League Circles wrote:It's as if you're suggesting that people who are rich don't like (more) money? Is that your claim? If not, my claim should be agreed on as the default. The unknown is the extent to which it happens. It obviously happens. I know for a fact. Obviously.
I'm not suggesting anything
he's taken to grossly exaggerating if not outright fabricating a position that his self-styled "opponent" holds and then indignantly shooting down that invented position. he did it repeatedly in the fight he weirdly picked with me. i dunno if he's going stir-crazy from quarantine due to lack of exercise or what, but after all these years i finally had to block him
dice wrote:moorhosj wrote:League Circles wrote:It's as if you're suggesting that people who are rich don't like (more) money? Is that your claim? If not, my claim should be agreed on as the default. The unknown is the extent to which it happens. It obviously happens. I know for a fact. Obviously.
I'm not suggesting anything
he's taken to grossly exaggerating if not outright fabricating a position that his self-styled "opponent" holds and then indignantly shoots down that invented position. he did it repeatedly in the fight he weirdly picked with me. i dunno if he's going stir-crazy from quarantine due to lack of exercise or what, but after all these years i finally had to block him