Slim Charless wrote:grumpysaddle wrote:Slim Charless wrote:
I find it very hard to believe that the Robert Sarver we've grown to know and love would ever do anything like this. He seems like the kind of boss that would try and get employees to work off the clock and to avoid paying any commissions marketing and sales people might've earned.
Hence the tax write-off angle I have. He just made a ton of money off the sale, I'm sure he's got sleazy tax people to find loopholes to get out of paying taxes, like "charity donations". Rich people tax world is different than us plebians.
1000%
You ever want to see a good movie that shows just a small window into what kinds of things they do go watch "The Laundromat" on Netflix. They tried to have it removed and were successful for awhile but I think it's back on there. Meryl Streep-who's done a movie or 2 said that she had to take a couple of shots to do her scenes as she was shook from doing a movie like that...
I don't have to watch anything about it, it makes me super mad already. Fricking orange doofus paid $750 in taxes for a year while boasting being a billionaire while I paid like 20% of my gross income (more than $750). I bought a book before the pandemic about rich person philanthropy but I can't read it cause it makes me too mad. So tired of normal humans praising billionaires for giving a scrap to the lowly poor.
Even if Sarver donates $20k to 225 workers, that's still only $4.5 million. Then add the $5 million donations and it's 9.5 million total. Say he made an even 1 billion off the sale (i think he made closer to 2 in reality). That's something like... 0.09% of his total wealth (closer to 0.04% if he made 2 billion). I'm not impressed.