Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Blue states' problem. He doesn't care.
As the cliche goes, "that's a feature, not a bug."
Anonymous wrote:Blue states' problem. He doesn't care.
Anonymous wrote:
Dems live big govt. any SALT changes by Dems will be to advance the growth of govt. If they can blow up the Corp rate and grow state govt via restoration of SALT, they will, just so long as Fed govt is on it’s way to bigger and more wasteful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought the liberals wanted the rich to pay more taxes and this change in tax laws did do that...
It probably has had an effect on more expensive properties especially in the Northeast where suburbs have high property taxes. On the other hand, it's helping to keep housing costs under control. Which is good.
All in all, I support this move. The tax deductions for mortgage interests and property taxes were mostly benefits for the affluent. The middle and working classes didn't see the same benefits.
If I'm going to pay more in taxes, I want the money to go to help our citizens who are in need. I do not want my money to be handed over to corporations and foreign owners.
You're not exactly helping your arguments by making these unsubstantiated claims about handing over money to foreign entities.
Trump, for all his flaws actually made tax changes that was more progressive in many ways by eliminating benefits that accrued heavily to wealthy and high income earners and gave tax cuts in exchange to lower income earners. I'm no fan of Trump but it will be ironic and hypocritical of the Democrats to restore SALT if their aim is a more progressive tax system.
Anonymous wrote:I’m no Trump fan. Politics aside, our taxes went down despite the SALT cap. Itemized deductions in 2018 were $72k but $32k in 2019. And our overall tax bill still declined. Same income. My point is that I’m not convinced the SALT cap is that big of a deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought the liberals wanted the rich to pay more taxes and this change in tax laws did do that...
It probably has had an effect on more expensive properties especially in the Northeast where suburbs have high property taxes. On the other hand, it's helping to keep housing costs under control. Which is good.
All in all, I support this move. The tax deductions for mortgage interests and property taxes were mostly benefits for the affluent. The middle and working classes didn't see the same benefits.
If I'm going to pay more in taxes, I want the money to go to help our citizens who are in need. I do not want my money to be handed over to corporations and foreign owners.
Anonymous wrote:I’m no Trump fan. Politics aside, our taxes went down despite the SALT cap. Itemized deductions in 2018 were $72k but $32k in 2019. And our overall tax bill still declined. Same income. My point is that I’m not convinced the SALT cap is that big of a deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good. It is not my responsibility as a taxpayer to fund the comfy lifestyle of everyone else via tax breaks. Why exactly do you deserve a tax break with an unlimited cap simply because you own a home?
You prefer that money goes to wealthy foreigners?
It isn't my responsibility to subsidize your lifestyle. If the only reason you can afford a home is because you require govt tax breaks, too bad. The gravy train has ended. Taxes should be used to build infrastructure and build schools, not to fund the lifestyle of people who think they need 4000+ sq ft homes.