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Comment Re: real goal (Score 1) 81

So your argument is they are firing IT workers so they can automate return processing of returns?

WTF? How do you imagine returns are processed? Old men with green visors and sleeve protectors plowing through mountains of paper returns?

Wouldn't they need MORE it workers (not fewer) to automate return processing?

Comment Re: but you do you, ya jerkoff (Score 1) 81

but he'll take it all the same - to russia, to buy a bit more silence from putin about those hotel videos we're all supposed to pretend we don't know exist

What tapes? You do know the Steele Dossier is all made up, right? The Obama FBI offered Steele a $1 Million payment if he could prove the things in his Dossier, and oddly, the former British spy couldn't prove any of it?

Comment Re: This has nothing to do with efficiency (Score 1) 81

Trump doubled the standard deduction in his first term (part of the "tax break for millionaires and billionaires"), then when Biden got into office he left the increased standard deduction in place, but when Trump returned to office Democrats fought Trump trying to make the doubled standard deduction permanent (again, labeling it a "tax cut for millionaires and billionaires")

Comment Re: Funny "Association of Government Accountants" (Score 1) 81

To be clear, you contend that MN is on the forefront of fighting waste, fraud, and abuse? Really?

Somehow the fraudsters in MN were able to bilk the federal gov't for literal billions of dollars for a number of years and only recently started prosecuting the offenders, and that somehow proves MN is on top of things?

Also, I notice you only mention one convicted fraudster, a white woman. Of the 80+ convictions secured already, wasn't there only ONE white person convicted? It's just a coincidence all the rest were largely from one ethnic community, a community that represents a large voting bloc in MN?

Wow, too bad more states can't be as great as MN!

Comment Re: Some of Us... (Score 1) 81

Income-tax regressivity is fixed by exempting the first ~$25,000 or so of income. A consumption tax can be fixed the same way: Send every U.S. citizen a monthly prebate (e.g., ~$200 per person, a rough estimate) to offset sales taxes paid on essentials up to the poverty line. This makes the effective tax progressive for low earners while keeping it simple.

No, you're trying too hard. You exempt staples from sales tax, more broadly and generally than under current sales tax schemes.

For example, all unprepared food items are tax exempt, period. If you buy a rotisserie chicken or a prepared entree at the grocery store, maybe there's a tax, but not on uncooked chickens, etc. clothing, toiletries, and medical items are also tax exempt. Maybe clothes, up to a per-item limit, say, $100 per item with items under that amount tax-exempt, above that limit there's a tax applied.

You can't start mailing everyone a monthly check to reimburse estimated expenditures, that just insane and a recipe for fraud.

There are states without sales taxes, and states without income taxes, but every state has one or the other.

Comment Re: Some of Us... (Score 1) 81

We'd have a simple tax system that treats everyone equally; so no loopholes, exemptions, carve-outs, whatever.

So businesses could no longer deduct losses or investments in research? Families couldn't deduct home mortgage interest, medical expenses, stock market losses, etc?

Really? Tell me how you'll get that approved by elected politicians?

Comment Re: surprised? (Score 1) 81

Here's a mental exercise for you:

Imagine the IRS had a mechanism that was able to root out and deny fraudulent tax returns BUT it had a 0.01% error rate, meaning one out of every 10,000 returns would be erroneously rejected. Now, imagine a return filled out by poor people, people of color, or women were statistically more likely to be in that wrongly-rejected group of returns.

Would elected officials understand that's a cost of doing this type of work, or would they publicly rail about the racist IRS?

Politicians may not intentionally design federal programs to be easily abused, but they become incensed and very defensive when anyone takes steps to prosecute people defrauding the government if they happen to be members of certain ethnic groups (Somali childcare, Autisim clinics, underprivileged child nutrition programs, for example) are implicated.

Detecting fraud is not always rewarded in the federal or state government.

Comment Re: surprised? (Score 1) 81

And Biden hired 83,000 IRS employees to audit ONLY millionaires and billionaires, right?

We literally know nothing about any of the IT workers that left the IRS - they could have gone on to contractor positions back at the IRS, they could have been dead wood that did almost nothing, or they could have been the very bestest COBOL batch programmers ever, who can read raw EBCIDC like it was plain text...

There were/are countless thousands of federal workers that couldn't even be bothered to log into their work laptops 5x a week, isn't it possible a few hundred of them worked at the IRS?

Comment Re: Fuck Taxes. (Score 1) 81

So just fuck the welfare of the American people, huh?

The welfare of the American people depends on a fully-staffed IT department at the IRS?

Maybe shift the tax burden back to billionaires and corporations where it properly belongs

Half of the U.S. population pays no net income taxes, that mean after adding up all the taxes withheld from their paychecks and all their deductions they actually either pay no net taxes or actually profit off the income tax system (get more as a refund than they paid in that year)...

What's their fair share? Zero? Less than zero?

instead of onto sales taxes, turnpike and transit fares, and use fees for parks.

Those are all 'consumption taxes' taxes paid for something one consumes (buying something, driving on a toll road, rides public transit, or visits a park) - the rich pay exactly the same as the poor to drive on a toll road, ride a bus or other activity you mention. Are you really wishing public buses were means tested?

Comment Re: Super Soaker 50 Trigger (Score 1) 121

I would welcome someone that supports this legislation to explain to me how, specifically, I could 3D print a gun today - and what would it look like? I think it would resemble a "zip gun", a macGuyver form of weapon designed to shoot one shot, then basically be disposed of (something a prisoner might make) or those crappy pistols we dumped in occupied France 80+ years ago for the resistance (made of stamped metal, as I recall).

Is the issue really the lack of serial number? When I've read about ghost guns in the past, it usually refers to guns that are undetectable by metal detectors

Comment Re: Fine (Score 1) 121

We have over 300 million guns in circulation in America - no one needs to buy a consumer 3D printer to get one.

You do realize this law is impossible to enforce, right? Why would other states follow CA? Comparisons with, say, auto emissions regulations don't make sense. CA can shape the auto industry because auto makers want to sell only one model/design, and in the context of the U.S. market, CA is big, but, 3D printer manufacturers have a world-wide market, and in that context CA represents a really small percentage of the market. Besides, all a California-compliant 3D printer needs is CA specific firmware and I guess a live internet connection to get real-time approval to print non-gun parts.

No, this virtue-signal will stand alone and do nothing to increase gun safety.

Please, make a Venn diagram showing the overlap of people that can run a 3D printer, want a gun, and can't figure out how to buy one, legally or illegally - I suspect the intersection of all three of those group is exceptionally tiny, almost non-existent.

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