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Rich Don't Pay Most of the Taxes (They Pay All of Them); About the "Almost Ric


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2013 Dec 11, 8:01am   27,878 views  142 comments

by Mish   ➕follow (3)   💰tip   ignore  

Rich Don't Pay Most of the Taxes (They Pay All of Them); Reflections on the "Almost Rich"
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2013/12/rich-dont-pay-most-of-taxes-they-pay.html
Mish

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32   spydah_hh   2013 Dec 12, 10:12am  

Dan8267 says

Mark Zuckerberg has a net worth of $13 billion and he didn't create jack diddly shit. Facebook was just one of thousands of crappy "build your personal web presence" websites.

Capitalism isn't just about creating something it's about providing something that people want/need. Obviously Zuckerburg provided something people want out of facebook.

33   spydah_hh   2013 Dec 12, 10:38am  

Dan8267 says

Reality says

Berners-Lee was on the payroll work hours of a government-funded entity (CERN) when expanded on hyper-card. Neither the FED nor the CERN were particularly capitalistic entities.

The World Wide Web went far beyond CERN. My question stands. If capitalism rewarded wealth creation and innovation, why isn't Tim Berners-Lee the richest man who ever lived?

Well i don't know too much about Tim Berners but is the .www even patented? Can it even be patented? And if it could I don't think Tim Berners would be the owner of the .www I believe that ownership would go to CERN since I believe he was working for them at the time.

34   thomaswong.1986   2013 Dec 12, 12:56pm  

Dan8267 says

Taxes comprise over half of my living expenses. I wouldn't mind so much if those taxes were used to do something good like

- rebuild New Orleans

- upgrade our nation's infrastructure

- build fiber to every house

- lower poverty

- nationalize the education system and ensure everyone had access to any education they are willing to work at

- exploring and developing space and space-related technologies

there is no point rebuilding a city below the sea levels.. it should be abandoned.
if you want rebuilding infrastructure, get more people employed and tax revenue will increase
no need for fiber cable.. already obsolete.
you reduce poverty by getting jobs to people.. see lower tax policies and building factories.
fire all the union teachers.. just like Steve Jobs said..

want Space Tech.. build factories.. as we did before.. with all the nasty chemicals and metal forging.

35   turtledove   2013 Dec 12, 1:41pm  

Dan8267 says

When women do that kind of math it scares me. And TurtleDove is actually one of the few women actually looking out for her husband's interests as well as her own. Image the math done by women who loath their husbands.

Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned, especially when she hires a lawyer.

The commitment to my family has nothing to do with a piece of paper or some supposedly holy book. If it reaches a point that it harms my family financially to have that piece of paper then I would have absolutely no qualms with reorganizing things, a bit.

What's a shame here is that we have reached a point where we bend over backwards for single mothers to the point that I would even be thinking such things. ACA is just another straw on the camel's back.

As a family of four, we are harmed by the fact that my husband makes a bit over 250k/year of w-2 income. We pay the most for everything. By the time taxes and health insurance are paid, we are definitely at 50%. After the house is paid, there's not much left. So, despite being a supposed member of the 1%, I find it more than a bit galling when we are all portrayed as living in mansions overlooking the Long Island Sound, with yachts, and fleets of foreign cars. We are the weakest members of the 1%, and we are the ones they are going after. If a piece of paper changes that calculus, is it really such a terrible thought? (I'm not saying that you were saying it's a terrible thought, it's a rhetorical question.)

36   Automan Empire   2013 Dec 12, 2:21pm  

thomaswong.1986 says

fire all the union teachers.. just like Steve Jobs said..

Many teachers, unionized or not, make shite wages especially given the importance of their work to society. Why is the first impulse here to lash out at the ones who actually perform the core task? Why not clear out goldbricking administrators and others by measure of their usefulness toward actual teaching, pay teachers better, and still save money but turn out better students?

turtledove says

As a family of four, we are harmed by the fact that my husband makes a bit over
250k/year of w-2 income. We pay the most for everything.

This is a fine example of the fourth and much of the fifth quintile being screwed over by the tax code written to favor the upper single digit percents who can afford to manipulate the tax code in their own favor. The trope of "The rich pay all the taxes" has really been making the rounds this week. It usually lumps the upper 40% together. A finer breakdown would give a better picture. Remember the illustration of the L curve of wealth distribution.

37   Dan8267   2013 Dec 13, 12:15am  

turtledove says

We are the weakest members of the 1%, and we are the ones they are going after.

Clearly, it's not the top 1% that's the problem. It's the top 0.1%, and then only a subset of them. It's probably more like the top 0.01%, but that doesn't have the same ring as "we're the 99%".

The parasites are the rich who gained their riches, not by producing goods or services, but by siphoning off of others. It's the owner/controller class.

There's nothing wrong with rich doctors, inventors, actors, professional athletes, etc. They produce wealth, even those in the entertainment business. And they do not steal wealth from others.

The executives at Goldman Sachs, Bank of America, etc. are the ones who acquire their wealth by stealing from others using means that are legal because they bribed politicians to make those means legal.

People don't hate the rich. People hate some of the rich, and only then not because they are rich, but because of how they got rich.

38   turtledove   2013 Dec 13, 3:01am  

Certainly people have it much harder than we do. It just pushes my buttons to be lumped in with multi-millionaire wallstreeters, when at the end of the day after taxes, health insurance, and house payment, we're left with a whopping $5k/month. Of course, we have yet to pay a single bill -- or eat, yet.... and yes, we chose to live in a high-cost area. However,

My husband is a pretty average earning employed doctor (specialist). So, we don't just get it from the side of tax policy (the rich aren't paying their fair share, etc....), we also get it from the masses who are under the impression that doctor's are super-rich and completely to blame for the rising healthcare costs in this country. Yes, there are some doctors out there who've scammed the system and profited from their profession in a way that violates the spirit of the oaths they've taken. But, I've never met one, personally. The "evil" doctors taking advantage of the system are hardly representative of the profession as a whole.

The point of all this is.... If a generally recognized higher paying profession has difficulty cutting the mustard, and 99% are in a worse situation than us -- then we've got a pretty f'ed up system.

39   New Renter   2013 Dec 13, 3:12am  

turtledove says

Certainly people have it much harder than we do. It just pushes my buttons to be lumped in with multi-millionaire wallstreeters, when at the end of the day after taxes, health insurance, and house payment, we're left with a whopping $5k/month. Of course, we have yet to pay a single bill -- or eat, yet.... and yes, we chose to live in a high-cost area.

$5k/mo ain't bad! Your non-shelter related bills shouldn't amount to more than half that. That leaves you with at least $30k/yr

Do you work or is that all your husbands income?

40   Bellingham Bill   2013 Dec 13, 3:17am  

Dan8267 says

There's nothing wrong with rich doctors, inventors, actors, professional athletes, etc. They produce wealth, even those in the entertainment business. And they do not steal wealth from others.

Well, there's something wrong with the medical sector since our costs are way out of line with the rest of the world.

Regulatory capture by the looks of it.

I don't have any (first-order) problem with the millionaires in sports and entertainment. Everyone parts with those dollars freely.

Health care is different. There are super-stars in medicine who earn their premium, but they're exceptional.

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=pZC

per-capita (age 16+) health costs, US

Here's what Churchill said about professional fees back in 1909:

"If a doctor or a lawyer enjoys a better practice, it is because the doctor attends more patients and more exacting patients, and because the lawyer pleads more suits in the courts and more important suits.

"At every stage the doctor or the lawyer is giving service in return for his fees, and if the service is too poor or the fees are too high other doctors and other lawyers can come freely into competition. There is constant service, there is constant competition; there is no monopoly, there is no injury to the public interest, there is no impediment to the general progress."

He was comparing these fees to land rents, and he's correct as far as he goes, but clearly competition is not so "free" in the US currently.

We have a glut of lawyers and a lack of health professionals apparently.

41   Reality   2013 Dec 13, 3:38am  

Dan8267 says

Reality says

Berners-Lee was on the payroll work hours of a government-funded entity (CERN) when expanded on hyper-card. Neither the FED nor the CERN were particularly capitalistic entities.

The World Wide Web went far beyond CERN. My question stands. If capitalism rewarded wealth creation and innovation, why isn't Tim Berners-Lee the richest man who ever lived?

Because Berners-Lee was working for a socialist institution. In any case, even if he invented on his own time in his garage, there would be nothing preventing him from giving it away instead of patenting it. Free market capitalism is about freedom of personal choice.

42   control point   2013 Dec 13, 4:06am  

turtledove says

It just pushes my buttons to be lumped in with multi-millionaire
wallstreeters, when at the end of the day after taxes, health insurance, and
house payment, we're left with a whopping $5k/month. Of course, we have yet to
pay a single bill -- or eat, yet.... and yes, we chose to live in a high-cost
area. However,


My husband is a pretty average earning employed doctor (specialist).

Holy crap - this is very hard for me to believe. What is your house payment? Must be very high. Do you live in a high tax state as well? California?

I am 99.99% certain you do not work if this is true. That right there puts you in a very elite class - single income families are very few and far between these days.

To have $60k after taxes and housing payments per year - you are probably in the top 5%. Especially when you consider this is done with one income.

43   Bellingham Bill   2013 Dec 13, 4:14am  

Top 5% make $161,579+, collect 33% of the income and pay 60% of the taxes.

'course, they have 95% of the disposable income now, LOL.

http://taxfoundation.org/article/summary-latest-federal-income-tax-data-2012

"The 1%" starts at $369,691.

44   control point   2013 Dec 13, 4:27am  

control point says

Top 5% make $161,579+, collect 33% of the income and pay 60% of the taxes.

Right - she says $60k after taxes, housing, and health insurance.

Total taxes are probably ~36% at $161k. 1.45% Medicare, 4.5% SS, 10% State income in Cali, 20% Fed Income.

64% of $161k is $103k. Take out $10k for health insurance and $2500/mo. mortgage. Bam, ~$63k left.

45   Reality   2013 Dec 13, 4:42am  

Bellingham Bill says

Top 5% make $161,579+, collect 33% of the income and pay 60% of the taxes.

'course, they have 95% of the disposable income now, LOL.

http://taxfoundation.org/article/summary-latest-federal-income-tax-data-2012

"The 1%" starts at $369,691.

Where is the disposable income number coming from? The poor has negative taxes due to government handouts . . . some of which translates into disposable income and unfortunately get spent on wasteful and harmful things like cigarettes. I see alcohol and cigarette use much more prevalent in poorer neighborhoods. Personally I don't even have a hobby that costs as much as a pack a day ($3-4k a year).

46   tatupu70   2013 Dec 13, 4:57am  

New Renter says

$5k/mo ain't bad! Your non-shelter related bills shouldn't amount to more than half that. That leaves you with at least $30k/yr

I agree--$5K/month after taxes, housing, health care is a LOT. If someone is crying about that, they need to have their head examined.

47   smaulgld   2013 Dec 13, 5:06am  

HydroCabron says

Blurtman says

Also consider the benefit of a two-tiered justice system. Sell drugs for the Mexican cartels - go to jail. Launder millions for the Mexican cartels - see you at the club this weekend.

When the wealthy are prosecuted for crimes, they just pass the costs onto consumers, and we end up paying more.

Agree but that is true for all crime.
Street crime costs the victim in loss and medical expenses which burdens the system
Ditto for the court fees and prison fees
The difference is while both types of crime add costs to society, corp crime goes unpunished

48   control point   2013 Dec 13, 5:48am  

HydroCabron says

When the wealthy are prosecuted for crimes, they just pass the costs onto
consumers, and we end up paying more.

I thought that prices were determined by the market.

49   control point   2013 Dec 13, 5:56am  

Reality says

I see alcohol and cigarette use much more prevalent in poorer neighborhoods.

This study says otherwise:

http://paa2010.princeton.edu/papers/101517

50   Dan8267   2013 Dec 13, 6:01am  

turtledove says

My husband is a pretty average earning employed doctor (specialist).

Most people don't realize that doctors pay a lot of money for malpractice insurance. And that eats away at their income.

But as I said before, even if a doctor is rich, that's ok because doctors produce wealth, they provide critical services. They literally save lives with their hands. Doctors should be rich. Bankers and those white collar criminals in the financial industry should not.

51   Dan8267   2013 Dec 13, 6:09am  

Bellingham Bill says

Dan8267 says

There's nothing wrong with rich doctors, inventors, actors, professional athletes, etc. They produce wealth, even those in the entertainment business. And they do not steal wealth from others.

Well, there's something wrong with the medical sector since our costs are way out of line with the rest of the world.

There are many things wrong with the health care industry, but doctors are not one of the problems. The real problems are:

1. Fraudulent billing and accounting by health care providers, particularly hospitals.

2. Corporate games and shenanigans used to convert a hospital, a single business, into various "independent on paper" businesses, so as to prevent legal accountability when something goes wrong.

3. Private health insurance -- this should not even exist. We should use a non-profit, nationalized health insurance paid by income tax. Side note: the graduation of the income tax should be a function of the rich-poor gap and far more graduated than it is today.

4. Administrative inefficiencies that can be solved by hiring a genius like me to streamline health care administration and automate all accounting. Yes, this is a big project, but good software engineers can do things that mediocre engineers simply cannot do.

52   Y   2013 Dec 13, 6:10am  

Well, you can control this. The more democrats you elect, the more Fed Systems will be deployed.

turtledove says

The point of all this is.... If a generally recognized higher paying profession has difficulty cutting the mustard, and 99% are in a worse situation than us -- then we've got a pretty f'ed up system.

53   Dan8267   2013 Dec 13, 6:11am  

Reality says

Because Berners-Lee was working for a socialist institution.

If CERN is a "socialist institution" than so is the U.S. military and we should get rid of it.

54   Bellingham Bill   2013 Dec 13, 7:37am  

Dan8267 says

Side note: the graduation of the income tax should be a function of the rich-poor gap and far more graduated than it is today.

While good in theory I do think just socking the rich with more taxes will result in higher home values and rents for everyone.

Cut taxes on the masses, and housing rents go up.

Hand out free money, housing rents go up.

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/CUUR0000SEHA

55   humanity   2013 Dec 13, 7:54am  

breathe and housing rents go up

56   Dan8267   2013 Dec 13, 8:50am  

Bellingham Bill says

While good in theory I do think just socking the rich with more taxes will result in higher home values and rents for everyone.

It's not about socking the rich, but rather aligning their self interests with society's interests. If the gradation of the income tax were a function of the rich-poor gap, there would be a point where siphoning more wealth would make the rich poorer and the only way the rich could increase their wealth is by increasing everyone else's.

Bellingham Bill says

Cut taxes on the masses, and housing rents go up.

This is just an manifestation of a more general problem. The problem is that privatizing rent income is terrible for society. Rent income should support the whole of society whereas most or all of income from productivity should be retained by the individual.

As technology advances and more jobs are automated either society will be divided into permanent haves and have-nots, or the gains of automation and ownership will benefit everyone equally. In the former scenario, the haves will kill all the have-nots and then turn on themselves. In the later scenario, no one will ever have to work again and yet will maintain an every increasing quality of life. Which world would you prefer?

57   turtledove   2013 Dec 13, 9:55am  

New Renter says

$5k/mo ain't bad! Your non-shelter related bills shouldn't amount to more than half that. That leaves you with at least $30k/yr

Do you work or is that all your husbands income?

Still not shopping for mansions and yachts with $30k!

That said, student loans and the child support he pays to his ex-wife make a pretty big dent.

Not saving much, that's for sure.

Yes, I'm a stay-at-home mom. I'm very lucky that we can manage it (barely). Having a parent at home is fast becoming a luxury.

58   Reality   2013 Dec 13, 10:04am  

control point says

Reality says

I see alcohol and cigarette use much more prevalent in poorer neighborhoods.

This study says otherwise:

http://paa2010.princeton.edu/papers/101517

Read the study itself, and you will find that it acknowledges there are studies showing results every which way. There are fundamental methodology issues: sample method and self-recognition bias. The self-medicating type among the lower income strata is far more likely to under-acknowledge than the social drinkers in the upper strata.

In any case, the spending on alcohol and cigarette as percentage of disposable income in a neighborhood is easily recognized by the type of stores in the area. Liquor stores and stores that sell cigrettes grossly over-represent in poor neighborhoods.

59   turtledove   2013 Dec 13, 10:09am  

control point says

Holy crap - this is very hard for me to believe. What is your house payment? Must be very high. Do you live in a high tax state as well? California?

I am 99.99% certain you do not work if this is true. That right there puts you in a very elite class - single income families are very few and far between these days.

To have $60k after taxes and housing payments per year - you are probably in the top 5%. Especially when you consider this is done with one income.

Yes, this is California, the land of insane house prices. Irvine doesn't have much 4-bed product under $1m (and that's a tiny dump). I'm not saying that we're poor. But when you think of the 1% who are made out to be the super-rich who are not paying their share, does my situation really strike you as the same as Mitt Romney, for example? He pays a much lower percentage in taxes than we do. We're progressive to a certain point (and type) of income... Then, it goes the other way.

60   Reality   2013 Dec 13, 11:34am  

tatupu70 says

New Renter says

$5k/mo ain't bad! Your non-shelter related bills shouldn't amount to more than half that. That leaves you with at least $30k/yr

I agree--$5K/month after taxes, housing, health care is a LOT. If someone is crying about that, they need to have their head examined.

LOL. We are not talking about a single guy living in his mom's basement while being paid to make online posts. Doctors are supposed to be one of the admired professions. Pretty girls used to fight for them, then after winning the fight would still have to put up with husbands being on call at the hospital 24/7. Serious sacrifices on the home front. $5k/mo is barely enough to put one kid through private high school or college. At this rate, why not spread legs for a good-for-nothing pot head instead of a doctor! At least the jobless pot-head live-in boyfriend would always be available at home; the household expenses can be paid for by welfare, like section 8, food stamps and cash subsidies, that would also add up to about $1k to spend each month after all housing, taxes and medical insurance already paid for by taxpayers. Such is the perversity of our tax-and-welfare system.

61   Reality   2013 Dec 13, 12:06pm  

Dan8267 says

Bellingham Bill says

Cut taxes on the masses, and housing rents go up.

This is just an manifestation of a more general problem. The problem is that privatizing rent income is terrible for society. Rent income should support the whole of society whereas most or all of income from productivity should be retained by the individual.

Rent income is always privatized . . . because all goods and services are ultimately privatized: a piece of food in my mouth can not be swallowed by you. The only difference is whether:

1. limited resources are allocated competitively in an open market place with two-way freedom of choice

vs.

2. a bunch of bureaucratic monopolists allocating the same limited resources to their own benefit thereby creating Economic Rent for themselves.

There is no such thing as "public" when it comes to limited single-use/mutually-exclusive-use resources. Someone has to swallow a piece of food. The only thing "the public" can swallow is the bill paying for the food (i.e. the cost), not the food (i.e. the benefit). Only the individual ultimately gets the benefit. When "the public" picks up the bill, it just means the cost is transferred to other individuals not getting the benefit.

62   Bellingham Bill   2013 Dec 13, 1:26pm  

It's my thesis if we lowered taxes on the top 5%, Irvine prices would just rise to take the tax cuts, since each household -- at every level of the 'property ladder' -- takes their after-tax income and bids up the cost of housing with it.

That's OK for you, since you've locked in your housing costs, but that's the deal for the next generation.

This is not to say bandit capitalists like Romney shouldn't be paying penalty tax rates of ~50%. If we doubled their rate to 48% that'd yield another $400B or so. We could use the money to get the deficit under more control.

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=q0u

(gov't deficit spending)

63   thomaswong.1986   2013 Dec 13, 1:43pm  

turtledove says

But when you think of the 1% who are made out to be the super-rich who are not paying their share, does my situation really strike you as the same as Mitt Romney, for example? He pays a much lower percentage in taxes than we do. We're progressive to a certain point (and type) of income... Then, it goes the other way.

You and I pay higher rates % on Salary earned..

Romney has no Salary! He has no employers to be paid from !

He isnt on anyone payroll... So he doesnt pay a higher rate...

One day as you, I and other retire or no longer employed.. WE will

be paying a lower rates... you will be living off savings ! or least that

is the plan for many!

64   thomaswong.1986   2013 Dec 13, 1:46pm  

Bellingham Bill says

This is not to say bandit capitalists like Romney shouldn't be paying penalty tax rates of ~50%. If we doubled their rate to 48% that'd yield another $400B or so. We could use the money to get the deficit under more control.

Double on what ? salary, savings, dividends, assets ?

65   Reality   2013 Dec 13, 2:09pm  

Bellingham Bill says

It's my thesis if we lowered taxes on the top 5%, Irvine prices would just rise to take the tax cuts, since each household -- at every level of the 'property ladder' -- takes their after-tax income and bids up the cost of housing with it.

The money in taxpayer pockets would go to all the things that people want to buy. Your thesis essentially asserts that people spend all their money on house payment, and don't care about other aspects of their lives at all.

Bellingham Bill says

That's OK for you, since you've locked in your housing costs, but that's the deal for the next generation.

No, it is not. See above.

Bellingham Bill says

This is not to say bandit capitalists like Romney shouldn't be paying penalty tax rates of ~50%. If we doubled their rate to 48% that'd yield another $400B or so. We could use the money to get the deficit under more control.

No. The deficit is the result of spending. The more taxes collected, the more the government budgets would be larded up with long-term contracts to cronies, resulting in even more precarious budgetary problems down the road.

66   Bellingham Bill   2013 Dec 13, 2:40pm  

The money in taxpayer pockets would go to all the things that people want to buy. Your thesis essentially asserts that people spend all their money on house payment, and don't care about other aspects of their lives at all.

They do, but housing is a very high priority.

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=q0w

real per-capita (25-54) housing costs.

(this is spot-on with my own experience; btw, what I rented for $700 in 1991 ($1100 in 2012 money) rents for $1800 today, a 1.6X increase in real terms).

The more taxes collected, the more the government budgets would be larded up with long-term contracts to cronies, resulting in even more precarious budgetary problems down the road

Sure, if we elect another chucklehead like Reagan or "W".

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=q0z

67   tatupu70   2013 Dec 13, 9:38pm  

Reality says

We are not talking about a single guy living in his mom's basement while being paid to make online posts

Thanks for clearing that up.

Reality says

Doctors are supposed to be one of the admired professions.

They still are.

Reality says

5k/mo is barely enough to put one kid through private high school or college.

And if you choose to live in Irvine, you can only buy a Lamborghini once every few years. I guess that's a sacrifice you have to make.

68   Reality   2013 Dec 13, 9:59pm  

Bellingham Bill says

No, just showing housing has totally outraced inflation, demonstrating my point that it's not like other expenses.

No, all you have shown is that the official "inflation" under-states some components of expenditure in real life, and housing seems to be one of them. If you graph medical expense or education expense, both would have out-raced "inflation" even more. Heck, even the cost of real food / organic food would have out-raced "inflation." In the case of housing, I'm not even sure if it is our-racing inflation: the graph you have is not adjusted for quality or quantity consumed. People live in much bigger houses today than they were in 1950's. By your way of graphing, even people's expenditure on electronics goods would have out-raced "inflation" . . . and we know electronic goods prices have definitely deflated in the last half century!

Bellingham Bill says

When households started making 2 incomes -- and banks started lending against that higher household income -- housing prices skyrocketed.

Along with the prices for many other items, including medicine, education and real food (organic food, but industrially produced substitutes). The average houses also got much bigger with more amenities during that time (the graph is not just housing but also utility, which is a reflection of energy cost and electricity/gas monopoly surcharge "distribution fee"), unlike education getting worse and real food staying more or less the same.

Bellingham Bill says

Other goods aren't in such short supply and not so critical to survival and quality of life as housing. No good is, really, since housing even determines how well your kids grow up etc.

Do you want to try giving up food or medicine? As for kids, upper middle class bidding up prices for houses in good neighborhoods is only a reflection that high taxes and inflationary transfers have already deprived them the capacity to send kids to private schools away from home.

Bellingham Bill says

As for the partisanship talking about the national fisc, this is because the last 4 Democratic presidents have been rather serious about paying for government, while "You know, Paul, Reagan proved that deficits don't matter" is the Republican belief.

It's a two sides of the same scam. Both deficit spending and raising taxes increase the Economic Rent collected by the privileged at the expense of the rest of the society, at gun point. Two wings of the same political party.

69   Reality   2013 Dec 13, 10:04pm  

tatupu70 says

Reality says

5k/mo is barely enough to put one kid through private high school or college.

And if you choose to live in Irvine, you can only buy a Lamborghini once every few years. I guess that's a sacrifice you have to make.

We are not talking about Lamborghinis, we are talking about sending kids to a good quality private school, just like the good doctor himself probably had when he was young. If the good doctor and his family can not afford to live in Irvine, who should be able to? Only government bureaucrats, banksters and other gang-bangers in and out of bureaucratic costumes?

70   Y   2013 Dec 13, 10:20pm  

you bring this on yourself by living in high mortgage districts to exist in a tiny dump. Move to stockton and quadruple your disposable income.

turtledove says

Yes, this is California, the land of insane house prices. Irvine doesn't have much 4-bed product under $1m (and that's a tiny dump). I'm not saying that we're poor. But when you think of the 1% who are made out to be the super-rich who are not paying their share, does my situation really strike you as the same as Mitt Romney, for example?

71   tatupu70   2013 Dec 14, 12:03am  

Reality says

We are not talking about Lamborghinis, we are talking about sending kids to a good quality private school

No. I'm talking about Lamborghinis and you were talking about private schools.

Reality says

just like the good doctor himself probably had when he was young.

Really? All Drs. went to private schools? Please tell me more.

Reality says

If the good doctor and his family can not afford to live in Irvine, who should be able to?

The good Dr and his family clearly can very comfortably afford to live in Irvine. They have more $$ left AFTER taxes, housing (in Irvine no less), and health care than what the median family has BEFORE all expenses. I think they have no problem being able to afford living in Irvine.. Don't you agree?

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