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Tax the rich, he thinks so as does most of the country.
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Nov 6, 2019 09:23:52   #
Kevyn
 
America needs to seriously tax the rich – I should know, I'm one of them
George Zimmer

If Donald Trump really wants to make America great again, he’d do what our country did when it was at the height of its economic stability and e******y: increase the top income tax rate to 90%.

Instead, what we have now is a tax system put into place for present-day robber barons – one that enables the interests of a small number of powerful industries to dominate national policy, for the benefit of only themselves and to the detriment of working people.

Under the current revenue system, companies such as Facebook and Exxon pay a lower rate on their 20 billionth dollar of profit (21%) than the top rate that dental assistants, sales workers, mechanics, telephone operators, painters and postal clerks pay on their average annual wage of $39,400 (22%).

Thanks to Trump and his 2017 tax bill, income ine******y has now reached its highest level since the US Census Bureau first began to tabulate it 50 years ago.

As a successful entrepreneur and founder of Men’s Wearhouse, I’ve seen how tax breaks for corporations and the rich perpetuate income ine******y.

Last year, the country’s “Gini” index, which measures the nation’s income distribution, reached its highest reading ever. In our modern-day Gilded Age, more of the nation’s wealth is going to fewer people.

If the trend was a half-century in the making, the Trump tax bill that slashed corporate tax rates has fueled it to an extreme. It calls into question the very sustainability of capitalism, with ramifications for everything from c*****e c****e to racial justice to who has a true economic stake in our nation.

In 2010, I joined an organization called the Patriotic Millionaires. We believe that those of us who benefit the most from our capitalist system must ensure that it also works for our employees, our customers, our communities – in short, all of the nation’s stakeholders, not just our shareholders.

Philanthropy alone won’t cut it. Advocacy is in order.

As “t*****rs to our class” – as we proudly call ourselves – we must press lawmakers at every level of discussion to revitalize the union movement, to increase the national minimum wage to $15 an hour, and to restore the working middle class that rose to prominence in America when our tax system was at its equitable best.

In order to do that, we need to bring back a fair and progressive tax code – one in which our nation’s wealthiest pay for investments in infrastructure, clean energy, public t***sit, early childhood education, re-entry programs for the formerly incarcerated and federal support for affordable housing.

That’s why the Patriotic Millionaires are hosting a Tax the Rich! conference in November. We’re meeting at the ground zero of 21st-century ine******y – San Francisco – to challenge our wealthy peers to fight for a fairer tax code.

We’ll be joined by Robert Reich, Gabriel Zucman and Emmanuel Saez, three University of California, Berkeley economists whose research has shifted the way we look at taxation and ine******y, as well as an array of other thinkers, activists and elected leaders.

By discussing how to address ine******y, we can provide for a truly great American future. We can debate the numbers, the rates, the programs. But when it comes to recreating American greatness, the ones who extract the greatest share of the national wealth must be the ones who pay the most to restore it.

George Zimmer is the founder and former CEO of Men’s Wearhouse, and the founder, CEO and chairman of Generation Tux

Reply
Nov 6, 2019 09:26:45   #
Canuckus Deploracus Loc: North of the wall
 
Kevyn wrote:
America needs to seriously tax the rich – I should know, I'm one of them
George Zimmer

If Donald Trump really wants to make America great again, he’d do what our country did when it was at the height of its economic stability and e******y: increase the top income tax rate to 90%.

Instead, what we have now is a tax system put into place for present-day robber barons – one that enables the interests of a small number of powerful industries to dominate national policy, for the benefit of only themselves and to the detriment of working people.

Under the current revenue system, companies such as Facebook and Exxon pay a lower rate on their 20 billionth dollar of profit (21%) than the top rate that dental assistants, sales workers, mechanics, telephone operators, painters and postal clerks pay on their average annual wage of $39,400 (22%).

Thanks to Trump and his 2017 tax bill, income ine******y has now reached its highest level since the US Census Bureau first began to tabulate it 50 years ago.

As a successful entrepreneur and founder of Men’s Wearhouse, I’ve seen how tax breaks for corporations and the rich perpetuate income ine******y.

Last year, the country’s “Gini” index, which measures the nation’s income distribution, reached its highest reading ever. In our modern-day Gilded Age, more of the nation’s wealth is going to fewer people.

If the trend was a half-century in the making, the Trump tax bill that slashed corporate tax rates has fueled it to an extreme. It calls into question the very sustainability of capitalism, with ramifications for everything from c*****e c****e to racial justice to who has a true economic stake in our nation.

In 2010, I joined an organization called the Patriotic Millionaires. We believe that those of us who benefit the most from our capitalist system must ensure that it also works for our employees, our customers, our communities – in short, all of the nation’s stakeholders, not just our shareholders.

Philanthropy alone won’t cut it. Advocacy is in order.

As “t*****rs to our class” – as we proudly call ourselves – we must press lawmakers at every level of discussion to revitalize the union movement, to increase the national minimum wage to $15 an hour, and to restore the working middle class that rose to prominence in America when our tax system was at its equitable best.

In order to do that, we need to bring back a fair and progressive tax code – one in which our nation’s wealthiest pay for investments in infrastructure, clean energy, public t***sit, early childhood education, re-entry programs for the formerly incarcerated and federal support for affordable housing.

That’s why the Patriotic Millionaires are hosting a Tax the Rich! conference in November. We’re meeting at the ground zero of 21st-century ine******y – San Francisco – to challenge our wealthy peers to fight for a fairer tax code.

We’ll be joined by Robert Reich, Gabriel Zucman and Emmanuel Saez, three University of California, Berkeley economists whose research has shifted the way we look at taxation and ine******y, as well as an array of other thinkers, activists and elected leaders.

By discussing how to address ine******y, we can provide for a truly great American future. We can debate the numbers, the rates, the programs. But when it comes to recreating American greatness, the ones who extract the greatest share of the national wealth must be the ones who pay the most to restore it.

George Zimmer is the founder and former CEO of Men’s Wearhouse, and the founder, CEO and chairman of Generation Tux
America needs to seriously tax the rich – I should... (show quote)


Does Men's Warehouse pay 15 dollars an hour to all of its employees?

Reply
Nov 6, 2019 09:33:33   #
Kevyn
 
Canuckus Deploracus wrote:
Does Men's Warehouse pay 15 dollars an hour to all of its employees?


The will with living wage laws, I don’t know if they do now I shop at Brooks Brothers.

Reply
 
 
Nov 6, 2019 09:38:06   #
Canuckus Deploracus Loc: North of the wall
 
Kevyn wrote:
The will with living wage laws, I don’t know if they do now I shop at Brooks Brothers.


I'm kind of a "practice what you preach" kind of guy...

What type of clothes does Brooks Brothers provide? (if the question isn't too personal)

Reply
Nov 6, 2019 09:41:04   #
JFlorio Loc: Seminole Florida
 
Canuckus Deploracus wrote:
I'm kind of a "practice what you preach" kind of guy...

What type of clothes does Brooks Brothers provide? (if the question isn't too personal)


Pretty easy for a guy who's already made his fortune. That 90% figure is bogus. Many of the tax deductions available then are gone now, also the ability to off shore industry was very limited. We all know where the wealth will go if you raise tax's that high and it won't be here.

Reply
Nov 6, 2019 09:41:55   #
JFlorio Loc: Seminole Florida
 
Kevyn wrote:
The will with living wage laws, I don’t know if they do now I shop at Brooks Brothers.


Just what is a living wage and how would it be calculated?

Reply
Nov 6, 2019 10:11:40   #
Pariahjf
 
JFlorio wrote:
Just what is a living wage and how would it be calculated?


That would depend on where an individual resides, I believe is how it SHOULD work. $15 an hour doesn't carry the same buying power in NY, Virginia, Texas, or Illinois as it does in Arkansas, New Mexico, Maine, or South Carolina.

Reply
 
 
Nov 6, 2019 10:24:25   #
Lonewolf
 
Kevyn wrote:
America needs to seriously tax the rich – I should know, I'm one of them
George Zimmer

If Donald Trump really wants to make America great again, he’d do what our country did when it was at the height of its economic stability and e******y: increase the top income tax rate to 90%.

Instead, what we have now is a tax system put into place for present-day robber barons – one that enables the interests of a small number of powerful industries to dominate national policy, for the benefit of only themselves and to the detriment of working people.

Under the current revenue system, companies such as Facebook and Exxon pay a lower rate on their 20 billionth dollar of profit (21%) than the top rate that dental assistants, sales workers, mechanics, telephone operators, painters and postal clerks pay on their average annual wage of $39,400 (22%).

Thanks to Trump and his 2017 tax bill, income ine******y has now reached its highest level since the US Census Bureau first began to tabulate it 50 years ago.

As a successful entrepreneur and founder of Men’s Wearhouse, I’ve seen how tax breaks for corporations and the rich perpetuate income ine******y.

Last year, the country’s “Gini” index, which measures the nation’s income distribution, reached its highest reading ever. In our modern-day Gilded Age, more of the nation’s wealth is going to fewer people.

If the trend was a half-century in the making, the Trump tax bill that slashed corporate tax rates has fueled it to an extreme. It calls into question the very sustainability of capitalism, with ramifications for everything from c*****e c****e to racial justice to who has a true economic stake in our nation.

In 2010, I joined an organization called the Patriotic Millionaires. We believe that those of us who benefit the most from our capitalist system must ensure that it also works for our employees, our customers, our communities – in short, all of the nation’s stakeholders, not just our shareholders.

Philanthropy alone won’t cut it. Advocacy is in order.

As “t*****rs to our class” – as we proudly call ourselves – we must press lawmakers at every level of discussion to revitalize the union movement, to increase the national minimum wage to $15 an hour, and to restore the working middle class that rose to prominence in America when our tax system was at its equitable best.

In order to do that, we need to bring back a fair and progressive tax code – one in which our nation’s wealthiest pay for investments in infrastructure, clean energy, public t***sit, early childhood education, re-entry programs for the formerly incarcerated and federal support for affordable housing.

That’s why the Patriotic Millionaires are hosting a Tax the Rich! conference in November. We’re meeting at the ground zero of 21st-century ine******y – San Francisco – to challenge our wealthy peers to fight for a fairer tax code.

We’ll be joined by Robert Reich, Gabriel Zucman and Emmanuel Saez, three University of California, Berkeley economists whose research has shifted the way we look at taxation and ine******y, as well as an array of other thinkers, activists and elected leaders.

By discussing how to address ine******y, we can provide for a truly great American future. We can debate the numbers, the rates, the programs. But when it comes to recreating American greatness, the ones who extract the greatest share of the national wealth must be the ones who pay the most to restore it.

George Zimmer is the founder and former CEO of Men’s Wearhouse, and the founder, CEO and chairman of Generation Tux
America needs to seriously tax the rich – I should... (show quote)



Reply
Nov 6, 2019 10:43:23   #
crazylibertarian Loc: Florida by way of New York & Rhode Island
 
Kevyn wrote:
America needs to seriously tax the rich – I should know, I'm one of them
George Zimmer

If Donald Trump really wants to make America great again, he’d do what our country did when it was at the height of its economic stability and e******y: increase the top income tax rate to 90%.

Instead, what we have now is a tax system put into place for present-day robber barons – one that enables the interests of a small number of powerful industries to dominate national policy, for the benefit of only themselves and to the detriment of working people.

Under the current revenue system, companies such as Facebook and Exxon pay a lower rate on their 20 billionth dollar of profit (21%) than the top rate that dental assistants, sales workers, mechanics, telephone operators, painters and postal clerks pay on their average annual wage of $39,400 (22%).

Thanks to Trump and his 2017 tax bill, income ine******y has now reached its highest level since the US Census Bureau first began to tabulate it 50 years ago.

As a successful entrepreneur and founder of Men’s Wearhouse, I’ve seen how tax breaks for corporations and the rich perpetuate income ine******y.

Last year, the country’s “Gini” index, which measures the nation’s income distribution, reached its highest reading ever. In our modern-day Gilded Age, more of the nation’s wealth is going to fewer people.

If the trend was a half-century in the making, the Trump tax bill that slashed corporate tax rates has fueled it to an extreme. It calls into question the very sustainability of capitalism, with ramifications for everything from c*****e c****e to racial justice to who has a true economic stake in our nation.

In 2010, I joined an organization called the Patriotic Millionaires. We believe that those of us who benefit the most from our capitalist system must ensure that it also works for our employees, our customers, our communities – in short, all of the nation’s stakeholders, not just our shareholders.

Philanthropy alone won’t cut it. Advocacy is in order.

As “t*****rs to our class” – as we proudly call ourselves – we must press lawmakers at every level of discussion to revitalize the union movement, to increase the national minimum wage to $15 an hour, and to restore the working middle class that rose to prominence in America when our tax system was at its equitable best.

In order to do that, we need to bring back a fair and progressive tax code – one in which our nation’s wealthiest pay for investments in infrastructure, clean energy, public t***sit, early childhood education, re-entry programs for the formerly incarcerated and federal support for affordable housing.

That’s why the Patriotic Millionaires are hosting a Tax the Rich! conference in November. We’re meeting at the ground zero of 21st-century ine******y – San Francisco – to challenge our wealthy peers to fight for a fairer tax code.

We’ll be joined by Robert Reich, Gabriel Zucman and Emmanuel Saez, three University of California, Berkeley economists whose research has shifted the way we look at taxation and ine******y, as well as an array of other thinkers, activists and elected leaders.

By discussing how to address ine******y, we can provide for a truly great American future. We can debate the numbers, the rates, the programs. But when it comes to recreating American greatness, the ones who extract the greatest share of the national wealth must be the ones who pay the most to restore it.

George Zimmer is the founder and former CEO of Men’s Wearhouse, and the founder, CEO and chairman of Generation Tux
America needs to seriously tax the rich – I should... (show quote)



It's c*******m; plain & simple. It is a d**g on incentive and that has been proved. It is also ens***ement to government.

Reply
Nov 6, 2019 10:48:00   #
JFlorio Loc: Seminole Florida
 
Pariahjf wrote:
That would depend on where an individual resides, I believe is how it SHOULD work. $15 an hour doesn't carry the same buying power in NY, Virginia, Texas, or Illinois as it does in Arkansas, New Mexico, Maine, or South Carolina.


Got news for you. That’s only half the battle. You sound like someone who’s never run a business, met a payroll, or paid themselves. Many small businesses can’t pay $15.00 without raising costs of goods which may be very prohibitive to the business. If you define living wage as just the necessity’s. That is food, housing, and energy the actual cost of labor goes way down.

Reply
Nov 6, 2019 10:49:54   #
JFlorio Loc: Seminole Florida
 
Lonewolf wrote:


If the govt. demanded 90% of your labor would you stay in the U. S., move, or quit working?

Reply
 
 
Nov 6, 2019 11:12:29   #
Carol Kelly
 
JFlorio wrote:
Just what is a living wage and how would it be calculated?


By your abilities! And your work ethics?

Reply
Nov 6, 2019 11:12:56   #
Carol Kelly
 
JFlorio wrote:
If the govt. demanded 90% of your labor would you stay in the U. S., move, or quit working?


That’s if he is working.

Reply
Nov 6, 2019 11:16:30   #
JFlorio Loc: Seminole Florida
 
Carol Kelly wrote:
By your abilities! And your work ethics?


Exactly how it should be. Don't forget the employers ability to pay what you are worth to his business.

Reply
Nov 6, 2019 11:17:10   #
JFlorio Loc: Seminole Florida
 
Carol Kelly wrote:
That’s if he is working.


I have a feeling with lonewuss the taxpayer is already footing about 90% of his expenses.

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