Jason Bourne wrote:On the fly right now, but quickly for Kish:
I already said my calling Galle an idiot was tool string and retracted it. At least I didn't say he was talking out his ass and acting like a dick unlike you did to me and Cicero.
OK. Well, clearly my words were taken more seriously then I had intended them. I apologize. I use expressions like "talking out of your ass" and "behaving like a dick" when I am razzing friends in a disagreement. Since I consider both you are Cicero to be more like friends than simple casual acquaintances, I thought I was relatively safe smacking you in the arm like that.
Am I on board with everything you guys are saying? No.
My basic point is that hypothetical policy discussions are different than "what is the law" discussions. Galle loves to write about the former, while it seems to me, and correct me if I am wrong, that you are reacting negatively to the what you understood to be ignorance about the latter. My sense is that so many of us know the crude basics of how an IRA is taxed that it would be inconceivable that Galle would not know and thus make a dumb statement.
So, to test my theory, I showed the little Huffpo piece to my wife, who got it right away. She said, and I paraphrase, that he is talking about the rather esoteric idea that IRA gains *should* be taxed in the present, rather than at a point in time when inflation has reduced the value of the tax collected. So, this is not about Galle not knowing the basics of IRAs; it is about Galle exploring hypothetical policy options. I get the sense that his position on this is a lot more Left-leaning than most people here would be comfortable with, since the practitioner's goal is to see that the client generally pays less, wherever possible and legal, whereas his goal as an academic is to think through different policy options and their impact.
Unfortunately, the Huffpo piece, as I thought, has taken Galle's more complex idea out of context and presented it as though Romney is cheating or doing something illegal right now. In reality, Galle would be using Romney as an example of how the wealthy can game the system legally to build massive fortunes and avoid taxation as much as possible. My guess is that he thinks some of that is unfair, but I have not confirmed that with him.
Jason Bourne wrote:Next I do not look down or discard academics. Much of what I read,attend training on and learn comes from tax professors. I have even though of going that route myself a few times in my career.
No offense, Jason, and I think that you believe you respect academics, but your remarks about the "real world" are simply offensive to academics. We happen to inhabit the same real world you inhabit. And damn straight you should not discard academics, because some practitioners do read the academic articles and plan their shelters, etc. accordingly. In other words, this is "real world" impact of scholarship. Furthermore, academics write about what is happening in Congress and the Senate in a depth of detail that many practitioners otherwise would not take the time to research themselves. This is of "real world" importance.
Sorry, but I am fed the hell up with this "real world" BS. Everyone imagines academics as some cushy gig where you simply sit on your ass all day and do nothing of significance. That BS has to stop, and, if you ever got my hackles up in this conversation, it was right there. You turned to calling Galle an "idiot" almost immediately, and I believe that is indicative of the same bias. There is a reason why our political discourse has been corrupted almost irretrievably, and this idea that professors are irrelevant is very close to the core of the problem. That is highly ideological resentment there, and it is not pretty. It is also detrimental to the body politic.
My apologies, I guess, that journalism is not the ideal forum for conveying complex ideas. But, you should not need to be told that.
Jason wrote:Last of all, in defense of my own profession, sure there are sleazy Tax CPAs and Attorneys who twist the tax law to its limits and border on and even can be criminal. I noted on another thread here that an attorney/promoter of the Son of Boss scheme about sucked me and one of my partners into selling this to a client. We were damn close. But our judgement over came our greed to get a big fee and our cleints greed to save a lot of tax. And technically it looked damn good. But substantatively it was just a fares and too good to be true. We passed. I am happy we did. That attorney can no longer practice, his firm was blown apart, he may even be in jail.
As you know, our politicians have come up with an incredibly complex tax law. I still run into things that just boggle my mind as to how complex they are and in some cases just ludicrous. However some of the reason the law is complex is to catch cheaters and abusers of the law. The rules relating to offshore investing and foreign owned companies and trusts is one example. And because those rules are so onerous and complex they often impose burdensome results on honest taxpayers that my guess was never intended.
That said,I see nothing wrong with with tax practioners using the law honestly and within its boundaries to save cleints tax dollars. But more times than not I am telling a client that may not like the fact that the law requires them to report some sort income and pay a heavy Texas on that income and that they simply must pay the tax. I could give examples but would rather not.
I don't see anything wrong with it either. The problem is that the tax code has been utterly effed up by the Congress, and often to skew things in favor of particular interests. As I sit here, I am almost caused to long for a flat tax with a threshhold below which the poor would either get a break or not pay. That might, however, put you and my wife out of a job. As things stand, our system is oppressive to some, rather overly kind to others, and generally unfair.
I know that you are a very good and ethical man. I am not impugning your profession as a whole. I am sorry for being sloppy and making it sound like that. I agree that some attorneys and CPAs skirt the law. Furthermore, in the current conversation about Romney, I believe that his tax behavior is sketchy. In my view, he fits that LDS type of the guy who is very upright in his dealings with other human beings, but a little dodgy in his dealings with Uncle Sam, local governments, etc.
I know these guys very well. The crap about Romney's residences and where he happened to be actually living at the time he ran for office and so forth: CLASSIC EXAMPLE. Other examples I have seen are the guys who leave their car registered in a place where a relative or ex-spouse lives just to avoid paying the vehicle tax or paying the higher insurance. There are a thousand little ways to save a buck, or get what you want, and when the entity on the other end is the "guvment", people find it easy to rationalize it. LDS people I have known are particularly good at rationalizing it, as far as I can tell. It is not a coincidence that the Mormon West has the highest concentration of tax protesters in the country. It is hatred of the government as though it were some foreign occupying power, which, in LDS culture, is probably not felt to be too far from the truth. Long live the Kingdom, eh?
So, yeah, I think Romney is both a good guy, and I think that he is, in some ways, a cheat. And the reason I can believe what appears to be a contradiction on its face is that I have seen him scores of times in LDS wards I have attended. I grew up with guys like him.
"Petition wasn’t meant to start a witch hunt as I’ve said 6000 times." ~ Hanna Seariac, LDS apologist