'Gates for President' Group Gives Up 274
netbuzz writes "Dilbert creator Scott Adams had done his best to make this fantasy (or nightmare, depending on your point of view) a viable notion, but after three months of trying the group's leader has acknowledged that it's unlikely Gates will give up his current gig. They've tossed in the towel." Here is our original coverage of this ill-conceived plan.
Why would he? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Why would he? (Score:5, Insightful)
According to wikipedia, the President's salary traditionally serves as the cap for all government employees, and is currently near half a million dollars. That said, most everyone who runs for President is already independently wealthy, so I don't think pay is a major concern.
A more appropriate question -- given who we are talking about -- would perhaps be, "isn't it a power cut?"
Re:Why would he? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Why would he? (Score:4, Interesting)
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According to wikipedia, the President's salary traditionally serves as the cap for all government employees, and is currently near half a million dollars.
Re:Why would he? (Score:4, Interesting)
I mean rumour has it, that the goal of a war with Iran has more to do with cutting off the supply of Iranian oil and achieving a price target $90 barrel for oil (which for no real apparent reason accidentally favours the current presidents business relationships) rather than WMDs which autocrats love to make lots of noise about but fear to use because they will end up being personally targeted by those same weapons.
Now of course Bill would make no money from M$ software being made compulsory in every US government department, every US school and every US business. Personally I don't see Bill being interested in any kind of silly nonsense like that, but billy goat ballmer would be whole different story, he would leap at the opportunity and just think how entertaining he would end up becoming, an all new, all singing, all dancing US president, and as a bonus, chair throwing would become a new national sport, cool ;-))) (well at least it is funny from my point of view, not being an American).
He was a criminal? (Score:3, Funny)
What was he charged with?
Re:He was a criminal? (Score:5, Funny)
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Bill Gates ain't the worst guy in the world (Score:2, Interesting)
OF COURSE he does! (Score:3, Interesting)
Some form of inheritance tax is required because not having just encourages hoarding of capital, which is bad for the national economy in the long term.
You don't have to be a billionaire (Score:2)
(There are a lot of financial advisors that will help to help you manage your estate so that you are below the legal limit before Uncle Sam comes in, by donating money to worthy causes you supported in life, etc.)
Estate tax deduction too high in the USA (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Estate tax deduction too high in the USA (Score:5, Insightful)
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As for leveling the playing field by stealing money. That's NOT the job of this government and is evil, plain and simple. Everybody should have equal opportunity, but to go all out to level the playing field is a system that was proven invalid by the collapse of communism.
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If I form a government under what I call "The Mathematics Party" and it fails horribly, does that prove that math is fundamentally flawed?
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Anyone who's net worth, including homes and small businesses is over $2,000,000 is very rich.
Are you sure about that?
You do realize that you're categorizing individual farmers as "very rich", right? Have you ever actually met and talked to such people? I have a bunch of them for neighbors, and I'll tell you that they're a lot poorer than me, regardless of what our net worths are. Estate taxes are big problems for farming families who want to pass the farm on to the next generation. There are some tax breaks (basically reduced valuation for "special use" land like farmland), but in many case
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Lottery winnings are income. Gifts are income. Money falling from the sky is income. So is inheritance.
Even a $200,000 deduction will allow anyone to keep running a small business unless it was on the verge of failing an
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To me, it makes sense to tax the value created by building a house once and call it good, rather than making a societal grab every time someone else starts using it(Property taxes are o.k., I'm talking about the 'income' from selling the house).
OK, so what about the people who make a living buying and selling houses? Real estate is an investment, no different from buying stocks or anything else whose value appreciates. So if there's a capital gain on that investment, then it should be taxed as such.
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The best way to avoid the estate tax is to place a chunk of your belongings in a trust and leave the trust to your heirs. That's how the truly rich do it, and it's why people like John Kerry are so in favor of a death tax (he knows his heirs won't be affected by one). See an estate att
Re:OF COURSE he does! (Score:5, Informative)
Gates and his father oppose the repeal of the tax, not the tax. (Presumably the OP meant to say that).
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Yes! That's a horrible idea! (Score:5, Insightful)
This was brought up a couple days ago, so I'll copy and paste from my previous post on this subject:
Forgoing the income tax for a sales tax is a pretty bad idea.
First, the income tax is progressive. This would be impossible to achieve with sales tax. The only people that would benefit from a "flat" tax (sales or income) are those at the highest tax brackets. In order to replace the income lost from dropping taxes on the top 5%, taxes would have to be raised on the bottom 50%.
Second, a sales tax puts a disproportionate burden on the lowest income families. Those with low incomes--even up to $50k/yr for a single man--spend a very large proportion of their income. The lower your income, the higher percentage of it is spent. People making minimum wage are spending 100% of their pay checks.
Those making $1MM a year, on the other hand, may spend only a small fraction of their income.
And you can say that you would simply not charge sales tax on the things that poor people are spending their money on -- food, shelter and utilities -- but doing so would drastically reduce tax receipts. It would be impossible to exempt those things and the suggestion that it is possible is just used by proponents to try to sell their plan.
Furthermore, this is about Google. Corporations pay a pitifully small percentage of taxes in America. The percentage of taxes paid by corporations has dropped dramatically since the 1950's. Your notion that double taxation is a serious problem is just plain wrong. The tax code currently incentivizes businesses to invest in capital expenditures, R&D, etc.
In summary, the only people that want a sales tax are those that don't understand it's implications and those that could pay less taxes by shifting the tax burden more on the lower & middle classes.
The notion that there is tax injustice because the top minority of Americans pays the majority of taxes is absurd. The people at the top of the food chain reap the highest rewards of our society. Without our national infrastructure, they wouldn't be able to make and horde millions or billions of dollars. They SHOULD pay a tax burden that more closely resembles their share of the US pie, not necessarily their share of the US Population.
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Loopholes certainly exist. But the vast majority of the deductions taken by wealthy people are not loopholes at all but are purposely written tax code to encourage wealthy people to invest their money in ways that the IRS is confident will lead to them incurring more revenue in the future than if they had just taxed the initial monies.
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"The Internal Revenue Service has released data on tax year 2003 that show the top 1 percent of taxpayers, ranked by adjusted gross income, paid 34.3 percent of all federal income taxes that year. The top 5 percent paid 54.4 percent of the whole, the top 10 percent paid 65.8 percent, and the top quarter of taxpayers paid 83.9 percent."
http://www.heartland.org/Article.cfm?artId=18402 [heartland.org]Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
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A consumption tax is MUCH more repsentative of wealth. If they just horde (i.e. invest their wealth back into the eco
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What's so complicated about a rebate? I've heard they have these newfangled inventions these days that can transfer money to an account with very little human effort...
For starters, you give the government money, and some point in time later (a year later?), you get it back. And you get it back AFTER filling out paperwork, which can often be confusing (hey, it's tax time now ...). Do they have to keep receipts? Or does the gov't keep receipts? And many bottom-income people don't have checking or savings accounts, and there's no way to transfer money to a non-existent account.
And the low-income people need the money NOW to pay bills (like rent and food) and literall
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That's why you make it a prebate, rather than a rebate. You know they either a) are going to spend under the poverty line, so they will not pay any taxes (in the end) anyway, or b), they are spending more than the poverty line (and now have a much harder time avoiding taxes), so you don't need to worry.
As for being impossible t
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Re:Yes! That's a horrible idea! (Score:5, Informative)
Obligatory FairTax plug (Score:5, Informative)
Everyone gets a monthly prebate covering the tax on spending up to the poverty level. This eliminates taxes altogether for the truly poor, and makes the tax effectively progressive.
True, there's a limit to how hard you can punish success and productivity with such a tax, but the overall effect on the economy and, dare I say it, fairness, more than makes up for that.
Website: http://www.fairtax.org/ [fairtax.org]
Summary: : http://www.fairtax.org/fairtax/thumbnail.htm [fairtax.org]
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It seems to work for those states, so at the very least it's worth consideration, no?
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Yeah, this is why the Canadian economy is such a basket case. We've had a (visible) national sales tax on good and services for nearly twenty years. All the arguments you've trotted out were used to show that it would end the world up here. The world seems to be spinning along just fine, thanks, especially
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First, the income tax is progressive. This would be impossible to achieve with sales tax.
Not so. The Fairtax proposal (I'm not really a fan overall, but they have some interesting points) and plenty of others like it have a very simple solution to this. A sales tax with a per-person monthly rebate of a fixed amount, usually set as roughly the amount of sales tax a person at the poverty line would pay. So a person at the poverty line pays their sales tax at the same rate as everyone else, but gets all
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As does using a graduated tax with high percentage brackets on high earners. When the top brackets were reduced in the 1980s, receipts rose. Besides, the poor already get their utilities, food, and clothing subsidized.
I still don't see a compelling argument for punishing those who are successful earne
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he may not be able to run a decent country, but his considerable holdings are proof that he has done a decent job of running the united states thus far :-)
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nah, 50 bil is about right once you take out all the taxes.
Re:Bill Gates ain't the worst guy in the world (Score:5, Informative)
In fact, he defends the tax so much he wrote a book about it. The argument of the book is basically saying the law that is in place is too lenient and it should be repealed for something like the old one that didn't have loopholes. He wants the rich to pay more taxes when they die.
From Wikipedia:
Gates is co-author, with Chuck Collins, of the book Wealth and Our Commonwealth: Why America Should Tax Accumulated Fortunes, a defense of the estate tax.[2]
The book on Amazon.com Wealth and Our Commonwealth: Why America Should Tax Accumulated Fortunes [amazon.com]
I haven't finished it yet because I use it to fall asleep... however your statement is not true in fact and spirit.
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What a shining endorsement of the book! I'm gonna run out and get it.
Re:Bill Gates ain't the worst guy in the world (Score:4, Informative)
I don't know about Bill Gates, but William H. Gates Sr., the father of Bill Gates, supports the inheritance tax.
From Now with Bill Moyers: [pbs.org] "There's a campaign to restore the inheritance tax. And it's being led, believe it or not, by some of the country's richest people including Bill Gates, Sr.
From Alternet.org: [alternet.org] "Case Against Inheritance Tax Is Bogus", By Chuck Collins and Bill Gates, Sr., AlterNet. Posted September 15, 2005.
The reason is obvious -- without the inheritance tax, the US would develop a wealthy aristocratic class. This is one of the main reasons the founding fathers broke away from Britain and developed a constitutional Republic.
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Why not just raise rates on the rich.
Quit pilfering for every little cent with stupid taxes.
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Of course, I also like the FairTax sales tax system more and more as I think about it, assuming that after we lay off the IRS and pare down government we can get the sales tax rate to something under %20. Bonus points if we can convince companies to mark their prices with tax included.
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Of course, I also like the FairTax sales tax system more and more as I think about it, assuming that after we lay off the IRS and pare down government we can get the sales tax rate to something under %20.
Some problems with this:
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Since when did incompetence prevent people from running for President :-) Heck, anybody looking at the US for the last 8-years would think it was a job requirement!
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No way he'd win... (Score:3, Funny)
Wouldn't work because of three words... (Score:2)
There is no way he could be seen as anything other than conflicted over what software government branches use. It just wouldn't work.
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Anyway, I think there are many much bigger issues facing a president than what software the government uses.
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The current admin has as much conflict of interest as gates would. I don't hear washington screaming for impeechment yet.
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Wow, the current guy really isn't doing his job, is he? With this being the case, it is really too bad that the Yanks require a native born "son" as President. Otherwise there could be a Linus Torvalds for Pres in, um, 2020 campaign.
Secret list of committee to elect Gates (Score:3, Funny)
-Antivirus companies
-Computer techs/Best Buy and pimped warranties.
-Indian outsourcers.
-Foreign charities.
This was never about Gates anyway (Score:4, Informative)
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RonB
I dont think hell get elected. (Score:2)
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Gates has 20 Charisma (Score:2)
What, no Microsoft web server? (Score:5, Funny)
Server: Apache Webserver
X-Pingback: http://www.billgatesforpresident.net/xmlrpc.php [billgatesf...sident.net]
X-Powered-By: PHP/4.4.4
Why would Bill support anything with this kind of response header?
Is Bill Gates Good for the USA? (Score:2)
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In the short-term, I absolutely agree. But it's the long-term view where I'm less certain. Sometimes, a change for the better involves some short-term pain. Are we *really* offshoring jobs that better our collective "standard of living", or are we just dumping a slew of jobs that are ultimately
Wow, deja vu (Score:2)
Back in the day, the National Lampoon got sued over a spoof VW ad showing a Beetle floating in water (which they will do, for a while). Caption: "If Teddy Kennedy had driven a VW, he'd be President today."
rj
POTUAC (Score:5, Funny)
You're giving up on Mr. Gates's presidential aspirations.
Cancel or Allow?
He didn't stand a chance. (Score:4, Insightful)
Scott Adams is a dolt (Score:3, Insightful)
Bill Gates would make a terrible President of the United States. Do we really need another Warren Harding or Calvin Coolidge?
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Yes, specifically another Coolidge. From one of his biographys:
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They're Right (Score:5, Funny)
Now we're left with Obama, McCain, and Romney (Score:2, Funny)
Jobs for President (Score:3, Funny)
1) Change the name of the US to 'iCountry'.
2) Ban Thanksgiving
3) Replace ballistic missile defense with a national reality distortion field.
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3) Replace ballistic missile defense with a national reality distortion field.
The interesting thing is that the reality distortion field actually works.
This is one idea...... (Score:3, Insightful)
Well...in some circles... (Score:4, Interesting)
Mr Hu goes to Washington (after he's seen Bill Gates and the Boeing factory) [timesonline.co.uk]
oh come on (Score:2)
Clippy for VP! (Score:5, Funny)
Bill Gates is Ineligible (Score:2, Interesting)
"Let's cut off their air supply..." (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Not a Microsoft fan, but better than neo-cons (Score:5, Insightful)
Who would Gates attack? (Score:3, Funny)
Would Gates declare war on Linux-loving nations?
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I really don't understand why most people don't get this point, especially voters in the U.S. And where is Bin Laden and why are we no longer concerned with his capture? I believe that the last thing this administration wants to do is have Bin Laden captured or killed. Without him out there in the wild, there's no boogeyman and less reason to justify suspending our constitutional rights in the name of the "war on terror".
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Re:Not a Microsoft fan, but better than neo-cons (Score:4, Interesting)
Not only he is unbelievably rich and powerful, but he is responsible for nearly every kind of almost-but-not-quite criminal corporate misconduct in the book and then inventing some. He recklessly and shamelessly exploits everyone and everything he can to benefit himself and the company he sees as an extention of himself.
And you want to give him, in addition to everything he already has, the position of commander of the armed forces.
You gotta be kidding.
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So who exactly are you endorsing? Hitler was evil and competent and I'm assuming he would be an undesirable candidate. Chaney/Bush only have a few tens of thousands of people in detention camps. So are you saying a competent Gates would nab millions and so be more evil, or are you saying the "borderline evil" means he would just put a video camera in every
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Well, Gates is an athiest and a liberal, so I don't think he'd fit in so well with the neo-cons.
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Not the track record... (Score:5, Insightful)
Suggesting that anyone independently wealthy that reached the white house would use it to feather his own nest is just a gross oversimplification.
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Let me help you - here's one of your recent comments [slashdot.org]: