Comment by guywithahat
6 days ago
I'm not the guy you replied to but the idea that "high-net worth individuals" (I assume you mean hundred-millionaires+) are skimping out on a meaningful amount of taxes is political. Most of these IRS agents will end up going after normal people, which is where most tax revenue comes from and where most of the fraud is. Billionaires have entire teams who do nothing but make sure their taxes are in order, a small business owner is more liable to make mistakes or try to commit fraud, which is who they will have to go after if they want to increase revenue. I think there's merit to his point, that the IRS has a history of targeting conservative organizations (https://grokipedia.com/page/IRS_targeting_controversy), and this has lead to their funding being a political issue.
I wouldn't call is comment sleazy I think he's just trying to discuss the topic at hand.
> Most of these IRS agents will end up going after normal people,
Normal people are the easiest to chase; the cut backs have made this a foregone conclusion.
> which is where most tax revenue comes
Because normal people can’t afford transnational accounting shenanigans.
> from and where most of the fraud is.
The Panama papers prove deliberate tax dodges are not by “normal people”.
> I wouldn't call is comment sleazy I think he's just trying to discuss the topic at hand.
Injecting and steering a discussion towards party and identity politics a where there was none is a sure fire way to shutdown a discourse.
Deliberate or not, the method involved is sleazy.
By the way: Given that your definition of normal in your heavily downvoted comment, I’m not surprised you’re defending the comment.
Dig deeper and look back over decades. The 2022 bill and headcount to 100k was a push BACK to normal.