Dragon
Senior Member
- Sep 16, 2011
- 5,481
- 588
- 48
a stock grant isn't bought .....see?
Then you said nothing at all pertinent to the discussion. And you still aren't. Why are you bothering?
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a stock grant isn't bought .....see?
The Bottom 50% of income earners pay taxes totaling less tan 3% of the Federal intake. The top 10% of wage earners pay 70% of the Federal intake.
Utterly and totally irrelevant. The important question is what percentage of their income each group pays, NOT what percentage of the total tax proceeds each group pays. The latter is in large measure a function of what percentage of the total income each group makes, and to use it without specifying that as well is in effect to lie.
I love it
The Bottom 50% of income earners pay taxes totaling less tan 3% of the Federal intake. The top 10% of wage earners pay 70% of the Federal intake.
Utterly and totally irrelevant. The important question is what percentage of their income each group pays, NOT what percentage of the total tax proceeds each group pays. The latter is in large measure a function of what percentage of the total income each group makes, and to use it without specifying that as well is in effect to lie.
I love it
I am sorry, the blizzard of data has me on tilt. ask again later...
I am sorry, the blizzard of data has me on tilt. ask again later...
Never mind, Mr. Troll. I understand you now. Bye, and have a nice day. It's unfortunate I can't put a mod on ignore, but there's always the "scroll through" method.
Utterly and totally false, as is any stat from a CON$ervoFascist. CON$ exaggerate everything while keeping their misinformation close enough to the truth to be plausible.The Bottom 50% of income earners pay taxes totaling less tan 3% of the Federal intake. The top 10% of wage earners pay 70% of the Federal intake.
Caught lying about being LIMITED to deducting "ONLY" 3k, you stoop to your typical pompous condescension to deflect from your repeated lie.
Thank you.
If your capital losses exceed your capital gains, the amount of the excess loss that can be claimed is the lesser of $3,000, ($1,500 if you are married filing separately) or your total net loss as shown on line 16 of the Form 1040 Schedule D, Capital Gains and Losses. If your net capital loss is more than this limit, you can carry the loss forward to later years. Use the Capital Loss Carryover Worksheet in Publication 550, to figure the amount carried forward.
Tax Topics - Topic 409 Capital Gains and Losses
Here you go idiot.
Yes you lying and being incorrect means others are idiots
[pointless personal insults utterly devoid of cognitive content and presenting zero in the way of argument or evidence snipped for brevity]
Hmm, nothing left . . . Yep, as I suspected -- nothing there at all.