This is the first in what will be daily
essays on the 2016 Presidential elections.
In transparency, I supported Senator Ted Cruz and Carly Fiorina for the
Presidency and often consider myself a conservative around the likes of Mark
Levin, Glenn Beck and Michelle Malkin.
Background
Much has
been made about Donald Trump’s taxes.
Here is what we know to be true so far:
-
Donald Trump has leveraged tax laws to fullest
extent possible to minimize or possibly eliminate his tax return. He has stated that himself.
-
Conservatives have a history of being targeted
and mistreated by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) which includes the
releasing of taxes for conservative candidates.
-
Hillary Clinton served in the United States
Senate, representing New York from 2000 to 2008. Prior, she served as the First Lade from 1992
to 2000 and as the Secretary of State from 2009 to 2012.
These things
are not debatable.
Of the
things we do not know, the following are important to note:
-
If the New York Times has seen accurate and
actual tax returns from Donald Trump.
-
If the access to those materials were legally
obtained by the New York Times OR by someone else and given to the New York
Times.
Let us now
take several scenarios based on the above.
Scenario #1: Donald Trump took a
significant loss several years ago and carrying those losses forward, he has
not paid US federal taxes.
Donald Trump
has not violated any tax laws by doing so.
He has simply done that which our complex tax code allows. Both parties complain about loopholes and
tricks in the code – about how it is rigged to help the wealthy – but no elected official done
anything.
If Hillary
Clinton believes this to be such a horrible act, then why did she not introduce
a bill to change that? I did a search
and could not find a single bill introduced by Hillary Clinton in her years in
the Senate to reverse and close these policies.
She cannot simply complain about being the junior senator from New York as a reason – her replacement has an
introduced and cosponsored legislation on a number of different issues (most of
which I disagree with).
Let us give
her the benefit of the doubt (which is very hard to do) and assume that she did
not want to change this. This leads us
to evaluate is there merit in this idea and policy around being able to carry
losses forward. The merit may be in the
fact that often times, losses on paper do not impact cash flows until months or
even years later. So perhaps allowing
losses to be carried forward reduce bankruptcy occurrences and costly tax-payer
bailouts in the future. (I admit that
this is a very simplistic model and I could fill pages and pages digging
deeper.) So maybe this policy should
continue.
So here are
the outcomes of this scenario:
-
Donald Trump did not break any laws. Should we punish him for doing that –
perhaps, but then the same criticism should be applied to Hillary Clinton.
-
Hillary Clinton who had 8 years in the Senate
did not believe this to be a major issue enough to introduce changes to current
tax laws.
-
There may be some merit in the tax law itself.
Scenario #2: The tax returns are not
accurate, partial or misleading. Donald
may have been paying taxes (nothing wrong with) or not paying taxes (see
Scenario #1).
In this
scenario, we see the bias of and the lack of responsible reporting by the New
York Times. I would submit that the
outcome should be the end of the New York Times – similar to Dan Rather’s
career after the forged Bush memo – and/or the removal of their status as
“press”. They should not be granted the
freedoms or access guaranteed and promised under the 1st Amendment.
This also
leads to the beyond-realistic, continuous occurrences of right-wing individuals
being targeted for taxes. This includes
the IRS not granting tax-exempt status to tea party organizations and the
release of tax returns for conservative candidates. This started in 2010 with Christine
O’Donnell, 2010 Senate candidate from Delaware, and continuing through the last
Presidential cycle of Harry Reid saying he has seen Mitt Romney’s tax returns
on the floor of the US Senate.
The IRS is a
federal agency and under the direction of the White House. Even the most liberal of liberals must admit
that IRS and tax treatment of conservatives is peculiar and needs to have an
independent investigation look into it.
So here are
the outcomes of this scenario:
-
New York Times should no longer be classified as
the “press”.
-
Another conservative attacked around taxes
should trigger an independent investigator into the IRS.
Conclusion
Liberals
will often claim that there is nothing wrong with not paying taxes, as Mark
Levin reminded us of the 2012 47% comment by Mitt Romney. They would submit our free market, government
regulation and capital systems causes these people to not have the opportunities
to be able to pay taxes. Well, the same
systems are what allowed Donald Trump to not pay taxes.
Liberals
will also claim that government and legislators are responsible for not passing
laws to protect victims of gun violence or consumer fraud. So we should actually hold Hillary Clinton
and other people in the Congress and Senate at-fault for Donald Trump not
paying taxes.
Personal Tangent
Our tax
system is broken – it hurts those Americans earning middle-class incomes while
favoring those who earn high or low incomes.
We need to fundamentally reform our tax codes to close loop-holes and to
have people pay their fair share in the high and low income brackets. The middle class is tired of financing our
government’s failed attempts to protect and empower the citizens of our
country.
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