The biggest tax cut isn't a legislative change but rather neutering the IRS's budget. The agency lacks the resources to audit the complex finances of the wealthy, incentivizing aggressive tax strategies and leaving hundreds of billions in legally owed taxes uncollected each year.
The US innovation ecosystem is fueled by a culture of risk-taking, which is incentivized by a regressive tax system at the highest levels. The tax rate plummets for the wealthiest 1%, creating an enormous potential upside that encourages venture creation, despite the lack of a social safety net.
After learning how much of their estate would be lost to taxes, Heather Dubrow's surprising takeaway was to spend more money. For those in the highest tax brackets, enjoying their wealth becomes a logical alternative to having a significant portion of it seized by the government upon death.
Unlike most countries that fund legislation upon passing it, the U.S. Congress passes laws first and separately debates funding later. This fundamental disconnect between approving work and approving payment is a structural flaw that repeatedly manufactures fiscal crises and government shutdowns.
The "Trump Gold Card" program allows wealthy foreign nationals to gain U.S. residency quickly by paying a million-dollar fee. This policy, modeled after "golden visa" programs in other countries, shifts immigration strategy toward monetizing access for the ultra-rich to generate federal revenue without raising taxes.
Beyond headline-grabbing scandals, the most insidious impact of a kleptocratic administration is its refusal to enforce existing laws, from financial regulations to anti-corruption acts. This quiet dismantling of the legal framework fosters a culture of impunity where bad actors thrive, ultimately harming ordinary people and destabilizing the entire system.
Tax policy is a reflection of societal values. By taxing capital gains at a lower rate than ordinary income, the U.S. tax code inherently suggests that wealth generated from existing money (assets, stocks) is more valuable or 'noble' than wealth generated from work and labor.
The federal budget reflects the values of those who vote. Since young people vote at lower rates than seniors, policies benefiting seniors (like Social Security adjustments) are prioritized over those for children (like the child tax credit), effectively defunding the young.
The US tax system disproportionately penalizes high-income 'workhorses' (e.g., doctors, lawyers) who earn from labor. In contrast, the super-rich, who derive wealth from capital gains and have mobility, benefit from loopholes that result in dramatically lower effective tax rates.
Instead of attacking wealth, a more effective progressive strategy is to champion aggressive, 'hardcore' capitalism while implementing high, Reagan-era tax rates on the resulting gains. This framework uses the engine of capitalism to generate wealth, which is then taxed heavily to fund public investments in infrastructure and education, creating a virtuous cycle.
Through capital and connections, the top 1% can navigate the legal and political systems to their advantage—from securing bailouts to obtaining pardons. This creates a two-tiered system of justice where the law binds the 99% but does not equally protect them.