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Focusing public anger on high-earning individuals is a misdirection. The real drain on national economies comes from mega-corporations and financial funds that use legal loopholes, like offshore headquarters, to avoid paying taxes in the countries where they generate revenue. This corporate tax avoidance is the primary force hollowing out the middle class.

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Billionaires like Mark Zuckerberg legally pay near-zero income tax by taking a $1 salary. Their wealth comes from stock appreciation. They access cash not by selling stock (a taxable event), but by borrowing against it. The core strategy is avoiding taxable income altogether.

Instead of controversial wealth or broad income taxes, a more politically viable solution for AI-driven job displacement is to levy a higher corporate tax rate specifically on companies whose profit margins surge after replacing workers with AI.

Rather than increasing revenue, wealth taxes incentivize the wealthy to leave, shrinking the tax base. As seen in New York, this forces the government to eventually broaden the tax to lower income brackets to cover the deepening deficit.

Attacking the wealthy personally is a failed political strategy. It alienates aspirational voters, pushes capital to other regions, and distracts from implementing effective policy. Focusing on sober, competent arguments for a progressive tax structure is a more effective path to achieving tax reform goals.

The proposed tax on billionaires' assets isn't about the billionaires themselves, who hold a fraction of national wealth. The real goal is to establish the legal precedent for a private property tax. Once normalized, this mechanism can be extended to the middle class, where the vast majority of assets reside.

When a political party uses the IRS to punish enemies, it simultaneously shields its wealthy allies from audits. This allows them to evade taxes, creating a revenue gap. To fund the government, that money must be collected from lower and middle-income taxpayers, effectively creating a tax increase for them.

Billionaire wealth taxes are easily dodged by relocating. A more robust policy would tax capital gains based on the jurisdiction where the value was created, preventing billionaires from moving to a zero-tax state just before selling stock to avoid taxes.

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.

The focus on "the wealthy not paying their fair share" distracts from the primary mechanism eroding middle-class wealth: government deficit spending. This necessitates money printing, which devalues the savings of ordinary people and drives up asset prices, benefiting asset owners at the expense of savers.

Proposed 'billionaire taxes' often include legal clauses that allow legislatures to expand the tax to lower wealth brackets and make it recurring without further voter approval. This reveals the long-term strategy is not just to tax billionaires but to eventually target the much larger middle-class tax base.