The wealthiest individuals don't have traditional paychecks. Instead, they hold appreciating assets like stock and take out loans against that wealth to fund their lifestyles. This avoids triggering capital gains or income taxes, a key reason proponents are pushing for a direct wealth tax in California to address this loophole.

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The wealth tax initiative is drafted to be highly punitive by including large Roth IRAs and negating the benefits of complex trust structures typically used for tax avoidance. This makes it extremely difficult for wealthy individuals to escape its reach if passed.

The idea that a billionaire can "spend" their net worth is flawed. Their wealth is primarily in company stock; liquidating it would crash the price and signal a lack of confidence. This misunderstanding of wealth versus income fuels unrealistic proposals for solving global problems.

A controversial feature of the proposed California billionaire tax is its retroactive application. The tax would affect anyone who was a billionaire resident at the start of the year, even if the law passes months later. This legal mechanism is designed to stop wealthy individuals from moving their assets out of state before the vote occurs.

Congressman Ro Khanna proposes a tax on the total net worth of individuals with over $100 million. Unlike an income or capital gains tax, this targets unrealized wealth, forcing the liquidation of assets like stocks to generate the cash needed to pay the tax.

For high earners, strategic tax mitigation is a primary wealth-building tool, not just a way to save money. The capital saved from taxes represents a guaranteed, passive investment return. This reframes tax planning from a compliance chore to a core financial growth strategy.

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.

Stock options and equity are the primary drivers of wealth for employees, not salary. Unlike salary, which is taxed annually, equity value grows unimpaired by taxes until it's sold. This tax-deferred status allows for faster, unimpeded compounding over time.

Instead of selling assets and triggering capital gains, the wealthy buy and hold assets like stocks. They then borrow against that portfolio tax-free for living expenses. When they die, a life insurance policy pays off the loan, allowing the original assets to pass to heirs tax-free.

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 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.