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b_b  ·  4613 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: Your Tax Dollars Hard at Work
For the most part I agree that if you make X, you should pay Y. Take three guys in their 30s, each are making $50,000, but one has 2 kids, one has a mortgage, and one is a single renter. The guy who is the renter probably lives the most carefree lifestyle, and thus likely is least burdensome on the system, but he definitely has the highest tax bill, because he only gets a standard deduction; the system is backwards, if anything!

Charities are a tough one. If I didn't get a deduction for the couple hundred bucks I give to charitable organizations every year, I would still give. Its such a small amount of money that I don't really care too much about the tax savings. But a lot of charities or non-profits are sustained by massive contributions from very wealthy people. For instance, in the hospital in which I work there is a public area that honors anyone who has given more than $1,000,000. These people absolutely would not give that kind of cash if it weren't tax deductible. It would be harmful to a lot of good organizations if the charitable deduction were taken away, but you can't really say that my $100 isn't deductible but her/his $100,000 is. For that reason, I would leave the charity deduction.

Europe is a good example. They don't have charitable deductions in any Western European country, and the result is that all the art museums, hospitals, food banks, etc. are run by the governments for the most part. I don't like the look of that for the US, and I'm going to go out on a limb and say you probably don't either.