On 3/7/22 2:17 PM, Frank Wimberly wrote:
Do any tax return forms have an item that says, "Gift to the US Treasury"?  It might work.
I can't remember the year I quit ignoring the "give $1 to the US Presidential Election Fund" because I "didn't want to encourage the Bastards" and started checking it because... ???  I think because I thought it was a token vote for "take the money out of politics" which is of course somewhere between an oxymoron and hopeless.

I'm a lazy stingy/generous bastard.

When it mattered, I didn't always itemize deductions.   I didn't apply for child-care tax credits, I didn't optimize by doing pre-paid medical/etc programs to avoid taxes.   I don't claim gifts to charity even if they happen to be substantial (for me, that means 4 figures not 6 or even 5).    I have sometimes gone without even filing taxes, knowing (by rule-of-thumb) that I had not underpaid or if I had it was in 2 figures and not likely to get me a visit from the IRS.   This has backfired (as most lazy man's shortcuts often do) of having them put a magnifying lense on me for a few years when I didn't file with the IRS/NMtax levying fines on those small underpayments whilst not wanting to hear about the overpayments I let slide in other years...   I'm betting the US/NM treasuries are 4 and 3 figures, respectively fatter because I CBB.   And easily 2x or 10x that because I have never felt like I deserved to use "obvious cheats" to beat them out of some of that.

I *do* drive on the public-funded highways and I *did* send my kids to public schools and they did enjoy the fruits of various scholarship/grant/loan programs for that purpose.   And I worked for Big Freddy via UC at LANL for a whole career where I was paid less than most of my peers but felt like we *all* got paid really well (just look at the service people/teachers in the area trying to get by on a fraction of our professional salaries)

I don't begrudge paying a tithe to Big Stupid even if I *do* begrudge Big Stupid's stupidity.  But then I accept it, Big Stupid isn't/can't be? any smarter really than a smart slime mold or a dumb jellyfish.   If I were more paranoid about Big Stupid I'd try to stay more out of her way... if I were more tragically or often a victim of Big Stupid (like being a young urban black man or many different subclasses of women, etc) I might be more paranoid and therefore more P and Q minded or more resentful of the taxes I voluntary put in front of the Big Rake, or maybe more to the point, don't pull back as quickly as others would.

I still try to be helpful/generous or at least not-stingy with those in my personal circle.  Glen has indicated that this is somehow a hyper-individualist kinda thing to do and maybe he's right.   I don't feel bad about throwing (some) money/energy into the wind if I think there is someone downwind who can benefit from it.   Hell, I like leaving change on the sidewalk if I drop it, knowing someone else will enjoy picking it up (and spending it) a lot more than I will.  All this because I am in fact a lazy, generous, stingy bastard and (apparently from re-reading this) proud of it.

BTW, Vlada made it into Poland yesterday and the process of getting her into the US/Wisconsin has begun.  Apparently there are order 30K Ukranians already in the US expected to apply for Temporary Protected Status when our "quota" for *European* refugees under this status is 10K a year.

  There was a piece in the paper about a real-estate guy in Santa Fe (Berkshire Hathaway) who flew to Europe, rented a car and has been (might still be) driving (one gas-tank round-trip?) into Ukraine and bringing back whomever he can give a ride.  It sounds like a good way to scratch the itch to help in person.  I don't know if he is causing more interference than good, but if he IS being good enough to haul in consumables (like fuel and food) and not interfere with the "official" methods, then more power to him.


---
Frank C. Wimberly
140 Calle Ojo Feliz,
Santa Fe, NM 87505

505 670-9918
Santa Fe, NM

On Mon, Mar 7, 2022, 2:10 PM Eric Charles <[email protected]> wrote:

    Glen,
    Intentional, but not distortion.

    If they were advocating more funding to cancer research, then just
    as you suggest we would want to see if they also gave
    philanthropically to support cancer research.  If they were
    advocating more funding to the arts, then we would want to see
    what they gave to the arts (e.g., my Kennedy Center) example. Many
    rich people behave in exactly this way; I've seen tons of rich
    people over the years running those sorts of messages to good effect.

    The parallel in this situation: If they were advocating more of
    their money be taken in taxes and put into the federal general
    fund, we would want evidence that they were voluntarily paying
    more taxes than they owe. Preferably, we would want to see
    something in line with whatever tax policies they are advocating
    be applied to people of their wealth level, but I'd be happy with
    any sizable payment over what they currently owe under current IRS
    code.

    Can we find evidence of a single one of them even claiming to have
    done that? Not hard evidence that they did so, even just a claim
    to have done so. Has anyone on here seen such a claim?

    I obviously haven't done an exhaustive search, but I've been
    tracking rich people talking about this individually or in groups
    for probably three decades now, and I've never seen anyone openly
    claim to have volentarily paid the amount of taxes they would owe
    under the system they claim to want applied to them by force. I've
    never even seen someone talk about how the movement inspired them
    to pay /_any_ /general taxes over what they owe within the current
    system. It is pretty weird to publicly announce that you are only
    willing to do the something you claim is morally right if you are
    forced to do so by legislation. In what other context do we ever
    see those kinds of statements?




    On Mon, Mar 7, 2022 at 1:04 PM glen <[email protected]> wrote:

        It's not clear to me if EricC is accidentally or purposefully
        distorting the message. In order for us to accuse the
        participants in Patriotic Millionaires (PM) of *not*
        supporting any given cause, we'd need to look at their
        individual philanthropy. Looking at the stances, lobbying, and
        messaging of PM is inadequate.

        E.g. If we took a look at an issue PM says is Good, a "value",
        and we examine the donations of all the PM participants and
        found that either a) they don't donate any of their money at
        all or b) they donate to everything except the values of the
        PM, *then* EricC's rhetoric would have some traction.

        Otherwise, what an org advocates is not, cannot ever be,
        identical to what its members advocate.

        I've done none of that work of comparing PM's
        advocacy/lobbying and its participants' actions. Perhaps
        others have?

        On 3/7/22 09:51, Eric Charles wrote:
        > Pick a cause if you want, or just send your money to the
        government if the
        > point is that you think the government should have it.  ¯\_
        (ツ)_/¯
        >
        > <[email protected]>
        > A Javelin missile costs $175,203 according to Wikipedia. 4
        years of college
        > education is cheaper than that at most institutions. *Any
        *millionaire
        > could just cover one of those, if they thought that was the
        best use of
        > their money. *Any *millionaire could cover 4 of them, and
        still have a
        > significantly higher net worth than the median American
        under 40. We need
        > to stop pretending otherwise. If someone has several
        million, they could
        > cover a whole lot more and still be doing just fine.
        >
        > "Look, man, I think helping kids go to college is a morally
        crucial
        > activity and that those who have an obligation to support it
        should do
        > so... But I won't help with that unless I know a legislature
        is forcing
        > lots of other people to help kids go to college!" Well....
        ok.... but
        > that's a pretty shitty position to take.
        >
        > Maybe you think it's so important that you want to help
        yourself, and you *also
        > *you think others should be forced to help. Sure. I don't
        like that
        > position, but it is sensible, and you can morally ground it
        in all sorts of
        > ways. But no level of moral importance should exist as a
        category where you
        > won't help unless everyone else is forced to as well. Yes,
        people take that
        > position all the time. But it is a morally shitty position,
        and we should
        > treat it that way.
        >
        > Phrased differently: Having the government pick up the slack
        when
        > individual action is insufficient can often make sense.
        Claiming that only
        > government action should happen, and then acting as if that
        claim somehow
        > relieves individuals from any obligation to live up to their
        purported
        > moral values, is crap.
        >
        > If you think it is important to support local kids getting a
        college
        > education, then step up. You are in absolutely no sense "a
        bum" or "a
        > sucker" if you help someone afford a college education and
        your neighbor
        > doesn't. That's not how moral action works. Not at all. The
        correct
        > response to someone trying to act that way is to try to
        force them to admit
        > the obvious truth, which is that they have chosen not to
        support whatever
        > the cause is that is in question.
        >
        > Again, if they *are *supporting the cause, and adding on top
        of their
        > individual support a statement that they also think others
        should do more,
        > that's a much more defendable position. Statements like "I
        think the arts
        > should be supported, which is why I donated $XX,XXX to The
        Kennedy Center,
        > while lobbying my federal congressperson for more tax
        support" is perfectly
        > reasonable, as is "I think we need to better support local
        kids going to
        > college, which is why I provided 5 $X,XXX local-kid
        scholarships this local
        > high school graduates, while also talking with my state
        congressperson
        > about upping state funding to state schools."
        >
        > Do a survey of the "Patriotic Millionaires" and ask them how
        much more they
        > paid in taxes than what they owed. My guess is that you
        would find $0 as
        > the across the board answer. If it's not $0 across the
        board, certainly the
        > median will be $0.
        >
        >
        > On Mon, Mar 7, 2022 at 9:47 AM Marcus Daniels
        <[email protected]> wrote:
        >
        >> Let’s say it is not a box of cookies but a four year
        college scholarship
        >> or a Javelin missile launcher.  The millionaire might be
        able to pay those
        >> individually, but no one else.  In that situation there is
        no sales for the
        >> individual girl scouts to perform.  At best a few heroic
        medium-sized
        >> donations.
        >>
        >> Some purchases will be out of reach without spreading the
        cost around,
        >> even over thousands of millionaires.
        >>
        >> On Mar 7, 2022, at 6:04 AM, Eric Charles
        <[email protected]>
        >> wrote:
        >>
        >> 
        >> Marcus,
        >> Let's say you have a neighbor who's always talking about
        wanting to
        >> support the girl scouts, and who even goes so far as to set
        up a web page
        >> about how important it is to support the girl scouts, and
        pays to have
        >> signs printed and distributed around town about how
        important it is to
        >> support girl scouts. You have a cousin in the girl scouts,
        so you send her
        >> over with the girl-scout cookie order form. The neighbor
        takes a look at
        >> the forms and tells your cousin "While I *do *think I
        should support girl
        >> scouts, I am not going to give you any money unless
        everyone else in the
        >> neighboorhood is forced to give you money too. Don't ask me
        to be a chump."
        >>
        >> What would we make of that?
        >>
        >>
        >> <[email protected]>
        >>
        >>
        >> On Sun, Mar 6, 2022 at 11:13 PM Marcus Daniels
        <[email protected]>
        >> wrote:
        >>
        >>> Facebook had advertisements on TV for a few months talking
        about their
        >>> efforts to review content for fake news.  They advocated
        government
        >>> regulation.   Commonality being that a taxation or
        regulation impacts them
        >>> and their competitors in the same way, so their effective
        power and
        >>> influence won’t be negatively impacted.  “Don’t ask me to
        be a chump.”
        >>>
        >>> On Mar 6, 2022, at 8:02 PM, Eric Charles
        <[email protected]>
        >>> wrote:
        >>>
        >>> 
        >>> Frank,
        >>> That all seems 100% positive to me.
        >>>
        >>> Do you also routinely publicly complain about how
        legislatures are lax in
        >>> not forcing you to do more of that sort of thing, because
        you strongly
        >>> think that you should do more, but are unwilling to
        without the government
        >>> forcing you to?
        >>>
        >>> THAT is what the Patriotic Millionaires are doing.
        >>>
        >>> <[email protected]>
        >>>
        >>>
        >>> On Sun, Mar 6, 2022 at 9:43 PM Frank Wimberly
        <[email protected]>
        >>> wrote:
        >>>
        >>>> I probably shouldn't volunteer to be a case in your
        argument but...
        >>>>
        >>>> I do make donations to universities and a church.  Today
        my wife and
        >>>> grandson Matthew assembled packages of hygiene products
        for Ukrainian
        >>>> refugees which included things like towels, toothpaste,
        toothbrushes, soap,
        >>>> shampoo etc.  This was done at United Church of Santa
        Fe.  As for financial
        >>>> contributions we spend $20k per year for tuition at
        Matthew's school which
        >>>> is a Montessori school for kids with executive function
        problems.  There
        >>>> are a number of scholarship students whose families
        wouldn't be able to
        >>>> send their kids there without help.
        >>>>
        >>>> The church group put together 137 packages this morning. 
        We donated
        >>>> funds for the purchase of some of the stuff.
        >>>>
        >>>> Melinda Gates said that if you're a billionaire you can
        donate half of
        >>>> your assets without any impact on your lifestyle.  But
        that's a different
        >>>> question.
        >>>>
        >>>> Frank
        >>>>
        >>>> ---
        >>>> Frank C. Wimberly
        >>>> 140 Calle Ojo Feliz,
        >>>> Santa Fe, NM 87505
        >>>>
        >>>> 505 670-9918
        >>>> Santa Fe, NM
        >>>>
        >>>> On Sun, Mar 6, 2022, 7:24 PM Eric Charles <
        >>>> [email protected]> wrote:
        >>>>
        >>>>> While some of the goals of groups like "Patriotic
        Millionaires" are
        >>>>> admirable, I can never get past the blatant hypocrisy of
        it all. Maybe
        >>>>> "hypocrisy" isn't exactly the right term. You could also
        see the part
        >>>>> that bugs me as a bizarre worship of the benefits of
        authority over
        >>>>> individual choice. Let me rephrase their primary claim:
        "I, as a rich
        >>>>> person, recognize that I really *should *give more of my
        money to
        >>>>> certain causes, but I adamantly refuse to do so unless
        forced to do so by
        >>>>> the federal legislature."
        >>>>>
        >>>>> What is anyone really to make of that position? Is it
        any different
        >>>>> than trying to look virtuous by saying that you know you
        should stop using
        >>>>> child labor in your mine, while also publicly refusing
        to stop unless the
        >>>>> government makes you?
        >>>>>
        >>>>>
        >>>>> On Thu, Mar 3, 2022 at 3:08 PM glen
        <[email protected]> wrote:
        >>>>>
        >>>>>> Obviously, I'm either procrastinating or unclear on how
        best to do
        >>>>>> actual work today because here is yet another thing I
        meant to talk about
        >>>>>> with someone, anyone, awhile back:
        >>>>>>
        >>>>>> https://patrioticmillionaires.org/about/
        >>>>>>
        >>>>>> A salon participant recently asked whether "greed" was
        our most
        >>>>>> nefarious trait as a species. It's a great question for
        sparking
        >>>>>> discussion. My answer was that the most nefarious trait
        of *all* species is
        >>>>>> myopia, the inability to reason over externalities,
        from pond scum to the
        >>>>>> Trust <https://raised-by-wolves.fandom.com/wiki/Trust>.
        But to
        >>>>>> de-emphasize what people think of as "greed", I said
        "Trying to ensure you
        >>>>>> have enough money to live out your life in relative
        comfort is not greed.
        >>>>>> Greed is, after acquiring billions of dollars, you feel
        the need to acquire
        >>>>>> more billions of dollars."
        >>>>>>
        >>>>>> I found Patriotic Millionaires prior to that
        conversation. And it
        >>>>>> seems legit ... a set of outwardly greedy people who
        recognize limits to
        >>>>>> their greed ... a recognition that there's a spectrum
        of merit, some luck,
        >>>>>> some effort, some systemic infrastructure, etc.
        Overall, [m|b]illionaire
        >>>>>> philanthropy (and especially effective altruism) seem
        like jokes to me,
        >>>>>> very postmodern jokes. "Here, let me given you a
        billion dollars without
        >>>>>> fundamentally rewriting your genetic code." Pffft. Give
        anyone enough money
        >>>>>> and you'll corrupt them fundamentally, often against
        their will.
        >>>>>> Philanthropists know this. Effective Altruism is an
        oxymoron. You can't
        >>>>>> both be coercive and altruistic at the same time. >8^D
        >>>>>>
        >>>>>> Anyway, I'd welcome any opinion on Patriotic Millionaires.

-- glen
        When elephants fight, it is the grass that suffers.


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