If you press F12 and look at the network calls you can see the insane amount of analytics they are sending for every twitch of the mouse
If you press F12 and look at the network calls you can see the insane amount of analytics they are sending for every twitch of the mouse
Fair question, honestly I think it’s ‘hacky’ and there are cleaner approaches. Regulating unrealized gains stands to cause a headache and costs for those navigating an already very complicated tax system.
To work the implementation would require everyone’s assets to be monitored and reported - extra work for tax software, brokers and taxpayers. Plus the development costs to comply with these regulations will be passed onto taxpayers and investors. Yes additional taxes would be recovered but are a drop in the bucket on the scale of the US economy.
To a lesser extent it also discourages regular folk from financial planning since it creates a public perception of “why should I own stock if it’s all going to be taxed anyway?” further concentrating influence on institutional and super wealthy investors.
While I’m still undecided on it, the solution others have proposed of regulating borrowing against collateral seems fairer as it puts the onus on the borrower to carry the admin overhead - regular investors remain unaffected.
Now my hot take - I think this is all a distraction from the real problem with the tax system Step up in Basis. If it wasn’t for step up in basis the gains would at least be taxed on the investor’s death anyway, but right now those who inherit stock get to permanently avoid the taxes on the gains that occurred during the original owner’s lifetime (up to a certain limit). I suspect the politicians responsible for passing such legislation would be too directly affected to address that one.
I chose the number because it is attainable to the median household with 2 years of saving 20% of their after tax income, but also substantial enough to feel the burden of risk associated with investing. Stocks are not guaranteed income, they are not money for nothing, and changing the playing field affects a lot of regular people just trying their best to build a reasonable amount of wealth, whether to buy a house or secure their financial stability.
I am not close to being a top 10% wealtholder, nor am I related to anyone who is, and I certainly was not expecting to have my investment question compared to complicity in mass racial segregation.
Serious question - who here is in favor of taxing unrealized gains and has more than $20k in personal investments? (Outside of retirement/401k or other tax advantaged accounts)
I played violent video games all my life and I turned out fine.
reflects on current financial and mental state
Wait a second…
I actually enjoyed the meme but I think because of the analogy’s incongruity it would be better received as a shitpost
wow super problematic
It could be a XML or JSON with some embedded binary data (but to your point Windows isn’t gonna figure that out from the extension)
Super scummy process, they probably turn a profit from it given most accounts are kids and will just re-buy to get where they were
The proper thing to do would have been to reset your username like Epic Games does
But did they taste good?
I knew I wasn’t the only one saying “PUSH IT REAL GOOD” every time I apply to master
fellow musician Finneas
But where does Ferb stand?
Good citation, thanks!
So then the answer is to uninstall apps that give you reminders - to negate the correlation that nagging users leads to positive outcomes.
A freak cosmic particle caused the user ID of the commenter to duplicate
Seymour! The house is on fire!
It can’t turn into an android, Android devices have games
All my homies hate agile, Jira, scrum, kanban, etc.
In truth none of these items are inherently wrong - what’s wrong is leadership picking up new tools and adopting management structures expecting them to solve fundamental organizational issues.
Instead they only serve to magnify the outcomes of your existing corporate culture.