cha12 ba
09-29-2020, 03:00
09/28/20
How Trump’s taxes compare to those of other presidents
https://www.vietbf.com/forum/attachment.php?attac hmentid=1662109&stc=1&d=1601348386
Ông tổng thống hiền lành Jimmy Carter được khấu trừ thuế rất nhiều theo đúng luật thuế liên bang v́ ông đầư tư nhiều vào máy móc ở nông trại của ông .
Ông thấy ấm ức đă không phải trả đồng nào nên tự ư viết check trả $6000 tiền thuế .
DJT th́ là tỷ phú nên đóng $750 mà cười nhăn răng : Tôi giỏi hơn mấy thằng ngu khác .
Biết tránh, núp, (khác với trốn), là stable genius. DJT đă nói với Hillary Clinton rằng ông không đóng thuế bởi v́ ông thông minh :"That makes me smart."
'The Comey Rule': Did Comey and Trump Private Dinner Really Happen?
Peter Strzok’s lawyer claims notes made public by Flynn’s defense were ‘doctored’
The Washington Post logoHow Trump’s taxes compare to those of other presidents
In 1977, President Jimmy Carter had a problem, according to presidential tax historian Joseph Thorndike. Carter’s federal tax burden for 1976 had been zeroed out by a massive investment tax credit he earned for purchasing equipment and buildings related to his peanut farm.
Carter was upset, as he told The Washington Post at the time, because he had a “strong feeling” that wealthy people like him should pay at least some taxes. So he voluntarily paid the Treasury Department $6,000, the equivalent to 15 percent of his adjusted gross income and slightly more than the 14 percent paid by average taxpayers that year.
How times have changed.
Trump probably paid less in federal income tax than average middle-class American
On Sunday, the New York Times reported that President Trump paid just $750 in federal income tax his first year in office, the lowest first-year tax payment of any president since at least Carter and, in raw dollar terms, significantly less than what the average middle-class American family pays.
Trump’s predecessor Barack Obama, by contrast, paid nearly $1.8 million in federal income tax his first year in office, primarily on royalties from the sale of his books. George W. Bush’s first-year federal tax burden was $250,221, paid largely on his presidential salary and investment income from the blind trusts in which his assets were held. Prior presidents each paid tens of thousands of dollars in taxes during the first years of their administrations.
Links:
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/how-trump-s-taxes-compare-to-those-of-other-presidents/ar-BB19vEQb?ocid=msedgn tp (https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/how-trump-s-taxes-compare-to-those-of-other-presidents/ar-BB19vEQb?ocid=msedgn tp)
How Trump’s taxes compare to those of other presidents
https://www.vietbf.com/forum/attachment.php?attac hmentid=1662109&stc=1&d=1601348386
Ông tổng thống hiền lành Jimmy Carter được khấu trừ thuế rất nhiều theo đúng luật thuế liên bang v́ ông đầư tư nhiều vào máy móc ở nông trại của ông .
Ông thấy ấm ức đă không phải trả đồng nào nên tự ư viết check trả $6000 tiền thuế .
DJT th́ là tỷ phú nên đóng $750 mà cười nhăn răng : Tôi giỏi hơn mấy thằng ngu khác .
Biết tránh, núp, (khác với trốn), là stable genius. DJT đă nói với Hillary Clinton rằng ông không đóng thuế bởi v́ ông thông minh :"That makes me smart."
'The Comey Rule': Did Comey and Trump Private Dinner Really Happen?
Peter Strzok’s lawyer claims notes made public by Flynn’s defense were ‘doctored’
The Washington Post logoHow Trump’s taxes compare to those of other presidents
In 1977, President Jimmy Carter had a problem, according to presidential tax historian Joseph Thorndike. Carter’s federal tax burden for 1976 had been zeroed out by a massive investment tax credit he earned for purchasing equipment and buildings related to his peanut farm.
Carter was upset, as he told The Washington Post at the time, because he had a “strong feeling” that wealthy people like him should pay at least some taxes. So he voluntarily paid the Treasury Department $6,000, the equivalent to 15 percent of his adjusted gross income and slightly more than the 14 percent paid by average taxpayers that year.
How times have changed.
Trump probably paid less in federal income tax than average middle-class American
On Sunday, the New York Times reported that President Trump paid just $750 in federal income tax his first year in office, the lowest first-year tax payment of any president since at least Carter and, in raw dollar terms, significantly less than what the average middle-class American family pays.
Trump’s predecessor Barack Obama, by contrast, paid nearly $1.8 million in federal income tax his first year in office, primarily on royalties from the sale of his books. George W. Bush’s first-year federal tax burden was $250,221, paid largely on his presidential salary and investment income from the blind trusts in which his assets were held. Prior presidents each paid tens of thousands of dollars in taxes during the first years of their administrations.
Links:
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/how-trump-s-taxes-compare-to-those-of-other-presidents/ar-BB19vEQb?ocid=msedgn tp (https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/how-trump-s-taxes-compare-to-those-of-other-presidents/ar-BB19vEQb?ocid=msedgn tp)