Scrolling down a bit more, I discovered what had triggered the email on which I had been copied. It had been sent in response to an earlier email sent to a large group of persons, including N. The response was shared with everyone to whom the email had been sent, and not just the sender. That’s a technique I often use when I receive an email that needs a response to negate misinformation, lies, and other untruths. The email to which the response had been sent now follows, shared with some reticence because of the risk it will be quoted out of context, erroneously attributed to me, or re-circulated in a manner that brings it to the ears of those who don’t understand it for what it is:
Every person in the country who owns property should see this before Nov. 2nd!! Keep Sending ItAfter reading this, my first thought was, “Did I not just blog about tax ignorance?” Of course I had. As recently as last Wednesday, I had shared some thoughts in The Consequences of Tax Education Deficiency. My next thought was, "There really is a flood of totally erroneous tax information being circulated, clearly designed to inject fear into the minds of those who, in fact, have nothing to fear, and clearly designed to stir up votes based on fear grounded in misinformation rather than on rational analysis of the issues."
This will apply to you whether you are a Liberal or a Conservative
Subject: REAL ESTATE SALES TAX TO GO INTO EFFECT 2013 (Part of Obama HealthCare Bill)
Those liberals are sooooo sneaky
So, this is "change you can believe in"? How's that working for you?
Under the new health care bill - did you know that all real estate transactions will be subject to an additional 3.8% Sales Tax?
The bulk of these new taxes don't kick in until 2013 (presumably after obama’s re-election).
You can thank Pelosi, Reed and Obama and your local Democrat Congressman for this one.
If you sell your $400,000 home, there will be a $15,200 tax.
This bill is set to screw the retiring generation who often downsize their homes.
Is this Hope & Change great or what? Does this stuff makes your November and 2012 votes more important?
Oh, you weren't aware this was in the obamacare bill? Guess what, you aren't alone.
There are more than a few members of Congress that aren't aware of it either (result of clandestine midnight voting
for huge bills they've never read).
AND, there are a few other surprises lurking.
*Why am I sending you this? The same reason I hope you forward this to every single person in your address book.
People have the right to know the truth because an election is coming in November!*
Of course, I responded to the person who shared the email with me. Here’s what I wrote, edited for typos:
Thanks for the blog topic! I’ve just written several things about tax ignorance, and the need to educate Americans so they’re not led astray by the misinformation artists. You are correct, the only instances where a house sale would be taxed are gains on vacation homes by high-income taxpayers, gain exceeding $500,000 on principal residences by high-income taxpayers, and gains on investment properties by high-income taxpayers. And if they were clever enough to engage in a like-kind exchange, no tax.I should have added that the 3.8% tax is NOT a “sales tax.” But who’s being technical when dealing with idiocy?
I wonder how many of the people who started or forwarded this email bothered to read the actual words of the statute? It’s like the “half of all Americans now pay no taxes” screed being used to fight off restoration of pre-economic crash tax rates on the wealthy. I wonder who is trying to make it appear as though the poor and middle class pay no taxes.
The only valid point in the email is the despicable practice of Congress (and other legislatures) not bothering to read what they’re voting on. That’s been a problem for a long time.
Let’s face it. The overwhelming majority, and by that I mean at least 95% or more, of Americans, are totally and completely unaffected by the 3.8% tax. Even some of those subject to the tax, the proceeds of which are slated to fund Medicare, will not pay tax on home sale gains. Yet someone wants Americans to oppose something that affects a portion of the nation’s wealthy by making Americans think that THEY are the ones being taxed. If Americans understood how the tax works, almost all of the 95% would react by thinking, “Well, that’s not going to affect me.” At that point, whether or not they oppose the tax would rest on rational analysis, such as the effectiveness and efficiency of Medicare and taxes imposed to fund it, preferences with respect to tax policy, and the like, rather than limbic system fear response. But those who oppose the tax know that under rational analysis a majority of Americans would decide that they can live with or even prefer the tax, so for those opposing the tax, they need to “trick” Americans by spreading misinformation. So who’s being sneaky?
I doubt the person who sent the email to N wrote the email on a blank screen. That person received it from someone else, who in turn received it from someone else. But SOMEBODY wrote the original email. Who? Did it originate here? I doubt it. I think it originated with one of those “operatives” whose “job” it is to make certain that the political goals of those for whom he or she works are accomplished. If that means whispering “there’s a 3.8% sales tax on all home sales starting next year” in someone’s ear, the “operative” won’t hesitate to do so. Surely, notions of integrity, honesty, fact checking, and other sensible approaches must be set aside for the “must win at all costs” mentality that has made acquisition of political power so much more important to the politics industry than use of political power for the benefit of ALL Americans.
Preventing this tax misinformation campaign from warping electoral outcomes is difficult. Propaganda, like rumors and other nefarious utterances, once started, take on a life of their own. Only a small percentage of people receiving this alarmist email will go to Snopes, which gets it right. Not many people who receive this manifestly manipulative email will bother to check with Paul Caron’s web site, communicate with a tax expert, or do some research into the matter before getting caught up in the mob mentality being nurtured by those who spawn this nonsense. Even though some sites, such as this one, have published a retraction, how many readers will return to discover that they have been hoodwinked?
If it had been one email and one issue, carelessness might have been the culprit. But it has been tax issue after tax issue, to say nothing of other issue after other issue, with misleading and even dishonest email after misleading and dishonest email. It’s not carelessness. It’s not an accident. It’s deliberate, and it threatens the “informed electorate” on which genuine democracy rests. To counter the trend, send the URL for this post in an email. Let’s get this information circulating. Let’s see if good information can drive out the bad. If so, then perhaps good public servants can drive out bad politicians, their operatives, and their truth-twisting tales of tax terror.