Taxing Unrealized Capital Gains Would be a Declaration of War Against the US Middle-Class

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'An Act of War Against the Middle-Class' — Americans Criticize Janet Yellen's, Democrat's Idea to Tax 'Unrealized Capital Gains'

Janet Yellen, the 78th United States secretary of the treasury, said on Sunday on CNN’s “State of the Union”, that U.S. lawmakers are looking at taxing unrealized capital gains. According to Yellen the funds would be used to finance climate and social changes. Yellen stated that Ron Wyden, a U.S. senator, was working on the plan. However, a lot of Americans have been critiquing the proposal via forums and social media.

Janet Yellen Discusses Unrealized Capital Gains Tax Proposal, House Speaker Pelosi Approves

“Unrealized Capital Gains” is trending on social media after Janet Yellen, the U.S. secretary of the Treasury, discussed the topic on CNN’s “State of the Union.” Yellen explained the idea which aims at taxing Americans on unrealized capital gain stemming out of liquid assets. Yellen clarified that her proposal was not aimed at wealthy people, such as the $600 IRS monitoring proposal.

CNN’s Yellen stated that although it wouldn’t be a wealth tax, it would help to get at capital gains. Capital gains are an extraordinary part of the incomes and therefore currently escape taxation until they are realized. She said that Ron Wyden, a Democrat senator, was involved in the proposal and Nancy Pelosi, the House Speaker is supporting the idea. Despite Yellen stating it was not a “wealth taxes”, Pelosi (D., Calif.), stated that she believed there would be a wealth tax.

Pelosi thinks the unrealized gains tax will help fund the $2 trillion spending bill and said the spending bill package was “pretty much there” and lawmakers are finalizing some of the “last decisions.” While Yellen, Democrats, and CNN have been lauding the idea of taxing unrealized gains, Americans are upset about the idea and consider it “unconscionable.”

Political Commentators, Libertarians, Crypto Enthusiasts Scorn Yellen’s Proposal — ‘Tax on Unrealized Gains Is Legal Plunder’

The 2020 Libertarian vice presidential candidate, Spike Cohen, said “This is unconscionable. For those who don’t know, an ‘unrealized gain’ is when something you own gains value, but you don’t sell it. You know, like your house. Or your retirement fund. So now you have to sell it, to pay the taxes. If implemented, this would be an act of war against the remaining middle-class folks who still actually own things,” Cohen added.

Cryptocurrency supporter and Galaxy Digital CEO Mike Novogratz shared his two cents about unrealized gains on Twitter. “Maybe try eliminating [the] step-up basis first. And carried interest,” the billionaire investor said. “That would be a start. Unrealized gains on illiquid securities would be [an] unmitigated disaster.” Independent journalist Jordan Schachtel explained that “taxing unrealized gains is only minimally about taxation itself. That’s not the bigger objective,” Schachtel remarked. The journalist added:

Taxing unrealized gains grants the government the ability to monitor your each and every move.

Nearly every post on social media and forums concerning this subject is littered with commentary that indicates Americans think taxing unrealized gains is a horrible idea. Except for mainstream media publications like the Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, The Hill, and other publications that continue to argue that the tax is aimed at the “billionaire-class” and “exceptionally wealthy individuals.” American journalist and Youtuber Tim Pool said that the proposal is merely a trick on people with no money.

“Wealth Tax, Unrealized gains, whatever,” Pool tweeted. “It’s a trick rich people are pulling on poor people who don’t understand how finance and the economy works. Wealth taxes will not do anything, people really don’t understand the power of that vast wealth.” Bitcoin proponent Stephen Livera stressed on social media that “Tax on unrealized gains is legal plunder. They created this mess and now they’re looking to pass the cost to the people.”

The evolutionary behavioral scientist and well-known author Gad Saad noted sarcastically that the unrealized gains tax was a good concept. “This sounds like a good idea,” Saad said scornfully. “Also, we should engage in punitive action on unrealized crimes. You find the person who looks guilty and you preemptively give them the chair (for community cohesion and diversity),” the author concluded.

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