Willow, check you out! Witch-Fu!

Buffy ,'Lessons'


Natter 37: Oddly Enough, We've Had This Conversation Before.  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


tommyrot - Jul 27, 2005 8:00:33 am PDT #3244 of 10002
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

Because I'm really afraid of inheriting my Dad's significant debt.

There should totally be a TV show about a debt collector who goes to heaven or hell to collect on debt that dead people have left behind.


sarameg - Jul 27, 2005 8:00:39 am PDT #3245 of 10002

Clearly, people just need to stop dying.

I want to know why it has taken over 24 hours for my IT department to do something as simple as push a button. I just need them to restart a job. I can't, because I don't have root permission and they won't give it to me. WHY IS THIS TAKING SO LONG? I rather hate most of our IT department. They are eight kinds of useless.


-t - Jul 27, 2005 8:00:59 am PDT #3246 of 10002
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

Are inheritance laws different if you leave yor estate to relatives than if you leave it to non-relatives?


flea - Jul 27, 2005 8:02:18 am PDT #3247 of 10002
information libertarian

If my mother gave me a diamond ring worth $25K - more than the amount of $11K allowed to be gifted tax-free - would I be obligated to pay tax on it? I suppose it would be easy for the government to never know about it if I didn't declare the gift as income on my taxes.

Why doesn't anyone ever give me diamond rings?


Sophia Brooks - Jul 27, 2005 8:03:11 am PDT #3248 of 10002
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

Is that absolutely positively for-sure true? Because I'm really afraid of inheriting my Dad's significant debt.

I am curious, too. If I have no heirs, and die, I hope that means no one inherits MY debt.


Kathy A - Jul 27, 2005 8:03:21 am PDT #3249 of 10002
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

The local radio station occasionally plays their "small print" addendum to their prize package list; after they mention that all prizes valued over $600 (I think) are subject to tax, they say, "Don't forget--Uncle Sam knows who you are, and where you live."


Gudanov - Jul 27, 2005 8:06:07 am PDT #3250 of 10002
Coding and Sleeping

The figure I've seen for the estate tax revenue is $290 billion over the next 10 years. If the tax is repealed, then where does that money come from? Raise the income tax?, Cut Medicaid?, Just add it to the debt?


Kathy A - Jul 27, 2005 8:06:52 am PDT #3251 of 10002
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

I suppose it would be easy for the government to never know about it if I didn't declare the gift as income on my taxes.

Exactly why my grandmother spent the last few years of her life parceling out the family treasures, well, that and she didn't want arguing between family members over who gets what. My mom is still pissed that my cousin managed to talk Gramma into giving him the Victrola, though--she'd had her eye on it since long before he was born.


flea - Jul 27, 2005 8:07:40 am PDT #3252 of 10002
information libertarian

Where I work, if an employee wins a $10 gift certificate in a "morale boosting ceremony" it's subject to tax. I know because I have to get the person's social security number and put it in the system, so it gets reported to the Feds.


bon bon - Jul 27, 2005 8:16:04 am PDT #3253 of 10002
It's five thousand for kissing, ten thousand for snuggling... End of list.

Since I figure an inheritence is just a gift you get when the giver is beyond having a use for it, I'm not seeing the difference an estate tax makes, aside from lower exempted amounts for gifts from live folks.

Like I say, the gift only gets taxed once. You get to claim whatever the giver paid for it as the "basis", or basically the cost of the gift, and it's not taxable to you. But you would have to pay any capital gains if you ever sold it. An estate tax makes the entire fair market value of the estate taxable at transfer. So,

I give you a house while I'm alive. I paid $50,000 for it, now it's worth $400,000. OK, fine. When you sell it, (for 400K) you owe taxes on the gains realized, which is $350,000. That's ok, you can pay the money out of your gains, and that $50K investment is only taxed once.

I give you a house when I die. I paid $50,000 for it, now it's worth $400,000. You pay estate taxes on $400,000 now, and that $50K is taxed twice, by virtue of me dying.