FearlessFreep said:
No, because my taxes are not going up to offset the lost money from Estate Taxes. Either the government doesn't have the money to pay for their obligations and they cut that spending, or they borrow more to cover it (which is eventually going to come due, but that's a different issue)
It's not like the total tax revenue is established to be $X dollars so if one tax is cut for someone, it raises the rest of the tax for someone else.
I would encourage you to spend some time on this as a thought experiment.
You have tried to brush off the entire discussion by telling us 'Deficit Spending is a different issue' ... which it is not.
You are correct that the 'total tax revenue is not established to be 'X'. However, the total of government outlays is established yearly to b 'Y'. No matter how one devises it, X must equal Y.
If Government Spending is $100.00 annually.
Then Government Revenue must be $100.00 annually.
If the Government revenue equals only $90.00 this year, then a $10.00 Debt is carried forward (interest begins to accrue).
If the Government cuts the Estate Tax by $5.00 forever, the amount Government spends does not change.
Either Spending needs to drop to match that eliminated revenue or,
That $5.00 is distributed over the population not paying the Estate Tax.
If the Government rolls that Estate Tax deficit forward, as debt, the burden now falls on future tax payers.
One argument Conservatives have made in the past, is they are for 'smaller government', theoretically because this creates small tax burden. Under the current Congress, taxes have been cut, and the size of government (and related expenditures) has increased.
See John Dean .... Conservatives without Conscience.