We can agree on that. Warren Buffett will never pay a penny of tax on most of the tens of billions of dollars of capital gain accumulated in his Berkshire Hathaway stock because the money is going to the Gates Foundation. It makes no sense to force ordinary people who barely make any money, relatively, to pay huge tax bills when Warren Buffett pays nothing.i do not believe actual charities should be taxed at all, but the rules for what is and is not a charity should be tight as fuck.
if your "charity's" expenses hit more than a specified level (say 30%, just off the top of my head...) then youre a business, even if you dont have shareholders or dividends. somebody is gettin paid, and thats not charity thats business.
if your "charity" sends even one thin dime outside the US then youre not a charity, youre an exporter. once you take that money or those goods to kuala lumpur or ethiopia, who can say what you did with it there?
if your "charity" uses it's organization to flog for your religion, thats not charity, thats evangelism.
charitable donations should NOT be a write off, since then it's really not charity or even a donation, but rather a tax stratagem.
Pissing away money is economically inefficient. And if they send the money out of the country, what good does it do the country? Spending millions on Italian marble or cars or Paris real estate doesn't do much here.but what you build WAS taxed, all your life, and when you leave it to your heirs, that should not be taxed (no matter how much the estate is worth) since your heirs will either continue to make it work, shaking your moneymaker long after you have gone to your tomb, or they will piss it away, letting somebody else's moneymaker shake, who may or may not leave heirs who are smarter than paris hilton (a high school dropout, seriously, the bitch is DUMB)