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Conversation | 04/30/2008 12:00 am

Whoopi: Why Isn't Anyone Screaming About Taxes?

© Shutterstock

WHOOPI: I am outraged. I’m outraged. I looked at my cable bill. I looked at my phone bill. And there are taxes on there … it goes anywhere from $10 to $15 a month that I’m paying for stuff I don’t know. There are letters — the LMNOPQ fund of the jacka-jacka … and no one says, “The what!?” And when you think about it, it’s every month that you’re paying it. So it’s ten bucks here or fifteen bucks here or twenty-five dollars there.

Then you’re writing out — they take the 50 percent of your income and it goes to God knows where. When I first started working I said, “OK. I don’t mind paying out because I know it’s going to go for some stuff I hate, and some stuff that I like.” But I’m looking and I see my friends who haven’t done as well as I have financially. You know, they’ve got kids, they’ve got house payments, they’ve got mortgages. They’ve got gas to put in their cars. Friends who are putting, you know, in a 500 gallon or 2500 gallon tank — they’re only taking 50 gallons of oil because they can’t afford it! They can’t afford it. I don’t understand why —

LIZ: Well, it’s pretty discouraging when Congress keeps doing these earmarks where they consign millions of dollars to stupid things like, you know, “We’ll study the button,” or “We’ll study ladybugs,” or something. Or they build these bridges to nowhere in Alaska. And then you do resent paying your taxes when that’s happening.

WHOOPI: I don’t mind paying them. I resent this idea that everything I do now is taxed. And I get no bang for my buck. I feel like I want to just dump tea in the river, because there’s no representation. And if I’m bitching about this, I can’t imagine what somebody who’s just living, literally, paycheck to paycheck is going through. Because there’s no government agency that says, “You know what? We’re going to pay this much to the oil company so that everybody can get the oil.”

LIZ: Well, I don’t believe we’re ever going to get rid of big taxes as long as America is in the industrial munitions manufacture business. And that’s the business the government is in — is constantly making these war machines and then they go obsolete and they junk billions of dollars worth of ‘em. And they just go on and on. And I don’t know. I know we have to protect ourselves, but —

WHOOPI: Here’s what started it, just so you guys know.

JOAN: Yes, let’s hear.

WHOOPI: I had a radio program, which did not work out. Very smartly, I was in a pay-or-play deal. So everybody said, “You know what? This isn’t working. But, yes, we know we still have to pay you.” They were supposed to give me my lump sum. Well it turns out that you can no longer be given a lump sum without 10 or 15 percent being taken out — as a penalty …

JOAN: As a penalty.

WHOOPI: … for getting paid a lump sum.

LIZ: Well, that makes no sense.

WHOOPI: It makes no sense. And what you have to do is you have to then defer the other half of your money. So you can take some now and then you can’t take it for another year.

LIZ: And then the company disappears and you never get it.

WHOOPI: Well, yeah. Or they go under. I said to the guy, “Who made this law? Did anybody put it on the books to discuss it?” No. This went into law about a year ago. If you’re getting ready to get paid a lump sum, you have a 20 percent tax on it — tax on top of the 50 percent they already took.

LESLEY: What always surprises me is when you see these people on Wall Street just cleaning up. Did you see the story the other day where these hedge fund owners — in this crisis and this recession that we’re in — in this Wall Street debacle, are making 3.5 billion dollars? And they’re the ones fighting taxes. They don’t —

JOAN: And they’re the ones that don’t pay the taxes!

101 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Susan Chick
My daughter took her first flight with me when she was 3. Because she had to have her own ticket, she had to have her own frequent flyer account. The airlines refuse to establish a “family account” no matter how young the kids are. Since she has her own frequent flyer account, the airline automatically sends her credit card offers to earn frequent flyer miles! My daughter is now 12 and every other month she gets a credit card offer in the mail. The airlines don’t care that she’s a minor. It’s insane. While I’m at it, here’s my idea on taxes: If you make less than $75,000 you are not taxed at all. Over $75,000 it is a graduated rate beginning at 10%. The scale goes up in slight increments (or “brackets”) until, oh I don’t know, say $1,000,000. Then everyone is taxed a flat 50% — no write-offs, loopholes, or cheating. That tax money is used to fund universal health care, education, childcare, etc. We shouldn’t have to pay a penny for these services. Just like the police & fire departments do not make a profit, neither should our healthcare companies. We can do this, people, it’s not that hard. Many other countries do it better than us. We just need to adopt their model and implement it.
By Susan Chick on 04/30/2008 1:54 pm
Judith Burnside
How do you figure that if you make less than $75,000 you don’t get taxed? I never made that much in any year, but I paid taxes every year.
By Judith Burnside on 04/30/2008 6:01 pm
Judith Burnside
Never mind. I just realized it is an IDEA, actually sane at that.
By Judith Burnside on 04/30/2008 6:03 pm
Maurine H
So In January I said to my friend/tax-preparer, “I hate this war and I don’t want a penny of my taxes going to support it. When I send a check to the IRS, can’t we deduct the percentage that is used to fund the war?” “Well,” she said, “we can do that. It just depends on how cozy you think your life would be in a federal prison.” I don’t mind paying taxes. I just want them to fund the systems that provide quality education, good health care, affordable housing rates, a safe infrastructure and efficiency in government for Americans and not a multi-trillion dollar war machine.
By Maurine H on 04/30/2008 2:54 pm
SL W
What I can’t figure out is why no one likes a modified national sales tax. If we managed to tweek it so that basics like food, clothing and shelter aren’t regressive, wouldn’t it make sense?
By SL W on 04/30/2008 3:00 pm
mary lou s
sl w, what’s left after food, clothing and shelter? oh, wait, i know: transportation. but we already have a gas tax.
By mary lou s on 05/01/2008 12:26 pm
doll lady
The other day i got the funniest joke. It had the IRS Letterhead and in the middle of the letter it said: What did you Make this year? $______ Send it in! I laughed and laughed because it was skirting the truth of what is happening in this financially confused America. I get the most upset about my property taxes. My house is a 3 bedroom, 2.5 baths, fireplace, walk out basement, two story on 2 acres and is 12 years old. Appraised in my locale at $165,000. We live in a nice rural mid-western area 25 miles from everywhere. Taxes when we built this were $1300 and now are over $3000 in 12 years.
By doll lady on 04/30/2008 3:06 pm
Marcia Stein
I own a small consulting business and the tax rates I pay as a business person are ridiculous. My accountant and I talked about personal income tax, and I asked him what he thought of the flat tax. He said it’s workable, but a better and fairer tax would be a VAT, a tax on all goods. Rather than single out any group and punish those who can’t qualify for or pay to find loopholes, we’d all pay. It’d be a lot better than trying to figure out what you really owe in taxes, and unless you have the simplest of needs you must pay for professional assistance or software. You can call the IRS for help but sometimes the laws are so confused that even they get it wrong. Living in the Silicon Valley, just like New York or many other urban areas, our salaries are inflated and so is the cost of living. It is unfair to consider our income as being a high tax bracket when we’re really middle class. If you earn $60K in Kentucky where my sister lives, you can afford a nice home and save for your future. If you earn that in the Silicon Valley, you’ll have to rent a small place and good luck on your savings. It’s time to re-evaluate the entire tax structure. What stands in the way? Lobbiests from tax prep software companies, leagues of tax lawyers and accountants, and the perception that we’d lose money in the process.
By Marcia Stein on 04/30/2008 3:09 pm
Maggi D
What would be so wrong with a flat tax base. 10%, 20%, or 30% whatever. No matter what anyone made, everyone would pay the same percentage. The only thing that I hate is the waste. The new Embassy in Bagdad with restaurants, olympic size swimming pool, etc. Why? I can’t afford to take my boys to the local Aquatic center but some Embassador who makes six figures a year is flopping around in an olympic size pool. It is a stupid example when there is so much waste but just read about it and it erked me. This government is sooooooooo wasteful. I have heard people say there is going to be a revolution in this country if they don’t keep pushing us against the wall. I hope I live to see it, otherwise my grandchildren and great grandchildren will be paying for everything. Whoopi - I don’t know about NY but where I live I have Federal Tax, State Tax, and Sales Tax and all the local taxes on the utilities. How many times can they tax a dollar.
By Maggi D on 04/30/2008 3:16 pm
Kay Mitchell
Susan- WOW! you should have been an economist! Or atleast a Politican! (A socialist one at that). Who on earth would make $80,000 when at 10% the value is $70k. And at 75K, you don’t get taxed. Do you see where this is going? I understand that this “would be worked out in the details. But 50% tax to pay for the 75% of this country who makes under $75K? Income Distribution (Read: Obama’s idealology) DOES NOT WORK. It is immoral and wrong and hurts the economy. Sure, we can all be “fair” and “equal”, if by that you mean “equally miserable.” Why don’t you think that the healthcare industry should make no profits? I ask you one question: Who would aspire to be a brain surgeon if will be not paid much more than the janitor who cleans the halls? I could go on forever with these: How would the best teachers emerge without incentive? Who on earth would go to school if the government guaranteed a nice life for everyone? Don’t you understand there will be no millionaries left?? Can’t you see that everything THAT IS NOT RUN BY THE GOVERNMENT is more efficient that things that are??
By Kay Mitchell on 04/30/2008 3:44 pm
Kay Mitchell
Also, I live in NYC, where i have State, Federal, City, Sales, and when I go to the movies with free tickets, I still have to pay a NYC sur-charge! Where do my taxes go? I don’t know, but I have a good idea when I step on the subway each morning and see countless Latina single moms toting around their kids…
By Kay Mitchell on 04/30/2008 3:47 pm
Mugsy Peabody
Source: United States Census bureau, Kay. “Traits of families on AFDC: Race White 38.8% Black 37.2 Hispanic 17.8 Asian 2.8 Other 3.4 Time on AFDC Less than 7 months 19.0% 7 to 12 months 15.2 One to two years 19.3 Two to five years 26.9 Over five years 19.6 Number of children One 43.2% Two 30.7 Three 15.8 Four or more 10.3 Age of Mother Teenager 7.6% 20 - 29 47.9 30 - 39 32.7 40 or older 11.8 Status of Father 1973 1992 Divorced or separated 46.5% 28.6 Deceased 5.0 1.6 Unemployed or Disabled 14.3 9.0 Not married to mother 31.5 55.3 Other or Unknown 2.7 5.5 As you can see, the stereotype that the average welfare recipient is a teenage black mother with several children is completely false, and not a little racist. The fact that blacks make up only 12 percent of the population but 37 percent of AFDC recipients reflects the continuing discrimination they experience on the job market.” [Note: This does not include men on welfare, which are not included in this figure.] “Latina single moms?” Now now.
By Mugsy Peabody on 04/30/2008 6:27 pm
DiLori J
Mugsy, I have been quietly enjoying your posts for weeks now. (guess I am a bit of a lurker, after all) You seem well thought out and researched when appropiate. Also owning more than a small sense of humor. Just a quick note to thank you for the stats from the Census Bureau concerning AFDC single parent families. As a Black female 50ish New Yorker, I would like to learn to better communicate with other women such as Kay when ‘off the cuff’ remarks are made. Some of the issues discussed on the site are of the ‘Hot Button’ variety, and we should all at least attempt to respect how and when to correctly ‘put the finger on the proper button’ so to speak. Just my two cents worth… DiLori
By DiLori J on 04/30/2008 7:33 pm
Mugsy Peabody
I read somewhere that Lily Tomlin always stopped and thought that the person she was dealing with (or her audience) was once a baby. She would imagine that, and then it made it easier for her to go forward with compassion. (Major paraphrase here.) When I’m totally about to start with the name-calling, etc., what I do is think, well, if I were misinformed or off to the races, how would I want someone to speak with me? Normally, when I start in “Oh, for Chrissakes!” I know I should stop and rephrase. Naturally, I screw up. A lot. But please add your two cents worth. That’s what we’re all here for — connection. Thanks for writing me, DiLori.
By Mugsy Peabody on 04/30/2008 8:47 pm
Dorothy Brennan
Hey Woopie thanks for the calling attention to CORN FRUTOSE I have been spreading the word for 5 years.
By Dorothy Brennan on 04/30/2008 4:05 pm