ricksrster
Commander
- Joined
- Jun 19, 2005
- Messages
- 2,022
Re: New crackdown on U.S. border
1) If they have employment where taxes are withheld then they are stealing jobs from legitimate workers. They're not lowering prices by working for less wages like people claim.
2) If they are working under they table then they and their employers are evading taxes and breaking all kinds of labor law.
3) A person making $30,000/year is not going to have $30,000 in deductions. Food and many other things are not deductible. They still need money left to live on. The standard deduction is probably better than itemized deductions in that case. They have to pay taxes on the net like you said.
The problem is this:Taxable income, Rickrster, is net income. . . what's left AFTER deductions. Should that be $30K, as I said above, the tax would be approximately what I said above, according to the IRS chart.
If a married guy with kids, insurance, medical bills and a home mortgage doesn't have enough deductions to bring his income from $30K gross to $0K taxable he isn't paying attention.
If our sample illegal earned $30K and couldn't file for refund, he actually PAID the approximate $4K in withholding tax.
When that happens, the illegal pays more tax than the low income legal.
Thanks for confirming what I really said by contradicting what you wish I had said.
1) If they have employment where taxes are withheld then they are stealing jobs from legitimate workers. They're not lowering prices by working for less wages like people claim.
2) If they are working under they table then they and their employers are evading taxes and breaking all kinds of labor law.
3) A person making $30,000/year is not going to have $30,000 in deductions. Food and many other things are not deductible. They still need money left to live on. The standard deduction is probably better than itemized deductions in that case. They have to pay taxes on the net like you said.