• Re: Trump Ally & Billionaire Bezos Says You Should Pay All The Taxes, Not Billionaires Like Him

    From Lee@cleetis@gmail.com to alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,rec.arts.tv,alt.home.repair on Fri May 22 15:29:43 2026
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.tv

    Lissajous <megahurts9911@kilos.net> wrote in news:10upnu2$369t7$1@news.tcpreset.net:

    Of course he's right because our dear leader Trump agrees with him.

    Bezos, Backlash and Zombies

    What we can learn from an unintentionally revealing interview
    Paul Krugman
    May 22



    Jeff Bezos praises Donald Trump's 'grace under literal fire' after assassination attempt | Fortune

    Jeff Bezos went on CNBC earlier this week to opine about taxes and
    economic inequality. What he had to say wasn't a shock: America's 4th
    richest man praised billionaires and declared that he opposes taxes on
    the wealthy.



    "Only the Little People pay taxes"
    - Leona Helmsley



    More surprising, perhaps, was how unprepared he was. Most of us, if we planned to spend almost an hour on national TV making pronouncements
    about taxes, would make at least some effort to get our facts right.
    Bezos didn't.

    But Bezos obviously suffers from billionaire brain, which I defined
    last year as

    that special blend of ignorance and arrogance that occurs all too
    frequently in men who believe that their success in accumulating
    personal wealth means that they understand everything, no need to do
    any homework.

    What was more interesting than the content of Bezos's remarks was the
    fact that he chose to give the interview at all. Andrew Ross Sorkin,
    the interviewer, opened the discussion by saying

    In these days, it feels almost impossible to pick up a newspaper
    without reading a headline about wealth in America, about the
    billionaire class, about wealth inequality and policy and everything
    else. And it's taken a uniquely critical turn, I think.

    Indeed. The critical turn has been especially severe for tech
    oligarchs like Bezos. And Bezos is obviously feeling the heat,
    sufficiently so that he's trying — incompetently — to improve his
    image by "informing" the rest of us about how taxes and all that
    really work.

    I'll get to Bezos's likely motivations shortly. First, however, let's
    talk about the substance of his remarks.

    Public discourse about taxes and inequality is, even more than
    discussion of other economic topics, infested with zombies — ideas
    that should be dead, having been proved wrong again and again, but
    that keep shambling along, eating people's brains. What sustains the
    zombies is, of course, billionaire money, which keeps false claims in circulation as long as they seem to justify low taxes on the
    superrich.

    Sure enough, it took Bezos only a couple of minutes to peddle a
    classic zombie lie about who pays taxes:

    We already have the most progressive tax system in the world. The top
    1 percent of taxpayers pay 40 percent of all the tax revenue. The
    bottom half pay only 3 percent.

    These numbers aren't remotely right unless Bezos is referring solely
    to federal income taxes — which are only part of the overall tax
    system. About 80 percent of Americans pay more in payroll taxes — FICA
    on your paycheck — than in income taxes:

    Furthermore, state and local taxes generally fall more heavily on the working and middle classes than on the elite. As a result, the
    Institute for Taxation and Economic Policy has showed that the overall
    burden of taxes is only slightly higher for the affluent than it is
    for the working and middle classes:

    Source

    These numbers are for 2019. Since then, the tax system has become even
    less progressive as a result of Donald Trump's tariffs, which fall
    most heavily on lower incomes, and his tax cuts for the rich.

    So Bezos doesn't understand the most basic facts about taxes, nor did
    he make any effort to inform himself. He went instead with some
    numbers he thinks he heard somewhere — numbers that tell a story he
    wants to hear. As I said, billionaire brain.

    Bezos also made some assertions about his own taxes:

    These people sometimes say that, that, you know, I don't pay taxes.
    That's not true. I pay billions of dollars in taxes.

    Seriously, does he want to go there? Yes, Bezos pays taxes. But
    ProPublica found that between 2014 and 2018 these taxes were less than
    1 percent of his true income.

    Bezos also decried corporate welfare. Again, does he want to go there? Amazon, like the oligarch who runs it, pays remarkably little in taxes
    as a share of its income:


    I could go on: there was a lot of arrogant ignorance in that
    interview. But in a way the most interesting question is why Bezos
    gave it at all.

    The answer, almost surely, is that Bezos is feeling the heat. There is
    a broad political backlash brewing against the excessive power of billionaires and the corrupting effect of their money on our
    democracy. This backlash is especially severe for tech oligarchs. A
    decade ago, Bezos and other tech billionaires were popular, almost
    folk heroes. No longer:

    That slight uptick in 2025 is probably just a statistical blip — and
    there's now a huge backlash brewing against AI. Here's Eric Schmidt,
    the former CEO of Google, trying to hype AI in a college commencement address:

    Last year Bezos and other tech billionaires evidently believed that
    they could insulate themselves from criticism — and secure their
    wealth against both taxation and regulation — by allying themselves
    tightly with Donald Trump. Notably, Amazon, along with Apple, Google,
    Meta, and Microsoft is one of the companies paying for Trump's
    grotesque ballroom.

    But Trump is now exploring new frontiers in presidential unpopularity,
    and Republicans are facing a wave of public revulsion so strong that
    it will probably overwhelm even their strenuous efforts to rig the
    midterm elections.

    So paying court to the mad king isn't looking like the smart political
    move Bezos and his ilk thought it was. How, then, can they defend
    themselves against the threat of taxes and regulations that might make
    them slightly less rich?

    Well, Bezos evidently thought that the threat to his billions was sufficiently important to justify going on CNBC to lecture the rest of
    us about the evils of taxation — but not sufficiently important for
    him to learn a few facts first.

    Somehow, I don't think this new political strategy will work.


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  • From Ubiquitous@weberm@polaris.net to alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,rec.arts.tv,alt.home.repair on Sat May 23 17:22:18 2026
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.tv

    megahurts9911@kilos.net wrote:

    Of course he's right because our dear leader Trump agrees with him.

    Bezos, Backlash and Zombies

    What we can learn from an unintentionally revealing interview
    Paul Krugman
    May 22

    And you posted this off-topic nonresponse here because?
    --
    Democrats and the liberal media hate President Trump more than they
    love this country.


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