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March 13, 2024

[Important Reminder: In case you missed our announcement from January 24, Sovereign Man has merged with Peter Schiff's media group. We are now called Schiff Sovereign, and our founder (Simon Black) has dropped the pen name and is now writing under his real name, James Hickman.]

Dwight Eisenhower had a huge problem in 1948.

After winning the war in Europe and defeating the Nazis, “Ike” was one of the most popular and recognizable men in the world… and publishing houses were falling all over themselves for his memoirs.

Doubleday, a New York based publisher, won the bid by paying a massive $635,000 advance for the book rights. That’s worth tens of millions in today’s money, putting him in the same category as the Obamas’ two book, $65 million publishing deal.

Eisenhower’s problem, however, was the US tax code; $635,000 would immediately bump him into the highest income tax bracket with a 91% marginal rate, and he would have to fork over the vast majority of that income to the government.

But for some bizarre reason, the Treasury Department issued an unprecedented tax ruling in Eisenhower’s favor; they claimed that he was not a professional author subject to income tax.

Rather, the Treasury Department explained, the former general was merely profiting from the sale of an asset, i.e. his life experience, and was thus only required to pay capital gains tax of 25%.

I doubt anyone in the Treasury Department actually believed such a weak argument; most likely there were a few very powerful people trying to help Eisenhower out, and they made up some ridiculous justification to cut his tax rate.

Obviously this tax ruling no longer exists, and Eisenhower was one of the few people to benefit from it. But for a very, very short time in the United States, the government peddled the ridiculous fiction that certain ‘income’ was really just a ‘capital gain’.

There is now a growing chorus of shrieking sirens within the government that is trying to do the opposite-- pretend that ‘unrealized’ capital gains are really income in disguise.

Joe Biden tried to make this case on Monday when he rolled out his new 10-year budget proposal… which is every bit as absurd fiction as Eisenhower’s tax ruling.

“Fairness” is a big part of the President’s budget proposal. Sounds good. After all, who’s not for fairness?

Except that they never bother to define their terms. Exactly how much is a “fair share”? No one actually says. All we know is that it’s never enough.

Part of his proposal is to enact a “25% minimum tax” on the wealthiest Americans with a net worth in excess of $100 million.

25% of what, exactly? Who gets to decide how much a person’s “income” is? What qualifies as income?

It’s obvious from the President’s explanation that they want to count unrealized capital gains as income.

In other words, if you buy shares of Apple, and your Apple stock goes up by 10%, they deem that 10% to be income even though you haven’t sold a single share or received any money for the investment.

This creates a lot of complications and questions.

For example, consider that Hunter Biden (by his own admission) is holding on to $10 million on behalf of the ‘Big Guy’.

Based on the President’s logic, this means that the Big Guy’s wealth, i.e. ‘income’, has increased by $10 million even though he supposedly never actually received any money.

Moreover, Hunter Biden has been able to make millions of dollars by monetizing his family’s name; this makes the Biden ‘brand name’ an obvious asset. And given all the money that Hunter has made, any reasonable financial model would easily value this brand name asset in excess of $100 million, and hence be subject to the wealth tax.

Ultimately the wealth tax is a pointless idea anyhow. Even in the President’s own budget proposal, the projected revenue from a wealth tax doesn’t move the needle on America’s endless deficits.

The proposal shows, in fact, that the US national debt still continues to rise, quickly reaching 130% of GDP and shooting well past $50 trillion… even assuming his wealth tax is passed.

Yet he also assumes that America can continue to rack up massive deficits year after year without any consequences.

Mr. Biden thinks inflation will remain low. Unemployment will remain low. Interest rates will remain low. And zero reforms will be made to Social Security and Medicare benefits, even though the programs’ trust funds are set to run out of money in ten years.

This is such a bizarre fantasy… and another important reminder that the people in charge aren’t even capable of acknowledging the problems (that they themselves have created), let alone speaking honestly about the solutions.

Now, we are not pessimistic people; on the contrary, I think there is a tremendous amount of opportunity in the world and I am wildly optimistic about the future.

However it would be foolish to ignore such obvious risks.

Even the President’s new budget proposal forecasts that the national debt will spiral out of control. And interest payments on the debt will consume a greater and greater percentage of tax revenue.

The only real solution is for the Federal Reserve to slash interest rates and start creating more money again, all in an effort to bail out the Treasury Department.

We believe this will be highly inflationary. After all, when the Fed created $5 trillion during Covid, we got 9% inflation. This time around they’ll most likely have to create $15+ trillion.

But this doesn’t mean the world is coming to an end. Rather, if we can anticipate inflation over the next few years, it means we can take steps now to minimize the impact.

And it just so happens that many fantastic inflation hedges are incredibly cheap right now, some even hovering near record lows.

More on this soon.

To your freedom,

James Hickman
Co-Founder, Schiff Sovereign LLC

Communistbitch 6 Mar 13
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2 comments

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1

Interesting that you

  1. Go back to the year if my birth ( I am 75) to drag up something with absolutely no relevance to today's world, and
  2. Drag in Hunter Biden, becuz why not.......
  3. Seem to loooove giving Fat Cats tax breaks.
    Good for you, but maybe you should, in the interest of truthfulness, change your name to VentureCapitalist....or, I dunno, learn something (anything at all!) about the "communism" you supposedly espouse.
  1. The relevance is that Joe Biden would be a victim of his own tax.

  2. Hunter Biden would also be a victim of this tax, and likely they would repeat history and say he doesn't really owe this tax, as they don't want laws to apply to themselves, only to everyone else, sort of like you.

  3. You seem to love giving fat cats like Biden a lot of working people's money.

1

The sovereign citizen movement (also SovCit movement or SovCits) is a loose group of anti-government activists, litigants, tax protesters, financial scammers, and conspiracy theorists based mainly in the United States. Sovereign citizens have their own pseudolegal belief system based on misinterpretations of common law and claim to not be subject to any government statutes unless they consent to them. The movement appeared in the United States in the early 1970s and has since expanded to other countries: the similar freeman on the land movement emerged during the 2000s in Canada before spreading to other Commonwealth countries. The FBI describes sovereign citizens as "anti-government extremists who believe that even though they physically reside in this country, they are separate or 'sovereign' from the United States"

The sovereign citizen phenomenon is one of the main contemporary sources of pseudolaw. Sovereign citizens believe that courts have no jurisdiction over people and that the use of certain procedures (such as writing specific phrases on bills they do not want to pay) and loopholes can make one immune to government laws and regulations. They also regard most forms of taxation as illegitimate and reject Social Security numbers, driver's licenses, and vehicle registration. Sovereign citizen arguments have no basis in law and have never been successful in any court.

The movement may appeal to people facing financial or legal difficulties or wishing to resist perceived government oppression. As a result, it has grown significantly during times of economic or social crisis. Most schemes promoted by sovereign citizens are ways to avoid paying taxes, ignore laws, eliminate debts, or extract money from the government.

Full Article: [en.m.wikipedia.org]

What relationship does that have with this fellow?

From my understanding, being a Sovereign man doesn't mean you are antigovernment, but it means you are pro freedom. Imagine being Jewish under a nazi government, which literally was seeking to kill you. You would claim that these jews are antigovernnent if they wanted to flee nazi Germany. Those who blindly and naively follow government would likely end up dead in a gas chamber. Your comment is insidious and malignant and you also have no clue what you are talking about.

@Communistbitch You are just in another anti-tax cult.

@nogod4me congrats on the dumbest comment I've ever seen in my entire life, .literally.

@Communistbitch This coming from a communist bitch.

@nogod4me why don't you give me your money bitch? You're in a antitax cult

@Communistbitch You are an idiot.

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