tlynn78 wrote:So far, nobody on this board even has mentioned Tom Daschle, who seems to be the champion tax avoidance strategist to date.
I found that interesting, too, Shiny. I will never understand why peeps put themselves into positions like this when they have to KNOW they have 'stuff.'
t.
A lot of the tax issues that have arisen for these people are just more (very obvious) examples of my rule that a person's mistakes will tell you where their biases lie: all of these people are claiming that they made 'mistakes,' but it's interesting that NONE of them made the mistake of OVERpaying taxes.
But with respect to how these people could let themselves be appointed to highly visible positions, where this stuff would obviously come out... I think that a lot of the people who reach really high levels of power and influence, whether it is in business, or the military, or government, wherever it might be, have filters that tell them that 'stuff' just does not apply to them, because they are somehow too special to be bothered by it. I do not mean this in the sense that they think, consciously, that they can break rules and get away with it, but rather, that they think that whatever they do is OK, because they are the ones doing it. And of course sometimes they
do get away with it-- after all, we now have a tax-dodging Treasury Secretary whose responsibilities including enforcing the tax laws against other people-- but I think that it usually comes as a huge surprise to these people that, in fact, these things DO apply to them. It's kind of an arrogance thing, and it might actually be part and parcel of whatever it is that drives them/enables them to reach the levels that they do reach, a feeling that 'I am special and everything that I do is special,' which for many them ends up turning off the common sense filter that most of us have, that tells us 'oops, I screwed up, and that's going to be a problem.'
This is how the Wall Street moguls, at Merrill Lynch and elsewhere, could justify paying themselves BILLIONS in performance bonuses for their work in 2008, even though the companies that they led are bankrupt, or would be bankrupt but for bailouts or acquisitions-- I would bet dollars to donuts that most of them are shocked, SHOCKED, that normal people think that there is something wrong with those bonus payouts (I specify 'normal' people, to exclude the non-normal people who think that what they did is OK, like the moguls themselves, and folks like Rush Limbaugh who have actually defended it); indeed, many of them would probably tell you that they actually DID perform outstandingly, and that things would have been even worse, but for their great efforts.
Innocent, naive and whimsical. And somewhat footloose and fancy-free.