kiki5711 wrote:Similarly, you can put money in a tax deferred IRA. I.e. - you don't have to pay tax on it now, when you put it in the IRA, but when you start withdrawing it, you pay taxes on it.
I don't think I'll need my tax deferred IRA when I'm dead.
But, when money is withdrawn from it, you pay taxes on it. It's tax deferred.
kiki5711 wrote:
The point is Mitt is using his "status" in the Mormon church to make these funds tax free. All the churches do that, with their extended leadership. I can belong to a church, buy a house, say it's extended stay of my church activities, and use the churches tax exempt status.
It's just a trust. And, it defers taxes -- it's not tax exempt at all.
And, you can't just join a church, buy a house and say it's extended stay of your church activities. Nobody can.
You can deduct donations to a church or any other charitable organization, if the church or other organization has 501c3 status.
kiki5711 wrote:
HOWEVER, BEING THAT HE IS RUNNING FOR PRESIDENT, he really ought to set up a better example for what the word "charity" means, other than just use it to save money.
He opened this trust up in 1996, around 16 years ago, and he wasn't running for President. There is and was nothing illegal or unethical about it. It doesn't evade taxes -- it defers taxes. That's all.
Obama has a huge pension that is tax deferred, too. I don't see you bitching about that.