| The Fair Tax Book: Saying Goodbye to the Income Tax and the IRS
Publisher: Regan Books |
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| ISBN: 0060875496 List Price: $14.95 Amazon Price: $9.72 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: Everyone should read this. Everyone knows that the current system is wrong. This spells out a better alternative. Summary: Boortz wants a Welfare state The so-called Fair Tax sets up a welfare state where the spoiled children of billionaires (like Paris Hilton) get billions of dollars for nothing. They didn't work for it and they didn't earn it. Yet Boortz thinks this "welfare" is the greatest thing since televangelists and country music. America is about working for a living and earning your keep. This communist philosophy that some are "more equal" than others so they should be allowed to keep what they didn't earn tax free is the pinnacle of Bortz's argument. The Fair Tax plan is akin to starting a Monopoly game after all the good properties are sold and have hotels sitting on them. Like saying, "I have Boardwalk and Park Place, and this entire side of the board, but from now on we will all pay sales tax on new property. However, I can keep the property I have tax free and pass it to my kids tax free too." If forces young couples to pay huge taxes on new houses while the rich can simply pass the property from generation to generation totally free of taxes. It kills social security and forces the government to borrow to keep up. It puts huge taxes on prescription drugs, hospital stays, medical treatment. Yet it makes stocks, bonds, and capital gains tax free. It is simply a way to push the tax burden to the poor and middle class. A good alternative would be to tax all money that was not earned or worked for. If you didn't earn it with your muscles or your brain then you should pay a sizable tax on it. If you got it for free without earning it from inheritance, gambling, capital gains, etc. then you should pay. That's FAIR. The ditto heads are always talking about how the rich pay higher taxes on their income. Income is a fanciful term dreamed up by tax accountants and tax lawyers that has no basis in reality. What we need to talk about is WEALTH. Ninety percent of the wealth is controlled by three percent of the population. Wealth is property, capital, stocks, bonds, and luxury items. People don't realize that most wealth people control private corporations where they deduct the cost of their food, travel, wardrobe, entertainment, energy bills, and housing and pay an average of 15 percent income tax on an amount that they decide to report to the IRS. Here's a real FAIR TAX - no taxes for anyone as long as you are alive. Spend all you have and all you make on whatever you want and pay zero taxes. But when you and your spouse die, the kids that get what you left pay a 50% tax. That's FAIR. Make it even more FAIR by letting the taxpayer tell the government what his tax dollars should be spent on. Every time you fill out a tax return you should get to pick from among 20 choices of where your money will go. Then make it illegal for the government to borrow money from the bank or from other government agency budgets. The taxpayer has the final word. That's FAIR. Summary: too much change too fast A National Sales Tax is such a radical change with so many different avenues from where it can be legitimately attacked, that whatever its benefits, it should be a complete nonstarter from a political standpoint. On the other hand, a flat tax with ONE and only ONE deduction for your home would vastly improve the current federal income tax and with serious support from the President could get through Congress. I don't know what allowing for a deduction for your home mortgage does to the numbers and what rate would be needed to make the plan revenue neutral. But not allowing the home ownership deduction would make the reform extremely vulnerable politically, and could be a fatal stumbling block towards getting any plan passed. Serious tax reform and simplification would be a major accomplishment for the President, and more importantly, would be an enormous boost for the American economy. A National Sales Tax isn't going to happen for a lot of reasons, the first being it is probably bad tax policy. But a Flat Tax or a considerably simplified income tax are very real possibilities, and well worth expenditures of President Bush's political capital. Summary: |
| Lower Your Taxes - Big Time! : Wealth-Building, Tax Reduction Secrets from an IRS Insider
Publisher: McGraw-Hill |
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| ISBN: 007140807X List Price: $16.95 Amazon Price: $11.02 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 2 Reviews: Summary: slides over important (and expensive) points I have 2 small businesses. I own rental property and work freelance. I'm also a professor, so I receive a pay check. This book slides over some important and expensive details. For instance, it barely mentions that a home office must be used exclusively for you business. According to the tax man, it cannot be the guest room, too. And the author suggests setting up a trust to protect assests, without discussing the cost (not small) of that. These are just examples. Since there are problems with the information I have experience with, I wonder if the information I'm ignorant about is correct. Summary: EXCELLENT! THIS IS NOW MY "TAX-BIBLE"! THIS BOOK IS LIKE HAVING A PRIVATE CONSULTATION WITH THE IRS REGARDING HOW TO LEGALLY AVOID PAYING MOST INCOME TAXES! SANDY TEACHES YOU ALL THE TRICKS OF HIS FORMER TRADE AS A TOP IRS ATTORNEY! THIS GUY IS REALLY GOOD! GET HIS BOOK AND SAVE YOURSELF TONS OF HARD-EARNED CASH! INDEED, WHY SEND ALL OF YOUR MONEY TO IRAQ?! THIS BOOK WILL TEACH YOU HOW TO KEEP MOST OF IT FROM THE IRS! Summary: Great tax resource for small business owners This book is an amazing resource for small business owners who are looking for ways to legally reduce the taxes they pay to Uncle Sam. Whether you are a small, part-time, out-of-your-basement business owner or the owner of an established company, this book provides lots of tips on how you can save money on your taxes. The book is laid out well and it is quick and easy to find what you want at taxtime. This book also does an especially good job of describing how to appropriately deduct vacations and mileage/car expenses. If you're not sure if this book is for you, take a look at the book's index provided by Amazon. Each section has a brief description that does a pretty good job of explaining the tips Botkin shares. If a couple of those sections sound like they may apply to your business, buy the book. If even just one tip applies to you, you'll save more in taxes than it cost you to purchase the book. Summary: |
| The Ultimate Accountants' Reference Including GAAP, IRS & SEC Regulations, Leases, and More
Publisher: Wiley |
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| ISBN: 0471678139 List Price: $150.00 Amazon Price: $118.66 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 4 Reviews: Summary: Pretty good book Decent book. It hits the high spots on a lot of issues, but does not go into any great detail. I would be careful about relying on it too much because of the constantly changing accounting and tax laws. Overall, it is a handy reference, and a good book to have on the shelf for accountants. It sure beats getting out the old college text book. Summary: |
| Don't Let the IRS Destroy Your Small Business: Seventy-Six Mistakes to Avoid
Publisher: Perseus Books Group |
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| ISBN: 0201311453 List Price: $18.00 Amazon Price: $11.70 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: Excellent Text Simply an excellent little book, concise and written in a very clear format. Indeed, not making just one of the many mistakes the author comments upon could save your business thousands in taxes, fines and penalties. Summary: Too much exaggeration The contents in this book are not really new. The author tends to exaggerate things quite a bit. Examples in the book may be true, but grossly sensationalized and hardly applicable to any real world case. Summary: Great book - concise and helpful This book outlines 76 ways that small businesses often get in trouble with the IRS. A lot of these mistakes are very tempting to make -- in fact, one can argue that it's the tax law that's the problem in many cases, not the business practice. Nonetheless, the author makes clear the IRS position on these mistakes, and shows how damaging the mistakes can be when the IRS wins in tax court over the business owners. Every small business owner should read this book. It's remarkably easy to scan and absorb, though the topics are often quite complex at their root. This book cuts through the complexity and makes clear what the dangers are. As the author writes in the introduction, "If things go wrong, it gets expensive. For this reason, you should know *where* things go wrong. Because usually they go wrong in the same place. To see your taxes doubled because you made the same mistake that thousands of other people made before you does not make good business sense." Summary: |
| Flat Tax Revolution: Using a Postcard to Abolish the IRS
Publisher: Regnery Publishing |
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| ISBN: 0895260409 List Price: $24.95 Amazon Price: $15.72 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 1 Reviews: Summary: Use the time you saved doing taxes to read a map of Europe Paraphrase from one of the book's highlighted sections: "In dramatically lowering taxes, Slovakia and its fellow Baltic states...." Since when is Slovakia (hint: small country, east of Austria, north of Hungary) a Baltic state? This book contains the usual nonsense about doing your taxes on a postcard. We all know that the hard part is not in computing your tax, but in calculating your income. That's what all those IRS forms are all about. The only way to make it so simple would be to tax only reported wages - shifting all the tax to those who work for a living. Summary: The Flat Tax is rearranging the deck chairs on theTitanic I supported Steve Forbes Tax reform 10 years ago when he was trying to become president. I now support H.R. 25 the FairTax. It is a grass roots effort to reform our nations tax code from an income based tax to a consumption based tax. Everyone keeps 100% of their paycheck without any deductions and it strips all of the embedded taxes out of the supply chain to provide the consumer with a set of tax free goods and services to be taxed only one time by the final consumer. Simple, flat, fair, completely transparent, no winners, no loosers, and most importantly no tent for the camels to stick their nose in. Summary: flat tax is a fraud I am a CPA who has practiced for over 30 years. 99.9999999% of the complexity of taxes has to do with determining just what is income and what is a deduction. Flat rates won't change that. Steve Forbes entire premise is a fraud. I have been listening with frustration to his inane ramblings for years, and I can't understand how he gets away with it. Summary: |
| The Official IRS Tax Guide to Auditing Horse Activities
Publisher: Russell Meerdink Company |
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| ISBN: 092934670X List Price: $19.95 Amazon Price: $19.95 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: Very handy. Buy your accountant a copy! This has been helpful for my husband and me in planning our business, and we purchased a copy for our accountant, since very few really understand the nuances of the horse business. Summary: Official Guide for tax cheats This book is a love it or hate it guide to auditing horse activities. That's why I had to go middle of the road on the review. I believe it is mistakently marketed to legitimate horse stables, breeding farms, training barns and businesses who want to assure themselves that they won't fail an audit. However, if you ARE indeed a legitimate business, this guide probably won't tell you anything you don't already know. This guide's merit is mostly for backyard or recreational horse owners who are attempting to pass their hobbies off as a "business," or those who list their personal horses as a business expense to attempt some extra tax savings. That being said, you know what category you fall into. If your primary business is horses, whether it be breeding, teaching, training, transporting, etc., don't waste your time or money on this one. If however, you are a retiree who would like to try to pass off your 3 backyard nags that you occasionally breed as a "business" read away. And let me know what jail is like in a couple of years =-) Summary: UGH! HARDLY WORTH THE TIME Hardly worth the time and not at all worth the money. Summary: |
| How to Turn Your Poker Playing into a Business: Knowing What to Deduct to Improve Your Odds With the IRS
Publisher: |
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| ISBN: 0977486206 List Price: $19.95 Amazon Price: $12.97 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: A Must Have Book For Anyone Who Play's Poker This author has written a easy to understand guide for anyone who play's poker and want's to know how to take every legal deduction available. It help's you figure out if you are truely in a positon to take deduction's as a pro or if you are just playing for fun. Very down to earth and fun book even if it is written by a C.P.A. Summary: |
| What the IRS Doesn't Want You to Kno (What the Irs Doesn't Want You to Know)
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons |
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| ISBN: 0471449725 List Price: $24.95 Amazon Price: $15.72 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 3 Reviews: Summary: How to Beat the IRS Keeping up with all the IRS rules and regulations can be a real hassle. The tax code keeps getting more and more complex every year, in spite of countless promises by politicians to "simplify" the system. This book does give some useful tips on how to avoid taxes. It points out specific ways that you can legally reduce your tax burden, along with key mistakes to avoid, unless you like the idea of being audited. This book is written in an outline format, with boldface and bulleted text throughout. This is helpful, for finding specific information. You can quickly turn to a chapter that interests you, and then narrow down your reading by looking for the sub- topic that interests you. Thw way this book portrays the the American tax system might not sit too well with some people. The author talks about the IRS, not necessarily as a great, friendly institution, but not as something to take caution with, either. He paints a picture of the IRS as being a firm, but reasonable institution and points out that we should not fear the IRS at all. We all can think of many, many occasions where this has not been the case. The IRS has abused its authority in many instances, and many feel that some of its unethical actions are directly the result of political manipulation against enemies, like in the case of auditing of high- profile individuals. But this book avoids talking negative, making the IRS seem like an institution that is reasonable and accommodating. This book shows the reader many ways to avoid taxes, and much of the advice is sound, but I found this book to be a yawner overall. It's one of those books that could be viewed as a reference book, or a reading book. However, if you try to read the book from cover to cover (it's more than 450 pages in length), don't be surprised if your eyelids seem to become very heavy after every few pages of reading. This isn't exciting material, and it can induce drowsiness quickly. This book has been updated and revised many times to keep it current with the ever- changing tax laws. It's the type of book that becomes outdated very quickly, and needs constant revisions to keep up with the times. My edition is already a couple years old, and I can already see where the technology chapter is way behind. This is an ok book to have around, as a reference guide to reducing taxes and complying with IRS rules. If you don't want to pay a tax professional and you enjoy the challenge of working on your own taxes, then this book could prove to be very beneficial. For everyone else, it will likely just sit on a shelf and collect dust. Buy it only if you feel that you really need it. Summary: Insightful I bought TaxCut software, then read this book, I end up with a tax professional to do my 2001 tax. I am glad I read this book though, I avoided making mistakes and I followed carefully to my tax attorney's advice. This book is informative and insightful. Summary: Solid, up-to-date tax advice for 2002 Now available in a revised and updated eighth edition, What The IRS Doesn't Want You To Know: A CPA Reveals The Tricks Of The Trade is a compendium of solid, up-to-date tax advice for 2002. Chapters survey such topics as what the latest IRS targets are; ten ground rules one must never break to win with the IRS; the thirty-four greatest taxpayer misconceptions; commonly overlooked credits and deductions; what forms should never be filled out; new tax laws enabling an innocent spouse to get out of debt; how to plan IRA and pension plans; the latest taxpayer rights; and what IRS people are really like and how to work with them. What The IRS Doesn't Want You To Know is a highly practical book and strongly recommended reading for every taxpayer! Summary: |
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