"earnings are stretched out."
All I heard was "doesn't make enough money."
If you're a professional then you spend most of your career paying off crippling debt and working shitting jobs in high cost economies. Once you finally get past all that towards the end of your career, you start making bank, but because all your earnings are concentrated into those few years in the 1%, more of it ends up in high tax brackets.
By contrast, tradesmen earn their money at a steady pace over a longer time, so they always keep their earnings in lower tax brackets.
yeah, no. thats now how tax brackets work.
it works like this. earn 120k? (not as a shitty communist union linesman btw) well first 40k of that gors inti a bracket and then the amount after is out inti the corresponding bracket.
you are fucking retarded. the square block goes in the square hole every fucking time.
making 30ish an hour after going to an apprenticeship is not worth the connections and earning potential of a real fucking degree.
and I'll tell you that as a former communist union laborer/contractor
it works like this. earn 120k? (not as a shitty communist union linesman btw) well first 40k of that gors inti a bracket and then the amount after is out inti the corresponding bracket.
Correct. And if that 120k were spread over three years instead of all peaking in one year than you would not enter that second tax bracket, and would get to keep more of the 120k.
making 30ish an hour after going to an apprenticeship is not worth the connections and earning potential of a real fucking degree.
Degrees are inflated, and increasingly a poor measure of ability.
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