@JD49916976@curaffairs@elonmusk That math aint mathing!!
Social security alone cost 1.7 trillion a year.
Musks net worth over 54 years 1.2-1.3 trillion.
If he liquidated everything today he couldn't pay for 1 year of social security...
@IfindRetards I do this in my work meetings too
'Guys, I hear we're having issues. I'd like to fix those issues. You know the issues are costing us money and we need to fix the problems!'
Everyone nods while wondering what the actual plan is
'Thanks guys, meeting over.'"
All you have to do is pay attention to where you send the money and you could save $186 billion dollars a year in mis-payments! Did you know if you could end fraud and stop mis-payments you could have more money than if you taxed the top 1% like democrats have purposed, last year alone was $300 - $500 billion dollars. You want Musks $1 Trillion? Stop throwing away $500 billion every year.....
@SadNYGuy It not that serious!
If you need a trash can just take one!
340 million people + 1 metal mesh trash can $500-$2000 = $190 billion / $680 billion
We could just keep rasing taxes on the top 1% to cover that...
If the government would stop mispayments and end the fraud on American tax dollars, they would recover the same amount if not hundreds of billions more than if they taxed the top 1% like proposed.
Accidentally sending money to people through mispayments alone totaled $186 billion last year....
@tweets2xs@brutalfootages@grok Grok sucks....
Footage Captures the Final Moments Before Three Teenagers Drowned at Indian Waterfall https://t.co/aLqzI20OFs
@BJSTN45 Think of what you can do with the $186 billion lost in mis-payments annually or the $300-$500 billion lost in fraud annually. Kinda crazy that this number is almost the same if not 100s of billions more than what the democrats would get if they taxed the rich like they want.
Adding fraud estimates ($233Bโ$521B annually per GAO analyses) to the confirmed $186B in FY2025 improper payments could bring potential savings from stronger controls into the $400B+ range.
Extending the 2%/3% wealth tax to the full top 1% (~$12M+ net worth) broadens the base far beyond the ultra-wealthy version. Optimistic projections point to several hundred billion annually or more. The scales align closely, though both options depend heavily on execution, valuation accuracy, and minimizing avoidance or errors.
@TheRabbitHole It crazy how the government forces americans to keep track of every dollar received or spent, but yet the government loses $300,000,000,000-$500,000,000,000 annually to mis-payments and fraud...
@LibbyTard17@SenWarren The UN never gave him a plan on fixing world hunger just helping 42 million people across 43 countries. Not to mention it would have only provided 1 meal per day for 1 year.