Disagree. It is much easier to stop a piece of legislation from passing if enough people contact their congressmen/women/whatever than it is to get a piece of legislation changed or repealed after it has been enacted.
Agree. The time to decide if legislation is good or not it before, not after it has passed.
we don’t know anyone even close to this level of assets
We know two. One is a Democrat, active in the party, fundraising, etc. She acknowledges that the wealthy should have a higher tax rate. The other I don’t know anything about his politics.
But I have a few objections to this legislation. First has already been mentioned: taxing unrealized gains. It’s a needless complication: taking, then having to rebate if the value goes down, and how do you account for artwork, jewelry, or other things which have only approximated value year by year? Are you going to have them appraised every year? What a job! And what an opening for fraud. Why, you might declare the value of a building to be far less than it’s worth for tax purposes, not that anyone would actually do that, I suppose.
I also don’t like the “hard cutoff” idea: zero below, 20% above. (OK, not actually zero, but pretty close in some cases.) There is already a mechanism to do this, it’s called the progressive income tax. Having a hard cutoff is another inducement to shenanigans.
I think there’s also an inducement for the super-wealthy to renounce their citizenship and declare domicile in some Central American country (or other), so if there’s to be a tax it ought to be on “wealth earned” in this country, not necessarily “wealth owned”. Again I’m not sure how you police that, but I’d not be happy to see some of the great entrepreneurs chased away once they acquire substantial wealth.
Oh. And get rid of the “step up” basis on inheritance. At SOME point, taxes should be paid on great wealth, just like the rest of us. I see no reason for the Walton daughters to have multiple billions sitting around while the workers who built the company are on food stamps.