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Reducing Taxes on Capital Gains

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Rep. Pease calls for fairness in his article rebuking the Bush Administration for wanting to lower tax rates on capital gains.

How about fairness to my 80-year-old retarded sister, who relies on a 40-year-old trust fund painstakingly scrimped together by a mother who wanted to protect her daughter from public welfare? Sure, her fund has luckily increased in value five times over four decades. But unluckily, dollars now buy only 1/10th as much health care, if that. Perhaps we could maximize her income by shrewd exchanges of money instruments, but not when there are penalties exceeding 25% on every exchange.

Similar cases abound.

Just a few years ago The Times carried an article by someone urging that capital-gains taxes be prorated by length of possession: the longer property was held, the less the tax. Such taxes would release many stagnated financial holdings, my sister’s included, add millions/billions/trillions (who knows) to tax receipts, and relieve many aging citizens locked into investments inappropriate for their declining years. It would not enrich wealthy traders mentioned in the Pease article.

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Such taxes would also pave the way for fair revisions of present large one-time exemptions on profits made by sale of residences. Elderly empty-nesters could safely sell homes grown too large; they wouldn’t need special exemptions.

I didn’t vote for Bush, but so far I like what I’m hearing.

DON McKENZIE

Hollywood

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