Dennis Kallicott retweetou

A CITIZEN'S RIGHTEOUS TESTIMONY
I’m being taxed on money I never made. Think about that.
I bought my property in 2015 for $60,000. Today, the county says it’s worth $246,000.
Did I sell it? No.
Did I make a profit? No.
Did I receive a check for $246,000? Not a dime.
But my taxes went up like I did.
That’s the issue. This isn’t income. It isn’t cash. It’s a number assigned on paper—and now I’m being billed for it.
If my stock portfolio doubles, I don’t pay taxes until I sell. If my paycheck stays the same, my income taxes don’t suddenly increase. So why is owning a home different?
Why am I being taxed on unrealized gains?
A home isn’t just an investment—it’s where people live. Yet under this system, you can do everything right, pay off your house, and still get squeezed year after year because of a rising estimate you never turned into real money.
At some point, it raises a bigger question: do you truly own something if you can be taxed out of it?
This isn’t about services or inflation. It’s about being charged for value you never actually received—and more people are starting to notice.

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