Because of course you have no minimum tax threshold and no possible way of knowing if you even qualify to pay that year or not.
Even if you don't have to pay, you still have to report the income to the IRS.
Because of course you have no minimum tax threshold and no possible way of knowing if you even qualify to pay that year or not.
They present themselves as homeless or otherwise unfortunate, when they are anything but.
Or, as it is here in Cincinnati, they beg for money saying they need food, and then they turn around and use the money to buy drugs.
Not to mention, I doubt any beggar, legitimate or not, is reporting that income to the IRS. So in that sense, all beggars are scamming the government out of tax revenue.
This has never ever happened
for addicts, drugs is a neccesity
if an addict resorts to begging, it means he has no other option left
look
that really really doesn't matter
owning a house = not possibly in need of helpYes, it has. Hell, in that local news report I talked about earlier, they followed some woman who claimed to be homeless back to her house. And before you say anything, yes they did confirm that she was the owner of the house.
EDIT: The fact that you say it has never, ever happened is a pretty clear indicator of how woefully uninformed you are on the issue. And you are pretty much just developing your opinions on the matter based on whatever position gives you the biggest "warm and fuzzy".
Are you serious right now? So being an addict give them the right to lie to people in order to scam money out of them? Just because an addict sees drugs as a necessity doesn't make it so.
Just because you say it, doesn't make it so. You are going to have to explain how it doesn't matter. Because I can think of some reasons why it does matter.
owning a house = not possibly in need of help
thanks for clearing that up
why would anyone spend their times on the street, degrading themself, to maybe get a tiny amount of money they don't need
yes sometimes it is right to lie
tell my why the state is more important than human beings
You really don't understand people, do you?
why would anyone spend their times on the street, degrading themself, to maybe get a tiny amount of money they don't needs
Well I'm not familiar with any statistics on the matter so I'll be careful in saying what's fact and what's not. But from a general fellow human point of view I find it appalling to generally advise people not to be charitable to people living on the street due to a possibility of potential scammery.
Mods: will someone move this in a separate topic?
Do you have a credible source for this claim? The poster in the OP sure don't offer any. Just an absurd statement that "beggars are not what they seem" and then leaves it at that with a propaganda picture of some evil looking beggar.There's a not insignificant number of beggars who do it as a way to make money without legitimately needing to do it.
None of this is particularly relevant to the discussion raised here. What you do with your money is up to you. Saying that a significant portion of those begging for money are imposing as something they aren't, is a claim where the burden of evidence resides heavily on anybody making such a claim.It can be very profitable if you get a good spot.
Regardless of whether there are scammers begging or not, I'm not giving a beggar my money. Just pointing out that unfortunately there are people who pretend to be homeless to prey on the goodwill of others to make a quick buck at the expense of those who genuinely need it.
What one local news channel at some point found out about one lady is also irrelevant.
Fair enough. But I'm sure you see that it's very hard to lend much credibility to a statement saying that there are many scammers posing as beggars in Cincinnati if you don't provide a source as well.
Where Does Your Dollar Go?
Shane Wright, 40, spends most days begging at the corner of Eden Park Drive and I-71.
Wright said he was a roofer who injured himself in a fall about three years ago. He said he now lives on the streets, feeding a heroin addiction.
Shane Wright claims he is a homeless veteran.
“A lot of people know what they're giving us the money for, but they don't care because the ones who give us the money, to be honest, give out of religion,” he said. “The Bible tells you to give without judgment."
Wright said most panhandlers aren’t honest. Some, he said, even pretend to be homeless.
His cardboard sign, decorated with smiley faces, reads: “Homeless vet. Please help. God bless.”
Wright claims he served in the U.S. Marine Corps from 1993 to 1996, but the I-Team uncovered the Marine Corps Manpower and Support Branch in Washington D.C. has no record of his service.
Wright isn't alone in his dishonesty.
I think there's probably a lot of both, people who are really desperate and people who are taking advantage. However I doubt there are many people who are not at least poor who are begging. I've heard about women here who rent babies to get more money. You also see kids begging and I wonder if they have some adult the money goes to.
What really annoys me is when beggars violate your space like grab on to you. Child beggars do that sometimes but they normally avoid me, maybe I look more intimidating, but I also try to steer clear of them.
In Erbil, the capital here, they actually started arresting beggars and taking them to refugee centers. I am sympathetic to some degree so I'm not saying this is the right decision. Most of them were Syrians.
Good find. I think the story is interesting enough, though I'd prefer some hard statistics to go with their angle on begging. But yeah I think it's one of the many aspects of poverty that warrants some attention too. Don't think it at any means justifies putting up a poster like the one in OP though.EDIT: Holy crap, I found the news report. It doesn't have the lady I referred to though, but it does report on the growing number of begging scammers:
http://www.wcpo.com/news/local-news/i-team/i-team-one-third-of-panhandling-arrests-are-young-adults
Did they say what they wanted to achieve with that? Perhaps just an out of sight out of mind situation?Yeah, they've started arresting beggars here too in an attempt to drive them out of the city.