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In reply to the discussion: Memories Pizza made +$800k? [View all]johnnysad
(93 posts)26. What bothers me the most about this issue is the turn arounds on it by leading Democrats
I'm 59 years old and if you asked me 40 years ago I would have said let them marry it's none of my business
to stand in their way.
but now in the just the last few years it has become vogue to support
gay marriage . Obama , Hillary etc.. when before they didn't or were silent about it.
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The IRS will likely see it as income. Gofundme sends a 1099-k if someone has
MillennialDem
Apr 2015
#42
They (IRS) will say it is for keeping their business open so it is income, not a gift. The reason
MillennialDem
Apr 2015
#47
Saying controversial things is working. Otherwise you couldn't tax people who give speeches.
MillennialDem
Apr 2015
#49
The IRS will view it as not a charitable act, but the gift givers having a vested interest in
MillennialDem
Apr 2015
#53
You're reading an awful lot into the intentions of anonymous gift-givers on GoFundMe.
Nye Bevan
Apr 2015
#73
No. The gift exemption is so that you aren't taxing a family at Christmas or someone who had
MillennialDem
Apr 2015
#43
They can just change the name to Church of the Memories Pizza and keep it all.
Contrary1
Apr 2015
#8
No taxes I assume, I think you can give up to $15,000 to someone tax free. So unless....
Logical
Apr 2015
#9
What bothers me the most about this issue is the turn arounds on it by leading Democrats
johnnysad
Apr 2015
#26
Why would they issue a 1099-k if the amount is over $20,000? I'm aware they don't report the income
MillennialDem
Apr 2015
#60
Giving to IRS authorized nonprofits allows you to deduct the contribution from your taxable income.
PoliticAverse
Apr 2015
#52
Well you highlight the problem of what is and isn't a gift. If the giver gets anything in return
PoliticAverse
Apr 2015
#56