It’s not targeting the athletes - they should be paying taxes on the income regardless of what the collective has to do.Ya let's start with the corporations. Targeting the athletes because they have no unions or representation is dumb as ****.
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It’s not targeting the athletes - they should be paying taxes on the income regardless of what the collective has to do.Ya let's start with the corporations. Targeting the athletes because they have no unions or representation is dumb as ****.
Yet here we are lobbying resources for their enforcement but the corporations will never pay theirs.It’s not targeting the athletes - they should be paying taxes on the income regardless of what the collective has to do.
Two separate issues that could both be handled in parallel. I’m all for corporate tax reform and consider it a top priority given the direction our education, healthcare, and infrastructure are headed.Yet here we are lobbying resources for their enforcement but the corporations will never pay theirs.
Easy way around it:
Pay the athletes as employees of the collective and have the collective concentrate on doing charity work/programs.
We only do it this way because our fans are so freaking cheap they won't donate otherwise. I honestly don't care if they do or don't. Just sick of the head hunting when corporations and hugely rich people still never have to pay the piper.Two separate issues that could both be handled in parallel. I’m all for corporate tax reform and consider it a top priority given the direction our education, healthcare, and infrastructure are headed.
I don’t really care about collectives but feel overall tax exempt status should also be reformed. A collective isn’t doing a charitable service so should have to pay taxes just like any other marketing company.
We’re in sync on that.We only do it this way because our fans are so freaking cheap they won't donate otherwise. I honestly don't care if they do or don't. Just sick of the head hunting when corporations and hugely rich people still never have to pay the piper.
IMO that is a pretty selective statement. There are a lot of instances where the people who do critical work are not fairly compensated.All these gymnastics to avoid paying players they're worth. What a country.
All these gymnastics to avoid paying players they're worth. What a country.
It's whatever the market dictates. I just think it's hippocrisy from these universities.what are they worth? are they all worth the same amount?
What does this have to do with non profit NIL?IMO that is a pretty selective statement. There are a lot of instances where the people who do critical work are not fairly compensated.
If universities can make legal/financial sense of student-athletes being employees and making a "livable" wage ($20-$30/hour), then I am good with that arrangement.
But I feel the real intent of the adults driving employee status is revenue sharing this enriching the guys leading the movement, agents and a maybe 5% of all student athletes.
IMO the key is options for young athletes and that should fall on the professional sport billionaires who hold communities hostage to fund their billion dollar stadiums.
Shouldn't our legal system protect HS grads ability to jump directly to the NFL, NBA, MLB, WNBA, etc? Pretty sure the NBA and NFL would develop a robust minor league system to ensure when they drafted the next Lebron or Durant they had a development system to maximize the kids potential like MLB has.
The good thing, the NBA is eliminating the age restriction and we are seeing entities like G-League and Overtime Elite emerging in basketball.
Nothing.What does this have to do with non profit NIL?
If a person is paid an exorbitant amount of money for a job that normally would cost much less, they have been given a wage plus a GIFT. Gifts over a certain amount are subject to a gift tax...paid by the giver. In addition, the gift portion of the payment is not deductible as an expense. Somebody needs to get the IRS on this before NIL ruins college sports.
Ever notice how the super rich screech about what the people on the bottom make but doing the opposite is anti capitalism?Nothing.
I was responding to your post about colleges "paying players their worth".
Colleges paying players and NIL are two entirely different things. If colleges pay players it would mean they are employees, which is what I posted about.
NIL should always be separate from the schools and market driven.
Who's the super rich you are complaining about? Universities, me, capitalism? You do understand capitalism is rooted in the person providing the capital being rewarded, not the worker.Ever notice how the super rich screech about what the people on the bottom make but doing the opposite is anti capitalism?
Your first paragraph is essentially serfdom. Second i agree. Third idgaf.Who's the super rich you are complaining about? Universities, me, capitalism? You do understand capitalism is rooted in the person providing the capital being rewarded, not the worker.
I would agree college athletics has lost its way and greed rules. But I would argue for spending caps by sport and excess athletic department revenues transferred back to the universities general fund.
If athletes feel their on field/court/mat/etc. worth is greater than scholarship value, then they should be able to compete professionally right out of HS. If the billionaire professional sport team owners funded their own minor league system- then athletes could determine their worth.
Your first paragraph is essentially serfdom. Second i agree. Third idgaf.
You said that capitol was all that gave people the right to be rewarded. A small business like a carpenter makes money off their services, which are typically labor driven. Selling their labor. Which means it has value. How can you claim that someone doesn't have the right to be rewarded for their labor?Serfdom means labor doesn't have options- they are tied to the land/job. With capitalism labor can form a union (which would happen with college athletes) and have choices where they work (why we have schools like Iowa State- get educated, get a good job).
I hope you are not an ISU grad with your knowledge of economics and business principles.
You said that capitol was all that gave people the right to be rewarded. A small business like a carpenter makes money off their services, which are typically labor driven. Selling their labor. Which means it has value. How can you claim that someone doesn't have the right to be rewarded for their labor?
They're not employees, so what are they?
It's whatever the market dictates. I just think it's hippocrisy from these universities.
We have much bigger fish to fry in this country anyways. I don't pity the universities and NCAA who drug their feet on this for decades and now want to fight any progress at all costs.