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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: i-node who wrote (695542)1/27/2013 2:13:39 PM
From: combjelly1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1575538
 
It wasn't commonly used, albeit it wouldn't surprise me if it was around then. Frank made it popular, though. From the wikipedia.

James L. Martin, chairman of the conservative 60 Plus Association, described Luntz's role as being that of pollster and popularizer of the phrase "death tax".

Martin gained an important ally in GOP pollster Frank Luntz, whose polling revealed that "death tax" sparked voter resentment in a way that "inheritance tax" and "estate tax" couldn't match. After all, who wouldn't be opposed to a "tax on death"? Luntz shared his findings with Republicans and included the phrase in the GOP's Contract with America. Luntz went so far as to recommend in a memo to GOP lawmakers that they stage press conferences "at your local mortuary" to dramatize the issue. "I believe this backdrop will clearly resonate with your constituents," he wrote. "Death is something the American people understand." Apparently, he's right. Spurred by Luntz, Republicans have employed the term "death tax" so aggressively that it has entered the popular lexicon. Nonpartisan venues like newspapers and magazines have begun to use it in a neutral context--a coup for abolitionists like Martin. [9]



To: i-node who wrote (695542)1/27/2013 3:32:48 PM
From: i-node1 Recommendation  Respond to of 1575538
 
It certainly was among tax professionals. I even recall a graduate level estate tax course where the term was used as a generic term that distinguished it from other kinds estates.