I'll have to look up my book when I'm at the other office, but I think for 2011 you're not even taxed on the first $1,500 (or was it $2,500?) in dividend or capital gain income. Unless the gain is from the sale of a primary residence or something like that.
Do you have any idea what kind of portfolio is required to generate $1,500 in dividend income? M$ dividend isn't even a dollar per share, shit maybe not even $0.50. For sake of argument, let's say it is $1 per share and it's trading at $25 per share. You'd need $37,500 invested in M$. Not only that, but you have to hold the shares and take the dividend as cash, as opposed to a DRIP which would net you an additional 1,500 shares essentially for free, meaning you get $3k in dividend income next year in this fictional universe where it trades at $25 for an entire year.
Even my best holding (that OKS I spoke of in another thread, which you're an idiot if you don't have) would require me to have roughly $15k in holdings to get taxed. Now, bury that into a Roth IRA and I have $0 liability on the principle regardless of gain upon selling in retirement. Also not paying a dividend tax at all because it's a DRIP meaning my only tax upon retirement will be on capital gain of final selling price minus principle.

ing poor people soaking the rich by not paying taxes!
Of course you take this onto talk radio and they'll do their best to twist you around until you can't even figure out what you were talking about in the 1st place... You've got to hand it to their high school debate coaches.
Let's not forget that this is a double taxation in the first place
Because the pay from his retail job wasn't taxed to the corporation, wasn't taxed to the customer who purchased something, which wasn't taxed on that customer's income, which wasn't taxed to their employer, ad naseum until you get back to the first dollar that was ever printed by the US treasury.
Just like if I saved my income, started a business, invested in inventory, sold that inventory for a profit to someone who paid for it with their taxed income, and oh

it, I can't even justify this line of thinking...