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Note that these aren't Lincoln's own tickets, but just tickets for that night.

> The holders of these tickets, seated more or less directly across from the president's box




I cannot fathom having so much money that I would find the best use of some of it to buy some trivialities like these. And what obligation would I feel to them after purchase? Oblige every visitor to my home to ooh and aah at them? How incredibly boring.


It’s mostly about buying a future tax deduction.

(1) Buy this thing now for $100,000.

(2) Wait a few years.

(3) Donate it to a museum or other charity at a valuation of $400,000.

(4) Take a $400,000 charitable contribution deduction on your taxes.


I don’t deny that this behaviour exists, but I don’t understand why it is allowed to exist. I understand it in the context of donating assets with a liquid market, like stocks and bonds, but for illiquid, difficult to value assets like these or art, it seems like a mega opportunity for tax evasion that could easily be cracked down upon.

At least have a “claw back” where if the charity then sells the thing for $100,000 then the donor has to retract the full value of the original deduction.


The problem is that most of the time the new valuation is real. In the case of art at least, there is an extra step between 2 and 3: create hype to make the artist popular.




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