Joe Rogan isn't buying the "tax the rich" solution. On a May episode of "The Joe Rogan Experience" with comedian Jimmy Carr, the podcaster challenged the popular idea that simply collecting more money from wealthy Americans would solve anything for everyone else.
Where Does the Money Actually Go?
"Figure out what to do with the money they already get from everybody," Rogan told Carr. "And you're not doing a good job with it. That's the problem. The problem isn't that the rich people aren't paying their taxes."
It's a fair question. The government already collects trillions in tax revenue every year, so Rogan's pushing back on the assumption that the issue is how much comes in rather than how it's spent once it's there.
His bigger concern? That raising taxes on the wealthy won't actually translate into better lives for struggling Americans. "Are the poor people going to get that money? No. Are their services going to improve? No, you're just going to get more government," he said.
Carr, who once faced public backlash over a tax scandal in the UK, brought some levity to the conversation. "It was tax avoidance, not tax evasion. There's a difference, and the difference is about 18 months in prison," he joked.
Rogan doubled down on his skepticism about whether higher taxes on the rich would change anything meaningful. "What are you going to do? You're going to enrich [the government]," he said. "They're just going to get bigger and stronger and have even more power... It's not going to help you if they tax rich people."
Why Scandinavia Isn't a Perfect Comparison
Carr pointed to countries like Norway and Denmark, where citizens pay high taxes but get robust public services in return. People in those countries seem generally satisfied with the arrangement.
Rogan acknowledged that model works in those specific places but argued it doesn't translate to America. Those societies are small and manageable, he said. "When you scale that to like hundreds of millions of people, things get really weird."
Corporate Winners and Local Losers
This isn't the first time Rogan has weighed in on wealth and economic power. In a conversation with comedian Ian Edwards, he warned that when accumulating wealth becomes the only objective, the ultra-rich disconnect from everyone else. "They don't give a f**k about you. They're just trying to make more numbers," Rogan said about individuals focused purely on profit.
He also blasted how pandemic policies channeled massive amounts of money to large corporations while small businesses got crushed. "You can only go to Target during a pandemic... You can't go [to a small business], it's a pandemic," he said. That shift, he argued, legally redirected money away from local economies and into corporate coffers.
Whether you agree with Rogan's take or not, he's tapping into a broader frustration many Americans feel about government efficiency and who really benefits when economic policies shift.




