I believe about two-thirds of Britain is in the hands of only about 6,000 people. (Other people may be able to correct my figures on this.)
I don't see what inheritance tax does to allay this. If you want to change that, you need peerage reform. Plus, you concede that in terms of money that people inherit, cases like these are a minority. How is it fair to tarnish everyone inheriting a certain amount of money with the same brush as those receiving aristocratic inheritence?
I'm quite happy for them, and your parents, and the Duke of Ditchwater's, to be able to do this tax-free. But I can't see why this freedom should last after death.
I'm not sure I understand your argument here. I don't see how the government has any extra right to money it's allready taxed when it's being posthumously given rather than while still alive. What about the case of a sudden/unexpected death?
And in general I don't see why the rich shouldn't pay more tax than the poor.
Neither do I. Don't get me wrong, I understand that the rich should be paying to the benefit of the poor, I just don't see that it should be in the form of taking money that's allready been paid for regardless of the wishes of the people who want to leave it to their loved ones.