super rich individuals, only about 80 small farms and businesses will even pay this tax this year, don. >> okay. so the richest americans are getting plenty of breaks. you just described some of them. what about the middle class, brianna? >> well, the rich are getting nice goodies, then at the same time a lot of the middle class tax breaks, they're actually going to go away. republicans argue that a bigger standard deduction will make up for that, but just look at some of the optics here. the house bill removes a $250 deduction that teachers can take for buying school supplies for their classrooms. this is an expense that many teachers pay out of pocket because their school district cannot cover the cost. the senate bill actually doubles it, so this is something that's going to have to be worked out in conference. and the house bill also takes away the student loan deduction. about 12 million people used that in 2015, so many people. it also ends a handful of education tax credits as well as tax breaks for graduate school, tuition, and employer tuition assistance. according to the joint committee on taxation, these changes will