Promising to cut taxes for “millions of families” and generate economic growth, the explainer that accompanied the 429-page bill used several examples to illustrate how the bill might work. Included among those examples was this one, first noticed by The Black List founder Franklin Leonard on Twitter, about lowering taxes on small businesses.

“The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act includes specific safeguards to prevent tax avoidance and help ensure taxpayers of all income levels play by the rules under this new fairer, simpler tax system,” the document states. “Our legislation will ensure this much-needed tax relief goes to the local job creators it’s designed to help by distinguishing between the individual wage income of NBA All-Star Stephen Curry and the pass-through business income of Steve’s Bike Shop.”

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Actual meat of the bill aside, what caught the Internet’s attention in this case was that, of all the famous people whose names are or sound like Steve that the committee could have chosen to lay out in its example, it’s ironic that it landed on Curry. As of Thursday afternoon, Leonard’s tweet had gone viral and inspired myriad responses, many serious and a few joking.

It was just in September that the 29-year-old, two-time NBA MVP found himself in a surprise public feud with President Trump after being uninvited to the White House to celebrate the team’s 2017 NBA Finals victory. Trump withdrew Curry’s invitation on Twitter after the Warriors point guard said he would not attend due to various political and personal disagreements with the president.

Curry later called Trump’s very public message to him “surreal.”

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“I don’t know why he feels the need to target certain individuals, rather than others,” he added (via The Post’s Tim Bontemps).

On Thursday, Curry had a more amused response.

Despite the social media kerfuffle, the use of Curry, the NBA’s highest-paid player, as an example of an extremely rich person compared to some average guy named Steve, appears to be entirely coincidental. That is, there does not seem to be an ulterior motive behind Curry’s mention.

This is not the first time the committee’s used this kind of comparison in an attempt to explain a policy. On at least three occasions, the committee has compared famous people to those considered more average using similar examples. In 2016, there was Bill Gates vs. “Bill the Electrician;” in February, Tom Brady was compared to “Tom’s Bike Shop;” and in March, Rep. Brady gave an example to Vox comparing Michael Jordan to “Michael the Plumber.”

Those cases failed to pique the interest of social media, however.