No, not really. But I will be affected in a few years when my grandmother passes away. My grandfather had the insight to invest a significant portion of his income in the phone company where he worked and because of that my grandmother is a millionare. She will be one of the tens of thousands affected and she doesn't feel she needs the money that she will give back to the government. She was saddened enough when they stopped taxing the dividends. She doesn't need that extra money, and she doesn't like where this country is going. Especially Bush, she can't stand the man and turns off the TV when he comes on.
She's already used the money to help send her 4 grandkids to great universities and helped two of her grandchildren purchase their first homes. She's traveled all over this country and has been able to enjoy her retirement extremely comfortably over the last few years. Because of careful estate planning, she's already given us significant parts of her estate tax free over the last 10 years. It's not even that difficult either, a consultation with a lawyer once a year is enough to plan out the strategy for the next year. When she leaves us in a few years (her warranty on her heart valve replacement is almost up, which is actually a good thing as it means she'll go peacefully when she's still sharp as a tack) each of her four grandchildren will stand to inherit a sizeable chunk of change. Not enough to retire early on, but way more than any twenty something needs.
Hers is an isolated case, seeing as how her entire fortune is in stock and real estate. She doesn't have to worry about how a business she wants to pass on will be affected. But why should we, her grandchildren, receive this money that's been out of the government's hand for decades tax free? Also, if this tax is repealed, then the government loses a lot more revenue because when you inherit stock, the capital gains level is reset to what you inherit it at. So I would not pay taxes on the profit from the ~50/share stock that my grandfather bought for 1/share.
It's funny, because we don't even particularly want/need it because we were raised to build our own fortunes and follow the example of our grandmother, who still works 20 hours a week at age 90 at a department store because "What else am I going to do?".