Well, when the disciples asked Jesus "where (are they taken), Lord?", His reply was "where the buzzards are gathered..." which means the taken ones are carcasses on the ground...
No, Christ didn't take those people there. Christ takes the raptured saints there as the army that follows Christ and they watch him slay the Beast's army.
You need to study deeper into the Greek words used for the one taken and one left since you have them backwards. I mean it's pretty obvious even in the English with the raptured saints being literally TAKEN up to the clouds before anyone is LEFT on Earth for punishment and death. No surprise that matches the story of Lot where an angel took Lot and his family away from the cities to a place of safety and all those LEFT back in those cities died.
taken
3880
3880 paralambano {par-al-am-ban'-o}
from 3844 and 2983; TDNT - 4:11,495; v
AV - take 30, receive 15, take unto 2, take up 2, take away 1; 50
1) to take to, to take with one's self, to join to one's self
1a) an associate, a companion
1b) metaph.
1b1) to accept or acknowledge one to be such as he professes to be
1b2) not to reject, not to withhold obedience
2) to receive something transmitted
2a) an office to be discharged
2b) to receive with the mind
2b1) by oral transmission: of the authors from whom the
tradition proceeds
2b2) by the narrating to others, by instruction of teachers
(used of disciples)
"to take with one's self"
"to join to one's self"
"an associate"
"a companion"
"not to reject"
That's not the one who dies obviously.