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Amazon Fights Back
Townhall.com ^ | May 16, 2018 | John Stossel

Posted on 05/16/2018 7:10:26 AM PDT by Kaslin

Seattle is worried about the well-being of the poor and mentally ill people living there, so it's going to drive businesses out of town.

OK, that's not how the politicians describe their plan, but that's probably how it will work out.

Members of Seattle's city council want all big Seattle businesses to pay a tax of $500 per employee.

In response, Amazon stopped building a new complex. Construction workers joined Amazon in protesting the new tax.

On the other side are city council members like Kshama Sawant. She and members of her political party, Socialist Alternative, demonstrated in support of the tax. They chanted, "Housing is a human right!"

Seattle does have large encampments of street people. Some are mentally ill. Some are young people looking to get stoned and live free. Some are homeless simply because they cannot afford apartments. There are many reasons for that, but one is that Amazon and other companies have brought so many new jobs to Seattle that the demand for housing exceeds the supply.

Normally, when that happens, the free market quickly solves the problem. Builders view the rising prices as a wonderful thing. They quickly build new housing to sell to the new customers. But in Seattle, and many towns in America, politicians make that very hard.

Seattle's building code is 745 pages long.

If you want to build apartments, you better hire lawyers and "fixers" to keep you on the right side of the rules.

Seattle's rules insist that "Welded splices shall be of ASTM A706 steel" and "foam plastic signs shall not be greater than 1/2 inch" thick.

On the majority of Seattle's land, building any high-rise is illegal; zoning rules say only single-family houses may be built.

Want to run a cheap flophouse with single rooms? Seattle's rules make that just about impossible.

Finally, if a landlord decides to take a building off the market, he must pay each of his tenants $3,000 in relocation costs.

No wonder there's a housing shortage.

Seattle's big-government restrictions created a housing problem. So now they propose to solve it with more heavy-handed government.

Seattle promises its new per-employee tax will only hit "big" companies, those grossing more than $20 million per year (about 3 percent of Seattle's businesses).

Don't the politicians realize that many growing companies will simply stop expanding when they get close to $20 million in income, just as companies, looking to escape Obamacare, avoid employing more than 49 workers?

Some pay lawyers to split the company into pieces. Some expand in another state. Don't politicians see that raising taxes has nasty side effects? I guess not.

Monday, after Amazon's pushback, the city council imposed a tax of $275 per worker instead of the originally proposed $500 tax.

They called that "compromise," but it sounds like replacing a bad plan with a half-as-bad plan.

It's not only government bureaucrats who are to blame. The consulting firm McKinsey weighed in with an analysis of Seattle-area homelessness and concluded the city needed to spend $400 million a year to solve the homelessness problem.

I'm sure Seattle, and many other governments, will manage to spend $400 million without solving the problem.

It's good that Amazon pushed back against the tax. Their reminder that they could reduce or close up business if Seattle's government got too greedy helped cut the tax roughly in half.

You can't just keep squeezing businesses or other taxpayers forever and not expect them to try to escape. At some point, businesses will pack up and leave. Then there will be fewer paying jobs that make a city's population less likely to be homeless in the first place.

Sawant and the other big-taxers try to make productive companies, which employ people so they can afford things like rent, sound like villains. She called Amazon's threat to leave "extortion." The activist group Working Washington asked Seattle's attorney general to charge Amazon with the crime of "issuing mob-like threats."

Mob-like threats? Amazon just wants to be left alone so it can build complexes, hire people and sell stuff.

As usual, government is the organization that sounds mob-like.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; US: Washington
KEYWORDS: amazon; bluezones; demagogicparty; headtax; homeless; housing; jeffbezos; kshamasawant; regulations; seattle; taxandspend; washington
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1 posted on 05/16/2018 7:10:26 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

I like it when the liberals do something that gets the unions that support them to protest against them...


2 posted on 05/16/2018 7:12:01 AM PDT by seamusnh
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To: Kaslin

Liberal self-destruction is a wonderful thing.

Now if only they’d stop trying to force it onto the rest of us.


3 posted on 05/16/2018 7:14:22 AM PDT by Luircin
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To: Kaslin

I am with Amazon on this.
I guess I am hoping for lefties to see the light on crap like this.


4 posted on 05/16/2018 7:14:23 AM PDT by waterhill (I Shall Remain, in spite of __________.)
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To: Kaslin

Greedy, commie bastards. That’s what they do. Destroy you.


5 posted on 05/16/2018 7:17:30 AM PDT by WKUHilltopper
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To: Kaslin

This was already resolved. The tax was passed and Amazon resumed building.


6 posted on 05/16/2018 7:19:40 AM PDT by TexasGunLover
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To: Kaslin

Seattle’s building code is 745 pages long.


7 posted on 05/16/2018 7:25:48 AM PDT by MarvinStinson
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To: seamusnh

Makes me happy!


8 posted on 05/16/2018 7:25:53 AM PDT by rrrod (just an old guy with a gun in his pocket)
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To: Kaslin

“On the other side are city council members like Kshama Sawant. She and members of her political party, Socialist Alternative, demonstrated in support of the tax. They chanted, “Housing is a human right!””

Another Indian “immigrant!” When will we ever learn?


9 posted on 05/16/2018 7:25:59 AM PDT by vette6387
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To: Kaslin
The government will eventually get to the point of making leaving a state illegal, for both companies and individuals. Not directly, of course. But they will do something shifty like impose a "wealth transfer tax" on property sales or something that will be so high that the price will have to drop to the floor to leave room for the tax and still be affordable to some buyer. So stay and pay your takes like a good peasant or leave and we will take everything you have on the way out.

It's only a matter of time, they will never look in a mirror and say "what did we do to make everyone want to leave?" Nope, force them to stay will be how they "solve" the problem.

10 posted on 05/16/2018 7:26:01 AM PDT by pepsi_junkie (Russians couldnt have done a better job destroying sacred American institutions than Democrats have)
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To: Kaslin

“Finally, if a landlord decides to take a building off the market, he must pay each of his tenants $3,000 in relocation costs.”

Just like San Francisco, but it’s a cheap way out of their confiscatory “rent control law.”But in SF, if you elect to take your property off the market, in addition to the “moving costs,” you have to agree to not re-rent it for ten years.


11 posted on 05/16/2018 7:28:59 AM PDT by vette6387
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To: Kaslin

Amazon, being the “woke” company that it is, should have upped their contribution to $10,000 per employee, and done so enthusiastically. What gives?


12 posted on 05/16/2018 7:30:28 AM PDT by rightwingcrazy
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To: Luircin

What’s even worse is when they enact thse policies upon the rest of us, but exclude themselves (like illegal aliens living 20 to a house in communities where the older inhabitants worked hard and paid to live in a nice neighborhood, or see their jobs undercut by illegals-and it’s never the leftist media and such who lose thereby-or shove government housing for criminal ne’er-do-wells into formerly nice neighborhoods, while the ones who decreed these policies live gated communities, or huge spreads with stout walls, etc). They’re always “compassionate” at the expense of the middle class.


13 posted on 05/16/2018 7:33:28 AM PDT by mrsmel (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn.)
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To: Kaslin
You can't just keep squeezing businesses or other taxpayers forever and not expect them to try to escape. At some point, businesses will pack up and leave. Then there will be fewer paying jobs that make a city's population less likely to be homeless in the first place.

Directive 10-289.

14 posted on 05/16/2018 7:40:18 AM PDT by MortMan (The white board is a remarkable invention.)
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To: Kaslin

Fixed capital investment in any area run by socialists is absolutely nuts. They will milk it, then steal what remains. The political climate and economy will not get better.


15 posted on 05/16/2018 7:41:29 AM PDT by Chewbarkah
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To: seamusnh

I like leftist feeding frenzies where they rip and slash each other to shreds.


16 posted on 05/16/2018 7:45:39 AM PDT by rockrr ( Everything is different now...)
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To: Kaslin

Seattle’s building code is 745 pages long.

In 1955 my Dad, his Dad with some part time help from a brother built the home I grew up in. (Pennsylvania) 2 bedroom 1 bath, kitchen dining room and living room, open front porch @ 8,000 dollars. House is still standing and lived in today. This was of course in the days before Nanny Government!


17 posted on 05/16/2018 7:50:15 AM PDT by 48th SPS Crusader (I am an American. Not a Republican or a Democrat)
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To: Kaslin

Jeff Bozo, the Amazon CEO is a hypocrite. Bozo is progressive and anti Trump. Bozo should be thrilled at the opportunity to participate in leftist policies.


18 posted on 05/16/2018 7:54:40 AM PDT by brownsfan (Behold, the power of government cheese.)
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To: Kaslin

Trump’s grandfather Friedrich did very well as a small busibessman in early Seattle.


19 posted on 05/16/2018 8:08:24 AM PDT by scottinoc
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To: Kaslin

I wonder if bozo Bezos will get a clue as to what scum democrats are.


20 posted on 05/16/2018 8:15:15 AM PDT by Bonemaker (invictus maneo)
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