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To: ancient_geezer

Dear ancient_geezer,

Your view is that the repeal of the income tax code would lead to repeal of the 16th amendment. I understand your argument but strongly disagree with it.

Frankly, I don't see why Congress would repeal the 16th amendment once the income tax is repealed.

They'll say, just as YOU are saying, "It isn't necessary. We ABOLISHED the income tax. We ABOLISHED the IRS. Amending the Constitution is hard! We can't get the other guys to go along with it! And we'll never get 3/4 of the states to ratify it!"

And, they may be right about that.

But they'll have less incentive than they have now. They'll use the same excuse you use now: It isn't necessary.

However, whether I'm right or your right, NRSTers who say there is no mechanism by which it could be done are spreading falsehoods. If I were an NRSTer, I would repudiate those posters, because they make my side look bad to folks trying to find an honest debate.

You could at least try to clean up the falsehoods being propogated in the name of the NRST.


sitetest


97 posted on 09/02/2005 4:51:24 PM PDT by sitetest (If Roe is not overturned, no unborn child will ever be protected in law.)
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To: sitetest
You could at least try to clean up the falsehoods being propogated in the name of the NRST.

That would certainly make these threads an aweful lot shorter.

99 posted on 09/02/2005 5:15:34 PM PDT by Always Right
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To: sitetest

Gawd!!! Am I glad you're not pro-FairTax.

With the FairTax as the tax law of the land, the 16th amendment becomes merely a anachronism - much like the prohibition amendment and it should easily pass as a repeal bill - AND be ratified.

The Squirrels primary argument always seems to be to try to claim the FairTax supporters are lying. That's ALWAYS argument #1 with them it seems. And YOU'D be well-advised to clean up the myriad of falsehoods that keep being promoted in response to detailed information from the FairTax supporters.

It would no doubt surprise you to know that everything we post are not "lies", etc. In fact, that is vanishingly small from what I've seen when you still have several pposters making claims contrary to the language in the bill even. Get your house in order first my friend.


101 posted on 09/02/2005 5:24:57 PM PDT by pigdog
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To: sitetest

Your view is that the repeal of the income tax code would lead to repeal of the 16th amendment. I understand your argument but strongly disagree with it.

Any may disagree.

Frankly, I don't see why Congress would repeal the 16th amendment once the income tax is repealed.

Control of Congress and the Whitehouse is strong incentive, especially with the overwhealming support of the electorate behind such a repeal. But then you can certainly disagree with the potential for that as well.

They'll say, just as YOU are saying, "It isn't necessary. We ABOLISHED the income tax. We ABOLISHED the IRS. Amending the Constitution is hard! We can't get the other guys to go along with it! And we'll never get 3/4 of the states to ratify it!"

They could certainly say that, but that won't get them vote one from the electorate.

But they'll have less incentive than they have now. They'll use the same excuse you use now: It isn't necessary.

Ahh but the excuse now is the income tax is necessary to pay the bills, there is no other tax to replaced it. That has been the situation for 92 years. Besides enough of their constitutents get a free ride under it so their seats are totally safe.

However, whether I'm right or your right, NRSTers who say there is no mechanism by which it could be done are spreading falsehoods. If I were an NRSTer, I would repudiate those posters, because they make my side look bad to folks trying to find an honest debate.

Hmmm, what mechanism are you proposing to repeal the 16th with the income tax system in place that does not suffer from the fact that with the income tax in place means don't need to even let a repeal resolution out of committee.

Besides, why would Congress enact a resolution to amend the constitution when there is always the Flat Tax to be held out as a way to go, which of course needs the 16th amendment for constitutionality as it is yet another income tax, not the mention the employee side of the SS/Medicare taxes (not addressed by Flat Tax) which require the 16th in place as well.

Gee you think maybe that there will be no repeal of the 16th as long as an income tax exists? With 92+ years of political history in this nation to judge from that is not even a bet a sucker would take a position against.

Wait for 16th repeal = Keep the income tax and VAT that is coming right down the pike behind it.

One way

ECONOMY; A New Money Machine for the U.S.; The old ways can't keep up. We need a value-added tax to meet revenue demands.
August 29, 2004 Sunday
by Bruce Bartlett.
http://www.ncpa.org/abo/quarterly/20043rd/clip/20040729lat.htm

 

or another:

Collection of Value Added Tax

Issue: What Is the Best Way to Collect a Value Added Tax?

A value-added tax (VAT) generally is a tax imposed and collected on the value added at every stage in the production and distribution process of a good or service. Although a VAT may be computed in any of several ways, the amount of value added generally can be thought of as the difference between the value of sales and purchases of a business. (e.g. Revenues - Costs = Taxable Business Income)

***

Subtraction-Method VAT. Under the subtraction method, value added is measured as the difference between a business's taxable sales and its purchases of taxable goods and services from other businesses. At the end of the reporting period, a rate of tax is applied to this difference in order to determine the tax liability. The subtraction method is similar to the credit-invoice method in that both methods measure value added by comparing sales to purchases that have borne the tax.

***

The subtraction method differs from the credit-invoice method principally in that the tax rate is applied to a net amount of value added (sales less purchases) rather than to gross sales with credits for tax on gross purchases. A business's tax liability under the credit-invoice method relies on the business's sales records and purchase invoices, while the tax liability under the subtraction method may rely on records that the taxpayer maintains for income tax or financial accounting purposes

http://waysandmeans.house.gov/fullcomm/106cong/4-11-00/4-11kotl.htm

"Robert Hall, one of the originators of the proposal(Flat Tax), who describes his Flat Tax as, effectively, a Value Added Tax. A value added tax taxes output less investment (because firms get to deduct their investment.)"

"The Flat Tax differs from a VAT in only two respects. First, it asks workers, rather than firm managers, to mail in the check for the tax payment on that portion of output paid to them as wages. Second, it provides a subsidy to workers with low wages."

 

The Flat Tax; Chapter 3, by Robert Hall and Alvin Rabushka

Here is the logic of our system, stripped to basics: We want to tax consumption. The public does one of two things with its income—spends it or invests it. We can measure consumption as income minus investment. A really simple tax would just have each firm pay tax on the total amount of income generated by the firm less that firm’s investment in plant and equipment. The value-added tax works just that way. But a value-added tax is unfair because it is not progressive. That’s why we break the tax in two. The firm pays tax on all the income generated at the firm except the income paid to its workers. The workers pay tax on what they earn, and the tax they pay is progressive.

To measure the total amount of income generated at a business, the best approach is to take the total receipts of the firm over the year and subtract the payments the firm has made to its workers and suppliers. This approach guarantees a comprehensive tax base. The successful value-added taxes in Europe work this way. The base for the business tax is the following:

Total revenue from sales of goods and services

less

purchases of inputs from other firms

less

wages, salaries, and pensions paid to workers

less

purchases of plant and equipment

The other piece is the wage tax. Each family pays 19 percent of its wage, salary, and pension income over a family allowance (the allowance makes the system progressive). The base for the compensation tax is total wages, salaries, and retirement benefits less the total amount of family allowances.

 

Concerning Proposals for a Flat-Rate Consumption Tax
Before the Joint Economic Committee, Statement of Robert S. McIntyre
Director, Citizens for Tax Justice May 17, 1995


103 posted on 09/02/2005 5:41:25 PM PDT by ancient_geezer (Don't reform it, Replace it!!)
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To: sitetest
Frankly, I don't see why Congress would repeal the 16th amendment once the income tax is repealed.
Actually, I think the states would be a harder sell. Do you think the states would repeal the 16th and lock themselves into a tax system that has them paying hunderds of billions in taxes?
105 posted on 09/02/2005 5:45:52 PM PDT by Your Nightmare
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