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Abolish the IRS
The Observer Online ^ | 11/8/05 | Scott Wagner

Posted on 11/10/2005 3:18:48 AM PST by Man50D

Since 1954, the size of the United States' tax code has increased by almost 500 percent. Tax regulations created by the Internal Revenue Service have increased in volume by 939 percent, and in April 2006, Americans will spend a combined total of 6.5 billion hours, at an estimated cost of close to $500 billion, in order to simply pay for the privilege of footing Washington's bill.

It is time for the FairTax.

Perhaps you have heard of the FairTax by now. It is a comprehensive plan for the dissolution of the IRS that would replace all income taxes with an embedded personal consumption tax. According to the website of Americans for Fair Taxation (www.fairtax.org), the FairTax would abolish "personal, estate, gift, capital gains, alternative minimum, Social Security, Medicare, self-employment and corporate taxes." In their stead would be a 23 percent national sales tax on all consumption goods: a simple, one-time tax that is collected at the retail level.

However, the FairTax is unlike the current sales taxes that exist in this country. These taxes are imposed on top of embedded income tax and compliance costs. In the FairTax Book, written by libertarian radio personality Neal Boortz and Congressman John Linder, a loaf of bread is used as an example to illustrate these hidden costs. For every loaf of bread, the seed producers pass tax costs onto consumers. The shipping company does too. In fact, processors, bakeries, distributors and grocery stores all pass a portion of their income tax burdens onto consumers, no matter how rich or poor they are. Eliminating these costs initially, by eliminating the income tax altogether, would reduce the market price of all products by an average of 22 percent.

Don't take my word for it, though. Take the word of the Harvard Economics Department.

So when these costs are abolished, the FairTax is added and returns the prices of consumption goods to - you guessed it - exactly where they are today. The difference is, of course, that people who are purchasing these things keep every last penny of their paychecks. For low-income families, this would mean an immediate average increase in pay of 25-30 percent.

If you are trying to think of ways in which to oppose this plan, I need to know one thing: why?

The federal government would still steal - I mean, collect - the same amount of tax revenue as it does today under the FairTax. The FairTax does not cut funding from any cherished socialist programs like welfare or Social Security. It is merely a new way for the federal government to pay for its existence.

But wait, it gets better. The FairTax Act of 2005 (yes, it has already been written and is ready to be passed) also contains mechanisms for a "prebate." Based on government figures, the federal government would calculate the "annual consumption allowance" of a household - that is, the amount of money that household can be expected to spend on the necessities of life for that year - and refunds the money. Every household in America gets a tax refund, every year.

In case you had not noticed, wealthy individuals tend to spend more money than poor individuals on consumption goods; thus, the wealthy would end up paying more in taxes than the poor. Most people seem to like this idea.

Finally, the economic impact would be astounding. Driven by the "increasing burden of taxation and Social Security payments, combined with rising state regulatory activities and labor market restrictions," American businesses have been seeking out "tax havens" in other countries with much friendlier tax structures. The media buzzword for this phenomenon is "outsourcing," and believe it or not, our government has been causing it all along.

Passing the FairTax Act would make the United States the "only nation in the world whose companies could sell into a global economy with no tax component in the price system." Companies would rush to bring jobs back to the United States, and their American workers would keep all of the money they earn.

The FairTax is a typical libertarian solution to a greater social problem. Instead of promising more regulations, like many Republicrats typically do, we reduce them. It is a novel concept, I know. The results would be revolutionary.

The FairTax is not a panacea. It does not lower taxes, and it does nothing to curb the spending orgy the Republicrats have been having in Washington. It does not stop pork barrel spending, nor does it re-evaluate how federal money is spent. The responsibility for affecting change in those areas falls squarely on us, as voters.

However, the FairTax would be an enormous stake in the heart of the monstrosity that is the IRS. The thought is enough to make any libertarian smile happily and sleep better at night.

We need the FairTax now.

Scott Wagner is the president of the College Libertarians Club. He writes political satire for the Web site The Enduring Vision and thinks you should go read it. He can be contacted at swagner1@nd.edu


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: fairtax; incometax; irs; konstitutionparty; libertarians; taxes; taxreform
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To: Final Authority

You're spouting nonsense and misinformation. Read #96 again.

BTW there's no such thing as a "pre-index payment" nor do I know where you ever got that notion other than dream it up up out of whole cloth. Even the terminology is odd.

Nor is there any "confiscation of property" - any more than there is with the income tax ... the FairTax is revenue neutral, remember.

You're the one who quoted the "10%" tax rate dipstick and that is as I stated $7,500 AGI. And the 0% on about $25,000 under the FairTax is about zero also as I stated.

I have filed 1040s for many years as well as other types of returns required by the different entities I own and/or participate in so stop your childish pretense of superiority. You don't know what you're talking about.


101 posted on 11/14/2005 12:39:53 PM PST by pigdog
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To: Protagoras

Sorry, dude (or dudette as the case may be), eliminate means eliminate. You can look it up in almost any dictionary.

Gone is gone and never the twain shall meet ... and it is embedded as part and parcel of the FairTax bill whether you like it or not.

With an operable tax bill, the 16th will be relatively easy to repeal as it serves no purpose - an anachronism - just like the repeal amendment. "Only a fool or someone who actually wants both taxes would do it otherwise."


102 posted on 11/14/2005 12:45:07 PM PST by pigdog
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To: pigdog

Apparently, you don't even understand that money is ones property.

Based on that alone, one can not possibly have a dialog with such an uninformed person.


103 posted on 11/14/2005 12:58:35 PM PST by Final Authority
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To: pigdog
Sorry, dude (or dudette as the case may be), eliminate means eliminate.

Sorry dupe (or dupette as the case may be) it doesn't eliminate a damn thing. It's not possible for a law to amend the Constitution. You can look it up in any copy of the Constitution you can find.

You might need a remedial high school constitution course.

But nice try. I used to think you guys were ignorant, but I'm starting to lean toward you guys wanting both taxes. Just more big government advocates looking to expand their favorite thugocracy.

If you purposely do it backwards, what other conclusion?

104 posted on 11/14/2005 12:59:00 PM PST by Protagoras (To keep freedom, you must give it away)
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To: Protagoras
Re: the farttax bill repeals the 16th amendment.

Have you ever seen a complex bill report out of a body of congress the way it was read in? And, have you ever seen a complex piece of legislation reported out of conference committee the way it was introduced?

Aren't the farttaxers quite naïve? You wouldn't think so based on their bloviation, but on the other hand, are they just trying to pull a fast one on the American people?
105 posted on 11/14/2005 1:22:01 PM PST by Final Authority
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To: Protagoras

Sounds like you are being intentionally obtuse.

Pigdog didn't say HR25 would eliminate the 16th. He said it eliminates the IRS. Which it does. It requires the IRS be stripped of funding. It requires all income tax records be destroyed.

Also, the 16th doesn't REQUIRE an income tax. It only allows for one. If you require that the 16th be repealed BEFORE implementing a new tax system, then what will fund the government during the gap ? Or do you mean the repeal must happen simultaneously ?

Finally, remember that it doesn't take HR25 or anything else to allow for a National Retail Sales Tax. Congress could implement one any time they felt like it. In addition to the Income Tax. After all, is there really any difference between the current excise taxes on gasoline, tobacco, and alcohol ? They are just targeted Sales Taxes.

You seem fixated on the fear of ending up with both income and sales taxes. We have both already. The FairTax is a movement to eliminate the first and rely only on the second.


106 posted on 11/14/2005 1:31:16 PM PST by Kellis91789
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To: Kellis91789
Sounds like you are being intentionally obtuse.

It only sounds that way to people who are clueless to the actual exchange.

Pigdog didn't say HR25 would eliminate the 16th.

Of course not, it would mean he conceded my point. BTW, I never claimed he did, so you make a strawman.

I'll adress your other incorrect staments later. I must depart now. Ta ta.

107 posted on 11/14/2005 1:41:33 PM PST by Protagoras (To keep freedom, you must give it away)
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To: pigdog
It eliminates the income tax (and several other taxes as well), the IRS, defunds the IRS (for good meanure), and requires the income tax records to be destroyed.

All of which would be held unconstitutional unless you first repeal the 16th Amendment.
108 posted on 11/14/2005 1:51:57 PM PST by ARCADIA (Abuse of power comes as no surprise)
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To: ARCADIA

Can you show where the 16th Amendment REQUIRES any of those things ? If not, then why would eliminating them be unconstitutional ?


109 posted on 11/14/2005 3:33:14 PM PST by Kellis91789
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To: Protagoras

You said:

"Sorry dupe (or dupette as the case may be) it doesn't eliminate a damn thing. It's not possible for a law to amend the Constitution. You can look it up in any copy of the Constitution you can find."

So what were you referring to with "eliminate" ? It sure sounded as though you were referring to the 16th Amendment and attributing that claim to Pigdog. I can't find anywhere that Pigdog claimed HR25 would "amend the Constitution."


110 posted on 11/14/2005 3:42:19 PM PST by Kellis91789
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To: Final Authority

I always thought it was a medium of exchange (or even specie) rather than a property since money has no title of ownership nor do you have the exclusive right to possess it,

What sort of property do you consider it to be? I think it may be more correct to say that it is something you may (or may not) possess since, for example, when someone has a lot of money you say "he possesses riches".

Because you use one term to describe it hardly means that everyone else is wrong, uninformned, and inferior. It just means you use a different term to describe something. There are lots of words and descritpions that can be used, Finial.


111 posted on 11/14/2005 3:44:32 PM PST by pigdog
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To: Protagoras

It seems that Kellis91789 is a closer reader of what has been said than are you.

He's right; I never did say (or imply) that the FairTax bill repealed the 16 to amend the Constitution - which is what was in your post #104 when you said "... not possible for a law to amend the Constitution ..." with the clear meaning you were talking about the fact you were positing that I somehow stated the FairTax bill amended the Constitution.

I did not.

What was really being communicated to you if you but understood is that it is neither necessary OR desireable to repeal the 16th first since absolutely eliminating the income tax etc. prevents it from coming right back into being. Hard to believe you can't/don't want to understand that.

Thinking it can be repealed first merely leaves those (such as Charlie Rangel) who wish us to have both at the same time and are actively to bring that about (which you apparently don't realize - or do realize it and approve) a lot more leeway to work toward having both. From the tone and tenor of your posts on the matter I have to think that you are one of these hoping to have both taxes at once.

None of the FairTax supporters hope for that - just the opposite, in fact.


112 posted on 11/14/2005 4:33:01 PM PST by pigdog
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To: pigdog
which is what was in your post #104 when you said "... not possible for a law to amend the Constitution ..." with the clear meaning you were talking about the fact you were positing that I somehow stated the FairTax bill amended the Constitution.

False, but nice try. I posited no such thing.

that it is neither necessary OR desireable to repeal the 16th first since absolutely eliminating the income tax etc. prevents it from coming right back into being.

False, but nice try. In fact, precisely the opposite is true. Hard to believe you can't/don't want to understand that.

Clearly, you want both taxes. It is the only way to interpret your insistence that a constitutional amendment not be made first. Either you want both or you are logically impaired, which is it?

113 posted on 11/14/2005 5:52:14 PM PST by Protagoras (To keep freedom, you must give it away)
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To: ARCADIA

No, not at all. It is all quite constitutional and nothing REQUIRES the 16th to be repealed first. In fact it would be virtually impossible to do so.

Having the FairTax as an operating tax law, though, would keep us from having both an income tax and a sales at the same time while the 16th is being repealed. In fact nothing right now keeps us fom having both at the same time and there has been at least one bill introduced to do just that.

There have been almost 100 years now during which the 16th could have been repealed, That should make it patently obvious to even the most die hard Status Quo Lover that the 16th won't be repealed until a completely different tax bill - one not relying on income tax - is in operation. That, of course, is exactly what the SQLers hope for ... that it won't be repealed but keep right on with more of the same old, same old.


114 posted on 11/14/2005 5:55:04 PM PST by pigdog
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To: Protagoras
"False, but nice try. I posited no such thing."

Really???? Then you'd better admonish your keyboard since your #104 said:

"... it doesn't eliminate a damn thing. It's not possible for a law to amend the Constitution .... "

... which clearly means you believe I said that the bill was intended to repeal the 16th. There can be no other meaning that I can see. But the bill DOES eliminate the things I said it did. Read the bill yourself and see,

If you intended some other meaning then why the reference to the amending of the Constitution??? Also, how is it you would propose to restore the income tax code, the income tax, the IRS (and funding thereof) as well as reconstituting the destroyed income tax records??

Tell us your plan how this many be accomplished and why, within the alomst 100 years we have had the income tax, that this repeal has never been done despite many attempts??? How is it that you propse it will somehow happen on your watch???

"Clearly, you want both taxes. "

False as hell as you could easily tell by asking any FairTax supporter or by reading the FairTax website where it says clearly that the objective is to repeal the 16th:

http://www.fairtaxvolunteer.org/smart/faq-main.html#42

I fail to see how even the most dense individual could fail to comprehend such a plain statement as well as the wording in the bill itself calling for he repeal. If you are indeed that dense and foolish you are one of the ideal candidates for guys like Charlie Rangel to give us both taxes at once. You are quite wrong. Why is it do you suppose that the 16th repeal has never happened in a century and will suddenly, magically, happen now???

The answer is - it won't until a tax law is in place that does not depend on an income based tax and that is shown by the last 100 years' experience which have not brought it about. There's no reason to believe this will suddenly so happen because Protagoras says it will.

115 posted on 11/14/2005 6:40:50 PM PST by pigdog
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To: pigdog
"... it doesn't eliminate a damn thing. It's not possible for a law to amend the Constitution .... " ...

which clearly means you believe I said that the bill was intended to repeal the 16th.

Ummm, no actually, it means that you seem to. No wonder you can't grasp simple concepts, you stumble on the obvious.

116 posted on 11/15/2005 6:01:51 AM PST by Protagoras (To keep freedom, you must give it away)
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To: pigdog
I'm dense? LOL, the dumbest guy on the site thinks guys like Charlie Rangel and the rest of the lying scum in congress will not start immediately to reinstate the income tax.


117 posted on 11/15/2005 6:05:58 AM PST by Protagoras (To keep freedom, you must give it away)
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To: Protagoras

"Dense" is probably too light a word for you. But let's not haggle about semantics.

And so you think Rangel (who'd like both taxes) is better off having the income tax in operation as a base to add whatever sales tax he dreams up onto? Keep in mind that with the FairTax he'd have to completely build the income tax back up from the ground up - including its funding and the tax code itself - and somehow find all of those income tax records that had been burned.

So you have the temerity to call ME "... the dumbest guy on the site ..."? You haven't even read the bill quite obviously. It sounds like you're on Charlie's side to help him get us both taxes at once. Even Dick Armey, when active in politics, recognize that one way to try to slow down the push for the FairTax was to insist the 16th had to be repealed first.

That's merely a delaying tactic.


118 posted on 11/15/2005 7:44:11 AM PST by pigdog
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To: pigdog
Nice try, but anyone can see that your tricks and obfuscation in order to leave the 16th in place for future mischief are purposeful. I think you are a liberal Democrat plant on this site, like many others.

Nice try Mortimer


119 posted on 11/15/2005 8:10:14 AM PST by Protagoras (To keep freedom, you must give it away)
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To: Protagoras

There are no "... tricks and obfuscation ...". Just read the bill. It is quite obvious it eliminates our current income tax system in a very forceful manner.

You merely can't read apparently. The 16th would have nothing to "hang its hat on" - nothing to operate with. The income tax would be gonzo and the 16th would merely be an anachronism like the prohibition amendment and just as easily repealed.

Your unfounded guess that I'm a liberal Democrat plant or even a Democrat plant or even a plant on this site is both quite wrong and quite laughable. You sound more like that that I. Claiming the 16th must be repealed first is merely an anti-FairTax delaying tactic, nothing more.


120 posted on 11/15/2005 8:52:06 AM PST by pigdog
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