Once again, your analogy is flawed. It is the STUDENTS who are given the "tax break" (if you want to call it that) under the FairTax, not the teachers, etc.Are you implying, admitting actually, there would be noticeable price increases on non-exempt services under the Fairtax?
Try applying your "It is the students who are given the tax break" analogy to other exempt businesses VS consumers under the revenue neutral Fairtax...it doesn't work, does it.
"Try applying your 'It is the students who are given the tax break' analogy to other exempt businesses VS consumers under the revenue neutral Fairtax...it doesn't work, does it."
I have no idea what point you are trying to make.