Posted on 09/17/2006 8:03:05 AM PDT by Principled
A Battlefield for Tax Reform
There are a few significant battlefields in the war for tax reform. One of them is Free Republic. What makes the Free Republic battlefield significant is that the debate is at the cutting edge. The debate on Free Republic is the most current and most knowledgeable. It is a year ahead of other significant battlefields (radio talk shows, political town-hall meetings, conversations among neighbors and coworkers.)
The trend on Free Republic with respect to tax reform is going to show up in the real world. Free Republic is a tiny segment of the world, albeit a more educated, more politically motivated, more affluent segment than most. Perhaps those are a few of the reasons that Free Republic predicts what will happen in the real world the world of radio, newspapers, network television, and most importantly - elections.
The choices are
Keep the status quo and continue with our graduated income tax
Eliminate the income tax and implement a flat income tax (although this option has negligible support)
Eliminate the income tax and implement a national sales tax
There are no other options. We are going to have taxes. The only choice is deciding the best way to have them.
Whichever choice you prefer, one thing is clear. The opponents of tax reform on Free Republic will stop at nothing to protect the status quo. Heres whats happening on Free Republic (remember its a predictor of what will happen in the real world.)
Opponents of reform randomly select perceived problems, however insignificant, and say thats the reason this reform cannot work. For example, attackers of HR 25 (the Fair Tax) have alternately said the rate is too high and then the rate is too low. Whatever seems to get traction is what they stick with. Is it no wonder the perception is that these anti-reformers are not being honest with the reason(s) they oppose the reform. This is why so many question the motives of the anti-reformers. What are they hiding?
The anti-reformers try to make the reform threads so unpleasant that people choose not to participate in them (what does this predict about the real world?)
An anti-reformer may be taking advantage of the positions he he was entrusted with by the site (modertor). By taking sides in threads, berating and belittling pro-nrst posters, by deleting threads, by locking threads, and by moving threads from news/ACTIVISM to Bloggers and Personal and to Smokey Backroom, the mod(s) in question are taking away from the greatest site on the internet. Sometimes, threads are moved to bloggers and then moved to SBR or vica versa.
Pro-nrst posters are suspended for things that dont make sense. Anti nrst posters are not suspended for things that should require it - comes to mind the picture of a dog copulating with a pig with the comment screw you pigdog I found a picture of your parents. Noteworthy is that the poster of said graphic and phrase were not suspended but rather the recipient of it was suspended for complaining about it.
What does this predict about the real world?
Suffice to say that the debate about tax reform is won by the reformers. The proof is that when educated about the three reform options, the general public chooses the nrst over 70% of the time.
The only question is whether the dishonesty of the anti-reformers will slow the progress of reform in the real world. This is NOT to say that all anti reformers are dishonest - but it is the dishonest ones who are tainting the others.
The good thing about the debate is that the nrst is the most thoroughly investigated alternative - each and every point is debated in complete detail. Problems have been identified and some changes have been made. That's a good thing. And as debate continues, the level of knowledge of any lurkers continues. As I said, I predict over 70% will choose the nrst.
Dear Principled,
"What is your explanation as to why after 95 years we haven't had an nrst on top of our income tax?"
Because the genius of the American system is that it does not do easily what it has never been done before. That is to say, in the normal gridlock that the Founders built into our constitutional system, it's difficult to do a new thing.
However, once a thing is done (like imposing an income tax), it's easy to do again.
Thus, once an NRST is in place, it won't be too tough to re-impose an income tax on an "emergency basis" on the "rich only," because, well, it's been done before.
And before long, we'll have the worst of it all.
Thus, it's really necessary, BEFORE we let the genie of a national sales tax out of the bottle, to put a stake through the vampire of the income tax (how's that for a mixed metaphor? ;-) ).
"Once we see what it's like without the income tax, who would ever propose it?"
Folks who want more money for the government to spend. Like most of the folks in Congress. Unfortunately, even with Republican majorities in both houses of Congress, the folks who want to spend more, more, more are in the majority, not the minority.
"Point being that after 95 years there has been sufficient resistance to prevent a sales tax on top."
I think that once Congress passes an NRST, the new thing will have been done - imposing the NRST. That's the hard thing. The easy thing will be to bring back the income tax, especially on an "emergency basis" taxing "only the rich."
"...then by all means tell your rep."
My representative is Ben Cardin of Maryland. The last thing I want to do is give him ideas about another tax that Congress could pass.
sitetest
"I don't know why in the world we should encourage Congress to starting taxing us with a national sales tax before we strip them of the authority to tax our incomes. "
Of course you don't since you're one of those opposing the FairTax; but you're welcome to correct me if I'm mistaken on that point. Wouldn't expect that you WOULD support it.
OTOH you could at least be honest in that there were some very good reasons given in this thread as to why trying such a combined, catch-all amendment as you suggest would be much worse that just a poor idea. It would be working against itself by the very provisions in the bill.
Posts #243, 247, 248, 252, 272, 297 are all replete with "sensible reasons". The fact that you wish to not accept them is solely your problem. Your attempts to brush them away with your "no sensible reason" rhetoric is just that - rhetoric. You've not refuted a single one.
"... BEFORE we let the genie of a national sales tax out of the bottle, to put a stake through the vampire of the income tax ..."
In fact, that's exactly what the FairTax bill does - eliminates the income tax (and others), the corresponding tax code, the IRS (and its funding), and requires the income tax records to be destroyed. That's indeed a stake through the heart of the vampire.
Making some facile claim that it will merely be restarted by a Congressional finger-snap is hardly reasonable since once gone there will be a huge political quagmire to wade through and with enough votes to pass the FairTax there are certainly more than enough to keep the income tax from seeing the light of day during the 7 year repeal period or - quite possibly - even for good.
Once people live under the FairTax system they will rapidly grasp its benefits and refuse as a collective voting body to return to the income tax system. Having had the income tax in the past does not make it easier to restart it ... in fact, if anything it will make it more difficult since more people under the new FairTax system will be aware of more of the deficiencies of the income tax than ever before. There will certainly be no hue and cry to return to it.
So I certainly don't ascribe to your believe that the easiest thing is what's been done before since for that to be true it would have to mean that taxpayers at large like and approve of the income tax system - and nothing could be further from the truth.
The correct repeal track is the one we're presently on - pass the FairTax and then the simplified repeal bill either with or without the "taxing income is illegal" verbiage. That will make it much easier to pass the repeal bill as most people will greatly approve of the FairTax and the manner in which it functions.
Certainly.
They have "studies", you have "studies".
They have "experts", you have "experts".
They have an agenda, you have an agenda.
They are well-funded, you are well-funded.
They believe they can predict everything with perfect accuracy using biased models, ditto for the FairTaxers.
They are doom & gloomers, ya'll are doom & gloomers.
They think everyone who disagrees with their far-out claims is an idiot, so do ya'll.
They are wrong, you are wrong.
It's a perfect analogy.
What you are expressing here is an opinion, not a fact. I believe that you believe that is true, but it is still an opinion. I have an opposite opinion, and that is what they both are-- opinions.
Sorry but that shows no connection at all to the FairTax.
Further, I don't care what the rate is provided it's revenue neutral (or below that - invoking a reduction in spending).
You aren't even able to show the rate isn't revenue neutral. You alternate between the rate being to low and too high. Recently, you've been saying the rate is less than revenue neutral. That represents a spending reduction.
I recall you saying that we should work on spending cuts. Well, there it is!
So the rate being less than revenue neutral isn't your real reason for opposing the nrst, is it? On one hand you say we need to do spending cuts - on the other hand you say you oppose the nrst because it contains (cough...) spending cuts.
Why not tell the forum the real reason(s) you oppose. It sure would be easier for you to defend!
Of course the rate is not the thing set in stone with the FairTax bill, the revenue is. The rate will be set to generate the proper amount of revenue, and this will include the massive prebate entitlement, and the phony FairTaxes being paid by the govt to itself and counted as revenue but not an expense. And if the required amount of taxable consumption doesn't appear, the rate will be raised causing further erosion of the base.
And in the end, we'll have our emergency income tax on the rich on top of the consumption tax. No thanks.
The real difference is that I offer reasons about why I think my opinions would be correct and not just state them as dogma.
You can lead a pigdog to water, but you can't make him drink. You and the global Warming nuts are singing from the same hymnal. Same tactics, same condescension.
Since I give reasons for everything I state, you must be confused.
I've explained exactly why they are wrong numerous times. They don't take into account the government paying the tax to themselves. And they don't take into account any evasion, or even base erosion due to price reductions that you say will happen. Take those into account and you are at the 45-50% exclusive Fair Tax rate.
Why not tell the forum the real reason(s) you oppose.
Because it will not work as promised, and has the potential to wreck our economy, is a good enough reason for me.
No, you've expressed an opinion void of any data. Like I said, simply stating doesn't make it true. Reading Gale isn't helpful ... especially if you don't understand it.
They don't take into account the government paying the tax to themselves.
Yes they do. (See how easy it is to refute opinion?!). Gov't already pays tax. The nrst won't change that.
And they don't take into account any evasion,...
Yes they do. Read it closer. They take the SAME degree of evasion as now into account. You're wrong.
BTW, it is YOU who decided pre-tax prices would fall 9%. Not me. And remember when Jorgenson opined 22-24% of prices were tax costs? Why do you think he organized the tax costs into one place?
Because it will not work as promised,..
Sorry Rob, we're well beyond listening to you with no back up. You have nothing but opinion behind this statement. Just up the thread you gave several reasons NOT to take opinion into account. Don't you read your own posts?
"... massive prebate entitlement ..."
Well, it IS a prebate but nothing else in that description fits. Its not "massive" (in fact far less than the Tax Panel mistakenly claimed) and the amount is encompassed by the 23% revenue neutral rate.
It is also not an "entitlement" but a rebate (and so stated in the bill) and as most people know a rebate is "... a return of a part of a payment ...".
There will also be no "emergency income tax" since voters once they've experienced the freedom of living under the FairTax and the economic benefits of that will certainly not allow their elected representatives to restart (from scratch - having just gotten rid of one) another income tax system.
That's just FUD speak ... fear, uncertainty, and doubt.
No one has ever tried to bring either the House of the Senate version of the FairTax out for markup. At some point when the political climate is right, that will certainly happen.Like when there is a Republican House, a Republican Senate, and a Republican President?
You haven't shown anything wrong about the studies giving a 23% rev neutral rate. Simply stating it isn't sufficient.What about the one the AFT paid for that says it would have to be 27%? This one just came out last December.
I thought they buried that one.
"... you must be confused ..."
Confuzzed??? Not me - but you see you give no reasons in the post I'm replying to ... but merely an attack.
The only thing they fear more is losing their jobs. That is why the number of cosponsors is rising.
It won't matter if we don't see it come up for the next 10 congresses. It will eventually come up. THe supporters aren't going away - they are not going to give up. The number of them continues to grow too.
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