A WIN for our side!!!!!!!!
Ping to the newly-created REPUBLICAN PARTY REPTILE Ping list, named after our spiritual founder, P.J. O'Rourke. What is the Republican Party Reptile? It is a creature of the eighties. Its neoconservatism with its pants down around its ankles, the Rehnquist Supreme Court on drugs, a disco Hobbes living without shame or federally mandated safety regulations. The Republican Party Reptile supports a strong defense policy, but sees no reason to conduct it while sober. The RPR believes in minimum government interference in private affairsunless the government brings over extra girls and some ice. In short, the RPR is the new label that our political spectrum has been crying out forthe conservative with a sense of humor and a healthy dose of depravity.
To be added or subtracted, just ask. :o)
What is this with million dollar shortfalls in state budgets? Don't they know how to budget? CUT SPENDING.
Michigan Smokers
SMOKERS CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE STATE ECONOMY
In 2001, Michigan smokers comprised only 25.6% (1) of the adult population in the state. Here is what they already pay because they choose to buy a legal product:
Smokers Pay Excise Taxes (2) $ 566,758,605
Smokers Pay Sales Taxes (2) $ 166,192,620
Smokers Pay Tobacco Settlement Payments (3) $ 311,406,111
$1,044,357,336
Smokers Economic/Tax Profile 2001
Income (1)
Michigan smokers median household income $ 34,798
Michigan nonsmokers median household income $ 44,811
Working families pay more (1)
35% of Michigan smokers had household incomes LESS than $25,000
13% of Michigan smokers had household incomes EQUAL to or GREATER THAN $75,000
The impact of smoker payments on the incomes of working families was more than THREE TIMES the impact on higher income smokers. Those who can afford it least pay a disproportionate percentage of their hard-earned income in smoker payments.
Smoker excise tax/sales tax/tobacco settlement payments liability in 2002 (4)
Total avg. paid per Michigan smoker in excise and sales taxes $ 390
Cost per Michigan smoker for settlement payments to Michigan $ 166
Total annual payments to Michigan per smoker $ 556
Total annual payments to Michigan per nonsmoker $ 0
Michigan Smoker Facts (5)
Michigan FY2002 smoker payments were:
Nearly 8 times larger than state excise taxes on alcoholic beverages in FY2001 ($136.6 million)
Almost as large as Michigans FY2001 motor fuels tax collections ($1.074 billion)
Larger than FY2001 motor vehicle license revenues ($837.6 million).
The total FY2002 amount paid by smokers in Michigan could fund:
FY2002 appropriations for: the Department of Education ($995 million)
OR
The Department of Environmental Quality ($458 million) AND Consumer and Industry Services ($557.5 million) COMBINED
OR
The State Police ($407.3 million) AND community colleges ($321.6 million) AND the Department of Natural Resources ($288.7 million) COMBINED.
In 1997, smokers provided 10,767 jobs that paid an additional $19.6 million to the state in personal and corporate income taxes. (6)
CIGARETTES DONT PAY TAXES MICHIGAN SMOKERS DO!!
1. Centers for Disease Controls Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, 2001
2. Orzechowski & Walker, Arlington, Virginia; from state revenue department
3. PriceWaterhouseCooper
4. U.S. Census Bureau, 2000 state population and Centers for Disease Controls Behavioral Risk Surveillance System, 2001
5. Tax and Budget Comparisons are from U.S. Census Bureau and the Michigan State Budget Office, Fiscal Year 2003 Budget Recommendations http://www.state.mi.us/dmb/budget/fy2003/contents.htm.
6. American Economics Group, Inc., The U.S. Tobacco Industry in 1997: Its Economic Impact in the States
from the New York Post 5/15/04
One-third blow off city cig tax
by David Seifman
A third of smokers here aren't paying the $ 1.50-a-pack cigarette tax-leading the city health commissioner to warn that smuggled smokes are "the single biggest threat" to the city's tough anti-smoking law.
"There has been a substantial increase in the purchase and consumption of nontaxed and smuggled cigarettes in New York City and other high taxed jurisdictions," Thomas Frieden told a Crain's New York breakfast forum.
"This is probably the single biggest threat in progress to tobacco control in New York City."
Cigareette sales in the five boroughs collapsed after the city increased its portion of the tax from 8c to $ 1.50 a pack on July 2, 2002.
In the next 12 months 182 million packs were sold-compared to 342 million in the previous 12 month period.
Sandra Mullin, a Health Department spokeswoman, said two-thirds of smokers who responded to a recent survey said they are buying their cigarettes legally.
"Others are purchasing cigarettes from sources such as Indian reservations, through the internet, from outside the U.S., from other states, through the mail," she said.
A pack of camels was selling for $ 6.75 yesterday at the smoke shop across from City Hall.
But on the internet, the upstate Seneca Indians were peddling a carton of 10 packs for $ 30.75 less than half the regular retail price.
Frieden called on the federal and state governments to enforce the law on Indian reservation sales. By law, city residents can purchase only two cartons of untaxed cigarettes at a time for personal use.
"The state does have the implementation authority," declared Frieden. "They went to the Supreme Court to get it and they're not using it."
end of article
a Site from which there is a link to the Native American's site (scroll down at the site):
http://www.adrenalineflow.com/pages/3/index.htm