Posted on 07/05/2002 8:06:56 AM PDT by Jean S
I have been keeping track since the first of the year, and a lot of them are turning against us. Snowe and Collins are RINO'S of the WORST kind!
(Seems the mayor, has a double standard, when it comes to smoking. This is the same Mayor, which advocated, the hike in the city cigarette tax, to "discourage smoking".)
Bloomberg must still be smoking dope if he thinks anyone buys his nonsense that hiking the cigarette tax is a public health measure. The theory that people, especially "the children", stop smoking because of price increases has been discredited for quite some time. When California raised taxes a few years ago its smoking rate supposedly went down. For reasons never explained by anti-tobacco, but obvious to even a casual observer of human nature, the smoking rates in neighboring -- and low tax -- Nevada miraculously rose at just the same time. No one will quit in New York City but many will buy out of state or off the internet.
Even the bozos running New York don't believe people will quit. They estimate the new tax will bring in $111-million in the coming fiscal year. For the next fiscal year they estimate the tax will enrich the city coffers by $116-million. If masses of people are going to quit, as the mayor pretends, why would the taxes collected continue to grow?
61's phone # is 1-800-61stuff.
They just raised the taxes on smokes here in Kansas as well. The Dept of Revenue info gal went on all the news shows to make it clear that anyone in possesion of more that 200 cigarettes without a Kansas tax stamp affixed will be fined $1,000 and could face jail time.
I'm not a lawyer, so I'll just toss the question out there and hope someone is: Isn't there a point past which taxing any product is illegal government interference in commerce? I mean, 50 cents a pack is one thing, but once the government starts intentionally jacking the prices so high that almost nobody can afford the product, does that not violate any laws?
The VIOLENCE? Oh, for crying out loud. As long as anybody can legally cross the border into New Jersey or Connecticut (or hell, even Yonkers) to buy cartons and then bring them back and sell them in NYC to your own friends and coworkers without anyone really noticing (a carton of smokes is a carton of smokes and will not inherently raise suspicions, unlike someone standing on a corner offering little tiny plastic bags filled with powdery substances), there aren't going to BE any turf wars. The product is LEGAL. This is merely a matter of economics 101.
I suppose if the Mafia were to get involved and start hijacking some of those vans filled with cigs from Virginia or North Carolina, you might get a little "violence", but that would be a false argument too because the Mafia's going to get involved in whatever's available, with the same outcomes no matter what.
In fact the government of New York City is perfectly within their rights to confiscate that which they would consider contraband, in this case cigarettes without a NYC tax stamp. Granted, unless you get pulled over for something else, I don't think NY's Finest are going to be stopping motorists coming into the city checking for out of city or out of state purchased cigarettes. But they can do it.
How does someone so stupid make so much money?
Anyway, now we know what some of next season's Sopranos episodes will be about.
You are correct. Just remember, liberals (including RINO's and Democrats) think that they own all of your money, and just argue about how much to let you keep. Ask a liberal politician some time if he or she thinks there is or should be a limit to the income tax, and what it should be. They probably will say yes, but they won't tell you what it is.
It became so impossible, that the Constitution addressed that issue and it is now known as the "Commerce Clause" which has been so abused since FDR.
This taxation between each of the States is exactly why the Federal government was granted this power.
No problem, I will just exploit this stupidity for my own personal profits.
Just the equal protection clause of the constitution.
Taxing a legal product, and thus indirectly a defined segment of the population exclusively, would appear to violate it.
When at the same time no gay-related products are specially taxed, and AIDS, (unlike tobacco) is 100% fatal.
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