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Everyone wants low taxes but you have to pay for something people. The oldest generation of voters have been the least responsible group of voters in this country's history. Politicians who promised tax cuts and no tax hikes while promising no program cuts or even worse new programs have crippled this nation's economy to the point that the US dollar is in the toilet.
Add on to it voters supported politicians who voted for the Iraq War, the FIRST WAR IN AMERICAN HISTORY THAT DID NOT HAVE A TAX INCREASE, and these idiots are now just realizing that oh wait, you can't avoid raising taxes and giving people benefits/protections all at the same time. I guess it makes sense that the Best Generation would give birth to the Worst Generation. Thanks, now people who are 20-45 are the &#^$@ed generation. Thanks a lot!
Oh, I'm sorry, where are my manors.
Good Morning to all!
We need to continue discovering where we can go with the Internet, and it is best done by keeping it costs reflective of true market value. Governments can do nothing more than screw this up - and at the wrong time, too.
For over a decade, I have been seeing the Internet change our lives for the better. On the other hand, I have not seen many government leaders who understand any of this, fail to implement the Internet's creativity, and often refuse to view the Internet as more than a digital peg board. These are not people who have enough of a clue to craft government policies on something as important as the Internet.
We cannot allow the Internet to be driven into the wrong direction by Luddites whose sole focus is gathering more cash for their broken and failed government programs.
Hands off!
no on taxing purchases. oh, that's right you're already supposed to pay it's called use tax. what if you had a tax and nobody paid it? states need to be granted some type of enforcement mechanism other than just using the nexus rule
Also please keep in mind that the buing on the internet is not technically tax free. technically, the internet buisness is not being required to collect the tax for you. BUT, in Illinois you are supposed to report all such purchases and go pay the tax. The obvious compliance issue is why a buisness collects use/sales tax at time oif purchase instead of relying on consumers voluntary partiticipation.
Also keep in mind that the salaries and other operational aspects of these business generate income for states. And tax is collected on purchases made by employees locally etc. This raises the idea though that perhaps we should be taxing services as well. tax local services to recapture dollars when they are spent by the owners and employees.
I for one am not talking about funding new programs. I'm talking about funding the programs we already have in place like public school education, health care, the justice system, and mass transit. You no-tax people have to be some of the stupidest heads in the sand bunch of people the world has ever seen. This isn't the late 70's, 80's or 90's. You guys won the tax race. In fact, once you crossed the finish line, you forced the entire system to keep on going to the point of exhaustion. You are too blind to see it though. You keep on running because it's the only thing to do and even though your feet have been eroded off from overuse, you keep on going because the only thing you know how to do is say "No taxes!"
Thanks to you we have a massively underfunded school system, an aging road infrastructure, terrible emergency relief, cracks in our port securities, a terrible health care system, and the worst debt this country has ever seen. You are so blind that you can't put two and two together even when report after report on the failing public school system comes out, bridges collapse, hurricanes and wildfires have maximum damage, reports of fake bombs getting through airports, story after story of healthcare mismanagement, and the dollar falls to 1/1.40 versus the Euro, all you can say is "See, the government doesn't know what it's doing! They have messed it up. Cut taxes" instead of taking a deep look at the problem and coming up with a solution.
The solution is not just raise taxes on the Internet, but when people are doing almost of their Christmas shopping online and not at their local stores, the fund shortfalls just continue. Meanwhile, you live in your isolated box that is about to fall and say "Yipee, I saved $10 in taxes on my new Iphone"!
Sales tax is bad enough. Hotel taxes are worse. But internet taxes would be the coup de grace of bad taxation.
I use VOIP services and I do pay a tax for my phone lines. Similar services such as telephone and cable should and as far as I can tell do pay the same traditional taxes and franchise fees as the older services.
The internet is still evolving. I my opinion, there will be a further convergence of the on-line experience and the storefront experience which can be exemplified by the Best Buys and Circuit Citys of the world where you can buy your product on line and either come into your local store for pickup and service or have it shiped. All sales taxes are collected. Ultimately that marriage of services provides the best customer experience and over time will become the winning model.
When I buy a Dell computer on line, I pay a sales tax and suspect that most of the major manufacturers collect a sales tax.
I believe the no tax exemption is warranted and once the intenet finishes its evolution, it will be collecting all the taxes that current commerce produces.
A quick aside as far a taxation is concerned. Telephone taxes are the most regressive things out there. On the lower levels of service taxes can approach 30% of the bill. Why do our liberal bretheren cry incessantly about the regressivity of our tax code, but seem to overlook this corner of the tax world? I can argue that a telephone line is very important to our seniors and poor, so why do they have to pay such a large tax on this lifeline?
I wil repeat that there is a continuous search for new tax revenues with no search for operation efficiencies in government. The days of palatable tax increases are gone. The choices now are that of the least bad. But governental spending goes on unabated. The Lake County community of Gurnee is already noted for the largest number of municipal vehicles being taken home by their employees. i.e. the taxpayers are footing the bill for their communing costs as well as their comfortable salaries. Their next week's agenda is asking for that number to go UP by two vehicles. More than 5% of their workforce take municipal vehicles home and apparently the employees are allowed to run personal errands and ferry their children around at taxpayers expense. Is that an example governmental efficiency or just a further reach into the taxpayers pocketbooks.
However, first of all, I believe this legislation only dealt with taxes on access, that is an access tax on your bill to SpeakEasy or NetZero or whoever is your access provider. Or a surcharge on your email messages or your IM conversations. I sure hope they don't put a per word charge on IMs--the shorthand is already almost undecipherable. So this legislation doesn't seem to have dealt with the issue of sales tax on purchases.
The internet today is very much a modern library with all the schlock, dross, and gold that that entails. Plato's Republic? Yep, available for free, txt or html format. Some airhead's "thoughts" on a third tier politician and his UFO abduction story--yep, it's available there too. Movies and vidcasts from Nasa's spitzer telescope--yep, that's there too. So the internet is an incredible educational tool. I wouldn't think anyone would want to stifle that in any way.
The internet also provides an incredibly fast way for people and businesses to communicate in order to actually do the work of business. That's a great benefit that allows people to work from home rather taking a day off, so the business still enjoys some productivity out of that employee. It allows people who travel for their business to stay in touch back with the office much easier. It's a real boon to business to have this tool and again, I don't think we want to hobble our businesses with taxes on this tool.
The internet is also still evolving and taxation could hobble that evolution. Take vidcasts. I recently downloaded miro (http://www.getmiro.com/) and have been downloading free (not illegal) media content from the net directly through the player. Or think about Youtube which has even grown to affect our politics. I think we need to let the technology get past its teenage years before we strangle it with taxation.
Transactions, on the other hand, can be taxed -- as in sales tax of goods purchased. Why is this not happening already?
1) It occurs to me that the "tax-free" status of internet purchases serves to subsidize shipping services including the United States Postal Service. i.e., a certain percentage of USPS package shipments are due to the fact that tax-free purchasing makes shipping-costs a wash.
I wonder if tax-free internet purchases offsets the USPS's loss of postal correspondence business and thus helps maintain universal postal service in the US.
2) Does the tax benefit of the internet exemption make the tax system more regressive? Are poor people able to take advantage of tax-free purchases on the net or is its benefit exclusive to relatively well-off folks like ourselves.
3) My knee jerk response is no tax on internet.
-- SCAM