Posted on 04/23/2010 6:26:48 AM PDT by K-oneTexas
-- Jefferson Davis Pres. CSA
We can seperate peacefully or in a desperate struggle to the death, I'm good either way...
A lot of folks on both sides would like to see the other side “punished” in some way.
The left would love to see the power of the state brought to bear to punish, incarcerate, and kill their ideological opponents.
On the right, we’re a bit more independent and individualistic, and some would like to inflict the punishment themselves.
A flat tax would make all the goldbrickers and scofflaws pay up. A flat tax or a fair tax.
-- Jefferson Davis Pres. CSA
Intellectuals:
Abusing the language
to promote their own power
for the past 6000 years.
So everyone pays but you still believe YOU pay more than anyone else. How exactly when everyone pays the same and everyone get the same prebate?
Under the FairTax no one is EXEMPTED. Everyone pays the tax. No one pays income tax, social security or medicare tax (payroll tax). The middle class pays no more than anyone else. Unless they purchase more than anyone else.
All classes (low, middle, high and all in between) pay an proportional percentage of their money based on their purchases. Now, you may go out and buy yachts and high priced items everyday and as such you will pay more than many others. You consume more than others, you will pay more.
You chose when you pay the tax because you chose when you buy the goods or services. Sales tax (a consumption tax) is in all but 5 states now and they all tax a combination of goods and services (a few tax intangibles). You pay that now.
You seem to think that the middle calls bears the burden because they buy more than anyone else or that there will always be loopholes for special interest to relieve their burden.
That not how it works. No loopholes. No exemptions. Purchase a new item or a service and you are taxed, regardless of who you are. The poor are not exempted in anyway way, shape or form. Nor are the rich exempted in any way, shape or form.
As I explained, and evidently you missed, everyone gets the prebate ... not just the poor. Everyone receives a check for the tax based on the governments computed poverty level for various sized households. And there is NO withholding from anyone’s pay check.
I think you may already know that the rich do not pay income tax because they do not have income, in the form of a paycheck, like the middle class. They live off their investments and therefore pay capital gains tax. Capital gains are taxed at a lower rate than income.
People don’t pay their ‘fair share’ now because the tax code allows them to pay nothing and get money from the government, the EITC, called a refund by our tax code.
Personally, I believe you are way off base in your understanding of the FairTax and should get it explained to you by someone you are willing to listen to.
I’m not saying that the middle class as a whole will be paying more than any other group. I am saying that under a consumption tax there will be households that currently pay no income tax that will be paying a consumption tax. Thus, for those households, tax reform will represent a tax increase. I think that is a a tough sell for Republicans who have traditionally been the party of lower taxes.
For years the District of Columbia has used a license plate bearing the motto “Taxation Without Representation”.
I now believe it should say “Representation Without Taxation”.
The problem is they pay no income tax now. As such, the middle class must make up for that. The burden is redistributed to someone to pay for another.
Under the FairTax everyone will pay their portion, period. Will it be an increase, yes. One they should have been helping with all along paying for the running of their government, rather than being an expenditure of theirgovernment. Now, yes government spends to much but that is another subject all together.
Tax reform has nothing to do with and does not impact spending reform. The FairTax is revenue neutral, so it collects the dame as being collected under the income tax now.
It is just that 100% of the country, consumers all, will be paying it.
Now the poor will also get a tax break with the FairTax, just like everyone else in that payroll taxes will not be taken out of their paychecks any longer. An increase in their available funds to spend.
The prebate reimburses them for the taxes they would pay up to the (their) poverty level. They are not out any money. How is that an increase in what they are paying. Thus they pay no tax, in net terms. Only on what they would purchase above that level with their new increase in spendable funds.
Republicans have always tried to hard to appease everyone to get their vote. when they do they miss the long term implications of most every subject they discuss with their blinders on. The Dems are the same but their blinders are to the facts.
It’s not a tough sell, it short-sightedness.
To further clarify my point, let me propose an example. Let’s take a household at the about 40th percentile in income earning $40,000/year. Let’s assume that this is on of the households currently payin no income taxes. No, we replace the income tax with a 15% consumption tax. Let’s say the save 10% of their income, so they would pay consumption taxes of $4,700 on purchases $31,300. Unless the prebate/credit is greater than $4,700, then this household’ taxes have gone up. If the prebate/credit is larger than $4,700, then there has been no progress towards having everyone pay their fair share.
It will raise on those not paying income tax before. If they worked they got the tax taken out of their paycheck and then they got it back.
The same happens with the prebate. What is the difference. Net sum equals zero.
How does it raise taxes on the middle class when they will no longer have payroll taxes taken out of their paycheck AND they too get the prebate.
Your arguing a non-happening.
It is not a hard sell if it was explained to the people. It’s a hard sell for those uninterested in learning. It’s a hard sell because it can be demigoged so easily by those who think they have a bargain in the current tax code.
You make it sound as though there is an increase in taxes being paid. There is not.
An example for us to look at (assume single no state withholding):
You earn $2,000.00 per week ...
Federal Withholding - $ 408.33
Social Security - $ 124.00
Medicare - $ 29.00
Net Pay - $1,438.67
1st - you keep the $553.33 in payroll taxes per week. ($28,877.16 annual savings of payroll taxes - $553.33 times 52 weeks)
2nd - Prebate of (2009) $208/mo or $2,491/yr. (see http://www.fairtax.org/site/PageServer?pagename=about_faq_answers)
The prebate covers your first $208 per moth in taxes paid out. Buy more it is not covered for anyone.
You have over $31,000 per year which is spendable that you do not have under the current income tax code.
It lowers taxes (payroll) and reimburses the tax (to the poverty level) ... no real increase possibly a wash.
I think you are afraid that any change will raise taxes. As I pointed out it is revenue neutral. It would even out across the household levels, however based upon what/how much they are buying their tax payments might go up.
>>>An example for us to look at (assume single no state withholding): You earn $2,000.00 per week ...You earn $2,000.00 per week ...
I think this is an example of a person that is already paying taxes and in the top 15% of earners, not exactly middle class household that I was referring to. What about the family of four that earns $800 per week. How does that scenario work out?
So would the "right", no doubt about it. Just read the FR abortion threads.
America is a bit short on liberty-minded citizens these days. Everybody is obsessed with security.
Your example for us to look at ((assume family of 4 - husband/wife/2 children - no state withholding, earning $800.00 per week:
Weekly Gross Pay - $800.00
Federal Withholding - $ 27.88
Social Security - $ 49.60
Medicare - $ 11.60
Net Pay - $710.92
1st - you keep the $89.08 in payroll taxes per week. ($4,632.16 annual savings of payroll taxes - $89.08 times 52 weeks)
2nd - Prebate of (2009) $559/mo or $6,702/yr. (see http://www.fairtax.org/site/PageServer?pagename=about_faq_answers)
The prebate covers your first $559 per moth in taxes paid out. Buy more it is not covered for anyone.
So this family gets the prebate annually of $6,702 plus the payroll tax savings of $4,623.16 total annual $11,325.16 to spend or save as they see fit.
This is good. Every thing is proportional to the funds that individual/family have available. It will not bring the poor up to the middle class or the middle class to wealthy ... no tax reform will ever do that. That will take the individual getting raises at work ... I know for some work is a dirty word.
What this shows me is that you do not want to be burdened with researching this matter yourself. Therefore, I don’t believe you will ever understand what the FairTax is all about. You will always have a uneducated point to bring forth. People learn by doing ... not having others do for them. I really wonder about folks who choose to question and not research the facts for themselves.
bttt
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