Pass an amendment abolishing the income tax first. Then we can talk about Fair Tax.
“Pass an amendment abolishing the income tax first. Then we can talk about Fair Tax.”
The FairTax bill has a provision which repeals the proposal itself if the 16th amendment is not repealed within 7 years. That makes repeal eminently achievable because once Americans experience the freedom and economic expansion brought about by the FairTax, the political pressure to repeal the 16th will be enormous. Making the repeal of the 16th a condition precedent to implementing the FairTax is a recipe for maintaining the status quo.
However, that was probably your intention.
BTW, you can talk about it or not; it’s a free country. There are million of Americans who understand how destructive and horribly inefficient the current system is and are eager to debate the issue. Even the federal government’s tax payer advocate Nina Olson has just come out in favor of simplification, pointing out that the tax system has almost tripled in number of pages since 2001.
Isn’t it funny how everyone agrees that simplification is badly needed in our tax system, but congress seems incapable of delivering it under the current system?
“Pass an amendment abolishing the income tax first. Then we can talk about Fair Tax.”
Bingo. The so-called Fair Tax is just another name for a national sales tax. If you don’t rip out the income tax by it’s roots, you’re likely to end up with both an income tax AND a national sales tax.
“Pass an amendment abolishing the income tax first. Then we can talk about Fair Tax.”
What I like about the fair tax is that it contains a caveat to insure that you don’t have both an income tax and a consumption tax. It requires that the income tax stop before a consumption tax is started.
There is nothing to prevent the addition of a consumption tax today, in addition to the income tax. This adds a bit of protection to us....
Read the bill. and then you can talk.