U.S. Congress Poised To Vote On Internet Tax Ban 409
jangobongo writes "'After more than a year of leaving the threat of new state- and city-levied taxes looming over Internet access providers and online merchants, Congress is poised to reimpose a moratorium on taxing Internet access,' according to eWeek. The House had approved a permanent moratorium while the Senate had approved a temporary ban. Members of the House are pushing to compromise and to vote today on the Senate's approach. President Bush is expected to sign the legislation when it is passed."
Can they levy a tax on spammers? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Can they levy a tax on spammers? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Can they levy a tax on spammers? (Score:4, Funny)
That will also kill AOL as a side effect, but we have to do what we have to do for National Security and The Country...
Re:Can they levy a tax on spammers? (Score:2)
Re:Can they levy a tax on spammers? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Can they levy a tax on spammers? (Score:4, Insightful)
In short, he wants to phase in a system where part of your social security taxes go into a private account that you can choose how to invest, and the rest go to the general public fund.
So, what is going to happen is that the amount of money currently moving into the social security fund will drop, the money moving out will continue to rise with the number of people retiring and living longer. Things won't really even out until those who are 16 when the program is implemented retire. The only way to fix this gap is to raise taxes or cut spending elsewhere. Of course, Bush won't raise taxes or cut spending, so when finally get a president with the guts to do that, he'll be portrayed as a horrible person who wants to stick his hands in our pockets and rob us. When the real thief is the person that created the deficit in the first place.
I find it amazing that while telling us that "privatizing" social security is putting our money in our control, what it is really doing is the government is not only forcing me to pay for everyone else's well-being, they're forcing me to invest some of my own money.
I wonder if the government will only allow me to invest in funds they approve of and don't violate their morals.
A few interesting links related to political parties and economics
Federal Deficit by Political Party [hevanet.com]
Jobs by President and Party [bovik.org]
Economic policies of Bush administration result in more abortions [prnewswire.com]
Re:Easing taxes (Score:2)
Re:Easing taxes (Score:3, Interesting)
Looking for truths here. Not left or right blah blah blahs.
Although, seriously, are you really trying to convince me that Bush is adopting a sort of anti-reagonics strategy?
Re:Easing taxes (Score:3, Informative)
Umm I cant speak to his IQ but he seems to be more informed than you. While bush did give a cut to people making 1 Million or more he gave a cut to every couple making more than 56 thousand dollars, and ever individule making more than 26 thousand dollars. does 26K = 1 million to you? The only brack
Re:Can they levy a tax on spammers? (Score:2)
Excellent idea (Score:4, Insightful)
(If you doubt that we are overtaxed, look at the money wasted on paying millionaires like Ted Kennedy a Congressional salary, no-bid Halliburton contracts, fish atlases, and pork barrel projects so multi-millionaire moguls don't have to pay to build their own stadiums).
Re:Excellent idea (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Excellent idea (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Excellent idea (Score:5, Insightful)
So you're saying different Senators should be treated differently depending on who they are and how much money they have? Who gets to decide this complicated set of rules and exceptions? You?
whoa there... (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm actually in favor of the idea that congressmen should be paid by the people of the state they represent. Who is it they represent anyway? Do they really represent the people of Massachusetts for example, if their paycheck comes from the United States Treasury?
Underpaid (Score:2)
I would be all for paying them ten times their current salaries if they would just do their job and then go home. These freaks living in D.C. dreaming up stupid ways to waste money irritates me. I think they should ban all air conditioners and heaters from the District.
Speaking of getting paid: How about a job with Google [vle.org]?
Re:Underpaid (Score:2)
Being an elected official should be considered community service, and a necessary evil, not a career (in other words, I agree with you)!
Re:Underpaid (Score:2)
That won't help. These people have to finance campaigns, and decreasing the salary would only increase the percentage of very wealthy people in office. Is that really a blow for the average guy?
Re:Underpaid (Score:2)
Re:whoa there... (Score:2)
You misspelled "Disney, Halliburton, Pfizer, Microsoft, Monsanto, etc..."
Re:Excellent idea (Score:5, Insightful)
I agree with both points. I think we are overtaxed, but I think the far larger problem is that congress does not spend the money appropriately.
Re:Excellent idea (Score:2)
Re:Excellent idea (Score:3, Insightful)
I believe the problem is the ever-increasing scope of government. The way to effectively solve a problem is to be involved in it as your profession- a part of the industry, with competition. "Necessity is the mother of invention," and in capitalism profit/growth is the necessity and competition is the catalyst.
Congress attempts to solve a problem by throwing money at it. But in order
Re:Excellent idea (Score:4, Interesting)
While the end result may be ok, is it really the place of the federal government to dictate what states can and can't tax? But it's not like the 10th amendment means anything anymore.
try england (Score:2, Funny)
try living in england.
once you're finished saying "what the fuck" after your first visit to a petrol statiom, let me know.
Re:try england (Score:5, Insightful)
Lets hope so (Score:5, Funny)
I will *so* do this! (Score:4, Funny)
it was always unlikely (Score:3, Funny)
Re:it was always unlikely (Score:4, Informative)
They will tax you at the point of sale. So the guy selling you the X will add on 1% or 2% sales tax.
Re:it was always unlikely (Score:2)
Same scum, different names. They are like supervillians flaunting their actual intent in some cleverly disguised name.
RTFA (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:RTFA (Score:3)
How many jurisdictions currently tax Internet access, and how many ISPs will lower your bill, or just raise it up to the rate you were paying with the tax on top of it anyway?
current tally: (Score:5, Funny)
bad things Congress has done this week: a lot more
That's better than most weeks...
Re:current tally: (Score:5, Funny)
NO TAXATION! (Score:5, Insightful)
Taxing communications is like taxing air. We all need to communicate with others the same way we all need to breath. Why not just tax people on the streets for talking to each other?
Re:NO TAXATION! (Score:2)
Shut Up!!! Dude! They're bad enough without the help. Want to suggest something else so they can go for the triple?
Re:NO TAXATION! (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't disagree with your sentiment, but your argument for untaxing communications could be extended to just about anything. For example, food and a place to sleep at night are just as essential, yet both, especially the latter, are taxed heavily by many governments.
Go go go! (Score:2)
Adding a tax on top of that price would only drive out people who would otherwise get online.
Re:Go go go! (Score:2)
Frankly, this bill is horrible. I can afford $4/month tacked onto my cable modem bill. A family at the poverty line has a much harder time affording $40/month tacked onto their grocery bill.
Jeez (Score:2)
Is this your job? (Score:5, Informative)
Read the Constitution of the United States of America. Is there any mention of the internet in that document? No? Let's have a look at Amendment 10:
Amendment X
The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people.
Okay. So the "right to regulate the internet" is not under the authority of the Feds because it's reserved to the States or the People.
"What of interstate commerce?", say the trolls.
Let me point you to Amendment 9
Amendment IX
The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.
The "right to regulate the internet" has already been established as retained by the States or the people and, therefore, the interpretation of "interstate commerce" can not be enumerated to include it. It is forbidden to expand the meaning of interstate commerce to include anything not specifically defined in the Constitution.
Don't like it because the politicians haven't checked the 9th or 10th since the early 1800s? These are the knobs you vote for--don't cry to me. Don't like it because 95% of what the Feds do is disqualified by this assessment? Maybe you should move to a communist nation so that you can be happy using the feds to siphon everyone else's cash to assuage your penile deficiency.
Re:Is this your job? (Score:2)
The power to regulate interstate commerce is delegated to the United States. It is not also prohibited to the several states, so therefore they can regulate it as well to a certain degree, though the United States always has the last word based upon the commerce power and the supremecy clause. (See jurisprudence regarding the negative commerce clause)
The regulation of interstate commerce is not a right, it is a power. Therefore Amend. 9 is not relevant. Rather, you'd have to
Re:Is this your job? (Score:2)
As for the power to regulate interstate commerce (Section 8, Clause 3), I still do not agree that this c
Re:Is this your job? (Score:2)
So it's a tax on the line because the line can be used in interstate commerce.
This isn't a very contentious thing. I'd get all up in arms over the Wickard case first. It's much more expansive.
Re:Is this your job? (Score:2)
Odd. I don't see that expansion anywhere in the Constitution. Are you making that up?
Re:Is this your job? (Score:2)
Odd. I don't see that expansion anywhere in the Constitution. Are you making that up?
No, the Supreme Court has. See http://www.landmarkcases.org/gibbons/power.html [landmarkcases.org], or http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commerce_clause [wikipedia.org], or just google for "Interstate Commerce Clause Expansion".
The Supreme Court has consistently ruled that j
Re:Is this your job? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Is this your job? (Score:2)
Re:Is this your job? (Score:2)
Feeling a bit testy are we? (Score:2)
Hey, how'd you know about my little problem?
Regarding Amendment X: The power to regulate interstate commerce is given to the Federal government.
Regarding Amendment IX: The right to regulate the Internet has not been established as retained by the states or "the people." In fact, the Internet was created by the United States government, so from its birth
Re:Feeling a bit testy are we? (Score:2, Insightful)
The "interpretation of the Constitution" is all bogus. As clearly outlined in Amendment 10 anything not specifically addressed in the Constitution is simply not a responsibility of the Feds.
Communism and the US government (Score:3, Insightful)
That statement is not "exactly" or even remotely correct. Your hostility to the federal government is coloring your interpretation of the facts.
Communism, which btw has never been truly achieved, is based on the concept of collective ownership. No matter how onerous the US federal government's "extraction of re
Re:Is this your job? (Score:2)
Re:Is this your job? (Score:2)
Did you even read the article? (Score:2)
Re:Is this your job? (Score:2)
I point you to this excellent breakdown [wikipedia.org] at Wikipedia.org. The Interstate Commerce clause, as it's typically referred to, has been the source of considerable Constitutional debate for a long, long time. Here is the actual verbage:
Re:Is this your job? (Score:2)
As do I, but one of the foundations of our Constitution is the Supreme Court's duty to properly interpret it, making sure the Executive and Legislative branches don't monkey around where they shouldn't. The Supreme Court is doing the job it's supposed to do. It's not required that we agree with them.
Amendment 10 is very particular in its statement that, if it's not specifically mentioned in the Constitution, then
Re:Is this your job? (Score:2, Funny)
Does this mean that you don't vote? Or that you haven't voted since the 1800s?
Re:Is this your job? (Score:3, Interesting)
Wow. This is quite misinformed. First of all, States don't have rights. Only people do. Amendment 10 talks about powers (which States can have). Amendment 9 talks about rights (which according to our founders are God-given, and God didn't give them to States but to people).
Further, protection of people's rights to engage in interstate commerce free from taxation by the states is precisely what the founders had in mind when they put in the Interstate Commerce Clause. It wasn't until much later that Co
Re:Is this your job? (Score:2)
Even playing fields? It seems to me like that would imply all purchases you ma
Ban on taxing access, not taxing purchases (Score:5, Insightful)
RTFA, people.
Well, Duh (Score:5, Interesting)
Of course he will. He has yet to veto a single bill [google.com] as President. It's easy to not have to, when your party controls both houses of Congress and is on the edge of a long-term conservative majority in the Supreme Court.
Re:Well, Duh (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Well, Duh (Score:2)
Re:Well, Duh (Score:2)
Re:Well, Duh (Score:2)
Re:Well, Duh (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes, actually, he doesn't hammer out those kinds of things with congressmen. He hands orders from Karl Rove to the Republican congressmen, and ignores the Democrats, who then roll over for fear of being portrayed as 'obstructionist,' when in fact they'd be happy just to be included in the discussions -- which, as previously noted, don't actually occur in the first place. And so it goes...
Internet Tax=Highway Tax=Better Infrastructure (Score:2)
Re:Internet Tax=Highway Tax=Better Infrastructure (Score:2)
In other news... (Score:2)
No such thing as forever..... (Score:2)
Re:No such thing as forever..... (Score:2)
Hey congress, (Score:2)
You're not going to tax me and use it to fund your wars and invasions and occupations that all your blood thirsty chicken hawks are hell bent on starting and waging.
This is nothing less than taxation without representation.
Just remember, the American Revolution was started over taxation without representation and they weren't anywhere near as burdened as we are now.
Hell, we would have been better off to let the Britts keep America because the current system is bleeding the
Re:Hey congress, (Score:2)
And what of all the APPOINTED people that no one ever elected?
And lastly, when did a congress-critter ever keep it's word once in office?
How about a little refresher course, "Read my lips, NO NEW TAXES"......
Case closed...
Re:Hey congress, (Score:2)
And I say that the people that are CLAIMING to represent us DO NOT REPRESENT US and in fact are robbing us "under threat of pain".. (If you understand that.)
For all those not reading the article... (Score:5, Informative)
This does not mean that the federal government would tax internet services. That may or may not be within their power. That is a different constitutional argument though.
This does not mean that your state would charge taxes on internet services. It would still be up to your state legislature and governor to decide on such a tax, approve it, and implement it.
Collecting taxes for 2000+ tax agencies (Score:2)
The real problems... (Score:3, Interesting)
Some say spending over a half trillion per year on "defense" purposes would qualify. Some say spending hundreds of dollar on comfy chairs would qualify. This subject is very opinionated.
2. The dreaded April 15th, income tax day.
Making criminals out of those who may not be able to afford to pay, or simply mess up. And allowing the evil geniuses to reap the benefits either through loopholes or ways of not reporting it.
Note: Some say a consumption tax (sales tax) would hurt the poor. Consider a consumption tax with rebates to offset the poverty level. No one can 'really' avoid paying a sales tax, unless the business is crooked.
3. In this so called democracy, it's really a republic, where we represent people who are suppose to be our voice. But nothing prevents them from really following that through.
A more democratic system would be nice, where citizens could speak their mind. e-Governments, no salary elected officials for representation when needed, and instant direct voting.
Re:Square Peg into a Round Hole (Score:3, Informative)
Once again a slashdot reader that failes to read the summary much less the FA. This is a bill to STOP taxs on the internet. Does that fit into your world view?
Re:Square Peg into a Round Hole (Score:2)
Get over this stupid idea that the Internet is some other-worldly, unparalleled phenomemon. It isn't. It's an evolutionary step in human communication, not alien technology, and it can be taxed just like everything else in history has been taxed.
Re:I like the idea of an internet tax... (Score:2, Offtopic)
Re:I like the idea of an internet tax... (Score:2)
Re:I like the idea of an internet tax... (Score:2)
Not to mention that the whole argument is irrelevant (yours and the grandparent's) since we're this particular law is about (not) taxing ISPs, not e-commerce stores.
Re:I like the idea of an internet tax... (Score:4, Insightful)
In my opinion, that ended (if it wasn't already over) when the American president, a candidate of the Republican party which supposedly contrasts the more socialist Democrats, told American citizens that buying identical pharmaceuticals for a lower price in Canada was scary, dangerous, and bad. Apparently, we're only interested in "free market" as a slogan. We're really in favor of corporate profits in spite of the quality of life for the average citizen declining.
I wish this didn't sound like a Democratic rant. I'd love to see a Republican candidate in 2008 who actually stands for what the Republican party supposedly represents.
Re:I like the idea of an internet tax... (Score:2)
1: Drug companies charge higher prices in the united states because the US has one of the highest per capita incomes in the world and can afford to pay more. It's sort of like the left's "Tax the rich" scheme.
2: The Canadian government subsidizes prescription drugs
So, once 'reimportation' of canadian
Re:I like the idea of an internet tax... (Score:2)
As long as agencies like that exist this will not be a free market because they drive up prices. The reason the drug companies are charging so much is because they can, most of the products are needed so its not like consumption is going to stop. Right now we are regulating everything in the wrong places (the s
Re:I like the idea of an internet tax... (Score:2)
As for moving overseas. If amazon wants setup their warehouse in mexico, so be it. It
Re:I like the idea of an internet tax... (Score:2)
Now is they lower the price of books to that of amazon, they can break even on books---AND make a load of profits selling coffee and snacks.
Re:I like the idea of an internet tax... (Score:2)
America must take over the world.
That would totally eliminate outsourcing.
And most places would be better off. (Ask the thousands of illegal immigrants.)
Re:Penny-an-email tax would kill email (Score:2)
Re:there is no veto (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:there is no veto (Score:3, Insightful)
Besides, since not vetoing the law is good in this case, criticizing him for it is misplaced -- save it for when he actually screws up!
Re:there is no veto (Score:2)
If it were otherwise, the Grand Theft Auto games would be illegal.
Anyway, the issue is not that "children to do not have any rights," it's that all people do, whether you agree with their morals or not! NAMBLA has rights, NAZIs have rights, Communists have rights, bigots have rights, heck, even Christian Fundament
Re:Food for thought: (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Food for thought: (Score:2)
And, of course, it's worth pointing out that both the permanent moratorium in the House, and the temporary moratorium in the Senate, are bipartisan measures. Indeed, the article in question features a quote from a congressional Democrat support (wait for it...) the
Re:American flag (Score:2, Insightful)
Not that this makes me happy, but let's call it what it is.
Re:American flag (Score:2)
As opposed to what the Radcons would use as a picture for politics, which would be a dollar bill sign.
Re:American flag (Score:2)
Re:Why? (Score:2)
Funny, when the federal government tells states to enforce environmental or "American's with Disabilities" laws, it's called an unfunded mandate. When they forbid states to collect revenue from some source, it's suddenly good.