Thomasville, GA FairTax Follow-up Survey

April 17, 2009 by  
Filed under About the FairTax

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If you were are the FairTax Meeting in Thomasville, thank you for taking the time to come learn about the FairTax. Please take just a few more moments to answer these questions about the meeting. Also, we would appreciate any comments you have about the meeting below. If you would like to get more involved with the FairTax Movement in Thomasville, please join our FairTaxSOWEGA Community and please subscribe to our newsletter (sign up form is to the right).

FairTax Presentation Follow-up Survey
Thomasville, GA

FairTax Presentation Follow-up Survey
Thomasville, GA

Which category best describes your position on the FairTax prior to attending the presentation?


 Strongly opposed

 Leaned against

 Neutral/undecided

 Leaned in favor of

 Strongly support

Which category best describes your position on the FairTax after attending the presentation?


 Strongly opposed

 Leaned against

 Neutral/undecided

 Leaned in favor of

 Strongly support

To what extent do you believe that Rep. Bishop’s concerns about the loss of the mortgage interest and the charitable contributions deductions were addressed?


 Inadequately

 Partially

 Completely

Which of the following economic and other benefits will be enjoyed by all Americans after the FairTax is passed?


 The disadvantage that the current tax system places on US producers in the global economy will be eliminated, which means the trade deficit will be reduced, the erosion of our manufacturing sector will be positively impacted and many US jobs will be created,

 Much of the + trillion in US dollar denominated offshore assets will be repatriated because of the elimination in the punitive treatment of these assets,

 The Social Security and Medicare crisis will be alleviated by replacing the narrow payroll tax basis for collecting those revenues with a broader based tax on the entire economy which will grow more rapidly,

 Savings and investment, the fuel for any healthy growing economy, will be increased as we remove the punitive treatment of those drivers,

 The spiral of greater and greater complexity and higher and higher compliance costs which are the hallmarks of the current system will be dramatically eliminated. These costs are a dead-weight loss to our economy,

 The opportunity to lobby congress for favorable tax treatment for special interest groups will be dramatically reduced, freeing our elected representatives for more productive pursuits.

 All of the above

 None of the above

If a follow up meeting is held in 6 months with a more extended Q & A session, would you be willing to commit to attend and to bring a MINIMUM of two friends/family members/colleagues who did not attend the first presentation?


 Yes

 No



Constitutional Issues of Taxation

February 17, 2009 by  
Filed under About the FairTax

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Here is a very good article from OriginalIntent.org

Constitutional Issues of Taxation

Most Americans understand that all government functions must be authorized by their state constitution or the Constitution of the United States. While this understanding may not be as firm as it was in our grandparents’ day, it is still fairly well acknowledged. However, some feel that when it comes to matters of taxation, the government throws the Constitution out the window and all must follow the dictates of the government or pay the piper. While this is not legally true, there is ample reason for people to feel this way. The purpose of this article is to clarify what the Constitutional boundaries of taxation are and what we can do to stay clear of the boundary markers.

Read the entire article Constitutional Issues of Taxation
Also read the ” Federal Income Tax Article” which is explained about our Income Taxation in this article

Charlie Prochaska
Volunteer Community Coordinator Ga.Dist.2
FairTaxSOWEGA

Fair Tax not Flat Tax is the “Revenge of the Tax Code”

February 17, 2009 by  
Filed under FairTax News

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This editorial recently appeared in the Washington Post:

Revenge of the Tax Code
By Chris Edwards
Sunday, February 8, 2009; Page B02

If it were a movie, it would be called “Revenge of the Tax Code.” The complex income tax, which has bedeviled average Americans for years, is biting back at the elite who helped create it. Tom Daschle, former chief lawmaker in the Senate, withdrew his Cabinet nomination because of an “unintentional” $128,000 tax mistake. Rep. Charles Rangel, chief tax-writer in the House, is also entangled in a tax scandal, as is Tim Geithner, the Treasury secretary, and Nancy Killefer, another high-ranking nominee who has withdrawn.

Whether you believe the excuses of these folks or not, it’s common for both taxpayers and the Internal Revenue Service to make big errors. “The question of what constitutes gross income remains a source of confusion for many taxpayers,” according to the Taxpayer Advocate Service of the IRS. Daschle’s mistake was to ignore the fact that all “accessions to wealth,” or unearned income, including the benefits from his chauffeur, are taxable unless the code explicitly excludes them.
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Rangel claimed that his error was due in part to “cultural and language barriers” and also stemmed from his failure to note that all foreign income needs to be reported, including the $75,000 he earned by renting his Dominican Republic beach house. It may be a bit hard to believe the 19-term congressman from New York when he claims, as he did last year, that “I never had any idea that I got any income.” But the global sweep of the income tax does seem to surprise people. If you have a savings account in Mexico, that’s taxed. If you move to London to work, you are taxed. Even if you scrap your U.S. citizenship and move to a mountaintop in Tibet, the IRS will still chase after you.

The IRS enforces a worldwide web of tax requirements, but it is a web full of holes. The Daschle, Rangel, Geithner and Killefer errors are part of the roughly $350 billion “tax gap” of unpaid taxes each year. The root of the problem is the intense complexity of the income tax. The labyrinthine code trips up many people who make honest errors, but it also makes it more difficult for the IRS to find cheats.

The Taxpayer Advocate Service has noted the “perversity” of tax complexity: “Taxpayers who honestly seek to comply with the law often make inadvertent errors causing them . . . to become subject to IRS enforcement. . . . On the other hand, sophisticated taxpayers often find loopholes that enable them to reduce or eliminate their tax liabilities.”

The income tax is a breeding ground for such loopholes because of its hugely inconsistent treatment of “income.” A large amount of income is not taxed at all, while other income is taxed multiple times. In 2006, taxable income in the United States was just half of what the Department of Commerce reports as total personal income. While municipal bond interest goes untaxed, for example, corporate equity is taxed twice — at the business level and at the individual level.

These sorts of inconsistencies foster aggressive tax planning by individuals and corporations. Enron, for example, capitalized on the different ways business income is treated, setting up partnerships, real estate investment trusts and other structures, and exploited the tax differences between them.

The solution to all these problems — from the Enron debacle to Obama’s tax-troubled nominees — is to reform the tax code. With a simple and consistent base, taxpayers would know what they owe, and the IRS could easily enforce it. That is the promise of the “flat tax,” which would tax all income once and create a level playing field with no tax-free loopholes. The notion of a flat tax debuted three decades ago and was initially championed by Democrats such as Obama’s pick for CIA director, former congressman Leon Panetta. The flat tax later became a Republican cause, but there is no reason why Democrats couldn’t rediscover their tax-reform roots. In fact, this nomination season would appear to give them ample reason to do so.

A flat tax would divide all income into two pots: labor income and capital income. The labor income would be taxed to individuals on a postcard-size return that even Rangel and Daschle would have a hard time evading. The capital income — profits, interest and rents — would be taxed at the business level under a consistent structure that would make Enron-style shenanigans impossible.

In the past, flat-tax lovers and haters have clashed over the desirability of a single rate. But it is the simple base of the flat tax that is really revolutionary. The simple base — free of exemptions, deductions and credits — would vanquish the 1040 instruction book, which has swollen from 112 to 161 pages in just the past 10 years and keeps on growing.

It would also vanquish the special-interest tax breaks that Obama railed against in his campaign. And, as an additional benefit, the simplicity of the flat tax would fit perfectly into the president’s theme of government transparency. He might be suspicious of a single-rate tax, but he could propose a multi-rate version of the flat tax and still get the benefits of the simple base.

A recent survey by the IRS Oversight Board showed that 90 percent of Americans say that it is “not at all” acceptable to cheat on your taxes, and it surely irks people when those in high office cheat. The only way to reconcile the public’s anger at tax cheating and its civil libertarian fear of the IRS is to reform the tax code. That would make it easier for the IRS to catch the tax cheats while freeing the rest of us from onerous paperwork and the risk of botched Cabinet appointments or, at the very least, costly tax mistakes.

Chris Edwards is tax policy director at the Cato Institute and co-author of “Global Tax Revolution.”

Here is the reply from the FairTax SouthEast Director:

Tax Reform
by: Philip Hinson

Mr. Edwards:
While your article “Revenge of the Tax Code” was essentially correct in its analysis of the problems caused by the enormous complexity of our current tax system, your conclusion that the flat tax is the answer is one that I disagree with for several reasons.

First of all, there is no such thing as “the flat tax”. There are a number of flat tax proposals out there, some with bills in congress, others without any active legislation. Those who call themselves flat taxers vary widely in terms of which version of flat tax they support. Most would agree that the leading flat tax bill in the house, the Burgess bill, which is a flat tax option, is a weak attempt at tax reform, since it leaves the entire mechanism of the current system in place and simply layers another option on top of it. I would argue that “the flat tax”, because of the tremendous fragmentation of its adherents, is a long ways from being politically viable.

More to the point, however, is that this country is faced with a number of adverse economic trends which are exacerbated by the current dysfunctional tax system. Among those trends are
1. the federal budget deficit – including the crisis in SS & Medicare,
2. the trade deficit, which drives an ongoing deterioration in our manufacturing sector,
3. a declining and now negative personal savings rate
4. an ongoing spiral of complexity and higher compliance costs of the current system
5. the AMT
6. etc, etc

In each case, the flat tax either does not address the problem, or does so in a less effective manner than the FairTax. For that reason, I consider the FairTax the most comprehensive and effective means of dealing with this broad array of economic trends, which share the following characteristics
1. they are unsustainable,
2. they are contributed to by our current tax system, even though few Americans understand that linkage.

As Dick Armey said about tax reform several years ago, the fight for fundamental tax reform is so difficult and requires such energy and commitment, it does not make sense to expend the energy to win that fight and arrive at the wrong answer. I agree totally with that sentiment; I just don’t agree with what constitutes the correct answer.

Philip Hinson
Atlanta
FairTax Volunteer

Mr. Edwards,
Please look into a taxation that is a proven and has been studied by our nations top economists. If you really want something that works as the best stimulus package, then Please research and write your article on FairTax, FairTax would really be a Revenge of the Income Tax Code. Call and check out FairTax.org !

Thank You,
Charlie Prochaska
Volunteer Community Coordinator

Our Tax System is BROKEN! Spreading Tax Dollars and Jeopardizing Safety

January 11, 2009 by  
Filed under About the FairTax

Here is a  little different side of the Fair Tax,  but it follows in the line of our tax dollars.  I think sometimes we need to know certain stories  from people we don’t hear from often, but are the vital part of the life blood of our economy.   Truck drivers transport and deliver products and commodities so we can enjoy the leisure of  getting them from the stores at our convenience.  I know first hand as I spent 28 years in the trucking business in different forms. I never was a student,  but I was influenced by the government involvement in the trucking industry.

Desiree, a single young woman trucker is now seeing all the ins and outs of  the trucking industry.  Another industry that has become much like our economy -  in total disarray .   This is Desiree’s Story for how the government is wasting our tax dollars – at the cost of our safety.

This is her own words:
“ I would not have survived this 1st year as a Student Trucker because it is set up for FAILURE to generate MORE STUDENTS under government programs.

I share my story in hopes we can bridge communication between our very different worlds and start making changes that benefit all of us

I am going to be driving this morning but I will pass this info along as much as I can manage today on breaks.

I understand the trend began with JB Hunt, understandably with the history of the Railroad Monopoly. Over the past 10 years during the Economic Boom we Americans have blindly followed our greed for cheap goods & driven our jobs overseas.

We got lazy & hungry and 3rd world countries & immigrants were willing & able to do our jobs while we sat on our porches enjoying the leisure time. I believe with some digging into Department of Labor & Statistics Data and Department of Education funding we can see the disparity between how much money is being spent to train Truck Drivers & how many actually become Truck Drivers. The churning out is why there is a false shortage 125% cited by Allen Smith’s Truth About Trucking.  The Student Loans available to retrain workers were given hand over fist until the stock market tumbled and now government loans are not so easy to get. That is the evidence that many of these Large Student Trucking Operations are fumbling right now. The list of tax credits ranging from “Welfare to Work”,  lots of Affirmative Action, immigrant programs , reintroducing former felons to workplace.  I personally do not know the dollar amount of the government subsidies to retrain a displaced worker through “workforce” & other qualifying programs but I’ve heard it is about $10,000 per student.  Therefore 1 student who falls also in the fore-mentioned tax credit categories is a revenue right out of 3 weeks at a CDL Mill. The companies pay commissions to the recruiters & schools & anyone else who steers students into their waiting arms. Then the company throws them on a truck with minimal guidance to work as a team at .14 cents a mile.  The trend now is to require Haz-Mat endorsements right away. This is OUTRAGEOUS. This is a serious matter. The accident rate of Student Truckers is very high due to the manner they are thrown on the open highways. States need to re-evaluate giving these endorsements to people without knowing if they will survive their first few months driving. Reputable Companies require at least 1-2 years experience to drive for them, so why then are Students with no experience at all preferred carriers of Haz-Mat? Cheap Labor! The Department of Transportation oversees this stuff don’t they? When you offset the Student training $ & credits against the cheap labor provided by them and track the time frame when the company no longer has use for that student, nor cares for their ultimate success in the Trucking Industry, a very ugly picture of “Indentured Servitude in America” emerges. Most certainly we understand Trucking cannot be shipped overseas but it is still being outsourced to the people who have no voice. We outsource to countries with no labor laws so we don’t have to see it in our own backyards. We all have a hand in what is happening in this country & we all need to get ourselves together to work our way out of it. Denial has been a large part, but seeing another corporate scandal and bribery case should hopefully spur people to see our Government is broken & if we don’t fix it others will. For a lot cheaper.

Truckers have little $ to even eat & send home to family, so anything that is FREE makes the difference. Here is what the government is doing to the drivers “ Discussion on the issue of Forced Per Diem.

Let me add one thing to Desiree’s story, so you can understand one of some many issues that was involved to the trucking industry and the government.  This is one of the many areas that Fair Tax would make a difference.

I can attest to “hiring” immigrants  at docks of warehouse we unloaded. We were told to get social security numbers from these immigrants. Of course, we all know this is a joke. They are illegal  immigrants and you think they have social security number. They would give us a false social security number and there is nothing we can do about it. Hundreds of thousands of “illegal immigrants“ and “welfare people” who collect food stamps are working “underground” at an average of $500 a day. Yes they collect food stamp from American Tax payers and the trucking industry is paying them more than average American Worker.  These ‘illegals” are not paying taxes – it is all money under-the-table.  These cost are embedded in the cost of the product,  just like capital gains or corporate taxes, that we the taxpayers pay when we purchase the product.  We all know the trucking industry can not be moved to overseas like some of our industries have. This is how the government is gaining control of the very industry that it the bloodline of the economy. I wanted to bring forward an industry that is affecting all of us and how it effects millions of American Workers from companies, to drivers, to employees and to the consumers.   An industry we need to hear about that seem to be hidden from American Taxpayer.

Thank you Desiree for coming forward and telling your story we would never hear about. Please keep safe and trucking, we will do all we can to help you, the American Worker!

Charlie Prochaska
Volunteer Community Coordinator
FairTaxSOWEGA