Philhelm
Member
- Joined
- Feb 23, 2010
- Messages
- 6,491
Criminal .
More like pure evil. What's worse, if someone were to ever make a stand to defend their property, they would be written off as nutjobs. My how far we have fallen.

Criminal .
I agree .More like pure evil. What's worse, if someone were to ever make a stand to defend their property, they would be written off as nutjobs. My how far we have fallen.![]()
I think that one is more overtly egregious than the income tax. So, I take a loan from the bank, spend years paying it off, retire, get sick, and can't pay the property tax. Goodbye home.
I hate taxes , but if you have to have them , maybe tariffs are reasonable , if I was in China , selling chickens to the US , they impose a tariff on my chickens , I switch to ducks and turkeys . If I am selling you auto's , you tariff it , I raise the price to keep my profit margin the same , or sell you bulldozers ....
I could even live with a reasonable sales tax (reasonable being enough to sustain what a true limited government would need to operate). If we only had, say, a 5% sales tax and the government wasn't trying to model itself from 1984, I don't think that I'd find the time to complain, even if I agree philosophically that the collection of taxation is ultimately dependent upon the threat or use of violence. At least with the sales tax, the implication of you or your property being owned by the government isn't there.
Yep. And with the income tax, everyone is constantly under the threat of IRS SWAT teams and confiscation of your property with no due process.
Tarrifs would be a deterent to trade. They would make everything subject to the tarrif (all imports?) more expensive. In responce to our tarrifs, countries would also impose tarrifs on goods we export to them which would hurt US exporters. It would shield US industries from foreign competition which would allow them to charge higher prices for goods and those who rely on imported inputs would face higher costs so their prices would also be higher. No matter where you assess any tax, the money eventualy comes from consumers- it is included in the price of the goods you buy. A tarrif sounds like you are avoiding paying taxes and that foreigners are paying them for you, but they are instead hidden more.I'm not sure how tariffs would effect trade, as I'm not that familiar with that form of taxation. At current spending levels such tariffs would have to be obscenely high to cover government expenses. I'm open to the idea but I could see tariffs (interstate? international on imports? what scheme, how far reaching?) resulting in some problems unless federal government was returned to the smaller more limited role it should have.
Estimated receipts for fiscal year 2009 are $2.7 trillion (+7.1%).
$1.21 trillion - Individual income tax
$949.4 billion - Social Security and other payroll taxes
$339.2 billion - Corporate income tax
$68.9 billion - Excise taxes
$29.1 billion - Customs duties
$26.3 billion - Estate and gift taxes
$47.9 billion - Other
The problem again becomes-what's to keep them from raising that to 10,20,30%? Tariffs are the most rational way to go, IMO.I could even live with a reasonable sales tax (reasonable being enough to sustain what a true limited government would need to operate). If we only had, say, a 5% sales tax and the government wasn't trying to model itself from 1984, I don't think that I'd find the time to complain, even if I agree philosophically that the collection of taxation is ultimately dependent upon the threat or use of violence. At least with the sales tax, the implication of you or your property being owned by the government isn't there.
Yes, but this is an incentive to keep government spending under control.Tarrifs would be a deterent to trade. They would make everything subject to the tarrif (all imports?) more expensive. In responce to our tarrifs, countries would also impose tarrifs on goods we export to them which would hurt US exporters. It would shield US industries from foreign competition which would allow them to charge higher prices for goods and those who rely on imported inputs would face higher costs so their prices would also be higher. No matter where you assess any tax, the money eventualy comes from consumers- it is included in the price of the goods you buy. A tarrif sounds like you are avoiding paying taxes and that foreigners are paying them for you, but they are instead hidden more.
In 2009, tarrifs only accounted for $30 billion in government revenues. Income taxes accounted for $1.2 trillion.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009_United_States_federal_budget
Yes, but this is an incentive to keep government spending under control.
As to your question about trying to cover current government expenses with tarrifs, the US imports about $2 trillion worth of goods a year. It spends roughly $3.5 trillion so if you wanted a balanced budget with today's level of government spending and financed it only via tariffs, you would need a tax on everything you import of 175%. Now once you impose that large of a tax, imports would drop significantly so you would require a much higher tax rate that that in the longer term to continue to collect that amount of money. THat $90 a barrel of oil imported would rise to $157 a barrel. Imported foods (we only produce foods certain times of the year- imports cover the times we can't like tomatos or lettuce in the winter) so food costs would also soar.
Exactly my point- you can't raise enough revenue via tarrifs alone.
And they are not "harmless" either- they would mean higher prices for everything.
The problem again becomes-what's to keep them from raising that to 10,20,30%? Tariffs are the most rational way to go, IMO.
Of course they're not harmless. But the amount of harm they (and any other tax) do is commensurate with how much they raise. The less they can raise, the less potential for harm they have. Since tariffs have less of a potential amount they can raise than other taxes, they also have less of a potential for harm.
And you absolutely can shrink the federal government to a size that could be paid for by tariffs alone. Why do you think you can't?
Mandatory spending: $2.173 trillion (+14.9%)
$695 billion (+4.9%) – Social Security
$571 billion (+58.6%) – Unemployment/Welfare/Other mandatory spending
$453 billion (+6.6%) – Medicare
$290 billion (+12.0%) – Medicaid
$164 billion (+18.0%) – Interest on National Debt
How low do you think you can go?
The absolute lower limit is zero.
This country got along fine for a long time without those entitlements. I see no reason it can't again.
As someone else said, reducing government to a size that could be funded by tariffs alone would merely be taking it back to what it was 100 years ago.
Again, all this is a reason for why tariffs are less harmful than other taxes. You seem to be saying the opposite.