garrettwombat
Member
- Joined
- Oct 21, 2007
- Messages
- 1,273
on a homeschooling forum to me:
While he is pro on abolishing the IRS--that does not mean he can deliver. He will be one president in a checks and balance system with 535 congressmen. How he will be able to go about abolishing the IRS without Congress approval should be no secret, so I see no problem with you providing a link to the information here.
Second, a familiar Ron Paul quote: "By the way, when I say cut taxes, I don't mean fiddle with the code. I mean abolish the income tax and the IRS, and replace them with nothing." Hold that thought....
Let's talk about something that really appeals to homeschooling parents, H.R. 1056: Family Education Freedom Act of 2007—Education Tax Credit. First of all, isn't that an attempt to "fiddle with the code?" I totally understand trying to work with the system as it is, however as one who believes the IRS and income tax are unconstitutional, I think I would be more impressed with Ron Paul if he did not try to "fiddle with the code" at all, considering that its legality is in question.
Back to the Family Education Freedom Act itself. Five bills with the same name with a $3,000 per child credit have been introduced since 1998...and all died. The latest introduced February 14, 2007 has a $5,000 per child credit and it is still in committee. While I appreciate his tenacity (and I would appreciate the tax credit personally under this current system), this also indicates that his fellow congressmen are not taking him seriously. How much can any man get done as a president if his ideas have so little influence in Congress?
Lastly, he is using both the Family Education Freedom Act and abolishing the IRS as campaign promises. Now which is he really for? No IRS or fiddling with the code? Maybe he is using the Family Education Freedom Act as the dangling carrot and the ones ready to bite on it the most are the homeschooling parents, which are now considered an interest group...?
Just a thought....
While he is pro on abolishing the IRS--that does not mean he can deliver. He will be one president in a checks and balance system with 535 congressmen. How he will be able to go about abolishing the IRS without Congress approval should be no secret, so I see no problem with you providing a link to the information here.
Second, a familiar Ron Paul quote: "By the way, when I say cut taxes, I don't mean fiddle with the code. I mean abolish the income tax and the IRS, and replace them with nothing." Hold that thought....
Let's talk about something that really appeals to homeschooling parents, H.R. 1056: Family Education Freedom Act of 2007—Education Tax Credit. First of all, isn't that an attempt to "fiddle with the code?" I totally understand trying to work with the system as it is, however as one who believes the IRS and income tax are unconstitutional, I think I would be more impressed with Ron Paul if he did not try to "fiddle with the code" at all, considering that its legality is in question.
Back to the Family Education Freedom Act itself. Five bills with the same name with a $3,000 per child credit have been introduced since 1998...and all died. The latest introduced February 14, 2007 has a $5,000 per child credit and it is still in committee. While I appreciate his tenacity (and I would appreciate the tax credit personally under this current system), this also indicates that his fellow congressmen are not taking him seriously. How much can any man get done as a president if his ideas have so little influence in Congress?
Lastly, he is using both the Family Education Freedom Act and abolishing the IRS as campaign promises. Now which is he really for? No IRS or fiddling with the code? Maybe he is using the Family Education Freedom Act as the dangling carrot and the ones ready to bite on it the most are the homeschooling parents, which are now considered an interest group...?
Just a thought....