#2
Should have done it a long time ago. But now some beaureacrats think they've figured out a way to get $$$$$$$$$$, they will try something, most likely a fake but integrity means nothing as long as they think it brings $$$$$. But, won't get them much. Just another useless government idea.
#5
OTOH RENSE > {bloomberg] CHART SHOCK: REAL US NATIONAL DEBT IS US$202.0TRILYUHN, as based on analysis of US Govt. Debt + Unfunded Liabilities figures between 2004-2009.
IRONY > Iff one believes US Govt. claims that US Budget Deficits have been keep to roughly 6.0% of US GDP, plus-minus, then gross US Global GDP
may be over US$1.2QUADRILYUHN, which is NOT the LESSOR $$$ figure normally quoted by US Officios, Medias for same.
and
* PEOPLES DAILY FORUM > US SOCIAL SECURITY FUND NOW SEES TO BE EMPTY BY 2037.
That's the preliminary ruling by a US District Court judge, at least: he's ruled that the law is unconstitutional on Commerce Clause grounds, and has issued a preliminary injunction to prevent the state of Colorado to enforce the disclosure rules on out-of-state vendors before the deadline. I am not a lawyer, but the short version is that the judge ruled that the Amazon tax law violated the Commerce Clause by putting regulatory and disclosure burdens on out-of-state vendors that were not present on in-state ones; that the plaintiffs (including the Direct Marketing Association) had a valid chance to prevail in the broader case; and that until the issue was involved it would be inappropriate for the State of Colorado to collect information as per the Amazon tax law.
This is only a preliminary injunction, obviously: if this court or a higher one decides that the law is Constitutional after all it'll be reversed. That's why Colorado House Majority Leader Amy Stephens (Republican, of course) is introducing legislation repealing the original law. Colorado Senate Majority Leader John Morse (Democrat) is reflexively opposing the repeal, even though he's sufficiently ignorant of the ruling as to apparently think that either the DMA or its members have revenue caps of $600/year. New Governor Hickenlooper is thus in a bit of a jam; he's facing a House that decidedly flipped last election cycle and a looming court controversy, and a remarkably uneducated set of Senate allies on the other. That this can be fairly categorized as a 'bit of a jam' tells you a lot about the current ideological condition of the various state Democratic parties.
And, note: the entire point of this law was and is effectively moot anyway. Amazon promptly pulled out of its Colorado affiliate program a year ago as soon as the law was passed, as per its standard policy. The state of Colorado isn't getting that sales tax money - and it isn't getting the income tax that would normally come from transactions made through the affiliate program, which Amazon.com does report and people do pay state and federal income tax on. Just like the Illinois Amazon tax fiasco from a couple weeks ago. Politicians just don't understand they can't FORCE a international buisness to do anything in their state. The internet buisness can cut all ties and further deprive the state of tax revenue. Higher taxes=less tax revenue. It has been proven time and time again but yet the dumb ass dhimocrats just can't wrap their small liberal brains around that simple fact.
#1
Here's the relevant precedent established by SCOTUS.
The Donk solution is to seek more POWER. The problem is that as the Feds (ie national Donks) are the only one's who can relabel a interstate 'tax' as a 'regulatory' fee, they are the ones most likely to keep the fee rather than pass it on to the states if it was tried even though they'd use it as an excuse to justify their further grasp of the peasants productivity.
#2
The Dems, as usual, when given power, try to usurp even more power and money into whatever branch of government they control, then parcel it out to favored groups.
A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.
Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing
the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.
Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence
over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has
dominated Mexico for six years.
Rantburg was assembled from recycled algorithms in the United States of America. No
trees were destroyed in the production of this weblog. We did hurt some, though. Sorry.