FairTax Blogburst For Sept. 27, 2006
by
TD of The Right Track
A
quick and dirty search through Google News for articles, news, and
editorials revealed no less than 14 pieces written in the last month
regarding the FairTax. Fully 1/3 of those were editorials agreeing with the
need for the FairTax.
A
sampling:
From
the Denver Daily News, an editorial titled "FairTax, not flat tax, needed to fix
nation’s taxation woes":
Dear editor,
The IRS needs to be eliminated and replaced with the
FairTax, not the flat tax, as suggested by columnist Aaron Harber in Monday’s
Denver Daily News.
The flat tax changes absolutely nothing — the IRS, tax
code, regulations, 16th Amendment, corporate taxation and payroll taxes (the
way Social Security is funded) stay exactly the same under the flat tax.
At best, the flat tax is temporary, the wrong direction to
move towards simplification.
From
the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, "The Fairer Tax":
The Fair Tax (FairTax.org) will
make our true tax burden -- most of which is concealed in the price of goods
and services -- visible to all and is a necessary first step toward smaller and
less-intrusive government.
We cannot allow the perfect to become the enemy of the
good.
So first, let's replace the current complex and dishonest
system of taxation with a fair and transparent system that will allow the
people to choose how much government they can afford in full knowledge of how
much it really costs.
The
Raleigh/Durham News & Observer has an editorial headlined "Total
Replacement":
Our tax code has grown steadily more complex, unwieldy,
expensive and out of control ever since its overhaul in 1986. The IRS is
increasingly unable to cope with the tax code, and puts much of its resources
to uses unrelated to raising revenue and contrary to the wishes of the
Founders.
Like Icarus flying ever closer to the sun, the tax system
appears to be headed for self-destruction. It is far beyond any fix and is
losing respect and credibility. The only reasonable solution is to finally and
completely scrap it and replace it. I support the revenue-neutral FairTax plan.
(http://www.fairtax.org/
1-800-FairTax).
This
is just a sampling of what people are saying all across the country. Truly a
grassroots effort, it takes people willing to step up and show public support
for the FairTax to convince politicians that it's in their best interest to
support the bills.
One
way to show public support is to write an editorial to your local paper,
no matter how large or small. Use the FairTax category that may appear on this
participant blog, visit http://www.fairtax.org/,
or read the FairTax book by Boortz and Linder to learn more. Get your facts
straight, then write your editorial and submit it. Many papers now have a way
to submit online or via e-mail.
However
you decide to do it, your public support for the FairTax is vital.
The FairTax Blogburst is jointly produced by Terry of The Right Track Blog and
Jonathan of Publius
Rendezvous. If you would like to host the weekly postings on your blog,
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