Internet Connection Tax Held Off for A Few More Years
Christopher Blanc writes "The ban on taxing Internet connections was set to expire at the end of October, but thankfully the US Congress has acted. Last night, a Senate bill was passed that extends the 1998 Internet Tax Freedom Act for seven more years. There are still some details to work out (the House's bill only extends it for four years), but it's clear both houses of Congress are looking to keep taxes out of the picture for the near future. 'Sen. Ted Stevens (R-AK) is excited at the prospect that Americans will be able to continue filing the tubes of the Internet tax-free. "The Internet has provided a powerful economic boost to our nation, and has become an important everyday tool for millions of Americans," said the senator. "By keeping Internet access tax-free and affordable, Congress can encourage Internet use for distance learning, telemedicine, commerce and other important services."'"
Meanwhile, food is taxed, energy is taxed, clothing is taxed, health is taxed, labor is taxed, trade is taxed, wealth is taxed, inflation hedging is taxed, mail is taxed, building is taxed, savings are taxed.
Fortunately sex and the internet are still untaxed. Cool.
\u262D = \u5350
If Congress really wanted to assure affordable internet access, they'd set about removing the "Universal Access Fee" (a/k/a "e-Rate" or the "Gore Tax") which has long since fulfilled it's stated purpose of subsidizing internet access to rural schools. (According to the FCC, 99% of public schools are connected to the Internet). And while they're at it, they can shut down the Universal Service Administrative Company, which is a bureaucracy set up to administer these funds.
It should be easy, right? A school asks for funds to help establish internet access, an application is reviewed and funds transferred... well, here's a little link to a flowchart showing how out-of-control a government agency can become in only a few years:
http://www.usac.org/_res/documents/sl/pdf/application-process-flow-chart.pdf
This is a little misleading - the part that we often think of as "Internet access" is not taxable, several important services which are not provided by your ISP will now be explicitly taxable. This includes VoIP, Internet radio and Internet-delivered television services that don't come over email and aren't provided by your ISP as part of your account. See this thread.
more of the same on Twitter.
When reality sets in. Sure, great that internet tax is held off for a few more years, god knows the cable companies and telcos don't need any help. This is an election year-ish, so taxes will be a big issue soon. The trouble is that the wars of choice for Bush are going to have to be paid for some how. I'm reasonably certain that the Bill Gates of the world are not going to donate their personal fortunes to pay for it, so that means that you and I (if you live in the US) will end up having to pay for it. Any guesses as to how? yes, that's right, in the form of taxes.
... Telcos or cable companies. If it gets taxed, one of them will make out terribly well as it will open the gates to applying taxes to VoIP and other such services. We'll have monthly bills that even Enron accountants couldn't figure out.
We could legalize/regulate/tax the sale of pot... no, that won't happen.
We could tax the monetization of religions... no, that won't happen, Xenu won't let it.
We could tax gasoline... that will happen
We could tax food stuffs... that will happen
The list continues with all the stuff that you cannot live without
So be wary of any politician that promises to reduce taxes, even if they manage to not tax internet access.
Truthfully, the only reason that this has worked is that they are still trying to figure out who will give the best backhanders
If that sounds cynical, think about it for awhile, the truthiness of it will settle in.
Support NYCountryLawyer RIAA vs People