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California Considering More Internet Taxes 530
dcg writes "San Francisco Chronicle is reporting on how web taxes could help the states, especially California, with its budget woes. One particularly disconcerting comment is from California's Controller Steve Westly. 'In addition to sales taxes, Westly said he is considering a tax on Internet access like those that appear on telephone bills. He also is looking at a tax on software downloads.' Would this affect only purchased software, or could sourceforge.net become a source of revenue for the state..."
Looking the wrong direction (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Looking the wrong direction (Score:5, Funny)
Get with the friggin' program!
It's the fault of the evil corporatists who exploit the citizens of california by providing them with high paying jobs and great products and merchandise, forcing them into a culture of consumerism. It's the fault of the wealthy exploiters who evade their tax obligations! It's the fault of McDonald's because they sold hamburgers to people who consumed them and got fat and have health problems! The citizens didn't know that eating 3 fatty burgers a day and a large Chocolate Shake with every meal could kill! They were innocent!
It's the fault of the gun companies because they sold guns to the criminals--forcing them to commit crimes and thus forcing california to build prisons!
If only California were more like Europe. Stupid American capitalist bastard! You are so simple! You just don't get it!
Blame someone else, that way you look really intellectual!
Re:Looking the wrong direction (Score:2, Interesting)
It is also GW Bush's fault for not intervening (by ordering FIRC to control prices). He chose not to intervene for two reasons: 1: To try to sink Grey Davis (which didn't work), Republicans argued unsuccesfully that the energy shortage was his fault, even though it was a REPUBLICAN governor that deregulated the industry. 2: Enron and other energy companies in which GW Bush is vested in benefited from the energy crisis. Enron avoided bankruptcy for an extra year with the cash from ripping off California.
Re:Looking the wrong direction (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Looking the wrong direction (Score:3, Insightful)
California hadn't built any plants for years before the power crisis, possibly a decade or more. The main reasons are all the environmental studies, regulations, NIMBYism, and protestors.
Californians are just reaping the fruits of their political choices, plain and simple.
Bush and his gang might have left California in a lurch just for "payback". As a Republican living in California, I somehow find all of this less than amusing.
Re:Looking the wrong direction (Score:3, Interesting)
This is dead wrong. You don't know what you're talking about. There have been zero plants denied for environmental reasons.
California has more generating capacity than it needs. The "crisis" was created by Enron gaming the markets.
Re:Looking the wrong direction (Score:4, Insightful)
It's been commonly said that no power plants were built in the 90s, and the environmentalist websites try to debunk that. After reading what they say, it turns out there were some plants built. All small, mostly non-utility plants.
In this article [sandiegometro.com], near the bottom, it talks about environmental and (mostly) political opposition to natural gas burning power plants that are popular in California.
But we may be both right, here [216.239.53.100] they talk about this:
Re:Looking the wrong direction (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Looking the wrong direction (Score:5, Interesting)
This is patently false. The California state legislature voted to cap energy prices for consumers under the guise of deregulation. So you had consumers paying a fixed price for energy despite an energy shortage. And when there's a shortage of anything, prices rise. So there you had Californians paying pennies on every dollar the state of California expended for energy.
California's energy plan was anything but deregulation. You don't get something for nothing, but that's how the California state legislature saw it, and so you have them to blame, not one man in a marble house thousands of miles away.
Patently false? Not quite. (Score:5, Insightful)
Patently False?
Not [chron.com]
quite. [miami.com]
Sure, California's scheme for "deregulation" had some major flaws, but that doesn't excuse Enron, as well as other energy corporations from committing wire fraud, to the point of almost bankrupting the state.
Re:Patently false? Not quite. (Score:3, Insightful)
Tax-and-spend mentality, after all that's only a few thousand extra we need to suck out of each and every state resident...
BTW did anyone hear if the doubled vehicle license fee was signed or vetoed? Last I heard it had passed the state legislature, tho supposedly Davis was going to veto it (doubtless prompted by the peasants with flaming pitchforks who were storming the governor's mansion, rather than from any real concern for taxpayer's wallets).
Unbelievable (Score:3, Insightful)
It's unbelievable the amount of ignorance that exists when it comes to the California energy crisis.
First, I would like some sort of explanation and proof that California's deficit is almost entirely to blame on the energy crisis? Is the fact that most states are experiencing deficits also do to the California energy crisis? Or, perhaps, it has something to do with the fact that our economy has slowed down. Or the fact that during the 90's the Californian State Government increased spending way past inflation.
Second, the "deregulation" scheme enacted by the legislature was hardly a joke. They did not setup anything even remotely recognizable as a free market system.
Third, GWB and FIRC ended up setting price controls.
Fourth, GW Bush was not and is no longer vested in energy corporations.
Do you wish for me to continue? I'm not some huge GWB or Republican drone or fan, I just hate seeing all the FUD that surrounds the entire energy issue.
Re:Unbelievable (Score:3, Insightful)
Fourth, GW Bush was not and is no longer vested in energy corporations.
Nice of you to contradict yourself in a single sentence.
Re:Unbelievable (Score:3, Funny)
In that sentence, I did not and I no longer will contradict myself.
Re:Unbelievable (Score:3, Insightful)
For that matter, lets look in to cheney.
Not vested means he also has no "good friends" and campaign donators in that bunch. It means he owns no stock or any company that benifits from the companies in question.
GWB and his posse is also were the ones who said there was no price fixing going on the whole time, even though now execs are coming forward ADMITTING to it.
You dont need to be a GWB fan to get your facts wrong.
Re:Looking the wrong direction (Score:3, Interesting)
Maybe say to Oregon or Texas, just somewhere more buisness friendly.
Then they would be screwed out of alot more than sales tax.
Re:Looking the wrong direction (Score:5, Interesting)
San Francisco considers the Sierras "their" playground, so why not move closer to where you play? Nevada welcomes any and all e-business. Indeed, there is a pool of high-tech workers already in place, sufficient housing that is considerably less expensive for employees that move with the companies, crime rates that compare very favorably when compared with the Bay area (for example, there have been seven murders where I live in the past 11 years), an international airport that is underutilized right now, and Internet bandwidth almost for the asking. South Reno is where many e-tailers have already set up shop...but there is plenty of room for more.
One reason that some e-tailers came here is that Nevada has no reciprocal arrangement with any other state regarding sales tax. (Don't believe me. Check it out for yourself.) With less than 2 percent of the population of the United States, our sales tax situation is much more friendly. Instead of hundreds or thousands of taxable areas to track, you only have to worry about 17 areas -- the Nevada counties. Out of state taxes? Right now, you don't sweat it if you are completely in Nevada. Let the other states deal with the problem as they see fit. Until the Feds step in, don't expect Nevada to force the burden of collecting other states' taxes on you. (But get rid of all ties to all other states to make this work.)
The body of Nevada law is MUCH simpler, and the taxes are low. (Governer Quinn is trying to raise business taxes, but the level is nowhere near where California has staked a claim on yourrevenue.) Traffic jams? Where?
The advantage that Reno/Sparks/Carson has over Las Vegas/Henderson is that we don't have an upcoming water shortage. That makes Reno more attractive to businesses currently in the Southland who want to move east to avoid Sacramento's nose in their tent.
Think Reno is too expensive? Consider Carson City. Fallon (Amazon.com and the Navy did). And other places in the Silver State.
If you are worried about the morals of Reno and vicinity, you need not be. During the past decade, the southern part of Reno has become family-friendly. For example, by law there are no brothals in Washoe County, and the "strip joints" are all in the northern, industrial part of the city. There are some parts of Reno where Bay area people would feel right at home, as we have many of the same chain stores and amenities -- but in addition our houses have open space and lawns, instead of the alleys that characterize many of the housing developments in places like Mountain View or the "row houses" of 19th Avenue. You can find schools in which the parents have a lot of say in what is taught in them. Parks? Yes. Ask a Realtor for more information on what Reno and vicinity has for the kids.
If you are rich and clean, consider coming to my home, Lake Tahoe, to set up shop. Incline Village has many people like me just waiting for you to bring your business and succeed. Or, if you prefer a louder lifestyle, consider coming around Wayne Newton's land on the East side of the lake and give Stateline and Zepher Cove a look-see.
It's four hours from where you are now (less if you are on the East side of the Bay) so you can still easily go to the places you know and love, and see the friends that decide to stay behind.
All you have to lose are the individual income tax payments -- Nevada has a personal income tax rate of 0.000%, and even the current Governer isn't asking for a change in that tax rate. Sales taxes are less, at 6.0-7.5% throughout the state. Property taxes are less than those in the Bay area or Los Angeles, according to people who own houses here and "there".
Check it out. Many ex-SF people live here now.
Re:Looking the wrong direction (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Looking the wrong direction (Score:5, Interesting)
It looks like some big companies decided to voluntarily start collecting taxes, so you can't just blame the government. However, it looks like there is one concrete reason why these companies are starting to tax, and one speculative reason (on my part). First, the article says they are collecting taxes, now, so that the states won't "back-tax" them in the future. Second, I speculate that some of the big companies that are ready to start taxing want to force everyone to start taxing. That way they will have a leg up on the competition. Some companies won't even be able to afford to implement a tax system, they'll just go out of business.
--naked [slashdot.org]
Re:Looking the wrong direction (Score:4, Interesting)
Spoken like a true Libertarian (or a demagoguing Republican). There are budget cuts happening all over California. They're coming in public schools [nctimes.net], rural healthcare [ojaivalleynews.com], state parks [sfgate.com], higher education [stateline.org], and more. Those are services that most Americans, and especially Californians, think are important. In fact, in order to cover the necessary gap, Gov. Davis has proposed more cuts than new taxes [ocregister.com].
Incidentally, I decided to reply instead of modding you down, even though zapping your "insightful" bonus was very tempting.
Re:Looking the wrong direction (Score:2, Insightful)
Good. There is olny a faint coralation between spending and quality of education.
Germany and Japan spend less, per child, on education and they both kick our asses.
Short answer: fire half of the school administrators, get rid of the retarded children, raise teacher saleries, get rid of the 'team sports', and ban disruptive children permently.
That would solve most of our problems in our education system and we'd end up spending less.
Re:Looking the wrong direction (Score:2)
Then we see after a while who has "fallen accidentally" in the pit of spikes.
graspee
Re:MODERATORS: WTF?? (Score:3, Insightful)
Good greif, sombody needs to lay off the crack pipe for a while.
It's called satire.
and yet the don't cut anything they should cut.... (Score:5, Informative)
In other words, Gray is doing what he has always done. There are two kinds of government employees. Essential and non-essential.
That should be an indicator of who needs cut.
For comparison, a local county is 67 million in the hole. They refused to cut their arts budget of 6 million, now tell me, whats more important? Buying art from people who can't sell it otherwise, or paying teachers?
That is the biggest difference between libertarians and those other two. Governments currently spend money on stuff they have no business doing so. But they have the guns to back them up, the idiocy of the general public to hide behind, and many cohorts in the press and special interest groups to run cover for them.
Why are they paying $100/hr for tech contracters? (Score:2)
Beauracracy... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Beauracracy... (Score:3, Insightful)
I think at some point it will become fundamental to treat people and groups of people as two distinct lifeforms competing in the same arena, but with vastly different motivations and values. I think mankind's success depends on understanding and controling this balance.
Right now most still believe that groups should have the same values as individuals because they are made of individuals - but just look at the cell/human relationship to see how much a group cares for the units of it's makeup.
Both are necessary, but I hope we learn to reign this stuff in before it's _way_ out of control. Or is that already the case?
Cheers.
Re:Beauracracy... (Score:3, Insightful)
Of course, corporations and churches depend on their customers to willingly give them the money they need to continue living. Governments on the other hand take the money by force, upfront. The consumers of government services just have to hope to get their money's worth.
Corporations aren't allowed to break down your door and arrest you because you didn't pay them for a service they provided.
A government can. They'll even force you to pay for their services whether you asked them to provide them or not.
The relationship is fundamentally different. People who know they can MAKE people pay them for whatever crappy service they provide are going to take it easy. Tell me, what would you do if you could MAKE people give you their money? Would you work real, real hard so they'd feel a little better about it? Or would you take it easy?
Governments know they can mostly "take it easy." Thats why they are less efficient.
Re:Beauracracy... (Score:2, Insightful)
Solution! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Solution! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Solution! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Solution! (Score:2)
New York already does this on certain kinds of car lease payments... No joke.
Re:Solution! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Solution! (Score:2)
Re:Solution! (Score:2)
Tax on Downloads (Score:5, Informative)
If you buy expensive software (i.e. chip-design tools at >$100k per user) and you take delivery via FTP instead of physical media (CD/tape), you do not owe sales tax. On a big purchase (multi-million $$) the 8% is a BIG deal. It happens a lot in the Valley.
I'm surprised that it took the bureaucrats in Sacramento this long to find a revenue "source" this big.
Re:Tax on Downloads (Score:5, Insightful)
A popular quote from most end-user license "agreements" (which are all unethical, anyway). Different tax rules apply for license transactions than sales transactions.
Schwab
Re:Tax on Downloads (Score:2, Insightful)
The article mentions "In addition to sales taxes, Westly said he is considering a tax on Internet access like those that appear on telephone bills. He also is looking at a tax on software downloads."
What does this mean? Especially with regard to "software downloads". At first I was thinking that commercial software ie you buy windows or something and in the future Microsoft offers a cheaper version for delivery by download and here they have it. Naturally you pay a tax on the commercial price was my thought, but this expression is too vague. It does not limit it to commercial. The tax could be $.50 per software download of any type. Also keep in mind that the country is controlled by big business. Someone like Microsoft could easily pay off the government to make it a reality. A tax on any transfer could easily hurt free software. I download tons of free programs that end up crap and I delete. But occasionally I find that one gem that makes it all worth while. This would definitely encourage people to experiment less and then the company with the best advertising budget would probably win your business, instead of Joe Blow out in the middle of the desert who writes a freeware version of the same program.
I can't wait... (Score:5, Informative)
Overheard (Score:5, Interesting)
-- California governor Gray Davis at a private dinner
The wrath of the geek (Score:5, Funny)
-- California governor Gray Davis at a private dinner
"Why does my homepage say '3y3 0wnZ0rr j00 gr3y d@v1Z!'? What does that mean, exactly?"
-- California governor Gray Davis, looking at his computer in three months.
You Need to Prove He Said This (Score:3, Insightful)
How?! (Score:5, Funny)
I can imagine my statement:
You have downloaded: SupAR WArEZ!!! $0.50c
You have downloaded warez, and and broken copyright laws: $5000
Also, doesn't it defy the entire point of the internet? (apart from nuclear safty) a free database of information for the education of the people?
Why doesn't the federal government help CA out, we 'were' a major source of taxes, all we need is a break. Sigh...
Re:How?! (Score:2, Interesting)
Why doesn't the federal government help CA out, we 'were' a major source of taxes, all we need is a break. Sigh...
You're also (and have been) quite a sinkhole too. The only thing that's kept you afloat so long is your insane amount of Congressmen (and thus, Electoral College votes).
Re:How?! (Score:2)
Re:How?! (Score:2, Funny)
You have downloaded warez, and and broken copyright laws: $5000
You have downloaded warez, and and broken copyright laws, and then found out the software was the wrong version to partition your 120GB drive: priceless
Re:How?! (Score:2)
Sorry, the federal goverment is too busy spending the 2.23 TRILLION budget to help.
Sure am glad the small goverment GOPers are running things...
Re:How?! (Score:2)
Why would a Reblican federal govt. help out an incompetent Democratic CA govt. that can't manage their spending and think regulation and higher taxes are the answer to solve all their money problems. How Davis got re-elected after the CA power fiasco just goes to show how out of touch with reality the ave CA voter is.
welcome to Nevada (Score:5, Insightful)
My dad worried about out-sourcing union jobs to Mexico. I worry about out-sourcing programming jobs to India. What's to stop the out-sourcing of all the other high-paying professions to low-tax areas?
Re:welcome to Nevada (perhaps, but NOT INDIA) (Score:2, Interesting)
You know, your first two sentences make sense.
But that lest sentence is HORRIBLY misguided. If you honestly believe taxes are at all related to businesses moving jobs oversees, you really need to catch up on modern times. India is practically a communist country, and let me tell you their taxes and government restrictions are far more oppressive than in the US. But they have lots of people. People are just like any other resource, thus the term human resource. When the supply far exceeds the demand, prices drop.
Even Adam Smith realizes this one and advocates tariffs as a result.
FYI, Nevada has in the worst fiscal shape in the whole of the US, even worse than California. And besides, jobs will never move too much to that state because its a hell hole. They would never be able to attract the talent they are looking for. Some REALLY want to eat at other restaurants besides casinos and Applebees.
Re:welcome to Nevada (perhaps, but NOT INDIA) (Score:2)
Well, the restaurants arguement is right. I'll give you that. Fine dining outside of a casino is hard to find...
But NV does have no corporate or personal income taxes. Thats its strongest point. One of the things that made me proud was that Vegas was home to Westwood Studios. At least until a few weeks ago when EA decided to close down their center here in vegas.
Its weakest point is public education. Parents who treat schools like daycare centers, give teachers no respect, and then complain about their kid not learning.
Re:welcome to Nevada (Score:2, Interesting)
And no jackass, not everyone who lives in NV eats at either McDonalds or a Casino. There are just as many selections of great eating establishments here as anywhere else.
A tax on sales, connectivity, downloads... (Score:2, Funny)
GMFTaxsujin
Great way to drive Internet stores out of business (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Great way to drive Internet stores out of busin (Score:2)
Easy! In response to your question, because people are lazy. I'm going to be ordering a $7 part for my Nokia cell phone (for which shipping will probably be more than $5) because finding a local place that sells that piece of circuitery is too freaking hard!
Another reason Internet retail works because the operating costs are so low - all you need is a good web designer to make the business you run out of my kitchen look like a Fortune 500.
Most consumers won't care that the cost of $100+shipping DVD player is now $106+shipping.
Here in BFE..... (Score:2)
The 1 thing that makes me buy locally vs internet is speed. If I need something right away, I'll drive to the store and get it. If it can wait, I'll get it online.
Re:Great way to drive Internet stores out of busin (Score:2)
All I can say is that a lot of people find value in online retail. If the retailer is smart at keeping their operational costs low, they can be quite successful.
Re:Great way to drive Internet stores out of busin (Score:3, Insightful)
You would if you're like me and don't have a car. It's usually a lot easier to find something online and have it shipped to your door than harass someone else to drive you to the store.
Tax on software download... (Score:5, Interesting)
Or counting bandwidth used? This will cause problem with any piece of software that check for updates (antivirus, "smart" operating systems, advertising software/spyware, etc).
At least if they return taxes on received spam some people will not be so angry, in fact, could mean finally that "get rich fast" schemes work at last.
Re:Tax on software download... (Score:2)
Enforcing a download tax would be much like enforcing things like a liquor tax or an income tax. There IS something of an honor system in the tax code. You can choose not to pay, and they probably won't find you, but if they do you are fucked. Thats why only small businessmen and drug dealers take the risk. Someone with a large business or a visible business has too much to lose.
There are ways to indirectly find out this sort of information, but it can be done. Look at gangsters getting busted for not reporting income realized from the drug trade.
Revenue booster? (Score:5, Insightful)
Likewise, Internet sales taxes are desperately needed. Not only are the well-off more likely to purchase things online, but the fact that they can dodge sales tax by doing so while the poor must pay when they go to the local stores is nearly an insult: this is one of those 'rich getting richer' schemes that doesn't get much airplay, but it should.
I'll agree that it's been a pretty fun ride, but we've already discovered that the Internet isn't free. Now it's time for the tax collectors to catch up.
Re:Revenue booster? (Score:2)
Last I checked, I dont pay sales tax for my groceries..at least in my state.
Re:Revenue booster? (Score:2)
Re:Revenue booster? (Score:2, Insightful)
But I think that the internet as such - not to be confused specifically with e-commerce - will become more and more (and to some extent, is already) of a 'staple of life', like the phone system already is.
Just one example - I'm in the process of applying to and entering UK university. Right now I'm organizing a trip there to visit some of them before I make the choice. I'm arranging the visits by e-mail - sure, it would be possible by phone, but I wouldn't say this is a luxury, it is a real practical improvement.
I think the net will become much more important, and certainly is not a luxury for many people even now. "The internet isn't free" - well, a lot of stuff is. In cases where money does change hands, taxes should be paid as in regular offline business.
For Those Of You Here In Oregon (Score:2)
happen, or at least, proposed here.
Measure 28, a temporary income tax hike,was
defeated during a special election in January.
The state is looking at some very serious cuts,
including literaly putting some mental patients
out onto the streets.
Things are getting so desparate here that I
would not be suprised that something like this
does not happen.
In fact, I think that I should be suprised that
it has not been at least proposed by now.
Mark
I have a better idea! (Score:5, Funny)
Internet Access Tax (Score:2, Interesting)
Intrastate vs. Interstate (Score:2)
If it comes to pass, I predict the rise of an Online-only retailer in Oregon. The ads will say "Come shop in Oregon, where we don't have any sales tax." Powell's will get a leg up on Amazon, who will complain mightily.
Qualifying 'internet download' (Score:5, Interesting)
I can only see that part failing miserably, or if it doesn't, that man is going to lose his office quickly.
Will lose more business for California.... (Score:5, Insightful)
How are they planning to tax, though? (Score:2)
What the fuck is going on with the American economy anyway? We should have been able to recover from the dot-bomb by now, what the fuck is Bush up to in his ivory tower anyway? The national standard of living is steadily declining...
To my california representatives (Score:5, Interesting)
I know you are looking for an alternative source of revenue for the state. However I feel that an internet tax will only stifle a already hurt sector of the economy.
Driving up the 101 by where I live, I see thousands, if not millions of square feet of office space empty. If you had not worked here during the boom you would not know that at one time these offices were filled with people paying income tax to the state.
Which brings to mind a question for me, what happened to the 100k in taxes you took from me over a 3 year period between 1997-2000? I know I was not the only person who contributed that much in taxes, yet I only got 6 months unemployment and still can't find a job in IT. Why should I try and go into another career? I'm 30 years old, this is what I trained for, and right now my skills are being severly underused.
So again, please don't add more gas to this fire by taxing an already hurting economic sector. We're suffering out here in Silicon valley living month to month on the small consulting jobs which are nothing more than a handout compared to a real paycheck.
And yes John Katz, i'm still eating ramen.
Re:To my california representatives (Score:3, Informative)
California is already one of the highest taxed states in the country. We have sales tax, income tax, employment taxes, and anything else you can think of. We also have idiots like Davis and his cronies sucking money into their personal black holes.
Special note to Governor Davis:
Here's a simple lesson in economics. When there is less money to go around, you must spend less! Even my 12 year old daughter can understand this basic concept. Stop trying to figure out how to squeeze more money out of me, I don't have any. Stop driving business out of the state and you might be able to collect some income taxes from a few hundred thousand currently unemployed tech workers. Then you can piss it away with more of your pork-barrel projects that you use to pay off your political pals, you criminal piece of shit.
Steve Westly really wants to be governor. (Score:2, Interesting)
so, I get taxed for the line coming to my house (Score:2, Interesting)
New Hampshire? (Score:2)
Re:New Hampshire? (Score:2)
Re:New Hampshire? (Score:2)
But a rich person who's never had to worry about money (or someone who's become accustomed to being rich) won't be like that: they'll waste money on all kinds of stupid things they don't need, like a Lexus SUV instead of a Civic, $30 soap bars from the department store instead of Ivory or a generic brand, $50 hair-salon shampoos instead of Head and Shoulders, an expensive house that was the maximum amount they could get a mortgage for, etc.
Cut the poor person's income a little, and they won't complain much because they already had put themselves in a state where it wouldn't hurt them: their house/shack is paid off, they bought their car with cash, etc. Cut the rich person's income a little, and suddenly they can't make the house payment or the SUV payment. But they're so used to the $30 soap bars and dinners at expensive restaurants that they can't cut most of these frivolous items in order to balance their budget, and they're up to their eyeballs in debt anyway so it probably wouldn't be enough.
Everyone knows that governments are amazingly gifted at wasting money; I think NH just never had much money to begin with, so they never got in the habit of wasting so much.
Besides, I'm sure they have some taxes, such as gasoline and property taxes. These aren't affected by the economy, unless people suddenly stop driving or move out of the state.
Government Calculators Need A Minus Key (Score:2)
If my family has a budget crisis, we cut expenses. You can't always get more money but you can always find places to not to spend it. When Government says its cutting spending, it generally means they are cutting the rate of growth not its actual size.
Too bad this will never happen. Too many people are interested in taking other people's money for their own causes and politicians are more than happy to assist -- both parties.
Enron et al. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Enron et al. (Score:3, Insightful)
This is of course patently untrue. California is in this position due to mismanagement. Gray Davis is a moron. California wanted to purposefully make deregulation look like a failure so they passed laws doomed to fail. Combined with the inability of utilities to build power plants due to the Green i.e. Communist (all environmentalists hate private property rights but this is another topic) policies in place.
So the people of California got a wonderful lesson in supply and demand. Unfortunately instead of learning their lesson they whine and cry like the children they are.
Enron was not the problem (Score:2, Informative)
Virtually every tax paying citizen and business in California is seeing their incomes and revenues reduced in a similar manner. In many cases the reduction is MUCH greater than just 22%, but we are all dealing within it our own manner. It's time that both the federal and state governments learn to have the same basic fiscal responsibility asked of citizens and business in boom and bust cycles.
During the boom there were proposals to actually give tax rebates back to the taxpayers because we were simply paying more than the state government needed to run operations. In retrospect, this would have been the wise thing to do because it would have put some brakes on the state government growing to an unsustainable level. Instead, we are now seeing the politicians scramble to protect their favorite pork projects while funding for basic services such as schools, public safety and other public infrastructure are reduced to level less than they would have been had the boom never happened.
Too often it seems people are quick to criticize those who want to see smaller government or at least put severe limits on its growth. Often there are good reasons for doing so other than the accusation such people are stingy, selfish or worse.
Any one actually interested in seeing the numbers may be interested in this link [ca.gov]. Check out the Chart A, Historical Data, General Fund Balance [ca.gov] document.
Re:Enron et al. (Score:2)
Besides, if the government in DC tried to stop us, we've got the UFOs in Nevada and Arizona, so they'd be no match for us!
What Counts as Software? (Score:2, Interesting)
California won't fix its problems (Score:4, Interesting)
California is what Socialism on a greater scale in the US would be like. Non-essential public services such as free healthcare for the indigent, public housing and welfare services aren't here to actually fix a problem, they're here to punish the middle and upper classes. Don't give me that bullshit about "that's not really Socialism." No shit sherlock, Socialism exists only on paper and in the head of utopian hippies who are pathologically incapable of dealing with reality. The reality is that big government destroys civil rights and encourages violence. You want to make a difference? Vote for a Libertarian and take that percentage of your income that would have gone to welfare and give it to a homeless shelter or a free medical clinic. Those people genuinely care. The money won't get lost in a bureacracy and will actually help the poor.
I live in Virginia so I can only watch CA's problems from afar. CA's problems are of their own making. The people of california deserve this problem. I have no respect for a group of people that have police departments as institutionally corrupt as the LAPD yet have enough faith in the government that they think gun control will protect them. You can't trust your own fucking cops and yet you give up more rights to big brother. What will it take Californians? Bin Laden getting ahold of a stolen nuclear weaponing and vaporizing LA for the majority of you to realize the government can't provide for and can rarely pre-emptively protect you?
Flat Rate tax would be a nice idea (Score:2, Interesting)
Ie. the GST (Goods and Servicecs Tax), similar to VAT in England, and other systems around the world.
The Americans really need to implement a flat tax rate across the country at a federal level for this kind of thing.
Having lots of different tax rates is fine if you are only selling your goods in one area, or you are big and can afford the complex tax software.
An internet tax system will hurt small businesses unless it is a simple flat rate everywhere, or tax is played from the purchase point.
ie. Order from New York pay New York tax, although this system would be rorted as well as companies move to areas with the lowest tax rates.
Re:Flat Rate tax would be a nice idea (Score:3, Interesting)
Its a degree of flexability our county most definately needs.
If they want Silicon Valley to pack up and leave.. (Score:2)
This will be a mistake... (Score:5, Funny)
Heh, software downloads would undoubtedly apply to JavaScript, since JavaScript is software. I can see it now, Granny blunders into a porno site and after experiencing a JavaScript blitzkrieg winds up owing the state of California $47.86.
BTM
Better sources of tax income!! (Score:2, Funny)
Bribes must be doubly taxed!
Oracle (Score:4, Funny)
money money money (Score:2)
Wal-Mart, Target and Toys R Us voluntarily began collecting online sales taxes in most states and all three now charge Internet sales tax in California.
So if the government doesn't come after them for back taxes, then they get to keep the current sales tax. That means more money for the online entities that start charging tax sooner.
Charging for downloads? I usually don't complain, but that sucks. There's one good drawback I can now quote for living in a capitalistic society.
Larry Loves It (Score:3, Funny)
The root... (Score:3, Insightful)
Califronia got hit in 2 huge ways at te same time. The above is just further proof of what people already knew: Enron and other energy companies bilked california out of millions? billions? This, at a time when californians were in a slide due to the
Wait a minute! (Score:4, Insightful)
States are having budget crises for the same reason we are - there's a RECESSION. I therefore don't subscribe to the idea that the people, suffering under the same fucking recession, should somehow be expected to foot the bill to maintain the pre-recession budget levels of state governments.
If tightening our belts is good enough for us, why is it not good enough for them?
Re:Of course this will work. (Score:2)
All they have to do is abuse this just like they abuse your phone bill...pull a percentage out of their ass and tack it onto that amount you're charged by your ISP. If we're not careful, we'll probably see the same phenomenon with ISP accounts that we see with phone bills: a relatively inexpensive ISP account that costs somewhere in the neighborhood of twice as much after all the abusive extras are added in.
California taxpayers would do themselves well to nip this in the bud before it takes hold, as would responsible voters in any state.
Edit (Score:2)
That's per credit, BTW.
Re:Who broke the word? (Score:2)
Actually, I was on the internet before the www, and while there were some advantages (ultra-fast speed, even compared to now; everything worked, no "404 server error: please contact Microsoft support", no silly MS-only worms DOSing the whole net), it just wasn't all that useful unless you liked downloading Warez, playing MUDs, reading Usenet (which at least wasn't full of spam back then), or chatting on IRC. It was also really useful for people in academia to exchange files, remotely login to other computers, etc.
The WWW is what really revolutionized everything, allowing websites with useful information, web boards to discuss things in specific areas, online merchants which let you buy things you'll never find in a local store, and learn about products you never knew about before, etc. The net is really a revolution in communications, completely changing the way we do a lot of things in our lives. States trying to add taxes to things like software downloads is just so ridiculous; I'm afraid these attempts at restraining the net and taxing it is either going to backfire entirely, or ruin the net altogether (at least in this country). With the importance the net has to the global economy now, especially in first-world nations, but also in many third-world ones, if we screw things up now, the US could easily become an irrelevant backwater.
Re:Who broke the word? (Score:2, Insightful)
Imagine! We'd all be using dial-up which would cost us by the minute to use, p2p would not exist (or there would be a hell of a lot fewer people sharing files), there wouldn't be great news sites like the bbc on the internet, when you applied for a job and said you'd email them your cv you'd get a blank look, newly-released pc games would not have multiplayer over the internet options ETC ETC ETC.
The basic thing is- especially if you are being serious rather than trolling, is that although we now have spam, big businesses on the internet and other insane things, we do have a lot of advantages that we wouldn't otherwise have had.
Back when the www started I used to go out to our university's terminal room and see if anything had changed "on the world wide web". It was possibly to check a large percentage of the www and then go, "oh, nothing's been updated".
And don't even try to force me back to the pre-www days when I thought that downloading a weather picture over the internet that I couldn't even see until I sent it to the laser printer was COOL...
graspee