None. They're passed on to the consumer.
So, instead of misreading my question intentionally and providing a smarmy non-answer, can you give me an example of direct business-to-business taxes that are passed on to consumers? We talked about payroll and corporate income taxes, but the previous claim by Texacon was that those are not what constitutes the 22% number. Those "don't matter" as he said. So what are these other mysterious taxes?
Question for you, are you opposed to a national sales tax to replace an income-based tax?
Not specifically, no. It has to replace it, the 16th amendment has to be repealed, and 30% is way too high. It should be advertised as what it is, a 30% sales tax, so that people know just how much money our government takes from us instead of calling it a 23% tax by switching around the math. I'm thinking it will damage the housing market the way it's curently drafted as well. People who buy homes will be financing taxes, which is horribly wasteful., even with a 20% down payment. A flat tax seems more equitable to me than the way the Fair Tax is drafted. You're even still exempting the bottom part of society from paying taxes with the prebate. You claim that you don't like progressive taxes, but the Fair Tax has a progressive component. Some portion of the people who aren't paying taxes now still won't be paying taxes under the Fair Tax.
If so, are you content with the current tax structure? Are you content with it being graduated AKA "progressive" which, IMO is REgressive?
No, it's not an either-or false dilemma you're trying to wedge me into. Just because I'm not particularly happy with the "Fair" tax doesn't mean that I like the current system. I've already told you this.
What are your plans, other than cutting spending and keeping the same BS structure in place?
Who said I want to keep the current system in place? I said there were lots of ways to simplify the current system with a flat tax and eliminating earned income credits and whatnot. Our government is, at this point, simply way too large. Don't expect me to get overly excited about a plan that simply changes who collects the taxes and files the returns, especially when misleading advertising is being used.
I think an income-based tax is immoral. IMO, it is unAmerican that the federal and state governments get their cut before I do. It's immoral to have to pay to work.
How is it logically immoral? If you don't pay to work, then you'll pay more to eat and buy things. I'm not sure it's immoral. I think it's fair that the more you make, the more you pay under an income tax structure, although it doesn't have to be progressive. You pay more when you make more under a flat tax, too. But as I mentioned, I'm not opposed to a national sales tax if it's not 30%. If the Fair Tax is revenue neutral, there's no logical way that things will cost less after the tax is enacted and relative to one's income without payroll and income taxes. I don't believe the math works that way. All things said and done, things will cost more for the average American, even though they're not paying income taxes and payroll taxes. That's not great for a "consumer-based" economy.
We're a consumer-based economy.
Which is a slight part of the problem. There's a happy medium between being consumer-based and producer-based.
At this nation's founding we had a consumption-based tax called tariffs...which were passed on to the consumer. The income-based tax is something straight out of the Communist Manifesto, and no, that's not just an overly emotional argument, it is what it is. I want to see a consumption-based tax. I want all other taxes gone. I'm tired of the shell game. I'm tired of having to search my balls off for little write-offs just to get more of my own money back at the beginning of each year. I want a transparent, one and done structure. Spending is a completely separate issue from taxation, in the terms of this argument. Of course we need to get spending down.
At this nation's founding, they didn't need 30% tariffs. Taxes need to be lowered in total eventually. The sooner the better. Spending is part of the discussion because it's difficult to keep lowering taxes and financing the rest of the wasteful spending with debt. A revenue-neutral tax structure, no matter how simple, isn't going to magically ramp up the economy. Come back with a 15% national sales tax, calculated as one would calculate any other state or local sales tax, and I might get excited.