Hidden Taxes

Guest Post by John Stossel

Hidden Taxes

The cable bill was the last straw, says Kristin Tate. “That’s the one that really made me mad.”

Comcast included $36 in charges for mysterious things like “utility tax” and “government access fee.”

That motivated her to research obscure taxes and put what she learned in a new book, “How Do I Tax Thee? A Field Guide to the Great American Rip-Off.”

Rip-off? Even limited government needs some taxes to fund basic functions.

“Yes,” says Tate. “But politicians are cowards. Instead of creating a tax, they magically create these little fees (so) they don’t have to tell their voters they raised taxes.”

Voters don’t often notice the sneaky taxes.

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Yesterday was “Tax Day.” It was April 17 this year because April 15 fell on Sunday and Monday was Emancipation Day. But by calling April 17 “Tax Day,” the media miss the big picture. Income taxes make up less than half the tax most of us pay.

We also must pay payroll tax, corporate tax, gift tax, gambling tax, federal unemployment tax, gas tax, cable and telecom taxes, plane ticket tax, FCC subscriber line charges, car documentation fees, liquor and cigarette taxes, etc.

People can’t keep track. For my latest YouTube video, Tate asked people, “What’s your tax rate?” Tourists in Times Square said that they thought they paid about 20 percent. But they left off the hotel taxes, airline taxes, etc., that push Americans’ total tax load to almost 50 percent.

When you pay those hidden taxes, you may assume they go toward useful things, but Tate knows her taxes pay for government waste.

“Extreme inefficiencies, pensions that are to die for — these amazing salaries that these public workers get that are just laughably above market.” New York City’s average subway worker makes $155,000 a year.

Politicians suggest their extra taxes go, not to fund those big salaries and “pensions to-die-for,” but to pay for the specific services for which the taxes are named. Tate says that’s rarely true.

“Cable bills and cellphone bills both have an ‘Enhanced 911 Fee.’ Consumers were told 911 fees were necessary to make upgrades to emergency communication needs. (But) after it was updated, instead of taking away the tax, it just stayed there.”

Chicago doubled cellphone fees to fund its Olympics bid. The Olympics rejected Chicago — but the tax remained. Now Mayor Rahm Emanuel wants to raise it again.

More. They always want more.

“New York City has an eight-cent ‘bagel-cutting tax,'” says Tate. For some reason, unsliced bagels are not taxed.

California has a 33 percent tax on fruit bought through a vending machine.

Maine imposes a one-and-a-half-cent per pound tax on blueberries shipped out of state.

Because these taxes sound petty, governments disguise them, says Tate, using “important-sounding language — like ‘documentation fee,’ ‘service charge,’ or ‘equalization fee.'” But most of the money raised just goes to the general budget.

“Wisconsin just renamed its 911 fee the ‘Police and Fire Protection Fee,'” says Tate. “But actually, none of that money directly goes to fire or police protection. Instead it goes straight into the state’s general fund.”

And they still can’t fund the pensions the politicians promised government workers.

Tate adopted two dogs and then learned that New York City imposes a $34 per year “pet licensing fee.”

“I won’t pay it,” says Tate. “I am technically breaking the law.”

She’s braver than I am. I try to follow government’s stupid rules. And if I broke them, I wouldn’t announce it. I figure the IRS is eager to punish government critics like me.

“I’m totally comfortable talking about that,” said Tate. “They can come track me down.”

They may. Governments go to great lengths to collect taxes.

“Seattle purchased lists of people buying pet food and mailed them threatening letters,” says Tate. “The county’s pet-licensing agency made more than $80,000.”

Governments should drop the pretense and just charge one huge “everything tax.”

Of course, then taxpayers might wake up and realize what’s been done to us. That’s one thing politicians don’t want.

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7 Comments
IluvCO2
IluvCO2
April 18, 2018 8:49 pm

I once saw a show by John Stossel, where he was with a woman and they were eating gmo and chemically treated food and stated it was just fine. No problems, no issues with health, just pure goodness. He is bought and sold like most everyone else. He posits as a libertarian, but he’s just a fucking shill for big agra and big pharma. Fuck that mustached bastard.

gigi belser
gigi belser
April 18, 2018 9:04 pm

I would tell them that I eat dog food:-)…

nkit
nkit
  gigi belser
April 18, 2018 11:36 pm

Alpo Lamb and rice doesn’t suck…

kokoda the Deplorable Raccoon and I-LUV-CO2
kokoda the Deplorable Raccoon and I-LUV-CO2
April 18, 2018 9:20 pm

They are ‘stealth taxes’.
Author is correct, the politicians are cowards. All stealth taxes should be eliminated and we should be taxed with one yearly income tax.

Wip
Wip
April 18, 2018 10:56 pm

Just say Moo.

Mad as hell
Mad as hell
April 19, 2018 10:40 am

Or, simply don’t buy the shit they tax. See frugality and saving keeps you out of debt, free to do more important things and also you can smile when you see stories like this. It is some solace when you see the “teacher” up the street bitching that she STILL does not have enough [Insert need for children here] , while at the same time supporting a stupid ass walkout from the classroom tomorrow for “gun violence”. Frugality never felt so damn good….

Oilman2
Oilman2
April 19, 2018 10:50 am

And the only way to avoid these taxes is to do exactly as the author has done – don’t pay them. Grow a pair, gentlemen, and realize they are not going to raise a fuss over $60. Just going to court over that would be stupid. If lots of people just didn’t pay, even then they would pick an example or two and then use media to scare everyone else into compliance. They aren’t going to take your house away or your car or deny you the ability to work – they just want to shake you down.

Fuck them.

I’m already not paying many and the list is growing. I fight every tax appraisal and vote no on every new tax bill I see. Doing nothing and paying them like a meek lamb going to slaughter? If you are OK with that, then maybe you need to take that bullshit “manliness” test from yesterday…