quote:
Originally posted by Hometown
Sorry about that. I was preparing for a death match.
Oh, the gloves were off. I had to step between you before you started posting blackmail worthy photoshops.
Per the sales tax comment above:
While my guttural reaction is to exempt some things, it is a true slippery slope. Every lobby would want to get in on the action. If drugs, why not food? If food, does that count eating out? How about junk food and pop? If pop, why not beer - it's better for you than pop. And what brands? Should someone get a tax break for buying caviar or a name brand prescription when something else would meet the need?
We all need clothing. And toothbrushes, gotta have toothbrushes. What about non-prescription drugs? What would count as a drug - therapy "medicines?" Also, some people use cough syrup to get high - so should we exclude that? Tampons? Gas should be tax free, we all need gas in Oklahoma to survive.
How about safety glasses, ear plugs, and other prevented health items? Condoms? Certainly condoms could do as much good for society as any other health prevention (oh how slim our jail populations would be if only lowlifes could have tax free condoms!).
Perhaps I am being obnoxious, but only a little. The fact is many items are "necessities." We need gasoline, food, medicine, clothing. We also need tax revenue.
Tax it across the board.