Cpt Banjo wrote:Weston White wrote:This is the truth about the income tax though:
Excise:
1 : an internal tax levied on the manufacture, sale, or consumption of a commodity
2 : any of various taxes on privileges often assessed in the form of a license or fee
This, of course, is woefully incomplete. Mr. White, illegally-obtained income has been held to be taxable, yet it falls into neither of the categories you listed. I guess you and Pete forgot about that one, right?
The gift tax has been upheld as an excise, yet it too falls into neither of the categories you listed. If the gratuitious transfer of property can be the subject of an excise, what in the world makes you think the transfer of property in exchange for labor can't be?
Illegally obtained income, if it is still income, it would really matter now would it? Illegal income, are you serious? Big WHO CARES!
Although sure there are many other sub-classes of taxes within various classes of indirect taxes such as excises, for example: 'inheritance tax/legacy tax/succession tax or duty', 'franchise tax', 'estate tax', ‘occupation tax’, ‘license tax’, ‘privilege tax’, etc.; and of course ‘income tax’, and the one thing they all have in common, all indirect taxes. Similarly, capitations retain the sub-class of poll-taxes and personal taxes.
"The Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787
by James Madison
THURSDAY. JULY 12. IN CONVENTION
Mr. GOVr. MORRIS, admitted that some objections lay agst. his motion, but supposed they would be removed by restraining the rule to direct taxation. With regard to indirect taxes on exports & imports & on consumption, the rule would be inapplicable. Notwithstanding what had been said to the contrary he was persuaded that the imports & consumption were pretty nearly equal throughout the Union.
General PINKNEY liked the idea. He thought it so just that it could not be objected to. But foresaw that if the revision of the census was left to the discretion of the Legislature, it would never be carried into execution. The rule must be fixed, and the execution of it enforced by the Constitution. He was alarmed at what was said yesterday, *2 concerning the negroes. He was now again alarmed at what had been thrown out concerning the taxing of exports. S. Carola. has in one year exported to the amount of £600,000 Sterling all which was the fruit of the labor of her blacks. Will she be represented in proportion to this amount? She will not. Neither ought she then to be subject to a tax on it. He hoped a clause would be inserted in the system, restraining the Legislature from a 3 taxing Exports. "
So, exports and imports, that would cover duties and imposts, right?
That leaves consumption, what could that be? Umm, oh I know excises! Also known as internal taxes.
Also note what that "S. Carola." underlined comment is saying, it is discussing fruit of labor in the context of proportion, gee that sounds like AI,S9,C4, doesn't it?
And look at this gem, this is exactly what Dr. Adam Smith exemplified in Wealth of Nations. This passage is equating representation to taxation, ergo, the context is applied to those types of taxes which are to be "direct". It is also referencing the value of labor in relation to such principles.
"The Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787
by James Madison
WEDNESDAY. JULY 11. IN CONVENTION
— He could not agree that any substantial objection lay agst. fixig numbers for the perpetual standard of Representation. It was said that Representation & taxation were to go together; that taxation and wealth ought to go together, that population & wealth were not measures of each other. He admitted that in different climates, under different forms of Govt. and in different stages of civilization the inference was perfectly just. He would admit that in no situation, numbers of inhabitants were an accurate measure of wealth. He contended however that in the U. States it was sufficiently so for the object in contemplation. Altho' their climate varied considerably, yet as the Govts. the laws, and the manners of all were nearly the same, and the intercourse between different parts perfectly free, population, industry, arts, and the value of labour, would constantly tend to equalize themselves. The value of labour, might be considered as the principal criterion of wealth and ability to support taxes; and this would find its level in different places where the intercourse should be easy & free, with as much certainty as the value of money or any other thing. Wherever labour would yield most, people would resort, till the competition should destroy the inequality. Hence it is that the people are constantly swarming from the more to the less populous places — from Europe to Ama. from the Northn. & Middle parts of the U. S. to the Southern & Western. They go where land is cheaper, because there labour is dearer. If it be true that the same quantity of produce raised on the banks of the Ohio is of less value, than on the Delaware, it is also true that the same labor will raise twice or thrice, the quantity in the former, that it will raise in the latter situation."