|
-
01-01-2001 12:00 AM
|
|
-
-
-
-
-
Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
|
Have you seen your phone bill lately?
Fed. Tax
Use tax
911 tax
local tax
connection tax
landline tax
tax this
tax that
tax on tax
tax on tax on tax
and oh, by the way...you made no calls this billing period so you owe the phone company nothing except basic service, HOWEVER you must still pay the taxes or we'll have to turn off your phone service.
Thanks
|
|
-
-
-
-
-
Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
|
More phone tax? Are you crazy?
This is downright ridiculous-I try to use my phone instead of drive my car...supposedly, to save me some money. I shop phone service providers constantly, trying to bring that big bill down. Seems like first the Feds, and now the state, cant bear for me to keep ANY of the money I work for. READ MY LIPS! NO NEW TAXES!!!
|
|
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
|
Did you even read the bill?
Yeah the State Police blew past their last budget protecting your arse--couldnt have been the nearly dollar a gallon gas rise or the fact that they are dictated to buy everything they use by DMB-Computers, buildings, cars you name it. Maybe they should just close their doors when they reach their budget ceiling? Send all their people home? Quite taking calls after 5pm? Not work holidays? Police work is not a money maker-if you want it then it costs-if not then dont complain when you dont have it. Get a grip Mike-maybe you should take the time to review "how" they blew past their budget instead of listening to the media. Of course that might take some time on your part-- better to just take everything your told for granted.
|
|
-
-
Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
|
did you even read the bill
If he did, he does not understand it anyway. The problem is the public does not get it. The state police are out of money. Tighten the belt any more and it will not be holding up the pants. I agree, stop talking calls. Posts have closed, millage restrictions, no overtime, broken equipment, no recruit schools in five years, uniforms with holes in them, no flash lights that work, broken cars and these nuts keep thinking we need to tighten the belt. WE HAVE, we have no more left. Public saftey has taken a back seat. Rest easy Michigan, your state police are hurting. It will get worse come October.
|
|
-
-
-
-
-
-
Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
|
Republicrats or Demolucans?
"my point was a slam on the democrats. They do not care about cutting fat or police protection."
Sometimes "police protection" becomes another kind of governmental fat deposit rife with inefficiency and pork-barreling. Both parties are guilty of fattening up our police-state, and too many quivering sheep out there lap this stuff up, gladly hucking liberties out the window in exchange for a little temporary security.
|
|
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
pfschaffner


- Joined on 11-22-2008
|
I've read this bill several times and cannot make sense of the actual tax mechanism. It appears to
impose a uniform tax "on each service user," which is defined as "a person receiving a communications service." That is: it is a flat tax of $1.35 per phone-using person, regardless of how many phone lines that person owns or how many service providers that person uses. That is what the bill actually says--but such a thing would be impossible to apply, since it would require immensely complex coordination between service providers. John Doe has two cell phones, a land line, and a fax line. He still owes only $1.35, but to which provider does he pay it? Perhaps the bill meant to say 'a tax on each service used by a service user,' or 'a tax on each phone number owned by a service user' or 'a tax on each user's services from a single service provider.' But which of those?
Even if that question could be resolved, there are others. The bill presupposes that service providers employ 'regular billings.' But what about those of us with pre-paid mobile phones? We never get billed, and when we do pay, it is never on a monthly basis but only for set of commodity 'minutes' that can be used at any time. And the name and address associated with the account are purely nominal: there is nothing to stop a user of a prepaid SIM from giving an address in another state, or another name, for that matter. How will such things be accommodated? I'm sure there are others I haven't thought of. It is hard to believe a bill could be this incoherently written.
|
|
-
-
Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
|
the police stater's favorite 'worst case scenario'.
"The next time your daughter breaks down on the freeway and gets assaulted, the next time you call for a breaking and entering in progress and you get no response think about this small tax that could save a life of a loved one."
how about this...
"The next time your daughter breaks down on the highway, and a guy comes up to assault her, have her taught how to properly use a weapon. she will be able, with a minimum of training to dispatch the felon with one or two shots from the twelve gauge shotgun she knows well how to use."
the problem with this is, the police stater's have already made carrying a weapon in your car ILLEGAL, so your daughter CAN'T DO THAT. even if you taught her how.
how about allowing the people of michigan to PROTECT THEMSELVES IN THE EVENT OF A PERSONAL ATTACK? that would go farther in PREVENTING PERSONAL ATTACKS than putting more policemen on the streets.
now let's look at 'worst case scenario' number two.
"the next time you call for a breaking and entering in progress and get no response... take that same twelve gauge shotgun off the wall and point it at the door the bad guy is trying to break in. as soon as it swings open, blast him. if he get's up, blast him again.
now, the hopolophobes will cry "what if it's a relative or somebody you know trying to get in to save you?"
my relatives don't kick in doors at odd hours of the night. my friends don't either. they know that this is the 'right way to get their butts shot'. anyone with any common sense realizes this too.
and, since someone is going to say it, 'what if its the police trying to serve a warrant?'.
they have the legal obligation to knock and announce before they start kicking. if they can't yell "POLICE!!! WE HAVE A WARRANT!!! loudly enough to be heard from the other side of the door, they know what the consequences will be.
now, both of these solutions are simple, don't cost the citizens of this state a dime, and are constitutionally supportable. the draconian gun laws of this state are not.
neither relies on 'police response time' as part of the plan, and neither relies on anything else other than a citizen saving himself.
now, the police's job is NOT to protect you from crime, it's to ENFORCE THE LAW. a police officer can watch as a person beats you to death before arresting him for your murder. he is NOT legally obligated to protect you from anything.
in other words, he is not obligated to stop the person from assaulting your daughter, or the person from kicking in your door, but he IS obligated to investigate the crime and attempt to arrest the subject for doing it.
it's YOUR job to protect YOUR life. it's the government's job not to take that life away without due process.
|
|
-
-
-
-
Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
|
using the daughter threat
I have always supported the police in the past and probably will for the most part in the future. I have read this bill and I have to say I just will not support it. Another tax applied to people who are over taxed as it is. What really bothers me is using the threat of "the next time your daughter breaks down." I can't belive the state police would use a scare tactic like that to put money in their pockets. I have already wrote and sent letters to my Senator and Representative to vote completly against this bill. I encourage everyone else to do the same.
|
|
-
-
-
Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
|
Disband The State Revenue Dept.
Keep the crime lab until a few private ones can get up and running.
|
|
-
-
Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
|
The Threat Is Baloney Anyhow
Go sit along the freeway or any road and see how long it takes for the state boys to come see if you're okay. If you happen to park in a place where kids drink beer it may be quick, if it's along the freeway you will just get to wave as they go past in their hunt for the elusive speeders.
|
|
-
-
|
|
|