Bricks and mortar businesses are the one's getting the bigger subsidies; roads, utilities, police/fire protection, mass transit, interstate highwasy system, yada , yada............
Originally Posted by Whirlaway
Get real. Not on the same level; a small internet retailer located in Oshkosh; who sells vacuum cleaner replacement parts and bags through ebay uses significantly lower local infrastructure and services than does the local Wal-Mart, who sells to the same customer.
Where is the level playing field on that side of the coin?
You want a "level the playing field tax" on the local consumer to offset the disadvantage of the small out of state retailer ?
According to your logic fair is fair; tax em !
Originally Posted by Whirlaway
Wait, you're trying to somehow argue that Wal-mart is a Mom & Pop small business, which the proposed law already exempts? Not to mention that Wal-mart is a poor example to use given that it also has a huge online sales presence.
And if you want to use an extreme example, I can throw one back at you - Amazon.com is an internet seller that eats up much more local infrastructure and services than your Mom & Pop shops.
And yes, fair is fair - if you're going to do business in a state, you should be subject to that state's laws (in this case, sales tax).