You're describing the income tax when you talk about incomprehensibility. However, since we levied tariffs and completely funded our government with tariffs for more than 150 years, I don't think its constitutionality is in question. But you never know. I think the tariff system could be made simpler, but I'm not totally convinced it's necessary.Personally, I would make out like a bandit with the FairTax, so from a greedy perspective I would be inclined to agree. Really, my main concern is the deflective nature of the organization that is proposing it, not the principle of a consumption tax. Perhaps thinking it through and at least answering some questions before ammending the Constitution would be the smart move. It would make me feel better about it anyway.
I think the FairTax would be such a boon to our economy, foreign competition would be negligible. But let's implement the FairTax, and if it becomes a problem, it will be much easier to solve than reforming (for the nth time) our monstrous income tax system. Even if tariffs were needed, and even if they were complicated, they could not possibly be more complicated or unfair than our current income tax system.
And thank you for a thoughtful, reasoned response. That's unusual here. Originally Posted by CuteOldGuy
Tariffs are certainly constitutional. Sifting through personal items, taking inventory of those personal items we purchased, and storing that data on government databases (in order to collect the tariff), certainly screams of an invasion of privacy lawsuit, imho.