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Msg. 25505 of 60008 |
Decoding the Proposed New Invasive IRS $600 Bank Reporting Rule
It is also recognized by the UN Declaration of Human Rights, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and many other international and regional treaties.
In a democracy, the state is subordinate to the citizen hence the government must respect the rights and dignity of the citizen. It doesn’t have to always be highly sensitive salary or health records; a citizen may not the public to know of his or her the history of frivolous videos watched on YouTube. This is a right that cannot be violated.
Confidentiality is closely related to privacy. The Oxford Dictionary defines Confidentiality as “The process of and obligation to keep a transaction, documents, etc., private and secret, i.e., confidential; the right to withhold information, e.g. medical information, from others.” At the very top of the list among the kinds of information that deserves to be confidential are bank records and financial transactional information. However, the new House reconciliation bill would breach that confidentially by allowing the IRS to monitor the bank accounts of virtually every American. The rule would require financial institutions to report cash flows of every account with more than $600 in deposits or transactions.
This is obviously highly invasive and has caused a great furor.
The cited goal for this exercise is to prevent tax fraud. There are myriad more effective ways to reduce tax fraud and increase tax revenue.
The first and easiest way to increase tax revenues is by reducing tax rates and gratuitous regulations that encumber businesses.
Following tax cuts instituted by President Trump, federal revenues hit all-time highs. This was because more people were earning and hence were paying taxes. The fact that the rates were lower didn’t reduce revenues, it increased them.
The onus to periodically send this information is on the financial institutions. Hence copious working hours will be wasted in this counterproductive effort. This will come at a considerable cost; it is very likely that the customer will end up paying the bill to facilitate his own torture. It is likely that the government will selectively apply this invasive law not only to target groups that they consider their political challengers but individuals as well.
All the government has to do is dig through the transactions of groups they consider their adversaries, such as the Republican Party or President Trump’s campaign or any major Gun dealer.
Quite soon they can systematically target those donors in various ways, the government certainly has the wherewithal to do it. Studies have shown that human behavior changes quite drastically with the knowledge he or she is being monitored. On paper, the citizen has the legal right to send money to any political party or any organization. However, when the citizen is aware that transactions are being monitored, he or she may hesitate to donate to a particular political party or to a cause that the government is opposed to just to avoid being subjected to harassment. Thus the government has found an indirect way to defund organizations that they consider their rivals. The bill is also seeking $80 Billion to bolster the IRS and tax enforcement which could mean more tax harassment. No business big or small enjoys being subjected to frequent exercises of intrusive scrutiny. Smaller businesses that cannot afford a team of accountants to deal with this may even choose to shut down in extreme cases.
Multi-national businesses will shift both their business and their money overseas where the laws are more conducive to economic growth.
The government has no business either being in business or monitoring business but the socialists believe in the exact opposite.
The establishment propagandist outfits who masquerade as the news media are obviously silent about this proposal. A coalition of several dozen financial industry trade organizations dispatched a letter to various members of Congress, expressing their opposition to a proposal. Some Republicans such as Senator Cynthia Lummis, Senator Tommy Tuberville, Congressman Steve Scalise are pushing back on the proposal. But this noise should have been louder and should have been in unison.
Giving any government body gratuitous access to the financial information of individuals is both dangerous and unconstitutional. http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2021/10/decoding_the_proposed_new_invasive_irs_rule.html |
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