Subscribers to Netflix, Hulu, Amazon Prime Video, Disney+, Apple TV, and other streaming services could find a hefty tax added to their bill as soon as this year. The Post reports that the new Netflix tax would be one of several new taxes slapped on residents of Montgomery County and the rest of the state to cover a new $6000-per-taxpayer spending hike for public education statewide. Montgomery County is already spending record amounts on public schools, and the County's own recent report shows that the declining school system has only gotten worse for all the high spending.
Now residents' Baby Yoda and You addictions are squarely in the tax crosshairs of the cartel. With property and income taxes at record highs, it is almost impossible for officials to add $6000 in hikes via those taxes. The county is now turning to these sin taxes, similar to those you pay on your cell phone service and the rain that falls in your home's yard, to get the same amount in sneakier ways. You may recall that the County floated a new Trash Tax in 2019, for example.
The Netflix tax will be hard to pass openly, however. Most of their constituents will be furious, and the tax will fall heaviest on young people, the poor and senior citizens - like all of "progressive" Montgomery County's regressive flat taxes.
This is not "the Council" and it is not just about Montgomery County. The proposal is by the STATE legislators regarding the STATE sale tax which is paid throughout the entire STATE.
ReplyDeleteHere is a link to the Post's article from last week so you don't have to rely on Dyer's game of "Telephone".
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/md-politics/leading-maryland-democrats-no-income-property-or-sales-tax-hikes-in-2020/2020/01/03/cb4152d2-2daa-11ea-bcd4-24597950008f_story.html
The very first paragraph of the Post's article:
"Maryland’s new legislative leaders flatly ruled out raising income, property or sales tax rates this year to pay for sweeping education measures."
Also, the article cites outgoing Maryland Senate President Mike Miller (Prince George's County), incoming Senate President Bill Ferguson (Baltimore City), House of Delegates Speaker Adrienne Jones (Baltimore County), and an unnamed spokesman for Governor Larry Hogan, who declined to comment.
NOTHING to do with the Montgomery County Council.
Dyer: "a Friday news dump strategically arranged by The Washington Post, whose reporters were aware of the pending tax earlier in the week, another clear example of coordination between the Montgomery County political cartel and the Post."
A better explanation is that the reporters of The Washington Post are professional journalists who take their jobs seriously, and are awake in the daytime and in constant contact with the elected and appointed officials whom they cover.
Dyer literally starts his article with "Democratic leaders in the Maryland General Assembly"
DeleteIt doesn't say Council, right? You don't want to discuss the substance of this article, with good reason.
The Post? Since when should I believe the Post? Dear leader tells me it is fake news and he never lies
ReplyDelete