What do these electrons represent?
Money that isn't being used to buy or trade anything.
Welcome to Baptist Board, a friendly forum to discuss the Baptist Faith in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to all the features that our community has to offer.
We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!
What do these electrons represent?
OK, I suppose if they called the interdiction of money transfers a tax it would be constitutional.
Hmmm...where have we heard that before? Oh yeah. The rationale for the ObamaCare mandate being held to be constitutional was that it was ruled a tax.
Money ...............
That is right. What it is being used for is irrelevant.
That is right. What it is being used for is irrelevant.
I do some consulting for some MNOs who primary business is building apps that allow remittances to be sent to Mexico and Central and South America. With the development of mobile commerce, there's not too much that needs to be done to send remittances to Mexico, Iran or any of the sanctioned countries if you want. we would have to police the internet the way that China does. And in the US, that's a tremendously tall task to ask of a government who has to beg Apple to crack the encryption on a phone.
There's just too many brilliant people in the United States that would jump into that space be it black market, deep web or something else.
The only way to tax the remittances is to tax the company sending them. And all they have to do is set up their corporate offices else where as so many companies do.
Mexico is currently using the US as a giant tax-free cash cow. This is basically billions of dollars of free money entering their country. If Mexico wants to continue receiving it there is no reason we can't tax it.
OK, so how will this tax be implemented?
New law passed by Congress?
Executive order by the President?
Well as admitted above, yes people can circumvent any law to some extant, especially if the government chooses to not enforce it.
But we see, as In the case of Iran for instance, "LONDON/ANKARA (Reuters) - Despite a diplomatic thaw, Western banks are steering clear of attempts by Iran to get them involved in financing humanitarian transactions, fearing they could be penalized under U.S. sanctions, bankers and government officials told Reuters...but measures by the European Union and the United States have made trade generally more difficult over the past two years by hindering payments and shipping." - And it hasn't been necessary to police the internet as China does.
Mexico is currently using the US as a giant tax-free cash cow. This is basically billions of dollars of free money entering their country. If Mexico wants to continue receiving it there is no reason we can't tax it.
OK, so how will this tax be implemented?
New law passed by Congress?
Executive order by the President?
And folk think that Mexico has no recourse to punish America? Dream on folk. I've seen it happen before with other countries. We try to punish them or cause a problem and they simply reply by causing us problems. Ain't no free lunch folk!
Mexico has some of the most restrictive immigration laws in the hemisphere. Yet their govt prints out and distributes handbooks showing their own poor how best to illegally enter our country.
Have you ever worked in one of the construction trades? I did when I was young, but now those trades are taken over by illegal immigrants.
And where have our manufacturing jobs gone? Mostly to Mexico.
If millions of Americans were entering their country illegally, taking millions of jobs away from their own native born workers, you can safely assume they would act.
Even if it meant straining relations with the US. Taxing remittances seems a small and fair means of evening the balances.
OK, I suppose if they called the interdiction of money transfers a tax it would be constitutional.
Hmmm...where have we heard that before? Oh yeah. The rationale for the ObamaCare mandate being held to be constitutional was that it was ruled a tax.
I understand what you're saying. But for so long, this has been a mutually beneficial happening for both countries. I think it hasn't been until recently that the overall demographics of the country started to shift that folks who are in the majority started really complaining about it. And they wouldn't have said anything if it had not been on Fox News or conservative talk radio.
How'd they take over those jobs? They aren't hiring anyone.
Illegal immigrants didn't cause this.
Now you're starting to sound like Fox News. They aren't "taking" jobs from anyone. They are being hired by the folks who want to give them jobs.
Again, unlike China and a lot of our other trading partners, we have a trade surplus with Mexico in the hundreds of billions of dollars. Taxing remittances wouldn't push us towards evening the balances, but would rather cause considerable harm to our surplus trade balance with Mexico.
As for illegals taking jobs in the construction industry, it has been a fact of life for many years. Sure, the contractors hire them cause they can get them so cheap, so technically they are not "taking" jobs.
In today's weak economy not many construction jobs are available, but the ones that are, are mostly held by illegals, at least in my area of the country.
Painting, drywall, roofing, asphalt, landscaping, all Mexican workers. This wasn't the case 30 years ago. E-verify should be used in all states IMO.
I do not have cable TV and do not watch Fox News. It would have been a nifty little jab though.
We have been running a trade deficit for many years with Mexico. LINK. It has only turned around in the last few months because we have not needed to import so much oil from them. Think fracking and the oil glut. Up until this year we have had trade deficits with Mexico in the neighborhood of $50 billion annual. Anyway, this wasn't even mentioned above. We were discussing taxing remittances.
If they have come here illegally, and are employed illegally, they are taking jobs that otherwise would be worked by US citizens, that is taking jobs.How is it a fact if you turn around and say the contractors are hiring them? They are being given jobs. They aren't taking them from anyone.
Good idea. Of course police are not able to act on such tips. States are not able to act on such tips, and the ones that tried to were sued by the current administration. And then there is the matter of sanctuary cites who absolutely refuse to cooperate with ICE. And the fact that ICE cannot possibly respond to millions of tips nationwide and if they do they have been instructed to use prosecutorial discretion. But other that that it's a great idea.Zaac said:Then report the folks who are hiring them.
Again, this is why programs such as E-verify would be enforcement tools that actually work.Zaac said:Again, if you know this, report them.
But in this case I am speaking of things that I have observed as an individual.Zaac said:It was not intended as a jab. I listen to conservative talk and I watch Fox News, and CNN, and MSNBC. You're repeating the conservative talking points. You may not have watched it on Fox, but the information made it to you because somebody repeated what they heard on Fox and one of the conservative talk programs.
Zaac said:If you just look at imports vs exports, yes....
The focus here is that taxing the $25 billion in remittances to Mexico, originating from people who are largely here illegally to begin with, could be a good move for the US. Seems fair to me.
Hi ITL,Sounds like a plan with a lot of good intention. How would it be implemented? How would it work?
List the necessary steps the government would take to intercept a money transfer to Mexico.