|
|||||||||||
|
How Does NESARA
Compare to Other Proposals? |
|
Practically speaking, the flat tax solves few problems. Currently many Americans pay as much as 33% or more in cumulative taxes because tax rates vary for each individual based on income brackets, exemptions and a complex system of tax codes. The flat tax proposal would create a single flat rate tax fixed at 17% that would be the same rate for all Americans. Most Americans would see this as a reduction in tax rate as the national average is currently 22%. In summary:
Disadvantages:
There’s still paper work involved, many hours of unproductive labor to support the process, there’s still a rogue IRS on the loose, there is still intrusion of privacy, there is still taxation on production rather than consumption, and with a flat tax there is still an unsound money system. The Flat Tax supposedly reduces the unproductive labor and paper work involved with compliance, but in the end, the Flat Tax is still an immoral and intrusive income tax. The Flat Tax provides no provisions to resolve the root problem, an unsound money system.
Tax reform is a good start, but ultimately futile without monetary reform. NESARA solves
both problems. |
|
Requires an Adobe PDF reader To download to your computer, use your other mouse button and select Save Target As, Save Link As, or Save Link to Disk |
Sponsored by the NESARA Institute
23805 Greenwell Springs Rd.
Greenwell Springs, Louisiana 70739
(606) 205–4908