The Jackson County Libertarian : E-Rate tax !
The Jackson County Libertarian
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"FCC says Dont ask cuz We won't let you tell about the E-rate !"

Warning! The FCC is about to slap
another E-Rate tax on our phone bill
WASHINGTON, DC -- Your phone bill may rise again next month,
Libertarians warn, thanks to a sneaky long-distance charge from
Washington, DC -- a $900 million increase in the so-called E-rate tax.
"We're irate over the E-rate," said Steve Dasbach, national
director of the Libertarian Party. "Congress has given unelected
bureaucrats the power to impose an unconstitutional tax on an
unsuspecting public."
The Federal Communications Commission is scheduled to vote on
Thursday (May 27, 1999) to approve a massive increase in the E-rate program, a
multibillion-dollar telephone tax to pay for connecting every
government-run school and library to the Internet.
Under the Telecommunications Act of 1996, Congress instructed
the FCC to create "mechanisms" to fund the program, and so the
Commission slapped a 5% tax on all interstate long-distance phone
calls.
"This tax is plainly unconstitutional because only Congress has
the power to tax," said Dasbach. "But in this case, politicians were
eager to delegate this power to the FCC. After all, you didn't vote the
FCC commissioners into office -- and you can't vote them out. The
result is that politicians evade the blame for raising taxes, while
eagerly claiming credit for ladling out cash to schools and libraries
in their districts."
The E-rate is sometimes referred to as the Gore Tax, Dasbach
noted, because of the vice president's goal of wiring all schools to
the Internet at taxpayer expense.
"Looks like the taxpayers are getting Gored -- again," said
Dasbach. "Al Gore didn't invent the Internet, but he did invent a
sneaky way for the government to milk it for tax revenue."
And the Republican response to the tax?
"In a typical example of GOP double-talk, they demanded that it
be replaced -- with a different tax," said Dasbach. "Rep. Billy Tauzin,
chairman of the House telecommunications subcommittee, asserted that a
telephone excise tax would be more 'honest.' But what would really be
honest would be for Republicans to admit that government has no
business forcing anyone to pay for anyone else's Internet access,
period."
Dasbach also noted that FCC Chairman William Kennard had the
gall to praise the multibillion-dollar program for its "affordability
and efficiency."
"In a sense, every government program is affordable and
efficient, for the government: Affordable, because politicians are
paying for it with other people's money; and efficient, because if you
don't pay up, you could get hauled off to jail."
The only solution, said Dasbach, is to abolish the E-rate
program and tell the government to keep its hands off the Internet --
and its taxes off Americans' phone bills.
"We're telling Congress and the FCC that the 'E' in the
so-called E-rate program stands for egregious, evasive, and
exorbitant -- and it should be eliminated.
"If there's any benefit to this telephone tax, it's that
students who get wired to the Internet as a result might read the
Constitution on-line -- and learn that the E-rate is just another
unconstitutional government program financed with another
unconstitutional government tax."
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