Originally Posted by
stile99
In what sense is it unfair? City governments collect tax to pay for such things as schools, police, and fire departments. I can see no possible reason a resident of Oklahoma City Oklahoma should be expected to pay for these things in Bozeman Montana, and vice versa. State governments charge taxes to pay more for the infrastructure, the roads for example, which the delivery companies already pay in the fuel tax. The resident of Bozeman Montana should not be expected to pay for the upkeep of Meridian Blvd in OKC. Not to turn this all political, but why is the only argument for collecting tax from people who do not owe it always 'fairness', using some strange definition of 'fair' that appears in no dictionary?
If online shopping is killing brick and mortar (what, we're on the 20th anniversary of that claim now? 25th? Should I get a card? Something in silver perhaps?) then brick and mortar needs to start offering what online is offering, rather than whine about how taxes are 'unfair'. If I go to Amazon, I can have my order delivered to my door in two days. If I go to a store, delivery will be an extra charge, it will be sometime in the next 4-6 weeks, assuming it is even offered at all. If you can't compete, go ahead and die rather than scream about how 'unfair' it is that the other guy is better than you. I literally can NOT count the number of times I've gone into a store only to hear "We don't have that in stock, but we can order it". Yeah. So can I.
So I do.
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