| ▲ | dpark 10 hours ago | |||||||
> Pretending that these problems don't exist because they don't exist elsewhere is not helpful. Pretend that’s everything in the US is globally unique to us also is not helpful. “No one else has sales tax like us” is likely not true but also not super relevant. Tax collecting agencies in 50 states and however many territories could issue guidance tomorrow for how to deal with this and it would have the force of law until/unless legislatures see fit to define different rules. > for every complex problem there is a solution that is simple, obvious, and wrong. Sure, but for every simple problem there is a small army of people online pretending it’s insurmountable. | ||||||||
| ▲ | jandrewrogers 10 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
The tax authorities cannot unilaterally change the law with "guidance". It is explicitly written into statute in many cases, requiring legislative action across thousands of independent tax authorities. Complicating it more is that in some cases a change must satisfy constitutional requirements which are even harder to change. Everything is easy if you pretend that you can change things by authoritarian fiat instead of abiding by existing statutory and constitutional restrictions. The courts would never allow it. | ||||||||
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