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Comments on: Days of Tax-Free Internet Sales May Soon Be Over With Introduction of Remote Transactions Parity Act https://nationallawforum.com/2015/09/10/days-of-tax-free-internet-sales-may-soon-be-over-with-introduction-of-remote-transactions-parity-act/ Legal Updates. Legislative Analysis. Litigation News. Wed, 19 May 2021 17:25:21 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 By: © https://nationallawforum.com/2015/09/10/days-of-tax-free-internet-sales-may-soon-be-over-with-introduction-of-remote-transactions-parity-act/#comment-79 Thu, 17 Sep 2015 08:42:42 +0000 http://nationallawforum.com/?p=9823#comment-79 I’m with Rick. This bill basically removes the small seller exemption making business ownership a much greater burden. Doesn’t make sense in this country or any that supports free markets or capitalism, or just “fairness” under the law.
It also discourages some retailers from using Amazon in order to keep their exempt status. Well, maybe not Amazon, but most of Amazon’s competitors.

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By: Rick https://nationallawforum.com/2015/09/10/days-of-tax-free-internet-sales-may-soon-be-over-with-introduction-of-remote-transactions-parity-act/#comment-78 Thu, 10 Sep 2015 23:15:53 +0000 http://nationallawforum.com/?p=9823#comment-78 It’s still a massive state overreach. RTPA has a few token concessions that are paper thin and easily pierced, such as the audit language. Actually, for most RTPA is FAR worse than the MFA. If you sell on any marketplace, such as Amazon, Ebay, Etsy… there is no longer a small business exemption of any kind. So a small craft seller gets all the compliance burdens and authority of 46 states after them for a little craft store?

Both the MFA and RTPA are terrible. If there has to be one solution, Chairman Goodlatte’s proposal is better, much less complex and doesn’t allow states to reach across their borders.

How about a better approach: States – enforce your use taxes on your own citizens first!

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