Saturday, October 06, 2018

No more taxes. Period!

The older I get, I find that the rules for being and doing good seem to be getting simpler by the day.  The problem of persuading others, however, has gotten to be increasingly difficult.  As Aziz Ansari says, “Everyone weighs in on everything. They don’t know anything. People don’t wanna just say, ‘I don’t know.’”  And the loud voices of idiots drown out the truth!

Today's exhibit: Tampons.

Yes, tampons. And sanitary pads. And, yes, real men talk about this too!

Almost three years ago, I blogged about the idiocy of taxing feminine hygiene products.  I wrote there:
To me, well, there is no argument here: the sales of tampons and sanitary napkins should not be taxed.  But then who listens to me anyway!
The rule is so simple, but persuading others is damn difficult.  Especially to us Rodney Dangerfields who thought our mothers had the best approach to life!

In responding to comments--yes, in those pre-trump years, there were commenters--I became blunter than I was in the blog-post:
Feminine sanitary products are necessities. I would argue that even birth control pills are necessities for that same reason--it is not like women *choose* to have periods and, therefore, it is a luxury. Unlike with shitting, which all of us do, it is a segment of the population that has to deal with menstruation. Which is why tampon tax is a remarkably stupid idea. I am surprised that it has continued this long--I am sure it is because politics is dominated by men, in the discussions and in the decision-making bodies.
This NY Times piece reports on the development in Australia, where from January 1st, tampons won't be taxed.  The report adds:
The fight over a tampon tax goes beyond Australia’s shores. In the United States, there is no tax in nine states for products like menstrual cups, pads and tampons. Five other states have no sales tax at all. Washington’s mayor signed an exemption into law last year. But 36 American states still tax sanitary products, according to the group Period Equity.
It is just bizarre that 36 states here continue to tax them.  (BTW, menstrual cups? What the hell is that?)

There are countries around the world that are a lot wiser compared to the US. Even the less "developed" countries:
Kenya was among the first countries to eliminate the tax on tampons and pads in 2004. India ended its 12 percent tax on sanitary products in July last year, and Canada abolished its goods and services tax completely in 2015.
It was a 12 percent tax in India?  Twelve percent?

Here in the US, politics is dominated by men, in the discussions and in the decision-making bodies, even more now compared to January 2016 when I blogged about tampon tax.  The outright misogyny surprises and shocks me.  As if to put the icing on the cake, the chairman of the all-male Republican membership of the Senate Judiciary Committee has this to say about why their group is all-male:


Even "intelligent" Republican women vote for such assholes!  I tell ya, persuading people about the truth is way more difficult than it should ever be.


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