edward
01-26-2009, 10:00 PM
Mandatory Equine Licenses Enacted
by Darol Dickinson~~ 1-26-09 From The Proud Political Junkie's Gazette
The New Hampshire Municipal Association proudly touts a new special "equine"
tax that will increase jobs and create new state income from the estimated 24,000
equine in New Hampshire. A licensing of each and every equine is proposed to be
effective July 1, 2009. This is a tax of $25 per horse (equine) and in cases of refusal
to comply, the state adds another $50 to slap the cowboys in line. It isn't a smoke
screen about export, food safety or disease, it is just a new state income.
Beyond the state lines of New Hampshire, the USDA has been at war with livestock
owners to coerce enrollment in the National Animal Identification System (NAIS), a
multi-billion dollar scheme to computerize, number and create a permanent
surveillance system on all US livestock. This plot is the mother of all numbering
scenarios. With the commerce of all US livestock, at the end of three years the total
computer movements recorded, and paid for by animal owners, would eclipse the
number of the earth's human population.
These draconian sounding tax collection schemes, although totally putrid to animal
lovers, are completely sane to bureau-rats who's salary increases, retirement and
weekly sustenance depend on innovative ways to transfer wealth from the regulated
to the regulators.
Just down the trail to New York 88 new taxes have been deviously hatched by the
lowly staff of Governor David Paterson to help pay for his flawed $15.4 billion
budget gap. Hookers who have enjoyed a tax break on work clothes worth less than
$110, won't any more. An 18% increase on sodas is proposed; higher gas tax,
increased taxi tax, boats, cars, rental car taxes, cigars, iPods, etc. Plush
governmental cubicles high in the New York sky are filled with think-tank devious
minds searching the alleys for a new tax source to increase the regulator's revenue.
New York Conservative Party Chairman, Michael Long says, "You're (Gov.
Paterson) sending notice to the people of New York that we really don't want you
here."
Tribute ideas like the USDA's NAIS, horse licensing and the New York taxationists
search the world over to locate new and innovative collection methods. It is one
thing to develop a new tax and another to collect it. That is where enforcements are
enacted with fines, late penalties, and refusal-to-comply fees.
In Australia a tax called the National Livestock Identification System (NLIS) has
been operational for several years. Herds of computer toting Biosecurity Officers
now stalk the Outback to locate animal owners out of compliance; conviction is up
to a $4000 fine for not registering a livestock premises.
The love of companion animals is multiplying in affection world wide. What a
sadistic way to create funding, to assess a new tribute for pets, livestock and
beloved family animals. Animal licensing is the contemporary government way to
tax not just the animal, but the joy and profit of livestock ownership.
In New Hampshire it starts out, In the Year of Our Lord Two Thousand Nine, and
then explains for Equine Licenses. Amend RSA 435, Sec 41, etc. In a scoop shovel
it is proposed, $25 per year, every year, and each animal must have a number. The
number process approved by the USDA is a computer chip, surgically injected
under the skin by a USDA licensed veterinarian at a fee of $75 to $125 per equine,
depending on how many in the remuda.
The Fiscal Impact: "The Department of Agriculture, Markets, and Food and the
New Hampshire Municipal Association estimates this bill will increase state and
local revenue, and increase local expenditures by an indeterminable amount in FY
2010 and each year thereafter. There will be no fiscal impact on county revenue or
state and county expenditures."
On July 1, will the horse owners of New Hampshire migrate to other states or will a
large population of equine feces machines establish residence on the Concord State
Capitol lawn?
This may be the time and place to rethink the New Hampshire motto: "LIVE FREE
OR DIE."
First Australia, the NAIS, the New Hampshire Equine Licenses----all innovations of
hostage taxation, which is a spreading livestock disease in itself. The mystery of
expanding government is not how it works, but how in the world to make it stop!
More info www.naisSTINKS.com, Australian Biosecurity, www.dpi.qld.gov.au.
by Darol Dickinson~~ 1-26-09 From The Proud Political Junkie's Gazette
The New Hampshire Municipal Association proudly touts a new special "equine"
tax that will increase jobs and create new state income from the estimated 24,000
equine in New Hampshire. A licensing of each and every equine is proposed to be
effective July 1, 2009. This is a tax of $25 per horse (equine) and in cases of refusal
to comply, the state adds another $50 to slap the cowboys in line. It isn't a smoke
screen about export, food safety or disease, it is just a new state income.
Beyond the state lines of New Hampshire, the USDA has been at war with livestock
owners to coerce enrollment in the National Animal Identification System (NAIS), a
multi-billion dollar scheme to computerize, number and create a permanent
surveillance system on all US livestock. This plot is the mother of all numbering
scenarios. With the commerce of all US livestock, at the end of three years the total
computer movements recorded, and paid for by animal owners, would eclipse the
number of the earth's human population.
These draconian sounding tax collection schemes, although totally putrid to animal
lovers, are completely sane to bureau-rats who's salary increases, retirement and
weekly sustenance depend on innovative ways to transfer wealth from the regulated
to the regulators.
Just down the trail to New York 88 new taxes have been deviously hatched by the
lowly staff of Governor David Paterson to help pay for his flawed $15.4 billion
budget gap. Hookers who have enjoyed a tax break on work clothes worth less than
$110, won't any more. An 18% increase on sodas is proposed; higher gas tax,
increased taxi tax, boats, cars, rental car taxes, cigars, iPods, etc. Plush
governmental cubicles high in the New York sky are filled with think-tank devious
minds searching the alleys for a new tax source to increase the regulator's revenue.
New York Conservative Party Chairman, Michael Long says, "You're (Gov.
Paterson) sending notice to the people of New York that we really don't want you
here."
Tribute ideas like the USDA's NAIS, horse licensing and the New York taxationists
search the world over to locate new and innovative collection methods. It is one
thing to develop a new tax and another to collect it. That is where enforcements are
enacted with fines, late penalties, and refusal-to-comply fees.
In Australia a tax called the National Livestock Identification System (NLIS) has
been operational for several years. Herds of computer toting Biosecurity Officers
now stalk the Outback to locate animal owners out of compliance; conviction is up
to a $4000 fine for not registering a livestock premises.
The love of companion animals is multiplying in affection world wide. What a
sadistic way to create funding, to assess a new tribute for pets, livestock and
beloved family animals. Animal licensing is the contemporary government way to
tax not just the animal, but the joy and profit of livestock ownership.
In New Hampshire it starts out, In the Year of Our Lord Two Thousand Nine, and
then explains for Equine Licenses. Amend RSA 435, Sec 41, etc. In a scoop shovel
it is proposed, $25 per year, every year, and each animal must have a number. The
number process approved by the USDA is a computer chip, surgically injected
under the skin by a USDA licensed veterinarian at a fee of $75 to $125 per equine,
depending on how many in the remuda.
The Fiscal Impact: "The Department of Agriculture, Markets, and Food and the
New Hampshire Municipal Association estimates this bill will increase state and
local revenue, and increase local expenditures by an indeterminable amount in FY
2010 and each year thereafter. There will be no fiscal impact on county revenue or
state and county expenditures."
On July 1, will the horse owners of New Hampshire migrate to other states or will a
large population of equine feces machines establish residence on the Concord State
Capitol lawn?
This may be the time and place to rethink the New Hampshire motto: "LIVE FREE
OR DIE."
First Australia, the NAIS, the New Hampshire Equine Licenses----all innovations of
hostage taxation, which is a spreading livestock disease in itself. The mystery of
expanding government is not how it works, but how in the world to make it stop!
More info www.naisSTINKS.com, Australian Biosecurity, www.dpi.qld.gov.au.