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Pay for government's bloated budgets with our beer? |
| By Jeff Sherman OnMilwaukee.com Staff Writer Photography by oregoncatalyst.com E-mail author | Author bio More articles by Jeff Sherman |
| Published March 23, 2009 at 4:05 p.m. |
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I like beer. In moderation, of course (well, most of the time). It's tasty and a big part of my hometown's culture, traditions and folklore. It's the drink, after all, that made Milwaukee famous. When I drink it, I feel like I'm helping my city. It's good for the soul.
Today, though, several people tell me that our local newspaper wants our state government to tax our beer. Many have forwarded me a JSOnline opinion piece called "Political non-starter? This makes no sense." In it, the editors call for more taxes on our beer and alcohol.
Don't get me wrong, I'm all for tightening our drunken driving laws and for throwing the book at offenders. But why should we have to pay for government's bloated budgets with our beer?
Tax cigarettes to death, I don't care. Sure, call me a hypocrite, but I despise cigarette smoke and smokers don't seem to care about the extra costs. But, beer drinkers do. And, frankly, since I am one I don't want my beer tax raised unless it's going toward something that I want.
Use the Talkback feature to tell us what you think about increased beer taxes in Wisconsin.
Excerpt from JSOnline. Sunday, March 22, 2008.
There is absolutely no reason that increased taxes on alcohol shouldn't be directed to the undeniably huge costs alcohol abuse imposes on society. And if this, too, is poached, anyone want to argue that the budget can't use the help?
So why is this a political non-starter for virtually everyone from Gov. Jim Doyle on down?
Their fears are based on a false premise. The theory goes this way: Because of Wisconsin's tradition as a brewing state and its storied culture of drinking, raising the beer tax in particular is tantamount to political suicide. Wisconsinites would rise as one to unelect the latter-day prohibitionists.
This notion does Wisconsinites a huge disservice.
Properly explained and with funds earmarked, increased beer and other alcoholic beverage taxes would be accepted as having little impact on consumers' wallets but huge benefits for the state's revenue and health picture. And this could withstand predictable alcohol and tavern industry assaults.
Winding their way through the Legislature are much-needed bills addressing the state's problem with drunken drivers. Among them are proposals to make the third or fourth drunken driving offense a felony (now a misdemeanor until the fifth offense) and requiring so-called ignition interlock devices for certain convicted drunken drivers. Other proposals that must get traction involve permitting sobriety checkpoints and criminalizing that first offense to at least a misdemeanor.
Law enforcement officials have legitimately raised the issue of increased costs if these come to pass.
The state desperately needs reform of its antiquated drunken driving laws. Alcohol taxes can knock down one argument conspiring against this.
The governor and the legislators have been saying, in the face of this current revenue crisis, that all items are on the table. Which makes their allergies to alcohol taxes all the more puzzling. Increasing the beer and other alcohol taxes is simply the right thing to do.
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21 comments about this article. Post a comment / write a review. |
Posted by sandstorm on March 31, 2009 at 12:10 p.m. (report)
let's tax the comedy value of corrina. her impression of the angry righty is spot on! a bit cliched perhaps but she does hit all the right bullet points when clownishly "debating" those rascally libs.
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Posted by happy_guy on March 27, 2009 at 4:19 p.m. (report)
Wow-you guys are really angry. How about a nice cold beer to relax? Before we inferior liberals tax the @#$% out of it! HA HA HA HA!
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Posted by cjswag on March 27, 2009 at 2:38 p.m. (report)
When you openly support a tax on one specific slice of society simply because you don't like the action or take part in the action yourself, you have NO right to complain when others who do not share your passion support a tax on your specific slice of society. You say "call me a hypocrite if you want" as if somehow you will accept the label despite it being untrue. You ARE a hypocrite. I will call you one because that is the most accurate label possible. And they are discussing taxing alcohol precisely BECAUSE of hypocrites like you.
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Posted by llpierce on March 27, 2009 at 4:50 a.m. (report)
Alcohol should be taxed a bit more; how about lowering the high gasoline tax and tacking that onto alcohol? Then taxes aren't technically being raised, just moved around. Yes, I know that would never happen, but, hey, it IS an idea! And, corrina, debating does not involve name-calling. You must have an extremely low self-esteem if you need to constantly try to denigrate others. Rather than name-call, how about making an actual valuable contribution and explain your opinion? But, of course, calling someone names IS much easier, esp. when you can hide behind a screen name.
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Posted by corrina252 on March 26, 2009 at 11:45 a.m. (report)
Mr Woland= typical naive and inferior leftist and my guess is that he is a stereotypical self-involved baby boomer. Hey, Woland, you liberal buffoon, I would love to debate you on any subject and enjoy watching you cower in the fetal position as I destroy every socialist talking point you offer.
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