http://nestmannblog.sovereignsociety.com/2008/07/housing-bailout.html
Solid article from some foreign attorney (Austria) who specializes in "providing international wealth preservation services for high-net worth individuals" on how this newest housing bill is going to generate money to bail out Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac by going after unreported internet commissions and transactions.
Obviously, he has an interest in attracting potential customers to < ahem > go offshore with their Interweb Monies.
But what he's discussing will, eventually, trickle down to AM'ers.
Everyone knew something like this was coming down the pike eventually- but it sure pisses me off that they're going after Internet Businesses to bail out the sheeple who bought into the variable rate mortgage lie.
Solid article from some foreign attorney (Austria) who specializes in "providing international wealth preservation services for high-net worth individuals" on how this newest housing bill is going to generate money to bail out Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac by going after unreported internet commissions and transactions.
Obviously, he has an interest in attracting potential customers to < ahem > go offshore with their Interweb Monies.
But what he's discussing will, eventually, trickle down to AM'ers.
The IRS believes that America's small businesses are evading billions of dollars in taxes through unreported credit card transactions. And for that reason, it's long been at the top of their legislative agenda to require credit card issuers and electronic payment systems like PayPal to report sales data to the IRS.
Tax Inquisition Planned to Bail Out Deadbeat Homeowners
The housing bailout bill does just that, broken down in terms of payments to businesses accepting the cards. Essentially, the bill requires Visa, MasterCard, Discover, American Express, PayPal, Amazon, Google Checkpoint, and virtually every other "electronic payment system" to track, aggregate, and report information on nearly every electronic transaction to the IRS.
They must report:
· The gross amount of payment card and third-party network transactions and
· The name, address, and taxpayer identification number of the participating merchant
Everyone knew something like this was coming down the pike eventually- but it sure pisses me off that they're going after Internet Businesses to bail out the sheeple who bought into the variable rate mortgage lie.