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Currently, my state imposes a sales tax on all prepared foods, but no tax on un-prepared foods. Buying a hamburger meal from McDonalds or the sit down deli in a grocery store will hit you with a 6% sales tax. Frozen hamburgers and fries don't get hit with the same sales tax. |
Re: Food taxes and rules Related to the topic, but not directly about it, its funny how the smokers pay twice for their smoke. First, they pay a sales tax on their cigs and then pay higher insurance costs than non-smokers. Back to topic. In most countries, there is a government insurance policy available for civilians in the fields of life/death [they pay your descendants when you die] and health [they pay your hospitals visits and drug costs]. In a country where the government does not have any such public-friendly insurance policy available, it would indeed be the public's own matter to eat what they choose. But in a state where the government offers you cheaper insurance policies, they have two options available: 1= Get greater insurance fees from overweight people. 2= Push a tax on fatty foods. This would in turn increase the prices of those foods, with the end result that the overweight people would pay you the tax for their hazardous activities. The government spends that surplus tax money on the more frequent health expenses of overweight people. The downside of the latter option is that those people who aren't overweight and use fatty foods and those who are overweight and do not take the insurance policy will have to pay the extra tax without burdening the government money. These two groups would suffer the side effects, but the minorities always suffer in a democratic government. |
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This would also apply to insurancies. Sports players are more prone to injuries. So I wouldn't blame them, getting fat is dumb but for children it's often the parents that allow that. |
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Re: Food taxes and rules Sad that we need the govt to convince us what we can and can't eat. |
Re: Food taxes and rules Not really. If you give people the choice between a fast road or a slow road, they'll take the fast road, even if the slow road is more scenic. People eat to prevent themselves from starving, and it wouldn't be a problem if there weren't so many foods with problems. Not to mention our brain isn't exactly a friend to us in this matter, since it'll point us in the wrong directions sometimes. |
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Re: Food taxes and rules I'm honestly amazed that people were that organised. In a total gob-smacked sense. |
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