They wanted you to believe Bobby Jindahl was this aspiring up and comer, a real beacon of light for the conservative movement. Perish that silly notion. He's as bad as the rest of them.
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If you buy or sell secondhand goods and live in the state of Louisiana, you can no longer use legal tender to complete such transactions. Ackel & Associates LLC (A&A), a professional law firm, explains that House Bill 195 of the 2011 Regular Session (Act 389), which was recently passed by the state legislature and signed into law by Gov. Bobby Jindal, prohibits anyone who "buys, sells, trades or otherwise acquires or disposes of junk or used or secondhand property [from entering] into any cash transactions in payment for the purchase of [such items]."
Besides prohibiting the use of cash, the law also requires such "dealers" to collect personal information like name, address, driver's license number, and license plate number from every single customer, and submit it to authorities. And the only acceptable form of payment in such situations is a personal check, money order, or electronic transfer, all of which must be carefully documented.
The stated purpose of the law, which excludes non-profits and pawn shops, is to curb criminal activity involving the reselling of stolen goods, particularly metals such as copper, silver, and gold. But according to A&A, existing Louisiana state law already requires businesses and other resellers of secondhand goods to account for transactions, and has specific laws already on the books that address the selling of stolen goods.
The new law is so broad and all-encompassing that individuals who buy and sell on sites like eBay or Craigslist using cash will also be in violation of it. Even a stay-at-home-mom who holds a garage sale with her neighbors more than once a month could be required to refuse cash from customers, as well as keep a detailed record of every single purchase made, and who made it.
"Can law enforcement not accomplish its goal of identifying potential thieves and locating stolen items in a far less intrusive manner?" asks A&A. "Why does the Louisiana State Legislature need to enact more laws infringing on personal privacy, liberties and freedom?"
There really is no legitimate reason for banning cash payments, especially in light of the required collection of detailed and excessive personal information. The measure is simply just another excuse for the government to spy on individuals, and take away their economic and civil liberties.
Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/033882_Louisiana_cash.html#ixzz1bKVmmEkV
2 comments:
A side effect (hidden purpose?) of
that law is that it enables collection of sales tax. In his state that is 4%. ..and "Louisiana allows counties and cities to charge up to an additional 5% local sales tax on all non-exempt purchases within their jurisdiction. As a result, the actual sales tax you pay in Louisiana may vary between 4% and 9% depending on which county or city the sale is made in." 9%..smells like pizza dude.
Not to mention it runs roughshod over legal tender laws.
The only upside would be that it undermines a fiat currency. However, I'd have been much more supportive if he'd signed into law a bill that would have made silver and/or gold an acceptable currency in such transactions.
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