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    #1
    DogManz maks's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by m0nde View Post
    you really think the taxes are that high here?
    you think that it's not offset by the fact that you can't even go to the dentist, doctor or get medication when you like?
    I can go to the dentist, doctor, or get medication when I like, I don't even have to wait weeks on end for a slot to open up. In fact, if I have a toothache, I can probably see a dentist tomorrow. It'll cost me a couple hundred dollars, but that's about what you're paying every month for your 13% sales tax on food whether you see a dentist or not.
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    v me in love v Camoron's Avatar
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    Twenty-nine states and the District of Columbia exempt most food purchased for consumption at home from the state sales tax. New Mexico is the state that most recently eliminated its sales tax on food.

    Five states tax groceries at lower rates than other goods; they are Illinois, Missouri, Tennessee, Virginia, and West Virginia. A sixth state, Utah, will reduce its sales tax on groceries effective January 1, 2007.

    Six states — Hawaii, Idaho, Kansas, Oklahoma, South Dakota, and Wyoming — tax groceries fully but offer credits or rebates offsetting some of the taxes paid on food by some portions of the population. These credits or rebates usually are set at a flat amount per family member. The amounts and eligibility rules vary, but may be too narrow and/or insufficient to give eligible households full relief from sales taxes paid on food purchases.

    Five states continue to apply their sales tax fully to food purchased for home consumption without providing any offsetting relief for low- and moderate-income families. They are Alabama, Arkansas, Mississippi, South Carolina, and (until January 1, 2007) Utah....



    i find it funny that the five states that tax groceries fully with no relief at all are some of the poorest states in the country
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