PortageeExpress
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- Nov 28, 2008
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Emailed Sen. Cornyn (TX)
I also suspect BUD and KO pull quite a bit of weight on capitol hill.
What makes you think the big brew corporations aren't the ones PUSHING this additional tax? I mean, I understand it sounds silly, but what better way to remove the competition they are finding in smaller, higher alcohol-content, microbreweries? 4.5% was chosen for a reason, and it bet it lies in the fact that most pisswater macro brews are just under that. If you can't beat them, have them taxed into extinction.
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Just contacted senator Durbin.
What makes you think the big brew corporations aren't the ones PUSHING this additional tax? I mean, I understand it sounds silly, but what better way to remove the competition they are finding in smaller, higher alcohol-content, microbreweries? 4.5% was chosen for a reason, and it bet it lies in the fact that most pisswater macro brews are just under that. If you can't beat them, have them taxed into extinction.
In a manner similar to present law, for domestic brewers producing less than two million barrels of beer during the calendar year, the proposal imposes a reduced rate of tax on the first 60,000 barrels of beer removed each year.
What makes you think the big brew corporations aren't the ones PUSHING this additional tax?
Chicago Business notes, accurately, that any federal tax bump would give Anheuser-Busch InBev the opportunity to slash costs. As a condition to Belgium-based InBev’s acquisition of Anheuser-Busch last year, it agreed not to close any of its 12 U.S. breweries - as long as there were no increased federal or state excise taxes or “other unforeseen extraordinary events” that hurt Anheuser-Busch’s business.
I'm not for raising any taxes, we don't need to be taxed more, we need to spend less and spend more wisely, even if there are provisions to tax the smaller breweries less than the large