John,
My understanding is that mail order businesses are supposed to pay
taxes on any sales in a state where they have 'brick & mortar'
outlets.  I first learned of this watching my mother-in-law come to
Chicago from Iowa and shop for clothes at Talbots.  She would have her
purchases shipped to here in Iowa and save the local taxes (which more
than paid for shipping).  I haven't followed this thread closely, but
I shop at B&H to save the tax and won't be volunteering to send
anything to Illinois.
Regards,  Bob S.

On Fri, Mar 12, 2010 at 12:56 PM, John Sessoms <[email protected]> wrote:
> From: "P. J. Alling"
>>
>> Depending on the State you're responsible for the Tax, (I think that's all
>> States that have Sales Taxes, they've redefined them to be Use Taxes), but
>> they have almost no way of enforcing their will.  Especially as those States
>> without Sales Taxes have no particular incentive to help those that do.
>>  Personally I think it's actually not Constitutionally valid, a violation of
>> the Interstate Commerce clause for one State to try to enforce it's tax laws
>> within another State.  But hell who pays attention to that musty old
>> document these days.
>
> North Carolina requires North Carolina citizens to pay sales tax on internet
> purchases when they file annual income tax.
>
> You can either total up all your out of state internet purchases for the
> year and pay the tax based on that or you can accept a percentage of your
> taxable income as your "estimated" internet purchases and pay the tax based
> on that.
>
> I mostly don't buy any taxable merchandise over the internet for that
> reason. I haven't bought anything from Amazon since I got home from Iraq.
>
> I buy locally so any sales tax due is paid at time of the purchase. And for
> that reason, I can total up the value of all my taxable internet purchases
> to $0.00.
>
> I think you have the Interstate Commerce clause backwards. Any seller who
> sells goods interstate has to comply with the tax law in the location he
> sells into.
>
> A business in North Carolina that sells goods in New York collects and
> remits New York sales tax on those goods sold in New York. If they sell
> goods into a state that has no sales tax, they don't have to collect and
> remit sales taxes for goods sold in that state.
>
> Nor is that North Carolina business required to collect North Carolina sales
> taxes on goods sold in New York or another state.
>
> The internet was exempted from sales taxes for a while in the interest of
> establishing commerce, but that has passed. Internet merchants ARE going to
> be required to comply with tax laws, just like every other merchant.
>
> I suspect that in the long term it's going to cost Amazon MORE to fight
>  than it would have cost to just collect and remit the taxes to Colorado for
> purchases delivered to Colorado residents. Because they are going to lose,
> either in court, or by forcing the adoption of a national VAT on ALL
> internet commerce.
>
> Taxes are a cost of doing business. Amazon and other internet businesses
>  are simply trying to shift those costs to other non-internet businesses.
>
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