Germany Imposes Draconian Internet Tax on Citizens
The compulsory mass registration of mobile phones
to follow soon
[Editor's Note: This is what a fascist state is all about.
Total government control and hegemony over your life down to the smallest
detail. The same satanic Illuminati nazis who are running Germany are running
this puppet regime here. When they were installing street cameras everywhere
in England in the 1990's, you didn't think it would happen here? Now we
have Big Brother street cameras in America. The driver's licence will next
become a national ID card and that will lead to a domestic passport required
to be carried at all times. Still waiting for someone else to fight for
your liberty? Good luck..Ken]
By Michael James in Frankfurt, Germany
http://educate-yourself.org/cn/germanyimposesinternettax14nov04.shtml
November 14, 2004
http://www.rumormillnews.com/cgi-bin/forum.cgi?read=59207
Forward courtesy of Slim Spurling <Acuvacset@aol.com >
12 October 2004
Germany has become the first country in the world to tax
private personal computers that are deemed to be "Internet-capable".The
plan, long in the offing, was agreed in Berlin by the Conference of Prime
Ministers of the Federal States of Germany on October 8. It is being billed
as part of the expansion of the television and radio public services fee,
which is administered by Germany's Radio and Television Licensing Authority
and enforced by the universally despised Gebühreneinzugszentrale (GEZ),
which often resorts to controversial and illegal Gestapo-like methods of
gathering information on private citizens.
The new tax was originally planned to come into effect on
January 1, 2007. That date still holds for businesses and large corporations,
but private households will be forced to register their PCs before the deadline
of March 31, 2005. Owners must then pay 17.03 euros a month for their PC
unless they are already complying with the full GEZ tax for a registered
television and radio.
The decision has provoked howls of protest from the nation's
estimated one million Internet users who have eschewed the trashy sensationalism
and state propaganda associated with the public broadcasters ARD and ZDF,
both of which argue that their websites constitute a public service that
Internet users are accessing free of charge. Technically speaking, they
say in addition, anyone with an Internet-capable PC (whether actually connected
to the Internet or not) can theoretically watch their broadcasts.
"With the same argument, the public broadcast services
can demand from me a fee for the existence of my briefcase, because in principle
it may contain an ARD television magazine that provides free viewing tips,"
says Arndt Groth, President of the Federal Association of Digital Businesses
(BVDW). Groth's comments, among others, have had lawyers frantically scanning
the German Constitution for loopholes (notwithstanding the fact that the
constitution, along with the Federal Republic of Germany itself, technically
ceased to exist as a legal entity on July 17, 1990).
Undaunted by the criticism that Germany is effectively nationalising
private telecommunications in much the same way as Hitler did during his
long reign of terror and in a style reminiscent of the taxes imposed on
typewriters by the Communist Party in the former totalitarian German Democratic
Republic, the Federal Minister for Culture, Christiane Weiss, has also signalled
her intention of subjecting Internet-capable mobile phones to the new tax.
"Cultural sovereignty is not to be interfered with,"
she warned owners of PCs and mobile phones who may consider taking the matter
to the European Courts. In a lengthy communications directive issued at
the end of September, she defended the massive state subsidies to public
broadcasters against advocates of a more free-market approach to the German
media, implicitly threatening the EU's monopoly regulator with non-cooperation
should a hearing be convened.
Tax-weary citizens who fail to pay the GEZ imposition or
register a television or radio are liable to pay crippling fines amounting
to thousands of euros and even face lengthy prison sentences. By law, individuals
and businesses resident in Germany must register every television, video-recorder,
DVD-player, radio, car radio and radio alarm-clock that they own, regardless
as to their state of repair.
That list will surely grow longer once hectored members of
the public have been goose-stepped into registering their personal computers
and mobile phones for fear of the GEZ knock on the door.
-------------
Michael James is a British freelance journalist and translator, resident
in Germany for over 12 years. Permission to republish his work without alteration
is freely granted to fellow libertarians.
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