on August 24, 2010 by in Kith and Kin and Home and Hearth, Comments (0)
Why State Tax Forms Are Essential
State tax forms are needed to file state taxes – but exactly where is our tax money going? Taxes are used to support the government, but in a democracy the government is supposed to be “for the people,” as a popular rumor has it. All of the state tax forms filed year in, year out seem to have no effect on our local governments, which across the country are a lot more likely than not operating at a deficit. How is this possible with all the money pouring into government coffers?
Most folks merely file their state tax forms and leave it at that, too busy with their lives and some even hoping not to attract any government attention. But a growing number of our fellow citizens and residents are seriously concerned over where “their money” is going. Almost everybody agrees with paying for firefighters, sanitation workers, and other civil servants, but even then there can be a lot of controversy over the details.
Take teachers for example. Again, nearly everyone agrees that educators are needed. But how to compensate them with our tax dollars, exactly? Currently, numerous individuals across the country are up in arms over teacher perks and salaries.
It’s felt that educators have things much too comfortable, and there are folks who would like to make the profession of teaching a job like any other, which in the United States means “hire and fire at will.”
These folks want to, they say, hold teachers more “accountable” for student performance, which is usually proposed to be assessed by standardized test scores. But the other side of the argument believes that teaching isn’t just a job like any other, that the training of minds and the inspiration of hearts is not something which can be neatly measured on a quarterly or yearly basis like some corporate earnings report.
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