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Feds to Decide What Can be Sold at Your Garage Sale
With the first days of Summer a long standing American tradition emerges anew from yards and garages all across the country. Once again this season we will see the venerable American garage sale bloom everywhere. Homeowners will be seen busily setting up folding tables or bringing picnic tables from back yards to load them up with used clothes, toys, collectibles, and items of all sorts. Couples will once again cruise the neighborhood looking to those bargains. It's as American as Baseball, and the rest.
But a new player has been introduced to the venerable garage sale scheme and this one isn't looking for a deal. It is a new player that isn't looking to ask you "how much" but is looking to tell you what you'll be allowed to sell. It's the federal government and it's iron boot heel come a'calling at your local garage sale.
That's right, folks, the federal government is here to warn you that you will no longer be allowed to sell certain things at your garage or yard sales or even on auction sites like ebay. If you are a scofflaw, Big Brother is here to stomp you. The nanny state is here to "protect" you. And you better watch out or there's no telling what just might happen to you if you don't bow down to the all powerful state.
Ignorance of the law is not an excuse
"Ignorance of the law is not an excuse," or so we are warned in a new handbook from the federal government. In it we are dutifully informed that, "on August 14, 2008, the President signed the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (CPSIA) into law." It warns us that this new act will have "dramatic changes for the marketplace," and that there are "strict laws" for selling certain products. (Find the downloadable handbook at cpsc.gov/)
You may wonder what this has to do with your garage sale? Well, a look at the section titled "the basics" will tell you that this act doesn't just affect Wal-Mart or Sears. Ominously, this law applies to everyone that wants to sell anything.
CPSC's laws and regulations apply to anyone who sells or distributes consumer products. This includes thrift stores, consignment stores, charities, and individuals holding yard sale and flea markets.
This will also affect auction sites like ebay.
So, what does this do to sellers and collectors of antiques? One would guess that ebay and other on-line auction services will eventually see the federal government come down on them like a load of bricks. If vigorously enforced, this act will have a devastating effect on certain collectible markets like old toys, books, comic books and vintage clothing collectors.
Naturally, these government thugs claim that they have no plans to monitor garage and yard sales... at least not now they don't. But they are ready and willing to go after re-sale shops like GoodWill and auction sites like ebay.
Whatever the case, this is just one more example of the nanny state involving itself in every aspect of our lives and regulating freedom and liberty out of existence. The government is out of control and this is another horrid example of it.
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Comments
I take it that if someone sells a container load of shoddy
I take it that if someone sells a container load of shoddy Chinese toasters on e-Bay and at flea markets, resulting in hundreds of Pop-Tart fires and ruined kitchens, that's OK with you?
This is about not paying federal income taxes
you obviously don't buy antiques. They'll be going after the dealers, mostly. it's what they always do.
No, The Association of Retailers Is Out Of Control
No, it is the Chamber of Commerce and Association of Retailers which are out of control. They are losing a big share of their market to independent entrepreneurs and citizens who are collectors and private sellers of their own property upon which they cannot levy sales taxes as private contracts. Much different for corporations, since they are "commercial" and can come down on them like a ton of bricks since they do have regulatory power over them. But extending this sale to private individuals is blatantly unconstitutional, not simply nanny state. And since Ebay is only a communication method which gets its fees from the seller and not buyers, they didn't have any method in which to regulate them as simply a go-between for private contractual purchses.
So this entire scam is for revenue, and future campaign contributions from the Association of Retailers and Chamber of Commerce members, not control, once again. We live in U.S.A., Inc., or hadn't you noticed?
See, "pure capitalism" was not the form of "government" the founders established, but sure does help to promote that myth in the bucks it gains Uncle Sam in the process. The taxing of property and the transaction also was not their intent. Their intent was that all would declare the value of their property at the end of the year, and there would be an equal tax on the value of that property as the only contribution to the federal government that was to be made by citizens and "corporate" entities - and the rest would be gained by use fees, excise taxes and export and import taxes (as the protectionists they were, not "globalists" since their entire mindset was breaking free of global dominance and control of this country's economy).