Today's WeatherThe Ghiorse Factor
Subscribe Now: Free Daily EBlast
Trending
What You Can Buy in South County Rhode Island—What You Can Buy…
Fit for Life: Impatient? Want a Quick Fix? Read on…—Fit for Life: Impatient?…
VIDEO: Raimondo’s “60 Minutes” Feature to Air Sunday—Raimondo's "60 Minutes" Feature…
Battle Over Bike Path Escalates — Council Blocks Smiley, Cost to Remove Is Estimated at $750K—Battle Over Bike Path…
Chief Scientist, Head of Technology at NUSC Anthony Bessacini of Narragansett Dies at 84—Chief Scientist, Head of…
Side of the Rhode: Who’s Hot and Who’s Not? - April 19, 2024—Side of the Rhode:…
Dear Annie: Finding Love in All the Wrong Places—Dear Annie: Finding Love…
Brown and the Rest of the Ivy League Are Getting Decimated By Transfer Portal—Brown and the Rest…
Providence Man Indicted for 1999 Cold Case Murder—Providence Man Indicted for…
Rhode Island’s Unemployment Rate Increased 48% in the Past Year—Rhode Island’s Unemployment Rate…
Your Email:
Your Name:
To:
Subject:
Message: From GoLocalProv by Travis Rowley, GoLocalProv MINDSETTER™: And, this week, we learn that two Statehouse Democrats, Rep. James McLaughlin and Sen. William Walaska, are introducing a bill that “aims to reduce [the] minimum corporate tax.” That’s right. For the distinct privilege of setting up shop in the worst business climate in the country (a condition caused by government), Rhode Island business owners are forced to pay the state government $500 a year – whether they turn a profit or not. Similar to “tolls” and “fees” – often justified by liberals by pointing out the cost of bridges and bureaucracy – that are tacked on to an already-bloated tax structure, the minimum corporate tax is one of those government bills that makes productive citizens wonder what their other taxes pay for, if not basic government services. http://www.golocalprov.comhttp://beta.golocalprov.com/travis-rowley-religion-first