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by msbarnett
4918 days ago
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His point was that objecting to a piece of legislation on the basis that some people will break the law is a pretty vacuous objection. Given one tax bracket or 200, people can lie to reduce their taxes. This, of course, is not an interesting or useful critique of tax policy, just as what this company did in this case (fraudulently manipulate RIN credit retirements such that the train load was simultaneously classed as containing credit-valuable biodeasel and credit-worthless ethanol depending on whether or not the train was pointing North) is a vacuous critique of the EPA. |
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Indeed, I'd argue that any analysis of the utility of a new law that doesn't take added opportunities for fraud into account (alongside the other negative effects of adding complexity) is simply worthless.