Post by account_disabled on Mar 4, 2024 5:33:57 GMT -5
Quixote da Silva woke up hand in hand with Esperança. An ephemeral and cursed feeling, the only one preserved in that famous Greek box, after Pandora's curiosity had released without filter all the other misfortunes for Humanity. In fact, millennia later, today there is no doubt that among them was the excessive complexity of the Brazilian tax system, as well as all the interests that orbit its maintenance. Franc-Comtois/Pixabay Franc-Comtois/Pixabay Excessive complexity against which Quixote had become accustomed to fighting accompanied by a few Sanchos, energized almost solely by that irrational belief in achieving positive results. And the disguised interests of more than two dozen windmills, sellers of the federative illusion.
But in reality, they fight at all costs any type of change that brings a breath of rationality and transparency to the most relevant financial tool for the effective creation of the democratic State of Law that the (innocent?) Charter of 1988 says it wants to build. That morning in November 2022 promised to be one of those increasingly rare moments of overflow of that Hope. Our EL Salvador Mobile Number List deluded friend — also called by some (affectionately) as Dom — had gotten up feeling especially recharged, somewhat numb by that Greek ailment. Justifiable: the day had finally arrived to follow the debates of the commission formed by the main body of the national Judiciary to discuss the important changes that the fuel tax system had undergone.
Changes that, if actually implemented, contained all the technical requirements to bring more simplicity, rationality and transparency to one of the segments that suffered most from non-refunded refunds, excessive additional obligations to be fulfilled and unfair competition generated by persistent debtors (many of them representatives organized crime). And, mainly: due to their relevance, changes that had everything to represent the starting point of the modernization of the entire Brazilian tax model applied to consumption. Hope "in the vein". So, agitatedly, while getting ready to attend the session, the dreamy lawyer — a lover of Tax Law — remembered the legislative changes implemented at the beginning of that year. The main ones occurred with the approval in March of Complementary Law No. 192, through which the national legislator regulated general rules provided for in the Constitution more than 20 years ago.
But in reality, they fight at all costs any type of change that brings a breath of rationality and transparency to the most relevant financial tool for the effective creation of the democratic State of Law that the (innocent?) Charter of 1988 says it wants to build. That morning in November 2022 promised to be one of those increasingly rare moments of overflow of that Hope. Our EL Salvador Mobile Number List deluded friend — also called by some (affectionately) as Dom — had gotten up feeling especially recharged, somewhat numb by that Greek ailment. Justifiable: the day had finally arrived to follow the debates of the commission formed by the main body of the national Judiciary to discuss the important changes that the fuel tax system had undergone.
Changes that, if actually implemented, contained all the technical requirements to bring more simplicity, rationality and transparency to one of the segments that suffered most from non-refunded refunds, excessive additional obligations to be fulfilled and unfair competition generated by persistent debtors (many of them representatives organized crime). And, mainly: due to their relevance, changes that had everything to represent the starting point of the modernization of the entire Brazilian tax model applied to consumption. Hope "in the vein". So, agitatedly, while getting ready to attend the session, the dreamy lawyer — a lover of Tax Law — remembered the legislative changes implemented at the beginning of that year. The main ones occurred with the approval in March of Complementary Law No. 192, through which the national legislator regulated general rules provided for in the Constitution more than 20 years ago.