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 @ISIDEWITHDiscuss this answer...3yrs3Y

No

 @9GXVXX6Republican from Florida  disagreed…3yrs3Y

I personally disagree I believe the IRS should have reports on charges over $600 as the IRS currently has enough information of purchases.

 @9GTGJBL from California  disagreed…3yrs3Y

Guys, what one is your favorite? Huggy Wuggy, Seek, scary Blue, Zumbo Sauce, Banban, Nabnab… Um, I forgot his name, the frog dude, and, um, yeah. Snow Seline, Banbalina, Stinger Flynn, Opila Bird, and Awesome Huggy Wuggy. This is, uh, me but like I don’t wanna use it. Blue and, uh, I mean, um, Kissy Missy, Killy Willy, um, Choo Choo Charles, right, Boxy Boo but like not evil, and we have evil Boxy Boo. We have Squid Game Huggy Wuggy. We have baby Huggy Wuggy, and Blue, and Freddy Fazbear, oinky oink oink. We have creepy Green. We have happy Huggy Wuggy. Look how happy he is, and we have "What the hell?" We have nobody cares Huggy Wuggy.

 @ISIDEWITHDiscuss this answer...3yrs3Y

 @ISIDEWITHDiscuss this answer...3yrs3Y

Yes

 @9GTGJBL from California  agreed…3yrs3Y

Pickle Rick: (offscreen, in the distance) Morty.
Morty: Rick?
[Morty stops combing, looks around, then continues combing]
Pickle Rick: (offscreen, in the distance) Morty!
Morty: Rick?
Pickle Rick: (offscreen, in the distance) Hey, Mooorty!
Morty: Rick? Are you far away, or are you inside something?
[Morty opens a cabinet beneath the bathroom sink]
Is this a camera?
[Morty tries to look inside his comb for a camera]
Is everything a camera?
[Morty nervously glances around]
Pickle Rick: (offscreen, in the distance) Morty, the garage, Morty. Come to the garage!
[Transition to Morty entering…  Read more

 @9GXVXX6Republican from Florida  agreed…3yrs3Y

As the IRS is a national organization the nation purchases more items a day than the IRS can keep up with. It is unnecessary for any purchases under $600 should be reported.

 @9F9Q6XTPopulist from Virginia  disagreed…3yrs3Y

I don't really have one. I mean, since its gig work they shouldn't be taxed for it since its not a business.

  @VulcanMan6  from Kansas  commented…3yrs3Y

 @ISIDEWITHDiscuss this answer...3yrs3Y

No, unless the transaction is considered income

 @ISIDEWITHDiscuss this answer...3yrs3Y

 @ISIDEWITHDiscuss this answer...3yrs3Y

Yes, but the threshold should be much higher

 @aoiginga5Democrat from Minnesota  answered…3yrs3Y

 @98PJN3X from Arkansas  answered…3yrs3Y

No, I think whatever you make under the table shouldn't be taxed at all.

  @VulcanMan6  from Kansas  commented…3yrs3Y

 @99T45NQSocialist from California  answered…3yrs3Y

Yes, but the threshold should be much higher and only then if its considered income.

 Deletedanswered…12mos12MO

NO... Online payment platforms should not be forced to report all transactions over $600 to the IRS without significant reform, contextual nuance, and protective exemptions. The policy undermines proportionality, burdens the wrong populations, violates personal privacy, and introduces systemic inefficiency without meaningfully addressing the core tax gap. Tax justice requires integrity, but integrity must be paired with prudence, trust, and restraint. A just government cannot trade mass surveillance for marginal compliance.

 @8TLN5QMGreen  from PR  answered…1yr1Y

Yes, except for low, middle and high middle class incomes. If rich, then they pay. Taxes should be illegal on the poor, working poor, working middle class, middle class and high middle class.

 @7PTCG38Democrat  from Wisconsin  answered…2yrs2Y

No, unless the transactions should be considered a form of yearly income with a total threshold of $10,000 or more

 @7PTCG38Democrat  from Wisconsin  answered…3yrs3Y

No, unless the transactions are considered income with a total annual threshold of $10,000 or greater

 @9H44T3W  from Oregon  answered…3yrs3Y

No, the transaction should be over $1,000 or if there is a total revenue of $15,000 in that tax period

 @7PTCG38Democrat  from Wisconsin  answered…3yrs3Y

Yes, but the threshold should be raised to more than $10,000 of online transactions in a calendar year that a vendor or gig worker would consider income.

 @9GS7LGB from South Carolina  answered…3yrs3Y

Yes, if it's a highly unusual payment from the person spending the money and if its on multiple things all at once.

 @7PTCG38Democrat  from Wisconsin  answered…3yrs3Y

No, unless the total amount of transactions are considered income that exceed a threshold level of $10,000

 @9HKH9R4 from South Carolina  answered…3yrs3Y

No honestly I think the IRS should be abolished so the answer is nothing should be reported to the IRS especially any transaction

 @9G8DDK4 from Arizona  answered…3yrs3Y

Nah, let rich people be rich without them having to worry about the IRS chasing them for "tax evasion"

 @9F9GYYD from North Carolina  answered…3yrs3Y

 @9FLZHB3 from North Carolina  answered…3yrs3Y

The IRS does not have the power to regulate taxes know where the government of Congress that should be done by the states The 10th amendment of the constitution prohibits that

 @9DXG5WY from Oregon  answered…3yrs3Y

 @9DSJSC5 from Georgia  answered…3yrs3Y

No, the IRS should be abolished by adopting the Fair Tax - a national sales tax that eliminates all other taxes at the government tier in which it is enacted. There is no need for an IRS in the Fair Tax plan.

 @9DSF8Z4 from Virginia  answered…3yrs3Y

 @9DMXBB9 from Washington  answered…3yrs3Y

 @9DCNZYW from Texas  answered…3yrs3Y

 @9D9GC93Independent from Washington  answered…3yrs3Y

 @9D8G35C from Illinois  answered…3yrs3Y

No, reporting any transactions to the IRS without a warrant or subpoena is unconstitutional

 @9D85V8M from California  answered…3yrs3Y

  @YauntiCommunist from New York  answered…3yrs3Y

Yes, abolish private property and ban wealth accumulation. Business should be transparent, secrecy leads to corruption

 @9DRGPVW from Illinois  answered…3yrs3Y

 @9DM8SJ4  from Florida  answered…3yrs3Y

How much money I spend at one time is not the government’s business

 @9DFS4DS from Colorado  answered…3yrs3Y

 @9BXCHQB from Florida  answered…3yrs3Y

No. The IRS should be abolished and infringes upon everyday Americans basic financial freedoms and privacies through said apps.

 @98QFR9B from New York  answered…3yrs3Y

 @74TXV99Independent from North Carolina  answered…3yrs3Y

 @7PTCG38Democrat from Wisconsin  answered…3yrs3Y

No, unless the transactions are considered income that has a total threshold level in excess of $10,000.

 @9C2Y8L2 from Maryland  answered…3yrs3Y

 @9BQKW3TRepublican from California  answered…3yrs3Y

 @9BGGZ3PProgressive from South Carolina  answered…3yrs3Y

 @9B82PHW from Wisconsin  answered…3yrs3Y

Not unless there is a suspicion over transactions, also the threshold should be much higher.

 @99J2VCJ from Florida  answered…3yrs3Y

 @99J2LV6 from Florida  answered…3yrs3Y

 @99HB6TVDemocrat from New Jersey  answered…3yrs3Y

 @99GKYHJ from Oklahoma  answered…3yrs3Y

 @99CVWN7 from Washington D.C.  answered…3yrs3Y

 @99CLGBD from Colorado  answered…3yrs3Y

 @9985NJFIndependent from Illinois  answered…3yrs3Y

online payment platforms should be forced to report all transactions over $10,000 to the IRS

 @993599B from New York  answered…3yrs3Y

 @992H859 from Pennsylvania  answered…3yrs3Y

No, private transactions between private citizens should be kept private and not free information for the government to have.

 @992CQQX from Virginia  answered…3yrs3Y

Undecided have meetings and debates and try to come up with a solution or solutions for this problem

 @98YZ5S2 from Texas  answered…3yrs3Y

 @98WHV6F from North Carolina  answered…3yrs3Y

 @98RNVT2Women’s Equality from Missouri  answered…3yrs3Y

It depends on if its unusual, if someone usually doesn't spend that much then yes

 @97L7SR5Libertarian from Colorado  answered…3yrs3Y

Yes, but not for taxpayers who's earned income is less than $100,000 per year. AKA Tax The Rich.

 @98Q47N9Democrat from Minnesota  answered…3yrs3Y

only if its like a person thats being suspected of a crime, otherwise no

 @98Q2KPP from Florida  answered…3yrs3Y

 @98PVC8V from Illinois  answered…3yrs3Y

Only if the payment is a form of income. If I have to pay income taxes, so does everyone else.

 @98PTFVQ from Mississippi  answered…3yrs3Y

 @98PT72T from South Carolina  answered…3yrs3Y

 @98PSTXH from Connecticut  answered…3yrs3Y

 Deletedanswered…3yrs3Y

 @9CPQ73VDemocratfrom Maine  answered…3yrs3Y

 @9CLXBXZ from Utah  answered…3yrs3Y

No, unless the transaction is considered income, and the threshold should be much higher

 @9CL986P from Arizona  answered…3yrs3Y

 @9CK8P85 from Minnesota  answered…3yrs3Y

 @9CGGYC9Forward from California  answered…3yrs3Y

No, the government should abolish any sales or income tax in favor of a graduated VAT tax.

 Deletedanswered…3yrs3Y

Yes, and all industries should be nationalized to ensure it happens

 @9CTMFSC from Georgia  answered…3yrs3Y

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