Controversy Over Rice-Ritter-Mullarkey Car Tax Increase Isn’t Going Away
by T.L. James | 10:07 pm, August 11, 2009 | Comments Off
Think the controversy over the Rice-Ritter-Mullarkey car tax increase has abated due to being drowned out by the furor over Obamacare?
Think again: this van was parked at the Arapahoe County DMV office at Alameda and Chambers today, in plain view of taxpayers entering and leaving the office to renew their license plates…and pay the increased car tax that Mary Mullarkey and her ideological pals on the Colorado Supreme Court decided was a fee in order to bypass TABOR:
As the signs say, you can vote out those responsible for “constitutionalizing” the unconstitutional – not only the “no, it’s a fee!” car tax increase but the blatantly TABOR-violating mill levy tax freeze. Justices Michael Bender, Alex Martinez, and Nancy Rice and Chief Justice Mary Mullarkey will each face retention votes in 2010 – all you have to do is to vote “No”, against retaining these unjust justices in office.
If you want to know more about the Mullarkey Court’s approval of the unconstitutional car tax increase and mill levy tax freeze, or its property-rights-violating decision on the Telluride Land Grab, or the upcoming Court fight over the unconstitutional repeal of the Arveschoug-Bird spending limits, Clear the Bench Colorado is all over these and more issues pertaining to the out-of-control Mullarkey court and the need to vote against retention in 2010.
Tags: Alex Martinez > Barber v. Ritter > bill ritter > car fee > car tax > Colorado Car Tax > Colorado Car Tax Revolt > Colorado DMV > FASTER > Joe Rice > Mary Mullarkey > Michael Bender > Mullarkey Court > Nancy Rice > TABOR
Comments
Praise for PPC From Our Lefty "Fan"
- "Zany-ass bombast-entertainment...Hackneyed weirdo communist pseudo-nostalgia" --Alan Franklin, ProgressNow
Featured Posts
- Rising Oil Production in Alberta: More Evidence Disproving Hubbert’s Peak
In today’s environment it’s hard to find good news. But this is good news: the free market is working, and putting statists’ predictions, like Hubbert’s, to shame. Oh, the joy!
- Regulatory Agencies Continue to Slow the Economy
- Printing Money Doesn’t Work in Britain Either
- Oklahoma’s Constitutional Amendment Would Pit Taxpayers Against Unions
- Friday’s Unemployment Numbers: Correcting the Corrections
- Romney Woos Grand Junction, Earns Sen. King’s Endorsement
- The Borking of Netflix: movie service finds privacy law to be an inconvenience





