One thing that I disagree with is the idea of using property taxes, sales taxes, excise taxes, etc, as a substitute for income taxes, and the reason for this is that state and local taxes are effectively regressive taxes - they have a higher burden on those with less, rather than being proportional. Why? Well, let's start with property taxes. Because for the non-wealthy, the bulk of a family's wealth is usually in their property. For a middle class family with a household income of $65,000 a year (2 earners), having a house and property with a market value of $300,000+ is going to be the bulk of their total net worth, but for an executive making $1,000,000 a year (including from investments/stock value, etc), that same property is just a fraction of their worth. You either have to be in a super-high priced real estate market (Beverly Hills, TriBeCa, Aspen, etc) or get into conspicuous consumption levels of property to have the same effect.
http://www.itep.org/pdf/whopaysreport.pdf[DOUBLEPOST=1434038424,1434038307][/DOUBLEPOST]
The dude also happens to have the perfect "pinprick cop who gets off on fucking with the defenseless" haircut.