Many of them are going to be challenged in court, and some seem like red meat that's going to get overturned or be made irrelevant.
For example: outlawing CBDC: The state of Florida has no mechanism to do anything about CBDC's. If the Federal Treasury decides to move to a CDBC (Let's call them DigiDollars), there is no mechanism to stop anything from engaging in trade or contracts with the CDBC. I'm fairly certain that if Florida brought suit against two private entities for fulfilling a contract in DigiDollars, they'd be raked over the coals in Federal Court.
Best you can do, as a state, is say that you won't prosecute contracts fulfilled in other currencies if both parties agree to it. The Feds will invent reasons to come after you for that, but you're not over-stepping your jurisdictional grounds.
Digidollars are just barter. If I trade many CarrotCoin for one FixMyRoofCoin, or if I leave "coin" off the end, it's all just barter trade. And it is taxed at the real-dollar-value of those barter trades, in theory.
You don't need to overcomplicate things. You owe taxes in your country's currency, but you can do business in whatever currency you want, as long as you provide that payment at year-end, 10% for the big guy.
You can't outlaw barter trade, because almost everything is barter trade on some level.
Many of them are going to be challenged in court, and some seem like red meat that's going to get overturned or be made irrelevant.
For example: outlawing CBDC: The state of Florida has no mechanism to do anything about CBDC's. If the Federal Treasury decides to move to a CDBC (Let's call them DigiDollars), there is no mechanism to stop anything from engaging in trade or contracts with the CDBC. I'm fairly certain that if Florida brought suit against two private entities for fulfilling a contract in DigiDollars, they'd be raked over the coals in Federal Court.
Best you can do, as a state, is say that you won't prosecute contracts fulfilled in other currencies if both parties agree to it. The Feds will invent reasons to come after you for that, but you're not over-stepping your jurisdictional grounds.
Digidollars are just barter. If I trade many CarrotCoin for one FixMyRoofCoin, or if I leave "coin" off the end, it's all just barter trade. And it is taxed at the real-dollar-value of those barter trades, in theory.
You don't need to overcomplicate things. You owe taxes in your country's currency, but you can do business in whatever currency you want, as long as you provide that payment at year-end, 10% for the big guy.
You can't outlaw barter trade, because almost everything is barter trade on some level.
That 10% to the big guy is the problem, and why gifts and inherentence are taxed as well.
But none of that changes that the State of Florida can't do anything about a CBDC.