|
Taxation Is Extortion
If
you’re wondering how the logic of this admittedly brash remark works
itself out, try the following. It’s
simple; just publicly refuse
to pay your taxes. The
government will come for you and the police will try to throw you in
jail. If you resist, you
will be shot. Pay up, or get
a bullet in your head. It’s
essentially the same tactic employed by Mafia thugs. After
a long week’s labor, you get the dubious pleasure of having
warmongering politicians get 30 to 40 percent of your money out of your
paycheck. And it is indeed your
money, not theirs. They
didn’t earn it. They
didn’t slave away for it. They
don’t own it. They have no
right to demand it from you. And
they certainly have no right to take it from you by force.
Taxation is essentially extortion. There’s
a reason why everybody hates the IRS.
There’s a reason why Republicans manage to win elections by
pledging to lower taxes—even though they never do it once elected.
There’s a reason why, in olden times, tax collectors took their place
among the most hated and reviled professions.
If some thief burglarized your home, you’d be outraged over the
loss of your property. You’d
likely be even more outraged if the thief had accomplices holding you at
gunpoint while stealing your stuff. So
why is it okay for the government to garnish your wages under the unseen
yet implicit threat of punishment if you fail to comply?
Why does the IRS get to keep extensive records on your personal
financial matters, with little to no accountability on their part?
Why is it acceptable for some people to force you and me—under
pain of death—to subsidize their fat salaries and their generous
handouts to corporate welfare queens and their bloody wars abroad? Actually,
my opening suggestion may not be relevant to the present time, because
nowadays we don’t make direct payments of tax to the Treasury, which
is what used to be done. Before
World War II, people paid their taxes to the government in one lump sum
every March. But between the
war expenses and the New Deal programs, the government was racking up
quite a huge bill. Knowing
full well that most people wouldn’t be happy having to pay higher
taxes, they came up with the ingenious
solution of having employers withhold the appropriate amount of
money from their employees’ paychecks and sending it off to the
Treasury. This was called
the “withholding tax,” but a more fitting term would be garnishing
the workers’ wages. This
is the system that exists to this day. Because
taxes are withheld from our paychecks and paid by someone else (our
employer) to the government, we don’t really see the impact of
taxation in a visceral way. Instead
of paying out one lump sum of thousands each year, we come home with a
paycheck with “Gross pay” and “Net pay,” and gripe over the
difference. You send out a
tax return form and maybe, just maybe, get a refund.
Someone withholds your money from you but all you ever really see
is that numerical difference. You
don’t see the actual money as you shell it out to the warmongers and
fat cats. The end result of
this is that you never really feel the full impact of taxation.
Out of sight, out of mind. Surely
if you had to mail a check for four thousand bucks to the treasury every
year instead of having your employer withhold it and take care of the
rest, you would be pretty PO'ed. You’d
shed a tear or two as you wrote out that check and stuffed it in the
mailbox and watched all that cash go down the drain.
And that contributes to us believing in the legitimacy of
taxation. Out of sight, out
of mind . . . and therefore acceptable. How
is this any different from the Mafia demanding “protection money”
from storeowners at gunpoint, then using it to finance their lavish
lifestyles and criminal activities?
How is it okay for greedy, power-hungry politicians to take what
is rightfully yours and use it to finance their own lavish lifestyles,
corruption, and the murder of poor people all over the world?
If for no other reason, taxation (or rather, extortion) is wrong
because it forces hardworking people like you and me to pay for the mass
murder of poor people abroad, so some parasite—be he or she Republican
or Democrat—can go on TV and proclaim the salvation of the Republic. Clearly,
if anybody else tried to do the same thing the government does with
impunity, they’d be thrown in jail in a heartbeat.
Of
course, there’s little the government does with our extorted money
that society couldn’t do otherwise (and better), aside from national
defense—and it doesn’t even do that
too well. Suppose there were
no taxes and you got to keep 100 percent of the wages you work so hard
for. You could donate to
charity. You could save it
up and start a business and provide jobs to people who need them in this
ailing economy. You could
afford better health care than the government could ever provide.
You could afford to go to a better school.
You and the greater community could have the economic means to
help more people in need, if you so desired.
More importantly, you would have complete control of the fruits
of your labor, which should be yours by right. Yet
because of what is essentially a massive extortion racket for the
purpose of financing mass murder, corruption, and waste, this is just a
pipe dream. Some people
would argue that this extortion racket is somehow okay because we vote
for the politicians who use our money, you know, to dole it out for what
they call the "greater social good."
Of course, it wouldn’t matter if you got to vote for the Mafia
dons because their extortion rackets would still be wrong regardless. Here’s my big question: Why not apply the same principle to greedy, amoral politicians? discuss this column in the forum Marcel Votlucka is a writer and freelance journalist from Queens, NY. He is a graduate of Stony Brook University, and is a frequent contributor to the Stony Brook Press and the Stony Brook Independent. He is currently finishing work a novella, Neverland: Voices From the Muslim Holocaust. |