How much of your tax payment this year would you like to allocate for waterboarding in Iraq or an invasion of Iran?
Around the world, people are puzzled as to why the U.S. public allows the Bush administration to wage illegal wars and usurp our power. Why do we tolerate it and continue to pay for it?
Over the past year, millions of U.S. citizens have voted, lobbied, marched, and taken direct action to end the war in Iraq. Courageous soldiers, such as members of Iraq Veterans Against the War, have taken the risk to speak out. Yet Congress continues to appropriate billions of dollars for the war.
How do we up the ante of resistance? It is time for taxpayers who oppose this war to join together in nonviolent civil disobedience and show Congress how to cut off the funds for this war and redirect resources to the pressing needs of people.
Chris Hedges wrote in The Nation, "I will not pay my income tax if we go to war with Iran...I will put the taxes I owe in an escrow account. I will go to court to challenge the legality of the war."
On this anniversary of the Boston Tea Party, a coalition of anti-war activists is calling on individuals to sign a pledge to resist payment of a portion of their taxes. Our pledge states, "When I am joined by 100,000 other U.S. taxpayers, I will join in an act of mass civil disobedience and refuse to the portion of my taxes that pays the U.S. military occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan." We are aiming for April 15th.
Former Secretary of State, Alexander Haig, once said, "Let them march all they want, as long as they pay their taxes." And he was right. We can march all we want, but if we cooperate with the funding of the war, we are culpable.
There is a great tradition of war tax resistance in the United States. During the Mexican-American War that began in 1846, Henry David Thoreau refused payment of war taxes and called on others to join him in resistance. "If a thousand people were not to pay their tax bills this year, that would not be a violent and bloody measure, as it would be to pay them, and enable the State to commit violence and shed innocent blood."
When Ralph Waldo Emerson visited Thoreau in jail, he asked the author of Walden, "Henry, what are doing in there?" Thoreau responded, "Ralph, what are you doing out there?"
Our statement is not against taxation or government. Many of us will continue to pay a portion of our taxes that support the vital functions of government. But we will hold in escrow or redirect the portion of our war taxes to humanitarian aid projects and projects such as those providing relief to survivors of Hurricane Katrina.
Some might suspect that tax resistance is symbolic and futile. But we want to purposely put a cog in the machine of war tax collection. We believe it will lead to a deepening of opposition as tens of thousands of people say, "I can no longer in good conscience pay for these acts by my government." Mass war tax resistance, on the scale proposed, has never been done in the U.S.
The tradition of civil disobedience involves breaking a law in favor of a higher law. It is a statement of non-cooperation with illegitimate authority.
There are people for whom this will not be an option or an appropriate expression of resistance. We hope that each of us will consider what additional action and sacrifice we will make to end this war.
As Chris Hedges explained his reasons for tax refusal, "I have friends in Tehran, Gaza, Beirut, Baghdad, Jerusalem and Cairo. They will endure far greater suffering and deprivation. I want to be able, once the slaughter is over, to at least earn the right to ask for their forgiveness."
The world and history will judge us by how vigorously we resist the illegal and immoral war tactics of the Bush Administration. One start is to stopping paying for Bush's war. What are you doing out there?
Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to
Google--"the 14 points of Fascism" and start an e-mail chain letter or print out and mail as a chain letter. Mail it to churches, fraternal organizations and small news media outlets. This is the least you can do. Have a great holiday, watch the calories and the booze.
People will continue to turn a blind eye until this war hits home more personally. You would think that gas at the almost continuous price of $3.00 a gallon would do it. I know my husband and I are struggling with this big chunk taken out of his weekly pay. I also know that he would never stop paying his taxes.
I keep saying the only way this war will touch almost everyone is a draft and higher taxes to pay for it. The next closest thing would be the collapse of our economy. Or perhaps the Chinese will get fed up over something and call in a loan or two.
Without those it's just one more way for the Bush administration to make us forget.
The sad fact is: Americans really have very little control over their government, which is an oligarchy of major corporations. Those corporations are increasingly reactionary and eager for war, which profits them enormously. Our elections are largely proforma affairs pitting one corporate-backed shill against another. That's why the plight of America's working class has steadily worsened in recent decades.
Take health care, for instance. If Hillary or Obama is elected, she or he will launch into a flurry of activity to get minor reforms passed, but will soon give up, proclaiming, "The Republicans in Congress are blocking me. Nothing I can do." And so on regarding tax reform, immigration, job exportation, you name it. And four years from now we will get all excited about another meaningless election.
What we really need is a complete overhaul of our federal government, but don't hold your breath.
Sorry I was busy shopping. Did someone say that there is a war?
Um, the war is so you can have gas...or didn't
you get the memo?
Excellent post. So THAT'S why all those new prisons are being built all over the country!!New digs for all of the tax evaders and victims of a hijacked economy. But that's OK. As all of the good paying jobs are being outsourced anyway and people can no longer afford to pay their mortgages, the US government can solve this problem by handing over those houses to elites and others from countries like Canada and China and India and Dubai as the dollar tanks beneath the peso. I mean, where else are the American people going to live once they can't afford to live? Oh, such a *considerate* government we have to think about the citizens of this country...
Have a nice life at Gitmo. And remember, torture of every kind is now legal in the United States, especially by the IRS.
Wise up Jodie. We're NOT buying Bush's war. We're putting it on the credit card and willing the balance to the kids.
Free war! Cool!
Jodi - This is fantastic. Please tell us where to go to for this pledge and any other links for the anti-war coalition. Thanks alot! - Laura
I thought China was financing the war.
You must be logged in to comment. Log in or connect with