Exploiting
the Workers
by
Anthony Gregory
by Anthony Gregory
Every year
the average American worker confronts the federal government in
a more disturbingly intimate manner than during any other so regularly
and widely experienced encounter. On April 15, Americans must pay
tribute to the state on the basis of their income.
To be more
precise, the coerced payment occurs continuously as every dollar
is earned. Ever since World War II, Americans have had their income
tax withheld by their employers, so they don't realize all at once
how much they're being milked and revolt. Government funding runs
more smoothly, especially in larger amounts, when the taxpayer is
soaked gradually.
Although the
grand larceny is unremitting, April 15 still has its unique significance,
for it is this date by which most Americans have to submit their
tax forms, often exhausted from an excruciating effort to accurately
account for their financial affairs from the past year, dreading
that an arithmetic error or misreading of the illegible tax code
might land them in federal prison. It is an onerous imposition for
millions. It is a reminder that the government is essentially an
extortion racket. If it happened closer to election time, campaign
rhetoric would perhaps be more interesting.
It is notable
how little concern there is for the oppressed taxpayer coming from
the progressives, the liberals, and the left. Although they might
complain about poor priorities and busted budgets, few of them attack
the institution of income taxation for what it is: violent exploitation
of the worker by the most monopolistic, immense and predatory corporation
to be found, the national government.
This of course
goes for all the payroll taxes, not just the income tax. It should
be obvious by now that Social Security is not an investment, and
no more voluntary than the income tax.
The hardship
of taxation is most clear to the worker on tax day, when the proletariat
must consummate their economic enslavement over the previous year
with an intimidating and self-deprecating paper ritual. Having paid
rent on their lives to the corporate state, a large fraction of
which payment has financed slaughter, persecution and further oppression
of workers, the tax serfs must prove to the state to its satisfaction
that the right amount has been extracted from them. If they fail,
they go to jail.
The percentage
of the workers’ production that goes to the state, incidentally,
is considerably larger than the cut the capitalist pockets from
what a worker produces. The comparison, however, is unfair, since
the worker has some choice of employers. Opportunities are certainly
scarcer than they should be, especially due to the regulatory trappings
set by the bureaucracy to keep the populace in a place most easy
to track and control. But the employee can ultimately leave and
seek other work. The state, in contrast to the most parsimonious
taskmaster in the private sector, is vastly more unrelenting, unforgiving
and inescapable. It has its grip on the whole country. Even Americans
who expatriate have to keep paying their annual ransom to Uncle
Sam.
It's funny
how much a $2.00 ATM fee will set the left off, meanwhile the state
loots the average American on every transaction to bankroll various
ventures in state capitalism and state socialism – ventures on which
the taxpayer covers the risk and the mega-bureaucracy, the military
industrial complex, and their cronies reap the profits. One might
expect a real partisan of the rights of the worker to be alarmed
by the state's encroachment on the worker's right to the fruits
of his labor and production.
Just thinking
of how much people would have to freely save and give and spend
and invest, to build their communities, pursue their dreams and
support their families, if it weren't for income and payroll taxes,
sure makes me more upset about the state than about minor banking
annoyances. For all the federal government supposedly does for the
downtrodden, does the left not see how much more it takes away?
Giving Labor Day to the worker in exchange for Tax Day for the state
appears an exceedingly unfair trade.
Why does the
egalitarian left speak so little of the fundamental inequity involved
between the $2.7 trillion exploiter and the hundreds of millions
of workers who labor constantly to keep the scam afloat? I suppose
that some liberals have been tricked into believing in the necessity
of taxation. Others are actually not so concerned with the well
being of the worker as they are with protecting government power.
The organized
conservatives, for their part, complain about taxes and yet favor
the most extravagant and vulgar spending projects. They are smart
enough about economics to understand the contradiction. They are
not really anti-tax. It was the Republicans who gave America the
Income Tax, under Lincoln and then more permanently through Taft.
The GOP has always been for the big tariff, too. When push comes
to shove, the right has always found ways to make others pay for
its wars and police brutality. Despite the pervasive misconceptions,
Republicans characteristically jump at the chance to raise taxes
and inaugurate new ones, and when they do cut them, the cuts are
nearly always an illusion.
Regarding the
extent of exploitation, over the years, under the care of both parties,
the federal budget has blossomed into the largest government budget
ever. Its growth continues to be tremendous. And the enormous income
tax doesn't even come close to covering the total. As
Ron Paul pointed out, the personal income tax could be wiped
out and the U.S. government would still have a larger budget than
it did in 2000.
That was the
last year of Clinton. Bush and the Republicans have spent so much
on their wars and graft, their welfare and police statism, that
we can accurately attribute the entire personal income tax burden
to the cost of their programs!
In other words,
income tax is the price we pay so the Bush administration can continue
to wreck civilization. Here and abroad.
There was a
time many years ago when liberals recognized the problem with taxation,
the impossibility of making it just, the danger of unleashing the
taxing power of the state that corresponds so well to its destructive
power. Then the left turned to the state as a potential friend,
rather than the unambiguous foe, of the working man. Conservatives
have long complained about paying up, even as their totalitarian
bureaucracy has been financed by burgeoning direct and indirect
taxation. Nowadays, the establishment left and right both care nothing
of the suffering taxpayer and the foundational evil of taxation.
Anyone with a vested interest in big government will just stare
off into space if you point out that it’s theft, conducted at the
barrel of a gun. In the long run, it is this point we should emphasize
– that taxation is simply plunder, and any organization that executes
it must be watched closely.
As for the
working class, every tax day the libertarian side of each wage earner
emerges anomalously like the Groundhog on its day. April 15 is,
in this sense at least, Libertarian Day. I get the feeling from
news of Mr. Bush’s declining popularity that this year in particular
the people will be enraged by the humiliation of filing those forms,
that insult of procedure added to the injury and exploitation of
taxation.
April
14, 2006
Anthony
Gregory [send him mail]
is a writer and musician who lives in Berkeley, California. He is
a research analyst at the Independent
Institute. See
his webpage for more
articles and personal information.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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