Your
decision to begin a fast
on July 1 reveals a dedication that few people possess. But
you have made a bad decision. I pray that you will reverse yourself,
not out of fear or discomfort, but out of principle.
The
Internal Revenue Service is on every American freedom-lover's
list of the first five organizations to abolish. It feeds the
Beast. The income tax should be abolished. It should not be resurrected.
The IRS should be limited to, at most, taxing other branches of
civil government. We the people should have no direct dealings
with the IRS. But, of course, such is not the case.
Your
Web site proclaims that the income tax was brought into existence
illegally. The evidence does indicate that the Sixteenth Amendment
was not
ratified according to law. Bill Benson and Red Beckman made
this case in their 1985 book, The
Law That Never Was. (Who knows? Maybe someday Mr. Benson
will do us the enormous favor-for a profit, no less- of publishing
the full documentation on-line or on a CD-ROM. I would be happy
to buy a copy.)
The
subsequent legislation that created the IRS is, at best, muddled.
You think that it was never passed. Your decision to challenge
the IRS on its legality is surely legitimate.
But
there is always the question of means. Is your threat of self-starvation
legitimate? Is it even rational? It will get some publicity for
your cause. It may not get enough publicity to force the IRS to
meet with you publicly on September 21. You cannot be sure. You
have said that you will not stop your fast until IRS officials
meet with you and answer your questions publicly. But they may
decide to ignore you. Then what?
A
rational tactic has a plan. A one-man stand had better have a
constituency in mind. An obvious constituency that you should
attempt to mobilize is this one: members of a tiny handful of
conservative Christian churches. The pastors of mainline churches
and most evangelical churches will ignore you. They will not risk
a confrontation with the IRS, which might revoke their churches'
tax-exempt status. You must therefore go over the heads of the
pastors to the members.
Christians
will see your tactic as literally suicidal. All branches of the
church throughout history have placed suicide in the category
of a mortal sin or its equivalent in the particular denominational
tradition. Suicide is seen as murder: the deliberate destruction
of God's image in man. The church has always said that each man
belongs to God, and God therefore places limits on killing. This
includes self-killing.
Your
decision to place your life on the line, on your own authority,
will be regarded by Christians who hear about your stand as morally
wrong and tactically misguided. You do your cause enormous harm
by adopting such a tactic.
Then
there is the question of the magnitude of the threat to our liberty
posed by the IRS. This agency should not be at the top of any
freedom-loving American's list of institutions to be eliminated.
Decades ago, R. J. Rushdoony made the point that any call for
a tax revolt is futile in modern American society. This nation
has for too long placed enormous faith in government-run schools.
He concluded: "Americans have willingly tithed their children
to the State. They are not about to take a stand against the mere
confiscation of their money."
The
public schools are America's only established church. Rushdoony
made this point in his book, The
Messianic Character of American Education, in 1963. Sidney
E. Mead, a liberal church historian, made the same point in the
same year in his book, The
Lively Experiment. The public schools are where most Americans'
public faith lodges. You should not waste your efforts in a vain
hope of shutting down the IRS until after the worship of the State
in these secular churches ends.
The
public school system operated for over a century without funds
collected by the IRS and distributed by the U.S. Treasury. Even
today, federal subsidies to state and local education are only
a small fraction of the total funding of the tax-funded schools.
The IRS is not our primary target. Shut down the IRS without first
shutting down the public schools, and the Beast will recover.
There
is another underlying error in your tactic: your abiding faith
in salvation by law. You seem to think that a technicality in
the law will save America from the tyranny of the IRS. But the
letter of any law is interpreted by politicians dressed in black
robes. You are operating under the naive assumption that the federal
courts are ready to cut off the source of their own funding. That
the IRS's own administrative law court will decide against you
is obvious. I have in mind a Constitutional court. The judges
are not about to commit institutional suicide. They would much
prefer to have you commit literal suicide.
We
live in a nation so utterly blinded by the doctrine of the absolute
authority of federal judges that a declaration by eight of them
that it is illegal for states to prohibit abortion persuaded the
vast majority of American voters, including Christians, that nothing
could be done about it. They shrugged their shoulders and dutifully
went on with earning a living and paying their taxes.
Why
do you believe that these people are ready to join you in a tax
revolt based on a legal technicality? Most of them will never
hear of you, and if they do, they will think "nut case."
You
are not Gandhi. This is not India.
Today's
tax laws are the visible manifestation of Americans' deeply entrenched
involvement in the politics of plunder. Our tax laws are consistent
with this national faith in the power of the State to redistribute
wealth by force.
You
may have found an ancient glitch in the letter of the tax laws,
but the spirit of these laws is universal. A jury of your peers
would probably convict you if you put the case before them. As
surely as the Israelites of Samuel's day paid no attention to
his warning that the king would extract a tithe from their production
(I Samuel 8:15-17), so are today's voters and jurors.
The
spirit of the law is our problem. The letter of the law may protect
this or that person from a specific act of government tyranny,
but it should not be expected to protect taxpayers from themselves.
I
implore you to continue your struggle by other means. Call off
your fast. Use your Web site to make your case that the tax laws
are rigged and technically illegitimate. Move your argument from
the verifiable facts of illegal acts by politicians and their
appointed bureaucrats to the broader issue of immoral law and
immoral voters, who believe in a rewritten Mosaic commandment:
"Thou
shalt not steal, except by majority vote."