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Protesting
the Tax Protesters
by
James Ostrowski
by James Ostrowski
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I
am not now nor have I ever been a big fan of the "tax protester"
movement.
Wikipedia
has a good definition:
"A
tax protester is an individual who denies the obligation to pay
a tax (for which the government has determined that person is
liable) based on a belief that the government is acting outside
of its legal authority when imposing such taxes."
Tax
protesters make what I believe are arcane legal arguments about
why this or that tax has no legal basis. I'm not going to bother
over the details of their arguments. I've heard them for over 25
years ad nauseum. Fortunately, law professor Jonathan
R. Siegel has performed that disagreeable task for us.
The
courts have held that there is a legal obligation to pay
taxes. What the "legal" in that term means exactly is a very interesting
question which I addressed at length in a law school paper which
I will publish at some point.
Bottom
line: "legal" means that if you do not comply, the government
may use physical coercion against you.
The
tax protesters apparently believe that if they make their esoteric
arguments to the authorities that the authorities will magically
cease to enforce tax laws. It's a complete waste of time in my view.
Many tens of thousands of people have spent many hundreds of thousands
of dollars supporting the tax protester movement. What have they
accomplished? Several of them have helped increase taxes
for federal prisons.
According
to Wikipedia,
several prominent tax protesters, including Irwin Schiff, have been
convicted and sentenced to prison. As long ago as the early 1980’s
my law professor, Henry Mark Holzer, told me that tax protesters
were getting killed in the "advance sheets," the most
recent decisions of the U. S. Courts of Appeal.
Tax
protesters are not exercising civil disobedience as Henry
David Thoreau did. That would be an entirely different strategy.
Civil disobedience involves deliberately violating an unjust law
so as to arouse public sentiment against it. That is not what tax
protesters are doing. Thoreau wrote in this regard:
Cast
your whole vote, not a strip of paper merely, but your whole influence.
. . . If a thousand men 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. This is, in fact, the definition of a peaceable
revolution, if any such is possible.
Much
tax protester time is spent praying to the Constitution. Big problem.
Constitutions don't limit government power because the government
has claimed the
exclusive right to say what they mean.
More
importantly, the Constitution is a legal document. Law is a reflection
of pre-legal values. The values that gave rise to the Constitution
are in large part dead. The vast majority of the public no longer
holds them. You might as well be speaking Chinese to them.
Worse
yet, a large portion of the population is on the federal dole. They'll
favor the tax authorities over the most elegant legal arguments
against the legality of the federal income tax. This is the tax
protesters' biggest problem and yet I have never heard them address
it!
Let's
assume for the sake of argument that the Supreme Court bought these
tax protester arguments and held that the income tax as presently
understood is unconstitutional. Congress would meet in the morning
and approve a constitutional amendment retroactively overruling
that decision. 38 state legislatures would meet in the afternoon
and ratify the amendment. Yawn.
Even
as political strategy, tax protesting fails. It takes enormous effort
just to understand their arguments and it’s virtually impossible
to translate them into plain English for a mass audience. Also,
by urging individuals to stand up to the system by themselves, they
allow the government to pursue a divide and conquer strategy. They
counter with the common sense and intuitively appealing argument
that the tax protesters are just making the rest of us pay more.
A much more effective argument is to argue for a general and steep
decline in taxation for all of us.
If
legal arguments are a waste of time, how do we fight confiscatory
taxation? By making moral, philosophical, economic, historical and
practical arguments against it. And by explaining why the various
programs funded by taxation are unnecessary or destructive and can
be replaced by market-based solutions.
To
fight tax slavery and the horrendously destructive policies it funds,
support the organizations working hard to end it: the Mises
Institute, LewRockwell.com, the Future
of Freedom Foundation, and the newest kid on the block Free
New York. FFF has recently published a fine three-part series
by Sheldon
Richman exposing some of the fallacious arguments of the tax
protesters.
To
my tax protesting brothers and sisters. You have been led astray.
Join us. The path of lesser resistance has gotten you no where.
January
1, 2007
James
Ostrowski is an attorney in Buffalo, New York and author of Political
Class Dismissed: Essays Against Politics,
Including "What’s Wrong With Buffalo." See his
website.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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