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Tax Heroes
The Rational Argumentator ^ | June 8, 2003 | Michael Miller

Posted on 06/12/2003 12:32:50 PM PDT by G. Stolyarov II

There are enough tax evaders to elect a government!

Three out of four Canadians (77%) say they are determined to evade taxes. 42% said they had already evaded taxes. (COMPAS poll, Financial Post, June 3, 1995) “Evading taxes” means escaping taxes by illegal means. It includes such things as hiding income from the government, smuggling cigarettes or liquor, buying smuggled goods and secretly paying cash to escape sales taxes.

If a party got 77% of the vote, it would be a landslide. Even 42% is usually enough to elect a government. Voting is safe, and tax evasion is threatened with fines and prison terms; yet enough Canadians to elect a government are evading taxes.

Why? “Most respondents said they cheated because they were disgusted with governments, politicians, regulations, the welfare system, bureaucrats and excessive taxation.” They’re sick of the welfare state, and can find no one to vote for.

A moral revolution is under way. The chairman of COMPAS is quoted as saying, “The most striking finding ... is the evidence of changing ethics.” The article explains, “Many of the Canadians who admit to cheating do not regard themselves as dishonest.”

In this moral revolution, the Post is on the side of reaction. Throughout the Post article, tax evaders are called “tax cheats,” tax evasion is called “cheating,” and so on. The usually admirable Diane Francis says, “Of course, tax evasion is deplorable and not to be applauded.” And, “Tax evasion is immoral as well as illegal ... .”

Oh yeah? Let’s review a simple fact of life: taxation is robbery. Taxation is the forcible, but routine, seizure of one’s rightful property by the government. If you don’t think taxes are collected by force, think about what happens to those who refuse to pay them.

The “changing ethics” deplored by Post and pollster are easily explained. Is it dishonest to frustrate the intentions of a robber? Is it cheating to put your money in your shoe when you are in a sleazy part of town? Certainly not. Neither is it cheating to prevent the government from robbing you.

It is said governments are different because they’re elected. But so are directors of corporations; that doesn’t allow them to rifle shareholders’ pockets. Would it make you feel any better if burglars were elected?

It is said that if you evade taxes, the government will raise taxes on others. Apply that to the free-lance tax collectors who lurk in alleys, and its corruption is obvious. It says that if you don’t let them rob you, you’ll be to blame that they rob others. It takes robbery for granted, and shifts the blame to bystanders!

Besides, the underlying premise—that government spends a certain fixed amount of money—is false. When a statist government gets more money, it does not lower taxes. It spends more! War used to be the sink down which governments poured taxes; today they pour taxes into the insatiable black hole of the welfare state. They also hire more tax collectors. It is not tax evaders who contribThis is no idle comparison. Taxation is partial slavery; slavery is complete taxation. Today, government takes about half our income. If it took it all, we’d recognize ourselves as slaves. But what else are we if government can take whatever it wants from us?ute to these evils, it is tax payers!

In fact, tax evaders defend us from rapacious governments. Cigarette smugglers (and their customers) recently drove governments to reduce cigarette taxes. Those who evade sales and income taxes are pushing government to reduce those taxes.

Tax evaders greatly benefit their fellow citizens by warning government of the practical limits of taxation—in a way that is hard to ignore. Tax evaders help limit taxes.

Is it moral to earn a living by honest work and voluntary trade? Yes. Are such earnings rightful property? Yes. Is it moral to keep them from robbers? Yes. Do those who do so incidentally benefit others? Yes.

Then should one evade taxes? No. It is dangerous: it can lead to impoverishment and imprisonment. Therefore, don’t do it! You are not obliged to take such a risk. But this is merely a warning against incidental evil; it is not a moral condemnation of tax evasion.

There is a name for those who, by acting morally, take a great risk and confer a benefit on others. The name is not “cheat.”

One who acts morally at great risk, to the incidental benefit of others, is a hero. Tax evaders are to be applauded as tax heroes! In the conflict between tax evader and tax collector, morality sides with the tax evader, just as in the past it sided with the runaway slave against the slave-owner and legality.

This is no idle comparison. Taxation is partial slavery; slavery is complete taxation. Today, government takes about half our income. If it took it all, we’d recognize ourselves as slaves. But what else are we if government can take whatever it wants from us?

Taxes are a relic of ancient times, as was slavery. Other organizations have found ways to attract voluntary financing. (1.) They content themselves with what their customers choose to pay them. So should government.

What? Abolish taxes? Surely that’s too radical! Well, only in theory. Most Canadians loathe taxes in practice; only in theory do they still approve of them. Maybe now they are ready to hear a new theory.

Here it is. Taxation is robbery, and robbery should be outlawed. So taxes should be outlawed. So abolish taxes.

Abolitionists are still a tiny minority: only 3% in the poll said they don’t believe in taxes. But the step from unrepentant tax hero to tax abolitionist is a very small one—and 77% of the population is now poised to take that step! Abolitionists need only tell them they are right, and point out that next step.

The time is right to hoist the abolitionist colors, and begin recruiting. The moral premises of abolition are widely accepted. Only the conclusion remains unthinkable.

Abolitionists can make it thinkable—the first step on the road that leads from “cranky” to “eccentric” to “respectable” to “undeniable.” From there it is a short step to “inevitable.”

Can governments be financed without taxes? Not today’s bloated monstrosities, but governments trimmed back to their proper roles? Sure.

How will government be financed without taxes? In principle, the same way as night watchmen, payment for services. It is fun and instructive to guess at the details, but they will have to be worked out in the usual political way, through debates and elections. If you have some good ideas, publish them.

What would a country be like without taxes? Prosperous! And that’s just the openers!

When runaway slaves were called thieves, slavery was regarded as a permanent fact of life. Slavery abolitionists changed that. Today’s usual certainties are death and taxes. If tax abolitionists do their part, the new century may see the end of taxes.

Tax heroes will have led the way. Meanwhile they keep unrelenting pressure on governments to reduce taxes. So let’s drink a toast to tax heroes, and strive to complete the revolution they have begun!

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1. Even, to some extent, the Mafia.

You needn’t be a hero to fight taxes—you can become a Quackgrass activist! Copy this article! Keep the original for future copies. Paper meetings with it! Paper your office! Leave a stack on your business counter! If you expect hostility, use stealth and cunning—it’ll drive your opponents wild! Be ingenious! Have fun!


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Canada; Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government
KEYWORDS: civildisobedience; coercion; compulsion; government; injustice; legalizedtheft; liberty; slavery; taxation; taxes; taxreform; theft
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Michael Miller is an engineer and Objectivist philosopher with thirty years of experience. He had been a member of Boycott Alberta Medicare in 1969 and of the Association to Defend Property Rights from 1973 on. He writes in-depth philosophical theory at his publication, Quackgrass Press, which can be accessed at http://www.quackgrass.com.
1 posted on 06/12/2003 12:32:50 PM PDT by G. Stolyarov II
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To: G. Stolyarov II
Receive updates from the world of Reason, Rights, and Progress. Sign up for The Rational Argumentator's FREE mailing list at http://www.geocities.com/rationalargumentator/registrationform.html

Visit TRA's newest issue at http://www.geocities.com/rationalargumentator/index15.html
2 posted on 06/12/2003 12:34:43 PM PDT by G. Stolyarov II (http://www.geocities.com/rationalargumentator/index14.html)
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To: G. Stolyarov II
Michael Miller is an engineer and Objectivist philosopher with thirty years of experience

Sounds more like a moron who, rather than working within the system to change the system, advocates breaking the law.

3 posted on 06/12/2003 12:41:38 PM PDT by Willie Green (Go Pat Go!!!)
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To: Willie Green
Before you perniciously and with infantilism insult a man, why not fully read his article?

"Then should one evade taxes? No. It is dangerous: it can lead to impoverishment and imprisonment. Therefore, don’t do it! You are not obliged to take such a risk. But this is merely a warning against incidental evil; it is not a moral condemnation of tax evasion."
4 posted on 06/12/2003 12:47:02 PM PDT by G. Stolyarov II (http://www.geocities.com/rationalargumentator/index14.html)
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To: G. Stolyarov II
Before you perniciously and with infantilism insult a man, why not fully read his article?

So he tosses in a disclaimer to cover his @$$.
So what???
He still applauds tax scofflaws as "heroes".
He undermines his own credibility.

5 posted on 06/12/2003 12:54:53 PM PDT by Willie Green (Go Pat Go!!!)
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To: Willie Green
It is a grave logical fallacy to think that commending an act and wishing to undertake it are the same thing. I, for one, am fully in support of the Iraq War and any further American military involvement, yet by no means am I going to join the Armed Forces, as the risk upon my life given my lack of training is too great. Similarly, Miller does not wish to grant any encouragement to tax evasion; he merely seeks to emphasize a dissonance between the law and morality on this issue.
6 posted on 06/12/2003 12:57:39 PM PDT by G. Stolyarov II (http://www.geocities.com/rationalargumentator/index14.html)
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To: Willie Green
Actually, he points out, right in the beginning of his piece, that 3 out of 4 Canadians dislike taxes enough to risk prison in evading them--and that they'd be far better off merely voting them out of existence.
7 posted on 06/12/2003 1:01:41 PM PDT by Poohbah (I must be all here, because I'm not all there!)
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To: Poohbah
Sheesh, goes to show stupidity is NOT limited to the U.S.A.
8 posted on 06/12/2003 1:07:19 PM PDT by hchutch ("If you don’t win, you don’t get to put your principles into practice." David Horowitz)
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To: hchutch
Hmm. Perhaps the problem is that the 77% don't realize just how numerous they are, and that if they figure out who to get behind, they can smoosh the opposition.

It's somewhat akin to the Prisoner's Dilemma.
9 posted on 06/12/2003 1:10:28 PM PDT by Poohbah (I must be all here, because I'm not all there!)
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To: G. Stolyarov II
It is a grave logical fallacy to think that commending an act and wishing to undertake it are the same thing.

No it's not.

I, for one, am fully in support of the Iraq War and any further American military involvement, yet by no means am I going to join the Armed Forces, as the risk upon my life given my lack of training is too great.

But if you chose to enlist, you wouldn't be breaking the law, would you?

Within civilized societies, people who disagree with the law work within the framework of the law to change the law. They destroy their own credibility law by expressing admiration for scofflaws. Why should anybody adhere to any changes in law that they propose when they themselves selectively hold it in disregard?

10 posted on 06/12/2003 1:14:45 PM PDT by Willie Green (Go Pat Go!!!)
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To: Poohbah
Not onyl that, they may allow other things to get in the way. Kinda like the Right here sometimes.
11 posted on 06/12/2003 1:15:16 PM PDT by hchutch ("If you don’t win, you don’t get to put your principles into practice." David Horowitz)
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To: Poohbah; *Taxreform
Actually, he points out, right in the beginning of his piece, that 3 out of 4 Canadians dislike taxes enough to risk prison in evading them--and that they'd be far better off merely voting them out of existence.

The real question is how many of them would be willing to see the government cut its "services" in exchange for lower taxes, and which candidates for office would work for those changes.

12 posted on 06/12/2003 1:23:02 PM PDT by kevkrom (Dump the income tax -- support an NRST!)
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To: Willie Green
How does one hold the law in disregard while obeying it? Long as one obeys it in deed, one's speech cannot be considered seditious in any state but a totalitarian dictatorship.

Let me pose another example. During the Holocaust in Nazi Germany, it was illegal for German citizens to give any refuge to Jews fleeing from genocidal persecution. The common German citizen with a vestige of morality would contend that such a law was inhuman, but still would obey it, for fear of the Reich's monstrous retaliation. Yet, at the same time, he would likely hold in high esteem those who undertook the courageous task of offering the Jews shelter despite the death threats arrayed against them.

Moreover, working within the law is precisely what Miller suggests via a grass-roots abolition movement, but do keep in mind that, while I essentially agree with that method in this case, there are certain instances, such as that in Nazi Germany or any state that forcefully institutes a draft upon its citizens (which is what my first example reminds me of), where the only means of retaliation on the citizens' part is outright disobedience and evasion.
13 posted on 06/12/2003 1:24:12 PM PDT by G. Stolyarov II (http://www.geocities.com/rationalargumentator/index14.html)
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To: G. Stolyarov II
where the only means of retaliation on the citizens' part is outright disobedience and evasion

Let's not forget that there was a time in our own history when this was true, and it was only a couple hundred years ago.

"But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such government, and to provide new guards for their future security."

Doesn't sound like "working from within the system" to me.
14 posted on 06/12/2003 1:30:55 PM PDT by babyface00
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To: G. Stolyarov II
How does one hold the law in disregard while obeying it?

By praising scofflaws as "heroes".

15 posted on 06/12/2003 1:34:20 PM PDT by Willie Green (Go Pat Go!!!)
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To: G. Stolyarov II
Once you feel that the government is no longer interested in your views and you are powerless to change anything, it's not hard, with a clean conscience, to take the next step and avoid having them steal your possesions.
16 posted on 06/12/2003 1:36:10 PM PDT by evaporation-plus
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To: Willie Green
Sounds more like a moron who, rather than working within the system to change the system, advocates breaking the law.

This statement is particularly ironic here on FreeRepublic, since we live in a country that owes its existence to a bunch of tax scofflaws.

17 posted on 06/12/2003 1:38:39 PM PDT by Alberta's Child
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To: Alberta's Child
This statement is particularly ironic here on FreeRepublic, since we live in a country that owes its existence to a bunch of tax scofflaws.

As I recall, the Founders said something about "taxation without representation".
I don't believe that condition exists either here or in Canada.

18 posted on 06/12/2003 1:49:13 PM PDT by Willie Green (Go Pat Go!!!)
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To: Willie Green
As I recall, the Founders said something about "taxation without representation". I don't believe that condition exists either here or in Canada

Correct me if I'm wrong, but the British Parliament existed in 1776. Was Commons not a representative body?

Seems to me the issue is whether the representatives are acting in the interests of those they represent, or just using the system as a pretext. If the author's figures are accurate, it would appear that they are not in Canada, at least with respect to this issue.
19 posted on 06/12/2003 1:52:31 PM PDT by babyface00
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To: babyface00
Boy, this looks like it could turn into an interesting discussion, but its 5:00 here in Cleveland and I've gotta run today.

Hope you guys have fun debating this.
20 posted on 06/12/2003 1:57:04 PM PDT by babyface00
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