Tax resistance: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Refusal to pay a tax in opposition to a government or policy, rather than taxation itself}} |
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{{Tax resistance}} |
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{{distinguish|Tax evasion}} |
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A '''tax resister''' resists or refuses payment of a [[tax]] because of opposition to the institution collecting the tax, or to some of that institution’s policies. Often tax resistance comes from [[pacifism|pacifist]]s, [[conscientious objector]]s or members of [[religion|religious]] groups, such as the [[Quakers]], who choose not to fund violent government activities. It has also been a technique used by [[nonviolent resistance]] movements, such as [[India]]’s campaign for independence led by [[Mahatma Gandhi]]. |
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[[File:Gandhi at Dandi 5 April 1930.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi|Gandhi]] picking up salt and disobeying the British [[History of the British salt tax in India|salt production and tax laws]]]] |
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'''Tax resistance''' is the refusal to pay [[tax]] because of opposition to the government that is imposing the tax, or to government policy, or as [[Taxation as theft|opposition to taxation in itself]]. Tax resistance is a form of [[direct action]] and, if in violation of the tax regulations, also a form of [[civil disobedience]]. Tax resisters are distinct from "[[Tax protester (United States)|tax protesters]]", who deny that the legal obligation to pay taxes exists or applies to them. Tax resisters may accept that some law commands them to pay taxes but they still choose to resist taxation. |
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Examples of tax resistance campaigns include those advocating [[home rule]], such as the [[Salt March]] led by [[Mahatma Gandhi]], and those promoting [[women's suffrage]], such as the [[Women's Tax Resistance League]].<ref>{{cite book|title=Gandhi and King: The power of nonviolent resistance |author=Michael J. Nojeim |year=2004 |page=142 |publisher=Bloomsbury Academic |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lme8yEeWOr8C&pg=PA142 |isbn=9780275965747 }}</ref> War tax resistance is the refusal to pay some or all taxes that pay for [[war]] and may be practiced by [[conscientious objector]]s, [[pacifism|pacifists]], or those protesting against a particular war.<ref name=NWTRCC>{{cite web|url=http://www.nwtrcc.org/what_is_wtr.php|title=What is War Tax Resistance?|publisher=NWTRCC}}</ref> |
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Unlike [[tax protester]]s (who deny that the legal obligation to pay taxes exists or applies), tax resisters typically recognize that the law obliges them to pay taxes but still choose to resist taxation. |
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==History |
==History== |
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{{main|History of tax resistance}} |
{{main|History of tax resistance}} |
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[[File:Wells egyptian peasants taxes.jpg|thumb|300px|Egyptian peasants seized for non-payment of taxes during the [[Old Kingdom of Egypt|Pyramid Age]]]] |
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The earliest and most widespread forms of taxation were the [[corvée]] and [[tithe]], both of which can be traced back to the beginning of [[civilization]]. The corvée was state-imposed [[Unfree labour|forced labour]] on [[peasant]]s too poor to pay other forms of taxation (''labour'' in [[Ancient Egyptian literature|ancient Egyptian]] is a synonym for taxes).<ref name=burg>{{cite book|title=A World History of Tax Rebellions|author=David F. Burg|year=2004|pages=vi–viii|publisher=Taylor & Francis |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=T91k6HAODzAC&pg=PP1|isbn=9780203500897}}</ref> Low taxes helped the Roman aristocracy increase their wealth, which equalled or exceeded the revenues of the central government. An emperor sometimes replenished his treasury by confiscating the estates of the "super-rich", but in the later period, the resistance of the wealthy to paying taxes was one of the factors contributing to the collapse of the Empire.<ref name="Hopkins p. 184">[[#Morris|Morris]], p. 184.</ref> |
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[[File:Boston Tea Party Currier colored.jpg|thumb|The [[Boston Tea Party]], 16 December 1773]] |
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==Motives== |
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Because taxation is often oppressive, governments have always struggled with [[tax noncompliance]] and resistance.<ref name=burg /> It has been suggested that tax resistance played a significant role in the collapse of several [[empire]]s, including the [[ancient Egypt|Egyptian]], [[Roman Empire|Roman]], [[Spanish Empire|Spanish]], and [[Aztec Triple Alliance|Aztec]].<ref>{{cite book|title=The Economic Psychology of Tax Behaviour|author=Erich Kirchler|author-link=Erich Kirchler|page=182|year=2007|url=http://ebooks.cambridge.org/chapter.jsf?bid=CBO9780511628238|quote=Governments as far back as ancient Egypt have struggled to maintain compliance with tax laws. Indeed, it has been suggested that tax resistance has played a significant role in the collapse of several major world orders, including the Egyptian, Roman, Spanish and Aztec empires (Erard, 1997).}}</ref> Reports of collective tax refusal include [[Zealotry|Zealot]]s resisting the Roman [[Tax per head|poll tax]] during the 1st century [[Common Era|CE]], culminating in the [[First Jewish–Roman War]].<ref>{{cite book|title=We Won't Pay: A Tax Resistance Reader|editor=David M. Gross|year=2008|pages=1–7}}</ref> Other historic events that originated as tax revolts include [[Magna Carta]], the [[American Revolution]] and the [[French Revolution]].<ref name="burg" /> |
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Tax resisters are typically motivated by disagreement with the policies of the [[government]] or institution that is collecting the tax. For some, this may include opposing that government or institution entirely, and not just specific policies (for instance, Gandhi’s opposition to British Imperial rule). |
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War tax resisters often highlight the relationship between [[income tax]] and war.<ref>{{cite web|title=History of war tax resistance|url=http://www.peacetaxseven.com/history.html|publisher=The Peace Tax Seven}}</ref> In [[Kingdom of Great Britain|Britain]] income tax was introduced in 1799, to pay for weapons and equipment in preparation for the [[Napoleonic Wars|Napoleonic wars]], whilst the [[Union (American Civil War)|US federal government]] imposed their first income tax in the [[Revenue Act of 1861]] to help pay for the [[American Civil War]]. |
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Anarchists who resist taxes oppose anybody or any institution that demands tribute. [[Christian anarchism|Christian anarchists]] in the pacifist tradition resist taxes from any government that funds a violent civil defence force or military. Some radical democrats suggest that a right to deny tax payments is in the spirit of [[democracy]], giving people a [[veto]] right and forcing government spending to be done with the consent of the governed. |
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==Views and aims== |
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What a tax resister hopes to accomplish may be personal or political or some combination of the two: |
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[[File:Benjamin D. Maxham - Henry David Thoreau - Restored - greyscale - straightened.jpg|thumb|right|150px|[[Henry David Thoreau]], author of ''[[Civil Disobedience (Thoreau)|Civil Disobedience]]'']] |
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* Some tax resisters want to [[Hand washing#Idioms|“wash their hands”]] of complicity in immoral government policies by not contributing to funding them. |
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[[:Category:Tax resisters|Tax resisters]] come from a wide range of backgrounds with diverse [[ideology|ideologies]] and aims. For example, [[Henry David Thoreau]] and [[William Lloyd Garrison]] drew inspiration from the American Revolution and the stubborn pacifism of the [[Quakers]].<ref name=gross>{{cite book|title=We Won't Pay: A Tax Resistance Reader|editor=David M. Gross|year=2008|page=Back cover}}</ref> Some tax resisters refuse to pay tax because their conscience will not allow them to fund war, whilst others resist tax as part of a campaign to overthrow the government.<ref name=gross /> |
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* Some resist taxes as a form of protest that communicates the strength of their opposition through an act of [[civil disobedience]]. |
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* Some see tax resistance as a form of [[Nonviolent resistance|nonviolent political force]] – cutting off funds from the government as part of a campaign to force concessions from that government or to cause it to relinquish control. |
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Tax resisters have been violent revolutionaries like [[John Adams]] and pacifist [[nonresistance|nonresistants]] like [[John Woolman]]; communists like [[Karl Marx]] and capitalists like [[Vivien Kellems]]; solitary [[anti-war movement|anti-war]] activists like [[Ammon Hennacy]] and leaders of independence movements like Mahatma Gandhi.<ref name=gross /> [[Leo Tolstoy]], a [[Christian anarchism|Christian anarchist]], urged government leaders to change their attitude to war and citizens to taxes: |
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==Methods== |
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There are many methods of tax resistance. In war-tax resistance circles in the [[United States]] it is sometimes remarked that there are as many ways to practice tax resistance as there are resisters. |
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{{quote|If only each King, Emperor, and President understood that his work of directing armies is not an honourable and important duty, as his flatterers persuade him it is, but a bad and shameful act of preparation for murder—and if each private individual understood that the payment of taxes wherewith to hire and equip soldiers, and, above all, army-service itself, are not matters of indifference, but are bad and shameful actions by which he not only permits but participates in murder—then this power of Emperors, Kings, and Presidents, which now arouses our indignation, and which causes them to be murdered, would disappear of itself.<ref>[[Thou Shalt Not Kill (by Leo Tolstoy)|Thou Shalt Not Kill]].</ref>}} |
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===Redirection=== |
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Some tax resisters refuse to pay all or a portion of the taxes due, but make an equivalent donation to charity. In this way, they demonstrate that the intent of their resistance is not selfish and that they want to use a portion of their earnings to contribute to the common good. |
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==Methods== |
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For instance, [[Julia Butterfly Hill]] resisted about $150,000 in federal taxes, and donated that money to after school programs, arts and cultural programs, community gardens, programs for Native Americans, alternatives to incarceration, and environmental protection programs. She said: |
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As an example of the numerous tax resistance methods, below are some of the legal and illegal techniques used by war tax resisters:<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nwtrcc.org/how_to_resist.php|title=How to Refuse to Pay for War}}</ref> |
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===Legal=== |
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:I actually take the money that the [[Internal Revenue Service|IRS]] says goes to them and I give it to the places where our taxes ''should'' be going. And in my letter to the IRS I said: “I’m not refusing to pay my taxes. I’m actually paying them but I’m paying them where they belong because you refuse to do so.”<ref>Smith, Gar "An Interview with Julia Butterfly Hill: Part 1" ''The Edge'' 26 May 2005[http://www.sniggle.net/Experiment/index.php?entry=10Sep05]</ref> |
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====Avoidance==== |
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A resister may lower their tax payments by using legal [[tax avoidance]] techniques. |
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Some resisters resist only certain taxes, either because those taxes are especially noxious to them, or because they present a useful symbolic target, or because they are more easily resisted. |
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====Paying under protest==== |
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For instance, in the [[United States]], many war tax resisters resist the [[Telephone Federal Excise Tax]]. The tax was initiated to pay for the [[Spanish-American War]] and has frequently been raised or extended by the government during times of war. This made it an attractive symbolic target as a “[[war tax]]”. Because this tax is typically small, resistance very rarely triggers significant government retaliation. This form of resistance is popular in part because of its relative safety. |
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Some taxpayers pay their taxes, but include protest letters along with their tax forms. Others pay in a protesting form—for instance, by writing their cheque on a [[toilet seat]] or a mock-up of a missile. Others pay in a way that creates inconvenience for the collector—for instance, by paying the entire amount in low-denomination coins. This last method is less effective in countries where small coins are [[legal tender]] only in limited amounts, allowing the tax authority legally to reject such payments; for example in England and Wales, 1p coins are legal tender only in amounts up to 20p. |
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====Reducing taxable income and consumption==== |
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===Refusing to pay=== |
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[[File:PeacePark.jpg|thumb|right|The [[White House Peace Vigil]], started by [[Thomas (activist)|Thomas]] in 1981 and supported by tax resister [[Ellen Thomas]]]] |
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The most dramatic and characteristic method of tax resistance is to refuse to pay a tax – either by quietly ignoring the tax bill or by openly declaring the refusal to pay. |
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Other tax resisters change their lifestyles so that they owe less tax. For instance; to avoid [[consumption tax]]es on alcohol, a resister might [[Homebrewing|home-brew beer]]; to avoid [[excise|excise taxes]] on gasoline, a resister might take up [[Vehicular cycling|cycling]]; to avoid income tax, a resister may reduce their income below the [[income tax threshold|tax threshold]] by embracing simple living or a [[freeganism|freegan]] lifestyle.<ref name=nwtrcc>{{cite web|url=http://www.nwtrcc.org/practical5.php|title=Low Income/Simple Living as War Tax Resistance|publisher=NWTRCC}}</ref> For example, British citizens pay no income tax if their income is below the [[personal allowance]]. In the US the equivalent tax-free annual income is the [[standard deduction]], though many deductions and credits allow people to earn much more than this and still avoid income tax.<ref name=nwtrcc /> |
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Opposition to war has led some, such as Ammon Hennacy and Ellen Thomas, to a form of tax resistance in which they reduce their income below the tax threshold by taking up a [[simple living]] lifestyle.<ref name=nwtrcc /><ref>{{cite news|author=Matt Hagengruber |title=DC protest group stands test of time |date=July 9, 2000 |publisher=KnightRidder |url=http://www.prop1.org/history/2000/000709kr.DC%20protest%20group%20stands%20test%20of%20time.htm|quote=I decided that when I didn't need to worry about providing for my daughter, I was going to reduce my income to below the poverty level so I wouldn't have to pay taxes, because I don't agree with the policies [of the U.S. government]}}</ref> These individuals believe that their government is engaged in immoral, unethical or destructive activities such as war, and that paying taxes inevitably funds these activities.<ref name=nwtrcc /><ref>[http://sniggle.net/Experiment/index.php?entry=19Mar05&showyear=2005 Picket Line Annual Report].</ref> These methods differ from [[tax evasion]] in that they stay within the tax laws, and they differ from tax avoidance in that the goal is to pay as little tax as possible rather than to keep as much post-tax income as possible. |
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Some tax resisters resist only a portion of the taxes due. For instance, some war tax resisters refuse to pay a percentage of their taxes equivalent to the military percentage of the government’s budget. |
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===Illegal=== |
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Other resisters withhold a symbolic amount – for instance, in the [[United States]], some might hold back $17.76/17.76% (symbolic of the revolutionary year [[1776]]) or $10.40/10.4% (in tribute to [[Form 1040]], which is used in federal income tax returns). In other countries, similar amounts symbolic of a certain year in their country's history (eg. 1788 or 1901 in the case of [[Australia]]) or a tribute to the form used for income tax returns in the country are held back in a similar fashion. |
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=== |
====Evasion==== |
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A resister may decide to reduce their tax paid through illegal tax evasion. For instance, one way to evade income tax is to only work for [[cash-in-hand]], therefore circumventing [[withholding tax]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://sniggle.net/Experiment/index.php?entry=16Feb06 |title=The Picket Line — 16 February 2006 |publisher=Sniggle.net |date=2006-02-16 |access-date=2010-09-01}}</ref> |
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Some taxpayers pay their taxes, but include protest letters along with their tax forms. Others pay in a protesting form – for instance, by writing their check on a toilet seat or a mock-up of a missile. Others pay in a way that creates inconvenience for the collector – for instance, by paying the entire amount in low-denomination coins like [[United States five cent coin|nickels]] or [[United States one cent coin|pennies]]. |
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====Redirection==== |
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Some tax resisters refuse to pay all or a portion of the taxes due but then make an equivalent donation to charity. In this way, they demonstrate that the intent of their resistance is not selfish and that they want to use a portion of their earnings to contribute to the common good. For instance, [[Julia Butterfly Hill]] resisted about $150,000 in federal taxes, and donated that money to after school programs, arts and cultural programs, community gardens, programs for Native Americans, alternatives to incarceration, and environmental protection programs. She said: |
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A resister may lower the tax due by using legal [[tax avoidance]] techniques. For instance, one way to lower the tax due is by changing one’s tax status through [[Incorporation (business)|incorporation]], or establishing an [[offshore company]], [[offshore trust|trust]], or [[offshore foundation|foundation]] in a [[tax haven]]. |
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<blockquote>I actually take the money that the [[Internal Revenue Service|IRS]] says goes to them and I give it to the places where our taxes ''should'' be going. And in my letter to the IRS I said: "I'm not refusing to pay my taxes. I'm actually paying them but I'm paying them where they belong because you refuse to do so."<ref>Smith, Gar " [http://www.sniggle.net/Experiment/index.php?entry=10Sep05 An Interview with Julia Butterfly Hill: Part 1]", ''The Edge'' (26 May 2005).</ref></blockquote> |
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===Tax evasion=== |
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A resister may lower the tax due through illegal [[tax evasion]]. For instance, one way to avoid the income tax is to participate in the [[underground economy]] – earning money that is never declared to the government. |
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====Refusing specific taxes==== |
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Some resisters refuse to willingly pay only certain taxes, either because those taxes are especially noxious to them, or because they present a useful symbolic target, or because they are more easily resisted. For instance, in the United States, many tax resisters resist the [[telephone federal excise tax]]. The tax was initiated to pay for the [[Spanish–American War]] and has frequently been raised or extended by the government during times of war. This made it an attractive symbolic target as a "[[war tax]]". Such refusal is relatively safe: because this tax is typically small, resistance very rarely triggers significant government retaliation. Phone companies will cooperate with such resisters by removing the excise tax from their phone bills and reporting their resistance to the government.<ref>"[http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2005/12/04/BUGG2G1PMA1.DTL Not paying phone tax becomes war protest]" ''San Francisco Chronicle'' 4 December 2005.</ref> |
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Other tax resisters change their lives and lifestyles so that they owe less tax. For instance; to avoid an excise tax on alcohol, a resister might [[Homebrewing|home-brew beer]]; to avoid excise taxes on gasoline, a resister might take up [[Vehicular cycling|bicycling]]; to avoid [[income tax]], a resister might decide to take in less income and take up a [[simple living]] or [[freeganism|freegan]] lifestyle; and so forth. |
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====Refusing to pay==== |
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These methods differ from [[tax evasion]] in that they stay within the tax laws, and they differ from [[tax avoidance]] in that the goal is to pay as little tax as possible rather than to keep as much post-tax income as possible. |
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The most dramatic and characteristic method of tax resistance is to refuse to pay a tax – either by quietly ignoring the tax bill or by openly declaring the refusal to pay. Some tax resisters resist only a portion of the taxes due. For instance, some war tax resisters refuse to pay a percentage of their taxes equivalent to the military percentage of the government's budget.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2008-03-23 |title=History of War Tax Resistance |url=https://www.warresisters.org/history-war-tax-resistance |access-date=2023-10-21 |website=War Resisters League |language=en}}</ref> |
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==See also== |
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==Arguments for tax resistance== |
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* [[Draft resistance]] |
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* [[Tax choice]] |
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* [[Taxation as theft]] |
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== References == |
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Some of the arguments are as follows: |
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{{Reflist}} |
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== Further reading == |
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* The government has no legitimate claim to the fruits of one's labor and so taxation is tantamount to stealing (see [[self-ownership]]). |
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* [[War Resisters League]] (2003) ''War Tax Resistance: A Guide To Withholding Your Support from the Military''. {{ISBN|978-0940862159}} |
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* The government engages in immoral, unethical and destructive activities, such as [[war]], and paying taxes inevitably funds these activities (see [[Christian anarchism]]). |
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* Donald D. Kaufman (2006) ''What Belongs to Caesar?: A Discussion on the Christian's Response to Payment of War Taxes''. {{ISBN|978-1597525404}} |
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* The government is non-legitimate i.e. the rulers did not come to power in a legitimate manner (see [[Salt Satyagraha]]). |
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* Donald D. Kaufman (2006) ''The Tax Dilemma: Praying for Peace, Paying for War''. {{ISBN|978-1597528047}} |
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* The government regime in power is corrupt, serving mainly their own needs. |
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* David M. Gross (2008) ''We Won't Pay: A Tax Resistance Reader''. {{ISBN|978-1434898258}} |
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* The government is controlled by individuals with business interests which unjustly benefit from tax revenue (see [[conflict of interest]]). |
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* David M. Gross (2009) ''Against War and War Taxes: Quaker Arguments for War Tax Refusal''. {{ISBN|978-1448688982}} |
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* The size and scope of government have reached levels far beyond that required of the state (see [[starve-the-beast]]). |
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* Marian Franz (2009) ''Persistent Voice: Marian Franz and Conscientious Objection to Military Taxation''. {{ISBN|978-1931038591}} |
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* The wealthy, or those in power, do not pay their "fair share." |
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* David M. Gross (2011) ''American Quaker War Tax Resistance''. {{ISBN|978-1466458208}} |
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* The government is inefficient and wasteful, providing inadequate return on the tax collected. |
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* {{Cite book |last= Huret |first= Romain H. |year= 2014 |title= American Tax Resisters |location= Cambridge, MA |publisher= [[Harvard University Press]] |isbn = 978-0-674-28137-0 }} |
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* The [[destitute]] should be helped through voluntary giving and charities, not funds obtained from compulsory taxation (see [[altruism]]). |
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* The best person at distributing an individual's income and money is the individual, not the government (see [[individualist anarchism]] and [[libertarianism]]). |
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* Individuals who chose to take nothing out of the government system (no state pension, healthcare or police protection, for example) need not pay into the system (see [[anarcho-capitalism]]). |
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==External links== |
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==Arguments against tax resistance== |
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{{Wiktionary|tax resister}} |
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Many arguments can be made against the tactic of tax resistance. Most basic, of course, is from those who support the entity collecting the tax and feel that other people should as well. But even those who are sympathetic with the tax resister’s complaints may question the methods. Some common arguments against tax resistance are: |
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*[http://www.simplerevolution.org/TaxReturn Climate change and my tax return] |
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* In a democracy, if everyone funded only those decisions with which they agree, the democratic process would be undermined (see [[anarchism]]). |
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*[http://www.consciencecanada.ca/ Conscience Canada] |
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* If taxes are left unpaid, the government will just have to take the money from someone else, which is unfair to them. |
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*''[http://www.nwtrcc.org/deathandtaxes.php Death and Taxes]'' - [[National War Tax Resistance Coordinating Committee|NWTRCC]] film about war tax resisters and their motivations |
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* Individuals who evade taxes are [[free rider]]s, benefiting from government services like road infrastructure without paying their share of the bill. |
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*[http://www.peacetaxseven.com/history.html History of War Tax Resistance] by Peace Tax Seven (U.S./UK focus) |
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* Tax resistance is too passive and ineffective a way to gain political change. Currently, a third of those who file tax returns and [[Lucky duckies|41% of Americans in all pay no federal income tax]].<ref>Hodge, S. “Number of Americans Paying Zero Federal Income Tax Grows to 43.4 Million” ''The Tax Foundation'' 30 March 2006[http://www.taxfoundation.org/publications/show/1410.html]</ref> If the government can thrive with so many people avoiding the income tax, it would require an unlikely number of tax resisters to have any effect, either as a protest or as an actual curb on government policy. |
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*[https://sniggle.net/TPL/index5.php?entry=rtcg Resistance to Civil Government] by [[Henry David Thoreau]] |
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* The government would respond to tax resisters by assessing fines, interest, and/or penalties against them, which would just mean they end up with more money in the end. |
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*[https://web.archive.org/web/20050404212746/http://www.mcc.org/respub/occasional/181.html Silence and Courage: Income Taxes, War and Mennonites 1940-1993] |
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*[https://web.archive.org/web/20060528232307/http://www.hastingspress.co.uk/history/siege.htm The Tax Resistance League] — tax resistance in the women's suffrage movement |
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*[https://web.archive.org/web/20040229204215/http://www.wellesley.edu/Peace/Rosenwald/thoreau.html The Theory, Practice & Influence of Thoreau's Civil Disobedience] by Lawrence Rosenwald |
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{{Tax resistance}} |
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==Quotations== |
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{{Anti-war}} |
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*“Withholding payment of taxes is one of the quickest methods of overthrowing a government.” — [[Mahatma Gandhi]] |
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{{Simple living}} |
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*“He or she who supports a State organized in the military way – whether directly or indirectly – participates in the sin. Each man old or young takes part in the sin by contributing to the maintenance of the State by paying taxes.” — [[Mahatma Gandhi]] |
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{{Tea Party movement}} |
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*“I have heard some of my townsmen say, ‘I should like to have them order me out to help put down an insurrection of the slaves, or to march to Mexico, – see if I would go;’ and yet these very men have each, directly by their allegiance, and so indirectly, at least, by their money, furnished a substitute. The soldier is applauded who refuses to serve in an unjust war by those who do not refuse to sustain the unjust government which makes the war…” — [[Henry David Thoreau]] |
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*“If only each King, Emperor, and President understood that his work of directing armies is not an honourable and important duty, as his flatterers persuade him it is, but a bad and shameful act of preparation for murder – and if each private individual understood that the payment of taxes wherewith to hire and equip soldiers, and, above all, army-service itself, are not matters of indifference, but are bad and shameful actions by which he not only permits but participates in murder – then this power of Emperors, Kings, and Presidents, which now arouses our indignation… would disappear of itself.” — [[Leo Tolstoy]] |
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==See also== |
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* [[Gulching]] |
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* [[Protest]] |
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* [[Render unto Caesar...]] |
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* [[Tax incidence]] |
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* [[Tax revolt]] |
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==Notes== |
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<div class="references-small"> |
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<references /> |
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</div> |
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==External links== |
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*[http://www.nwtrcc.org/what_is_wtr.htm What is War Tax Resistance?] |
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*[http://www.warresisters.org/history_wtr.htm History of War Tax Resistance] by War Resisters League |
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*[http://www.peacetaxseven.com/history.html History of War Tax Resistance] by Peace Tax Seven |
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*[http://sniggle.net/Experiment/index.php?entry=rtcg On Resistance to Civil Government] by [[Henry David Thoreau]] |
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*[http://www.federalbudget.com/ How U.S. taxes are spent] — Bar chart showing nearly half U.S. Federal taxes are funding the [[United States Department of Defense|Defense Department]] and [[United States public debt|public debt]]. |
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*[http://www.activistmagazine.com/index.php?option=content&task=category§ionid=9&id=200&Itemid=80 Pensions for Peace ~ ACT for the Earth] |
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*[http://www.mcc.org/respub/occasional/181.html Silence and Courage: Income Taxes, War and Mennonites 1940-1993] |
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*[http://www.hastingspress.co.uk/history/siege.htm The Tax Resistance League] — suffrage movement |
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*[http://www.sniggle.net/Experiment/ The Picket Line] — tax avoision |
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*[http://members.aol.com/XianAnarch/index-CL.htm Why taxation is evil] — Christian anarchism |
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*[http://home.snafu.de/mkgandhi/manifest.htm Manifesto against conscription and the military system], on official website |
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*[http://www.themanifesto.info/manifesto.htm Manifesto against conscription and the military system], with online signature, official website |
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*[http://www.givemeliberty.org/ We the people foundation], no answer, no taxes |
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[[Category:Tax resistance| ]] |
[[Category:Tax resistance| ]] |
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[[Category:Civil disobedience]] |
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[[Category:Community organizing]] |
[[Category:Community organizing]] |
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[[Category:Protest tactics]] |
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[[Category:Anarchist theory]] |
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[[Category:Libertarian theory]] |
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[[Category:Tax noncompliance]] |
Latest revision as of 10:25, 2 November 2024
Tax resistance is the refusal to pay tax because of opposition to the government that is imposing the tax, or to government policy, or as opposition to taxation in itself. Tax resistance is a form of direct action and, if in violation of the tax regulations, also a form of civil disobedience. Tax resisters are distinct from "tax protesters", who deny that the legal obligation to pay taxes exists or applies to them. Tax resisters may accept that some law commands them to pay taxes but they still choose to resist taxation.
Examples of tax resistance campaigns include those advocating home rule, such as the Salt March led by Mahatma Gandhi, and those promoting women's suffrage, such as the Women's Tax Resistance League.[1] War tax resistance is the refusal to pay some or all taxes that pay for war and may be practiced by conscientious objectors, pacifists, or those protesting against a particular war.[2]
History
[edit]The earliest and most widespread forms of taxation were the corvée and tithe, both of which can be traced back to the beginning of civilization. The corvée was state-imposed forced labour on peasants too poor to pay other forms of taxation (labour in ancient Egyptian is a synonym for taxes).[3] Low taxes helped the Roman aristocracy increase their wealth, which equalled or exceeded the revenues of the central government. An emperor sometimes replenished his treasury by confiscating the estates of the "super-rich", but in the later period, the resistance of the wealthy to paying taxes was one of the factors contributing to the collapse of the Empire.[4]
Because taxation is often oppressive, governments have always struggled with tax noncompliance and resistance.[3] It has been suggested that tax resistance played a significant role in the collapse of several empires, including the Egyptian, Roman, Spanish, and Aztec.[5] Reports of collective tax refusal include Zealots resisting the Roman poll tax during the 1st century CE, culminating in the First Jewish–Roman War.[6] Other historic events that originated as tax revolts include Magna Carta, the American Revolution and the French Revolution.[3]
War tax resisters often highlight the relationship between income tax and war.[7] In Britain income tax was introduced in 1799, to pay for weapons and equipment in preparation for the Napoleonic wars, whilst the US federal government imposed their first income tax in the Revenue Act of 1861 to help pay for the American Civil War.
Views and aims
[edit]Tax resisters come from a wide range of backgrounds with diverse ideologies and aims. For example, Henry David Thoreau and William Lloyd Garrison drew inspiration from the American Revolution and the stubborn pacifism of the Quakers.[8] Some tax resisters refuse to pay tax because their conscience will not allow them to fund war, whilst others resist tax as part of a campaign to overthrow the government.[8]
Tax resisters have been violent revolutionaries like John Adams and pacifist nonresistants like John Woolman; communists like Karl Marx and capitalists like Vivien Kellems; solitary anti-war activists like Ammon Hennacy and leaders of independence movements like Mahatma Gandhi.[8] Leo Tolstoy, a Christian anarchist, urged government leaders to change their attitude to war and citizens to taxes:
If only each King, Emperor, and President understood that his work of directing armies is not an honourable and important duty, as his flatterers persuade him it is, but a bad and shameful act of preparation for murder—and if each private individual understood that the payment of taxes wherewith to hire and equip soldiers, and, above all, army-service itself, are not matters of indifference, but are bad and shameful actions by which he not only permits but participates in murder—then this power of Emperors, Kings, and Presidents, which now arouses our indignation, and which causes them to be murdered, would disappear of itself.[9]
Methods
[edit]As an example of the numerous tax resistance methods, below are some of the legal and illegal techniques used by war tax resisters:[10]
Legal
[edit]Avoidance
[edit]A resister may lower their tax payments by using legal tax avoidance techniques.
Paying under protest
[edit]Some taxpayers pay their taxes, but include protest letters along with their tax forms. Others pay in a protesting form—for instance, by writing their cheque on a toilet seat or a mock-up of a missile. Others pay in a way that creates inconvenience for the collector—for instance, by paying the entire amount in low-denomination coins. This last method is less effective in countries where small coins are legal tender only in limited amounts, allowing the tax authority legally to reject such payments; for example in England and Wales, 1p coins are legal tender only in amounts up to 20p.
Reducing taxable income and consumption
[edit]Other tax resisters change their lifestyles so that they owe less tax. For instance; to avoid consumption taxes on alcohol, a resister might home-brew beer; to avoid excise taxes on gasoline, a resister might take up cycling; to avoid income tax, a resister may reduce their income below the tax threshold by embracing simple living or a freegan lifestyle.[11] For example, British citizens pay no income tax if their income is below the personal allowance. In the US the equivalent tax-free annual income is the standard deduction, though many deductions and credits allow people to earn much more than this and still avoid income tax.[11]
Opposition to war has led some, such as Ammon Hennacy and Ellen Thomas, to a form of tax resistance in which they reduce their income below the tax threshold by taking up a simple living lifestyle.[11][12] These individuals believe that their government is engaged in immoral, unethical or destructive activities such as war, and that paying taxes inevitably funds these activities.[11][13] These methods differ from tax evasion in that they stay within the tax laws, and they differ from tax avoidance in that the goal is to pay as little tax as possible rather than to keep as much post-tax income as possible.
Illegal
[edit]Evasion
[edit]A resister may decide to reduce their tax paid through illegal tax evasion. For instance, one way to evade income tax is to only work for cash-in-hand, therefore circumventing withholding tax.[14]
Redirection
[edit]Some tax resisters refuse to pay all or a portion of the taxes due but then make an equivalent donation to charity. In this way, they demonstrate that the intent of their resistance is not selfish and that they want to use a portion of their earnings to contribute to the common good. For instance, Julia Butterfly Hill resisted about $150,000 in federal taxes, and donated that money to after school programs, arts and cultural programs, community gardens, programs for Native Americans, alternatives to incarceration, and environmental protection programs. She said:
I actually take the money that the IRS says goes to them and I give it to the places where our taxes should be going. And in my letter to the IRS I said: "I'm not refusing to pay my taxes. I'm actually paying them but I'm paying them where they belong because you refuse to do so."[15]
Refusing specific taxes
[edit]Some resisters refuse to willingly pay only certain taxes, either because those taxes are especially noxious to them, or because they present a useful symbolic target, or because they are more easily resisted. For instance, in the United States, many tax resisters resist the telephone federal excise tax. The tax was initiated to pay for the Spanish–American War and has frequently been raised or extended by the government during times of war. This made it an attractive symbolic target as a "war tax". Such refusal is relatively safe: because this tax is typically small, resistance very rarely triggers significant government retaliation. Phone companies will cooperate with such resisters by removing the excise tax from their phone bills and reporting their resistance to the government.[16]
Refusing to pay
[edit]The most dramatic and characteristic method of tax resistance is to refuse to pay a tax – either by quietly ignoring the tax bill or by openly declaring the refusal to pay. Some tax resisters resist only a portion of the taxes due. For instance, some war tax resisters refuse to pay a percentage of their taxes equivalent to the military percentage of the government's budget.[17]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Michael J. Nojeim (2004). Gandhi and King: The power of nonviolent resistance. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 142. ISBN 9780275965747.
- ^ "What is War Tax Resistance?". NWTRCC.
- ^ a b c David F. Burg (2004). A World History of Tax Rebellions. Taylor & Francis. pp. vi–viii. ISBN 9780203500897.
- ^ Morris, p. 184.
- ^ Erich Kirchler (2007). The Economic Psychology of Tax Behaviour. p. 182.
Governments as far back as ancient Egypt have struggled to maintain compliance with tax laws. Indeed, it has been suggested that tax resistance has played a significant role in the collapse of several major world orders, including the Egyptian, Roman, Spanish and Aztec empires (Erard, 1997).
- ^ David M. Gross, ed. (2008). We Won't Pay: A Tax Resistance Reader. pp. 1–7.
- ^ "History of war tax resistance". The Peace Tax Seven.
- ^ a b c David M. Gross, ed. (2008). We Won't Pay: A Tax Resistance Reader. p. Back cover.
- ^ Thou Shalt Not Kill.
- ^ "How to Refuse to Pay for War".
- ^ a b c d "Low Income/Simple Living as War Tax Resistance". NWTRCC.
- ^ Matt Hagengruber (July 9, 2000). "DC protest group stands test of time". KnightRidder.
I decided that when I didn't need to worry about providing for my daughter, I was going to reduce my income to below the poverty level so I wouldn't have to pay taxes, because I don't agree with the policies [of the U.S. government]
- ^ Picket Line Annual Report.
- ^ "The Picket Line — 16 February 2006". Sniggle.net. 2006-02-16. Retrieved 2010-09-01.
- ^ Smith, Gar " An Interview with Julia Butterfly Hill: Part 1", The Edge (26 May 2005).
- ^ "Not paying phone tax becomes war protest" San Francisco Chronicle 4 December 2005.
- ^ "History of War Tax Resistance". War Resisters League. 2008-03-23. Retrieved 2023-10-21.
Further reading
[edit]- War Resisters League (2003) War Tax Resistance: A Guide To Withholding Your Support from the Military. ISBN 978-0940862159
- Donald D. Kaufman (2006) What Belongs to Caesar?: A Discussion on the Christian's Response to Payment of War Taxes. ISBN 978-1597525404
- Donald D. Kaufman (2006) The Tax Dilemma: Praying for Peace, Paying for War. ISBN 978-1597528047
- David M. Gross (2008) We Won't Pay: A Tax Resistance Reader. ISBN 978-1434898258
- David M. Gross (2009) Against War and War Taxes: Quaker Arguments for War Tax Refusal. ISBN 978-1448688982
- Marian Franz (2009) Persistent Voice: Marian Franz and Conscientious Objection to Military Taxation. ISBN 978-1931038591
- David M. Gross (2011) American Quaker War Tax Resistance. ISBN 978-1466458208
- Huret, Romain H. (2014). American Tax Resisters. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-28137-0.
External links
[edit]- Climate change and my tax return
- Conscience Canada
- Death and Taxes - NWTRCC film about war tax resisters and their motivations
- History of War Tax Resistance by Peace Tax Seven (U.S./UK focus)
- Resistance to Civil Government by Henry David Thoreau
- Silence and Courage: Income Taxes, War and Mennonites 1940-1993
- The Tax Resistance League — tax resistance in the women's suffrage movement
- The Theory, Practice & Influence of Thoreau's Civil Disobedience by Lawrence Rosenwald