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Resisting the War Machine, One 1040 at a Time

by PFairbanks


“Let them march all they want as long as they pay their taxes.”


Tax resisters protest out­side
the IRS build­ing in Wash­ing­ton, D.C.

This quote, by Alexan­der Haig, for­mer U.S. Sec­re­tary of State, is found on many web­sites that advo­cate or explain the phe­nom­e­non of war protest known as tax resis­tance. Under­scor­ing the truth of this is a quote by Henry David Thoreau, “If a thou­sand men were not to pay their tax bills this year, that would not be as vio­lent and bloody a mea­sure, as it would to pay them, and enable the State to com­mit vio­lence and shed inno­cent blood.” The war machine is hun­gry and depends on astro­nom­i­cal amounts of money to con­tin­u­ally wage war.

Although fig­ures from the White House Office of Man­age­ment and Budget’s 2008 bud­get report sug­gest that mil­i­tary expenses com­prise only 21% of the fed­eral bud­get, the War Resister’s League, which pro­duces it’s own annual fig­ures, esti­mates that the actual fig­ure is much closer to 51%. Accord­ing to the data released by the War Resister’s League, the big dif­fer­ence between their bud­get and the fed­eral government’s is that the White House Bud­get and Man­age­ment Office does not dis­crim­i­nate between social secu­rity funds, which are col­lected and used sep­a­rately from the rest of the bud­get, and fed­eral taxes. In other words, for the fed­eral gov­ern­ment, the rev­enue gen­er­ated by social secu­rity is counted as part of the over all tax, despite the fact that it is col­lected sep­a­rately and already ear­marked for social ser­vices. In addi­tion to this, the bud­get office does not take into account the cost of ongo­ing veteran’s ben­e­fits from pre­vi­ous wars and the inter­est on the national debt from pre­vi­ous mil­i­tary spend­ing, which, believe it or not, makes up for a full twenty per­cent of the annual fed­eral bud­get. That means that as much as 20% of the taxes we pay each year are spent pay­ing for the costs of pre­vi­ous wars alone. It is in response to fig­ures like these, and what these fig­ures entail — less money for edu­ca­tion, less money for health care, etc. — that many war resisters and paci­fists decide to go the extra step and become tax resisters: an ille­gal move that involves a huge amount of con­vic­tion and ded­i­ca­tion, but which more and more peo­ple are choos­ing to do as the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq con­tinue unabated.


Tax Resister Ed Henemann.

As most peo­ple know, con­sci­en­tious objec­tors can be freed from mil­i­tary ser­vice if they object to the tak­ing of human life for reli­gious or eth­i­cal rea­sons. Every tax­payer, how­ever, will­ingly or oth­er­wise ends up sup­port­ing the build­ing of mis­siles and bombs. For this rea­son, there is a long his­tory of war tax resis­tance. The first offi­cial case of war tax resis­tance in Amer­ica took place before the United States even existed. In the early 1600’s, the Algo­nquin Indi­ans opposed fund­ing a Dutch fort by refus­ing to pay Dutch taxes. Dur­ing the Amer­i­can Rev­o­lu­tion, the Quaker Soci­ety of Friends refused to pay taxes and many of them were jailed and had their prop­erty seized because of their refusal to fund the war. It is the Indochina war, how­ever, that may be seen as the real start­ing point of the mod­ern move­ment of War Tax Resis­tance. Backed by such socially con­cerned artists as folk singer Joan Baez, lin­guist and non­con­formist Noam Chom­sky, and “beat” leg­end Lawrence Fer­linghetti, the Indochina war tax resis­tance grew from a lit­tle more than 200 in the mid-60’s to upwards of 20,000 by the early 70’s with tele­phone tax resisters exist­ing in even greater num­bers. The move­ment became so pop­u­lar that in the late 60’s, The War Resisters League, founded in 1923, had to found the National WTR, War Tax Resisters as a sis­ter resis­tance group.

Fur­ther sup­port for war tax resisters came in 1982, in the form of a new coali­tion of groups with com­mon goals known as the National War Tax Resis­tance Coor­di­nat­ing Com­mit­tee. The NWTRCC, pro­nounced “new trick” pro­vides mate­r­ial and moral sup­port for tax resisters and advice for those con­sid­er­ing becom­ing tax resisters.

Accord­ing to NWTRCC, there are two pos­si­ble argu­ments you can present to the Inter­nal Rev­enue Ser­vice (IRS) for your refusal to pay taxes on grounds of your con­science objec­tion to war. Accord­ing to Prin­ci­ple IV of the Nurem­berg Prin­ci­ples: “The fact that a per­son acted pur­suant to order of his gov­ern­ment or of a supe­rior does not relieve him from respon­si­bil­ity under inter­na­tional law, pro­vided a moral choice was in fact pos­si­ble to him.” This would not only excise Men­non­ites and Quak­ers and any other gen­uine indi­vid­u­als who have a moral oppo­si­tion to sup­port­ing war in any way, but would actu­ally indem­nify them for not act­ing in accor­dance to their beliefs. Another pos­si­ble tax loop­hole is the fact that the 16th Amend­ment, the tax amend­ment, was sup­pos­edly not legally rat­i­fied and that fil­ing the forms vio­lates the 5th amend­ment right against bear­ing wit­ness against your­self, not to men­tion the fact that the IRS is reputed to vio­late 4th Amend­ment injunc­tions against search and seizure as well as vio­lat­ing rights to due process. As sketchy as this sounds, occa­sion­ally the IRS finds it more prof­itable not to pur­sue legal recourse against such gad­flies. One such objec­tor is Bob Schulz. Mr. Schulz began a hunger strike on July 1, 2001, until the gov­ern­ment had given him a response and redress of griev­ances in regards to the ques­tion­able legal­ity of the income tax. Bob Schulz and the “We the Peo­ple Project” also took out an ad in 2000 in USA Today address­ing their points regard­ing the dubi­ous char­ac­ter of the IRS. Joseph Ban­is­ter, for­mer spe­cial agent of the Crim­i­nal Inves­ti­ga­tion divi­sion of the IRS, and Mr. Schulz hand-delivered copies of the remon­strance to mem­bers of the three branches of government.

Pos­si­ble penal­ties for this form of protest include levies, fines, audits, seizure of prop­erty, and pos­si­ble prison time. Dur­ing the 80’s there was a resur­gence of prop­erty seizures in response to the grow­ing num­bers of war tax resisters. Since 1999, there have been no cases of prop­erty seizure, but this doesn’t mean that the IRS is just look­ing the other way. In Decem­ber of 2004, Joe and Inge Donato and Kevin McKee were con­victed of “will­ful eva­sion” of fed­eral taxes and “con­spir­ing to defraud the United States.” The three were busi­ness part­ners and mem­bers of a small Bible study com­mu­nity in New Jer­sey num­ber­ing less than 50 mem­bers known as the Restored Israel of Yaweh Bible Com­mu­nity. Mr. Donato and Mr. McKee were sen­tenced to terms of 27 and 24 months respec­tively and Inge was sen­tenced to six months in prison. The Restored Israel of Yaweh Com­mu­nity has a his­tory of war tax resis­tance. The group was founded by Leo J. Volpe, a WWII con­sci­en­tious objec­tor and draft resister who became a paci­fist reli­gious activist. Volpe spent a four-month stint in jail for refus­ing to file tax returns. Since Volpe’s sen­tence in 1983, mem­bers of the com­mu­nity had not been both­ered by gov­ern­ment offi­cials until this more recent action.

Pre­sid­ing U.S. Fed­eral Dis­trict Judge, Jerome B. Siman­dle, rec­om­mended that the gov­ern­ment erase the amount owed to IRS and allow them to pay an equal fine that would not go to fund any war they refused on moral grounds to mate­ri­ally sup­port. The Donatos and Mr. McKee agreed to this propo­si­tion, but the IRS rejected it. “We would always have gladly paid our full share of taxes if only the gov­ern­ment could assure us that the amount we paid would not go to fund war mak­ing,” said Joe Donato. “The lack of any pro­vi­sion like that forced us to either vio­late our reli­gion or risk being branded as crim­i­nals. At that point, we saw no choice but to honor our beliefs.”

Founder of the National War Tax Resis­tance Coor­di­na­tion Com­mit­tee, Ed Hede­mann has not paid fed­eral income taxes since 1970. He owes some­where around $70,000 in back taxes, all of which has been rel­e­gated to causes he believes in. “I run a risk of get­ting in trou­ble for not pay­ing my taxes, but not as big a risk as the peo­ple of Iraq will suf­fer if I do pay.” Hede­mann receives notices often and occa­sion­ally receives per­sonal calls from agents to his apart­ment. At one point he was taken by the U.S. Jus­tice Depart­ment to Fed­eral Dis­trict Court to ask why he should not be held in con­tempt for not giv­ing infor­ma­tion to the IRS.

Hede­mann refused the Viet­nam draft and believed from then on that it was “incon­sis­tent” to then pay for oth­ers to die in his place. Like most war resisters, he resists war per­son­ally and refuses either to kill or pay to have peo­ple killed in his name. “Not only do I think the mil­i­tary actions the U.S. is tak­ing in Iraq and Afghanistan are crim­i­nal, but I think the U.S. has done more to increase the level of ter­ror­ism in the world than any other coun­try, thus mak­ing the world far less safe for Amer­i­cans, Afgha­nis, Iraqis and oth­ers.” Hede­mann refuses the 3 per­cent fed­eral tele­phone excise tax. The tele­phone excise tax was instated in 1898 to help fund the Spanish-American War and is a pop­u­lar means of war tax protest, as the IRS usu­ally finds it more expen­sive to attempt legal action so few cases are pur­sued. Hede­mann also refuses to pay any fed­eral income tax. Accord­ing to Hede­mann, it’s impos­si­ble to get a defin­i­tive count of the num­ber of war tax resisters because many war tax resisters don’t always con­tact NWTRCC or other groups. But some esti­mate that 5,000 – 10,000 peo­ple are refus­ing to pay some or all of their fed­eral taxes to protest the cur­rent wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

This may be in part due to the phe­nom­e­non observed by author of “The Picket Line” blog and the DON (Don’t Owe Nothin’) method of tax resis­tance, David Gross. “I’ve done some work in con­cert with NWTRCC and with our local group (North­ern Cal­i­for­nia War Tax Resis­tance) [but over­all] the tax resis­tance move­ment isn’t very tightly coor­di­nated. It tends to attract peo­ple who have an indi­vid­u­al­is­tic bent (com­ing from anti­au­thor­i­tar­ian dis­senter churches like the Quak­ers, or Amer­i­can anar­chism of the Thore­au­vian mold)…and there’s a lot of ide­o­log­i­cal and tac­ti­cal dif­fer­ences that dis­cour­age coor­di­nated actions. Many con­sci­en­tious tax resisters are con­tent to go at it alone with­out ever reach­ing out to the com­mu­nity at large or orga­nized tax resis­tance groups.”

In addi­tion to groups such as The War Resisters League and NWTRCC, there are other groups, like the CMTC Escrow account, that can pro­vide sup­port. War tax resisters can deposit money into the escrow account where it can be later with­drawn to pay off debts. There is also the War Tax Resisters Penalty Fund, which has reim­bursed over $185,000 to over 280 war tax resisters to help resisters pay for inter­est and fines imposed by the IRS. Presently under con­sid­er­a­tion, H.R. 2631, called the Reli­gious Free­dom Peace Tax Fund, would pos­si­bly give an alter­na­tive for con­sci­en­tious objec­tors to have their taxes fun­neled into non­mil­i­tary funds. The prob­lems with the Peace Tax Fund, how­ever, are brought up by David Gross, who says that “It’s no good in that it will not have any ben­e­fi­cial effects — I that is, if the bill were to become law, Con­gress would con­tinue to spend tax money in the same ter­ri­ble ways it would oth­er­wise, and all tax­pay­ers, includ­ing the ones who check the ‘peace tax’ box on their forms, would in real­ity be con­tribut­ing to all of it just as before. In other words, the eth­i­cal cover the law gives ‘peace tax’ pay­ers is com­pletely phoney.”

There already are meth­ods of legally show­ing sol­i­dar­ity to the war resis­tance move­ment finan­cially. One method of show­ing finan­cial sol­i­dar­ity in the war resis­tance move­ment is to boy­cott orga­ni­za­tions that serve as Defense Con­trac­tors. Accord­ing to the non­profit group Cen­ter for Media and Democracy’s Source Watch there are a large num­ber of groups, some of which include famil­iar names like Boe­ing, The Car­lyle Group, Exxon Mobil, Gen­eral Elec­tric, Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Texas Instru­ments, Ver­i­zon and many oth­ers, which con­tribute to war.

Another, per­haps more rad­i­cal, and cer­tainly more Thore­au­vian, method of war tax resis­tance involves actu­ally liv­ing below the tax­able income level. Jes­sica Ramer, the author of the blog “War Tax Resis­tance,” chooses this method of war tax resis­tance. Ms. Ramer works at a non-profit group called the Kushi Insti­tute for a mod­est salary plus room and board to avoid earn­ing enough income to be taxed. Another blog­ger, David Gross, also came to the con­clu­sion that it was worth quit­ting his job and sac­ri­fic­ing lux­ury to sup­port his conscience.

Gross’ blog “The Picket Line” out­lines the DON or “Don’t Owe Nothin’” method of war tax resis­tance. The method is one legal option for con­sci­en­tious objec­tors to stop fund­ing the mil­i­tary. The DON method is a non-confrontational, “by the book” method of ensur­ing that your money doesn’t go to fund a war you don’t believe in. The method is not for every­one and involves a lot of paper­work and com­plic­ity with the bureau­cracy that some pro­tes­tors may abhor more than sim­ply hand­ing over their dol­lars for guns. Infor­ma­tion on this kind of resis­tance is avail­able at a link at The Picket Line with NWTRCC’s PDF doc­u­ment “Low Income/Simple Liv­ing as War Tax Resistance.”

For those who feel that pas­sive means of protest such as picket lines and let­ters to mem­bers of Con­gress is not enough, war tax resis­tance may be a more direct route. Whether your resis­tance comes in the form of refus­ing tele­phone tax, refus­ing a sym­bolic por­tion, or all of your fed­eral income tax, or mod­i­fy­ing your lifestyle to live below tax­able income, it is pos­si­ble to ensure con­gru­ency between your beliefs and your wal­let. For those seri­ously con­sid­er­ing any method of war tax resis­tance, a good start­ing point is NWTRCC’s web­site http://www.nwtrcc.org.

Posted by PFairbanks on Apr 15th, 2007 and filed under Features. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response by filling following comment form or trackback to this entry from your site

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