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EDITORIALS
Against War? Stop Buying It
- by Andy McKenna
(previously published on
Antiwar.com)
In the Dec.
29 New York Times, George Bush said of Osama
bin Laden: "His vision of the world is
one in which there is no freedom of expression,
freedom of religion, and/or freedom of conscience."
But in the president's zealous fervor to export
democracy at the end of a gun barrel, the he
has denied many people these very freedoms.
From Guantanamo to Abu Ghraib, for Muslims and
antiwar protesters in the U.S., the Bush administration
has run roughshod over civil liberties. Although
I am not being detained or tortured, I am also
paying a price for freedom.
As another tax year ends, many
wage earners start preparing their 1040 forms
for the Internal Revenue Service. Meanwhile,
we members of Austin Conscientious Objectors
to Military Taxation (ACOMT), a local peace
group, are preparing to suffer the consequences
of our principled refusal to pay taxes that
fund war.
In 2004, ACOMT members experienced
an increase in IRS seizures of our wages and
bank accounts. A state worker had a bank account
seized twice, and he recently received more
garnishment notices from the IRS. A nonprofit
employee who is a Catholic and an Army veteran
was forced to reduce his income to avoid repeat
levies. A Quaker emergency room physician, whose
car was seized in 1991, was recently visited
at her home by an IRS agent and faces possible
seizure of her wages and another car. A teacher
who is new to war tax resistance has already
begun receiving collection notices. A housecleaner
and artist continues living intentionally below
the taxable level to legally avoid paying war
taxes. In the fall, after 11 years of inaction,
the IRS garnished my wages by taking all but
$662.50 the monthly federal poverty level
from my paychecks.
The $465 billion-a-year war machine
has caused the deaths over 1,300 U.S. military
personnel and as many as 100,000 Iraq civilians.
According to the National Priorities Project,
the Iraq war has cost Austin families $375 million
to date. War tax resisters want to pay our taxes,
but we cannot in good conscience pay others
to kill in our names. We regularly redirect
thousands of our tax dollars to humanitarian
and peaceful causes. Last April 15, ACOMT gave
money to the American Friends Service Committee's
relief efforts in Iraq and to Austin's Nonmilitary
Options for Youth. Just before Christmas, we
made a donation to Casa Marianella and Posada
Esperanza, two East Austin immigrant shelters.
This is a drop in the bucket, but it is one
drop less for the barrelfuls of blood being
shed in the war in Iraq. It means a lot to the
nonprofit groups struggling to fill the canyon
in human-services funding left by the massive
Pentagon budget. As much as 50 percent of federal
income taxes (which does not include trust funds
like Social Security or Medicare) go for past
and present military spending, according to
a federal budget analysis.
There ought to be a law (since
the First Amendment apparently does not apply
to us) that would enable us to direct our taxes
to a Treasury Department fund dedicated to nonmilitary
purposes. All of the members want to be able
to legally pay their taxes for life-affirming
programs. ACOMT believes the Religious Freedom
Peace Tax Fund Bill is the win-win solution.
The legislation would restore civil liberties
to this minority group of taxpayers by resolving
the conflict between the tax code and First
Amendment rights. It would extend the legal
precedent in the Selective Service Act of 1940
so that conscientious objectors would pay their
taxes for nonmilitary purposes. The bill has
44 congressional co-sponsors. ACOMT has built
a statewide coalition of supporters, including
several dozen Austin and Texas community groups,
clergy, and over 1,000 citizens. Numerous national
secular and religious organizations also endorse
the effort. Despite bipartisan support, the
bill sits in the Ways and Means Committee, where
it has not had a hearing in over 10 years.
Thad Crouch, a former soldier,
said, "In a nation founded for religious
freedom, why is it against the law to love my
enemies and to hold a job?"
ACOMT continues to be in contact
with congressional representatives about the
proposed legislative relief. The group has been
in Austin for over 20 years with different members
and is the Texas affiliate of the National Campaign
for a Peace Tax Fund and the National War Tax
Resistance Coordinating Committee. Our group
believes that the Religious Freedom Peace Tax
Fund Bill is a win-win solution for us and the
government. The bill would grant civil liberties
to our minority class of taxpayers by extending
to war tax resisters the legal protections the
Military Selective Service Act gave conscientious
objectors. It would increase tax revenues and
decrease the IRS' collection burden. However,
it would not reduce the military budget or "open
the floodgates" to other taxpayers.
Over 1,000 Central Texans have
signed a petition in support of the bill, and
dozens of Austin clergy, community groups, and
statewide organizations like the American Civil
Liberties Union of Texas have endorsed it. Many
national secular and religious organizations
even the president's own denomination,
the United Methodist Church support the
National Campaign for a Peace Tax Fund. The
bill has the bipartisan backing of 44 congressmen,
including three Texan representatives. Despite
this support, it has not had a hearing in a
decade, while conscientious objectors around
the U.S. have endured many civil liberties violations
by the IRS.
Meanwhile, the war and
Americans paying half their taxes to fund it
continues unabated. Long-time war tax
resister Karl Meyer recently said, "If
progressives fail to resist militarism or refuse
participation in it through the one form of
participation that is demanded, that is to pay
taxes, they should give up their pretensions
to being in opposition." Those too faint
at heart to try even symbolic war tax resistance
can and should safely support the Peace Tax
Fund.
The upcoming election in Iraq
is a supposed step toward freedom there. But
in the U.S., some of us are still struggling
to enjoy freedom of conscience. "Freedom
must be defended," the president once remarked.
He should make a New Year's resolution to follow
his own advice.

Andy McKenna, of Austin, is a
former AFSC Austin program committee member
who co-founded the Guatemala Action Network,
which introduced the SOA Watch movement to Austin.
He attended six protests at Ft. Benning, where
he was detained and is banned from going on
the base.Andy can be reached at peacetax_tx@yahoo.com
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