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By P. Revere of American Citizens for Economic Freedom (http://truecapitalism.org/).  We are the Super PAC for the Tea Party and Women's Organizations, founded by prominent business entrepreneur, Peter M. Vessenes.

We hear a great deal about taxes:  Are they fair?  Rich people don’t pay enough. The middle class pays too much.  What about those who don’t pay anything?  This raises some questions for me:

* What is fair and who determines what’s fair?

* Should the wealthy pay a greater share?

* Are successful people really evil?

* Is our tax system efficient?

Fairness

Fair is a relative term.  Each of us judges fairness from the view of our own circumstances or self-interest.  If I stack old tires in my yard regardless of what the neighbors think, is that fair?  If I choose to illegally “jump the line” of immigration to get ahead of those going through the legal citizenship process, is that fair?  There are good laws to guide these types of behavior, but frankly common sense guides most people’s beliefs about fairness.

Who determines what is fair in America?  When government decides what is fair, do you think the politicians’ self-interest is involved?  By allowing government to determine what is fair, one person or group will be “favored” over another; the government picks the winners and losers.

We saw a politician who thought it was fair to sell a U.S. Senatorial seat to the highest bidder.  Former Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich is now in prison because that was NOT fair.

Let’s look at our current tax code. According to Heritage Foundation’s 2011 Budget Chart Book, “The top 1 percent of income earners paid 38 percent of all federal income taxes in 2008, while the bottom 50 percent paid only 3 percent. Forty-nine percent of U.S. households paid no federal income tax at all.”[1]  Does that seem fair to you?

If the goal were all Americans being “equally” taxed, then a flat tax would seem to make everything fair. There is actually no single, perfect or best way to tax. The point is our politicians find many fatally flawed ways to tax, and the tactics promoted by Democrats and Progressives are certain tickets to economic suicide.

Taxation of the Rich

Who are the rich, and who determines the line between rich and non-rich?  Is that the President’s call?

Why demonize the efforts of those who successfully create their own wealth and then spend their money in our economy? This is class warfare and our President, though he did not start it, is certainly escalating it.

American economic freedom is about people having an equal chance to succeed or fail without government choosing winners or bailing out losers.  That is freedom; it is intuitive and fair. Regardless of the tax code our country follows, starting a debate without terms like “rich” and “poor”, and without demonizing success is where we have to focus if we are to move toward economic freedom.

Are Successful People Evil?

It is unbelievable that we have a President who labels the wealthy as “evil,” saying they don’t care and don’t pay their fair share. To be sure, there are evil people both wealthy and not, but the viewpoint from the Oval office that successful people are evil – that they have ”enough” and their greed keeps them from giving away a greater portion in taxes – is just plain wrong.

I would offer that our federal government not having a budget for over 1,000 days and spending over $1.5 trillion per year beyond our means is the real problem.

Many great innovations and companies that produced jobs and shaped society have come from the wealthy. Steve Jobs, Bill Gates and Michael Dell are examples of hard-working, tax-paying people. They did not depend on government to make them wealthy or productive, and their foundations have given billions of dollars to helping others without the government telling them to do so.

Taxation Inefficiency

In USA Today, January 23, 2012, the president of the National Taxpayers Union, a non-profit, non-partisan group that works for limited government, wrote an article in the editorial section titled Opposing view: Americans aren’t undertaxed.

I found the statistics he used from the National Taxpayer Union’s Taxing Trend report amazing.  “Americans spend 7.64 billion hours complying with the tax code; the value of that time alone exceeds $227 billion.”[2]

UNBELIEVABLE!

If you convert the 7.64 billion hours into jobs, the math is simple.  Using 50 weeks of work at 40 hours per week would mean 3.82 million fulltime workers filling out forms for a year.[3]

Is the current taxation system a problem? Yes. The proposed budget for running the IRS in 2012 is $13.3 billion[4] for about 100,000 employees.  Now for a real shock: as of 2010 there are over 70,000 pages in the U.S. tax code compared to 400 pages in 1913.[5]

By comparison, the Lord gave Moses only 10 commandments.

Stop Washington’s Overspending

Who benefits from a bloated, loophole-ridden and complex tax system?  Follow the money and then follow the votes.

The President keeps telling “non-taxpayers” and “non-rich” that the rich people and big business are the problem.  He portrays himself as defender of the little guy; protector of the 50% who do not currently pay taxes.  Who do you think they will likely vote for in November?

We must look past Obama’s portrayal of good guys and bad guys, and focus on the real problem – our bloated and growing government in Washington. This President never ran a business, never had to “make payroll” for his employees, and apparently has no intention of balancing a budget or shrinking the size of Washington spending.

It is critical this election year that we bring a change in the White House and Congress, and a change to how Washington spends our money. Tell your friends and neighbors to vote for candidates who know how to live within America’s means.  You have the power to vote this kind of change in 2012.

If we do not take the “checkbook” out of the President’s and politicians’ hands in November, our country’s taxing problem will be the least of our problems.

For more articles go to http://truecapitalism.org/core-principles/washington-spending/

For a copy of Peter M. Vessenes' newest book, The Golden Rules of Economics: The Real Way Out of America’s Economic Crisis go to http://www.thegoldenrulesofeconomics.com/


[5] The Economist - http://www.economist.com/node/15867984

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Comment by joseph C Avila on July 29, 2012 at 4:09pm

P. Revere: This is good to rally the masses, but it does not point out the problem nor does it provide a solution.

The problem is the congress has too much access to our money via taxes, and the supreme court has just given the congress (without authority) more power to tax.

The solution is : It is necessary, no, it is imperative that the constitution be amended to eliminate the all current taxing powers and they are currently, and  be replaced with a flat rate income tax on the states gross income. "With no deductions". Couple this with the repeal of the 17th amendment and the appointment of two gubernatorial members from each state to represent their  states in the U.S. Senate.

This is a plan and a solution. This kind of information is what is needed, not just Rah rah speak.

Comment by Billy Bowlegs on July 27, 2012 at 12:40pm

No budget = who the hell knows response.

Without a budget, how do you what to collect.

New Rule of Law:  If Congress does not pass a budget and President Signs Annually; and live within that budget, no one in Congress nor the Top Executive tear will be eligible to remain in office for another term.

That gives us the current situation:

http://freedomoutpost.com/2012/07/obama-issues-racist-executive-order/

 

The law being singed spends Whitie's money to educate Boston Blackie.

 

Makes Taxes Illegal if you consider that taxes and tax expenditures must be perportional.

 

Comment by P Revere on July 27, 2012 at 11:37am

Thanks John for the kind note.  We patriots need the "ammunition" to help the moderate and left leaning confused citizens that have been lied to by the media, the establishment and those seeking to stay in power.  It's hard to argue against facts and the truth, I'll share more here to forward. 

The real good news is there is a book that is transformative that I would highly recommend, The Golden Rules of Economics: The Real Way Out of America’s Economic Crisis go to http://www.thegoldenrulesofeconomics.com/  Check it out, buy it and then buy one for someone who needs and wants the truth.

Comment by John Palmer on July 27, 2012 at 8:06am

Well written pieces like this are forwarded beyond the choir.  Keep up the good work P.Revere.

 

Comment by P Revere on July 26, 2012 at 10:29pm

Thanks for the comments, just started to scratch the surface.  Clearly we all define "fair" differently than the occupant of 1600 Pennsylvania Ave.  Good thing we will change the occupant and watch him move out in January 2013.

Check out some of the other articles and things we are covering at  http://truecapitalism.org/

Comment by Sue Carroll on July 26, 2012 at 10:20pm

Richard sad, but true.  Sice the top 10% pay 71% of the tax burden, and the top 25% pay I think 83.6% or there abouts, just whoo is not paying their "fair share".  I would say they far exceed their fair share.

Comment by Richard Curtis on July 26, 2012 at 6:03pm

Hard to beat the Dems vote buying. The Dems could piss in the Punch and those that pay no tax and get checks will still vote for them.

Comment by Debrajoe Smith-Beatty on July 26, 2012 at 5:54pm

Vote Obama out of office. Vote Rino's out of office. Vote Democrats out of office.

Comment by Ray Mason on July 26, 2012 at 5:32pm

Mr. Revere, you are quite long winded especially when you are preaching to the choir. 

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