Taxing Away Our Rights
Aaron Zelman and Claire Wolfe at JPFO - how taxation violates the First, Second, Fourth, Fifth, and Tenth amendments to the U.S. Constitution, and how a Bill of Rights culture would enrich every one of us. [jpfo]
In a Bill of Rights culture, the income tax and the Internal Revenue Service would be gone -- vanished. So would many other taxes and tax-fed bureaucracies. Not replaced by something equally bureaucratic like a value-added tax, a national sales tax, or a so-called flat tax. Not "reformed." "Reform" is a merely a political game in which Congress makes itself look good while actually making government bigger and laws more confusing. Gone.
There would be no need to replace the federal income tax and its enforcers because the Ninth and Tenth Amendments, as well as the body of the Constitution would limit the federal government to a very few, very specific, necessary functions.
Think about how it would feel to have 25 or 40 or maybe even 60 percent more money than you have today. Think about giving your children a better education, taking a longer vacation, investing in your own future, pursuing a new hobby, being able to afford health insurance, spending more time with your partner, building an addition on your house, having the gun collection of your dreams, or taking a hunting trip to an exotic location.
Think not only about getting a bigger paycheck, but about never again having to go through the April 15 nightmare. Think about being able to keep your private business private. Think about making financial decisions based on what's most sensible for you and your family -- not what's tax deductible or "allowed" by arrogant bureaucrats.