Harris R. Sherline is a retired certified public accountant and executive, whose conservative commentaries appear weekly in two California newspapers. His web blog is "Opinionfest.com." The excessive complexities and inequities of the income tax are bad enough but, to me, stealth taxation is even more offensive. However, there is a slight gleam of hope shining through the fog of legislative hide and seek that our politicians and government bureaucrats employ to screen tax initiatives from public view, and people do sometimes fight back.
It’s not always easy to see the relationship between government actions and taxation, but transitioning from an increase in the budget to higher taxes seems like an obvious connection. Increased expenses generally lead to a search for more revenue to pay the bills, and this invariably translates into higher taxes, somehow, some way.
In a truly offensive display of political chutzpah, in July 2005,
But, all’s well that ends well.
When
In Indiana, the president of the state Senate, a 36-year incumbent who pushed through a bill to give lifetime health-insurance benefits to state legislators, was subsequently defeated by a political novice who rode the crest of a wave of public protest into office.
People tend to feel that trying to resist taxation is hopeless, what with politicians and bureaucrats constantly scheming to find ways of increasing taxes while taxpayers struggle to break free of the web of tax laws that they somehow never seem to be able to understand or control. And unfortunately, litigating tax issues is well beyond the means of most taxpayers, while the government has unlimited resources to draw on in pursuing its claims.
However, Scrivener.net reported on what may be the beginning of a growing trend toward resisting stealth taxes, noting: “The federal telephone excise tax--enacted as a temporary measure two centuries back to help finance the Spanish-American war--may finally in large part be meeting its demise as the result of evolving markets, bureaucratic punting, and Congressional bungling.”
So on the face of things it's pretty clear--the IRS has been collecting a lot of tax on phone service that it isn't entitled to. . .And in the last year companies have begun asking for that tax back . . . and courts have been giving it to them.
Even in the face of a growing tide of resistance, “. . . the IRS says it's not going to be paying any refunds soon, it is appealing these cases and hopes to win in the higher courts. Things don't look so good for it up there either, but with more than $9 billion (and rising) estimated as being at stake, it has reason to fight on.”
Although few taxpayers have the resources to challenge the IRS in court, the organized resistance they demonstrated in
We may get there yet, but it will take concerted political effort. There is strength in numbers, provided people can be motivated and organized to act in concert.
A beacon of hope was ignited in 1999, when irate taxpayers blanketed the