Politics

...now browsing by category

 

A Classic Reading Assignment For Tax Day

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

For weeks now, I have been thinking about writing a long treatise about income taxes and posting it on tax day, but then I realized that there is nothing I can write that would exceed what was writtenby Frank Chodrov in his book, The Income Tax: Root of All Evil. I happened across this book around 10 years ago and it was mind-blowing to me and, more than any other work, started me along the libertarian road that I walk today.

Chodrov’s “Argument” is reprinted below:

Tradition has a way of hanging on even after it is, for all practical purposes, dead. We in this country still use individualistic terms—as, for instance, the rights of man—when, as a matter of fact, we think and behave in the framework of collectivistic doctrine. We support and advocate such practices as farm-support prices, social security, government housing, socialized medicine, conscription, and all sorts of ideas that stem from the thesis that man has no rights except those given him by government.

Despite this growing tendency to look to political power as the source of material betterment and as the guide to our personal destinies, we still talk of limited government, states rights, checks and balances, and of the personal virtues of thrift, industry, and initiative. Thanks to our literature, the tradition hangs on even though it has lost force.
But there are many Americans to whom the new trend is distasteful, partly because they are traditionalists, partly because they find it personally unpleasant, partly because reason tells that it must lead to the complete subjugation of the individual, as in Nazi Germany or Communist Russia, and they don’t like the prospect. It is for these Americans that this book was written. For their opposition to the trend takes the shape of reform, while nothing will turn it but revo lution. And by “revolution” I mean the return to the people of that sovereignty which our tradition assumes them to have. I mean the return to them of the power which government confiscated by way of the Sixteenth Amendment.

When you examine any species of government intervention you find that it is made possible by revenues. A government is as strong as its income. Contrariwise, the independence of the people is in direct proportion to the amount of their wealth they can enjoy. We cannot restore traditional American freedom unless we limit the government’s power to tax. No tinkering with this, that, or the other law will stop the trend toward socialism. We must repeal the Sixteenth Amendment.
Washington, D.C.

F. C. February 1954

You can download and read the whole thing here.

Remember that this was written almost 50 years ago and then reflect on how much things have changed – and not for the better – since then.

Flying Unicorns and Clean Rainbow Technology!

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

Love it. But I still want my pony, dammit.

h/t The Corner

George Will Today

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

George Will hits it out of the park today.

First, a mention of 3rd party payments and the inefficiencies that such a system has introduced to our healthcare market (if only he had gone on and said more):

Employer-paid insurance is central to what David Gratzer of the Manhattan Institute calls “the 12 cent problem.” That is how much of every health care dollar is spent by the person receiving the care. Hence Americans’ buffet mentality — we paid at the door to the health care feast, so let’s consume all we can.

John McCain had the correct prescription for health care during the 2008 campaign. He proposed serious change — taxing employer-provided health care as what it indisputably is, compensation, and giving tax credits, including refundable ones, for individuals to purchase insurance.

Then, a mention of what is really going on here: Obama really thinks he’s smarter than everyone else and would rather impose a clean solution than deal with the dirt of democracy:

Professor Obama, who will seek re-election on the 100th anniversary of Wilson’s 1912 election, understands, which makes him melancholy. Speaking to Katie Couric on Feb. 7, Obama said:

“I would have loved nothing better than to simply come up with some very elegant, academically approved approach to health care, and didn’t have any kinds of legislative fingerprints on it, and just go ahead and have that passed. But that’s not how it works in our democracy. Unfortunately, what we end up having to do is to do a lot of negotiations with a lot of different people.”

Note his aesthetic criterion of elegance, by which he probably means sublime complexity. During the yearlong health care debate, Republicans such as Sen. Lamar Alexander of Tennessee have consistently cautioned against the conceit that government is good at “comprehensive” solutions to the complex problems of a continental nation. Obama has consistently argued, in effect, that the health care system is like a Calder mobile — touch it here and things will jiggle here, there and everywhere. Because everything is connected to everything else, merely piecemeal change is impossible.

So note also Obama’s yearning for something “academically approved” rather than something resulting from “a lot of negotiations with a lot of different people,” aka politics.

Pretty much.

Note that I’m not saying that I don’t think that sometimes the political process isn’t inefficient or that experts can’t come up with the best solution to a problem. What I’m more concerned with is the legitimacy of the process – the principle that our government is representative and based on inviolable sovereignty of the individual. That’s what gets lost so often in the mind of the modern progressive, that he feels he is smarter than everyone else and is being held back by his less enlightened compatriots. THAT is the real cause of the opposition to Obamacare today: a lack of respect for the individual in favor of paternalism.

Health Care: Employers’ Tax Credit

Friday, February 26th, 2010

I know that there is an insurance/health care tax credit for employers that individuals don’t have and I know that it’s a relic of WW2 wage controls. That’s not the question I am asking – what I want to know, what I simply cannot understand – is WHY the tax credit is still there for employers and isn’t available for individuals.

(Actually, strike that question. I am sure there’s a political answer and that it’s a combination of corrupt political rent seeking and overspending by a federal government that is loathe to reduce tax collections in any way… so forget that question)

A better question is this: WHY is there a presumption that employers should responsible for employees’ health care? Why is there an assumption that employers who don’t offer health care plans aren’t doing right by their employees, and why is the underlying objective – on both sides of the aisle – that something should be done to FORCE those employers to offer coverage as opposed to making it EASIER for individuals to get it for themselves instead?

President Obama was giving his closing remarks to the Kabuki Summit yesterday and by the time I was yelling at the television. Why must we infantilize people and assume that they cannot take care of themselves? Why must we assume that the only way to solve a problem is to centralize authority and mandate regulations?

The whole problem with the escalation of health care costs today is that consumers don’t actually pay for what they receive. They don’t get price feedback, so they overconsume and health care suppliers overcharge. If you want to fix that problem, take away 3rd party payment systems – this means all forms of comprehensive health “insurance”, including medicare – and start exposing consumers to the true costs of their decisions. If someone is poor, then subsidize him directly, but don’t pay on his behalf and implicitly encourage him not to ask about price. If someone is already sick and needs acute care that they cannot afford, then use the system we already have, Medicaid. But we should ENCOURAGE people to ask their doctors about the price of procedures, and we should encourage doctors to market themselves and compete on the price to consumers.

That is the ONLY way to fix this.

Doubling down on medicare – which is what Obamacare is, just an expansion of the size of the 3rd party system and forcing everyone onto an even more opaque government system – is only going to make things worse. It’s that simple.

On Joe Stack, the IRS, and W2’s

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

I posted this in a comments section over at Reason this morning and thought it probably described its own blog post. I’ve been thinking a lot about the Joe Stack story the past few days and I think the comments below very neatly encapsulate my thoughts on this sad story:

It’s too bad that he acted out because now people can just ignore his complaints dismissively as the “rantings of a crazy guy” and point to his criticism of the Catholic church and George Bush and all those other things as evidence that all of his other opinions were equally loony.

I got into a message board argument over the weekend with a horribly condescending person, who claimed to be an IRS agent, who honestly tried to make the case that W2 classification of employees is a good thing because it “protects workers”. How? Because it shifts parts of the employment tax burden onto evil greedy employers, who apparently only consider as “employment expense” what they pay as wages and would otherwise pocket the difference if not for the heroic actions of FICA.

When I pointed out that W2 classification also makes tax collections much easier, by restricting taxpayer’s consent and shifting the burden of proof from collector to payer, and enhances revenue by giving government an interest-free float, he called me “paranoid” and told me to go find a therapist.

Thing is, if enhanced collections weren’t the case, why would Obama come out last week and announce a “crackdown” on independent contractors as a revenue enhancement strategy?

Fact is, it’s fairly clear that this man – Joe Stack – was hounded by the IRS for most of his adult life, and whether or not he brought it on himself, the sheer amount of discretionary administrative and enforcement power that the IRS has is a legitimate concern. The income tax is fundamentally inconsistent with the founding principles of this country – 16th Amendment or not – and Congress, using the IRS as its very own special collection agency, has rigged the rules against the average American and built a regulatory system (through the despicable withholding tax, which is a specific topic Joe mentions in his note) that maximizes revenue whole cultivating as much apathy and ignorance as possible among taxpayers.

‘Ole Joe DID try and work peacefully through the system and he did try and work with the IRS to try and fix his problems… and was apparently given no quarter. He quite clearly was driven to such a hopeless place that he felt he had no other choice but to react violently. I’m not all saying that his actions were justified or that he made the right choice, but he does deserve at least a little more sympathy and consideration than many people are apparently willing to give him.

Just because a vast majority of Americans don’t go out and kill IRS agents doesn’t mean that the system is just or fairly structured. There are serious problems that need to be addressed and Joe Stack, through his actions, has ruined it for the time being for those of us who care deeply about tax reform.

That pretty much says it all. Someday when I feel like blogging in depth, I’ll get into John Locke’s natural law and his theory of property and labor and how that’s fundamentally at odds with the income tax. But today I need to work.

Intellectual Hypocrisy

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

Jonah hits it out of the park today:

What I don’t think we hear enough about is intellectual hypocrisy. What’s that? Well, if moral hypocrisy is saying what values people should live by while failing to follow them yourself, intellectual hypocrisy is believing you are smart enough to run other peoples’ lives when you can barely run your own…

Or consider Rep. Charles Rangel (D., N.Y.), currently subject of a House ethics investigation. Rangel heads the Ways and Means Committee, which writes the tax code. He backs the imposition of an income-tax surcharge on high earners to pay for health care, calling it “the moral thing to do.” Yet he can’t seem to figure out how to file his own taxes properly or, perhaps, legally.

Now, I also know lots of conservatives who are basket cases at everything other than reading and writing books and articles, giving speeches, and thinking Big Thoughts (likewise, I know liberals who despise conservative moralizing about sex and religion who nonetheless live chaste, pious lives themselves). The point is that conservatives don’t presume to be smart enough to run everything, because conservative dogma takes it as an article of faith that no one can be that smart.

This is exactly right. One of the basic tenets of libertarianism and capitalist economics – the principles that this country were founded upon – is that the only person qualified to make decisions for a person is that person himself and I’ve been meaning to blog on this for some time. I have a nice long post in my head on this topic for someday in the future if I can ever get around to it.

On the other hand, the actual hypocrisy that Jonah is talking about here might be that these guys -Barney Frank, Nancy Pelosi, Obama, and the rest of them – don’t actually think they can run things better or that they can accomplish the things they claim, and they know they can’t, rather, their actual reasons for doing what they do are different than what they claim. Anyone with half a brain can see that expanding government entitlements isn’t going to save money in the long run, nor is forbidding malpractice reform going to lower costs incurred by healthcare providers, but if the goal is simply to expand the size and power of the federal government in pursuit of craven political purposes and majority building, then they’re doing a bang up job and are clearly up to the task.

Maybe that’s not hypocrisy, but it is dishonesty.

Like I said, more on libertarian theory later.

A “voluntary” mandate

Saturday, October 24th, 2009

I’ve been meaning to get back to blogging and this morning is as good a time as any.

Ed has a good post this morning on the growing debate over the constitutionality of health insurance mandates and the left’s solidifying position that of course it’s allowed because Congress can do anything if they say they’re doing it for people’s own good, which is obviously what the framer’s intended by “general welfare.” (No really, that’s what they’re saying)

So I’ll ask again: What authority does Congress have to mandate that people buy a product?  What precedent do they have to threaten people with imprisonment if they don’t buy a product merely for existing, as opposed to a prerequisite for accessing public roads as with car insurance?  The reason why Pelosi, Leahy, and Hoyer refuse to answer those questions is because they don’t have an answer to them.

I’m not so much going to focus on the specific post content, because Ed’s got the whole constitutionality argument covered, but there were some interesting comments on enforcing the mandates that I wanted to touch on.

As a bit of background, in all of the proposed healthcare bills containing an individual mandate, the mandate will be enforced by the IRS.

Now, knowing that the IRS will be the enforcer of this mandate, what can one logically conclude about the following statements?

its like taxes, pay voluntarily so you don’t get fined or thrown in jail.

If this monstrosity passes, I can all but guarantee you will see MILLIONS dare the feds to imprison them.

And here’s the rub with the individual mandate: yes indeed, paying income taxes is considered to be voluntary, but for tens of millions of people in this country, it’s voluntary only to the point where it’s also voluntary to go to work and get a paycheck. Yes, self-employed people (I’m ignoring corporations in this argument, because they aren’t applicable) have to actually write a check and have a little flexibility in deciding whether or not to write that check, but for millions of Americans, they pay their taxes every two weeks whether they want to or not. It’s called “payroll withholding” and it’s insidious.

They don’t withhold taxes from your paycheck because it’s more convenient for everyone that way (although that’s how they justify it). They withhold taxes from your paycheck because it makes you more docile and ignorant and easier to be lied to. This is why the IRS is always so interested in trying to classify people as employees when they might not actually consider themselves to be, because the IRS gets more money with less hassle that way and you’re not as informed about how much you’re actually paying.

So what does this have to do with the individual mandate? Like a lot of things, the actual enforcement mechanism will be a matter of regulation rather than statute, but my guess is that signing your paperwork when you start a new job will become something like registering your car at the DMV: you’ll have to show proof of insurance when you fill out all of the forms and if you can’t, they’ll just automatically take the fine/fee/premium out of your paycheck just like normal income taxes and it will be up to you at the end of the year to prove that you were really insured so that you can get an interest-free refund of the nominal amount they withheld. No one will be wiser and there will be no way for anyone to protest or otherwise not pay.

Just watch.

Yes, they usually do start with the kids, but let’s give Obama the benefit of the doubt right now

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

Sometimes this feels like the Facebook studio show, but I get so many good post ideas that I often have to come over here to flesh out an argument or verbalize more precisely a point that I try to make over there. This one is no exception: Obama is giving a speech to the schoolkids on Tuesday.

There is a full blown panic in many corners of the Right right now (hey now!) about “socialist indoctrination” and Nazis and  the like, and, given some of his wacko associations, especially Bill Ayers and Ayers’s switch from violence to education as the “true motor” of revolution, I think there is reason to be suspicious. Hitler analogies are overused in today’s age, but this is truly an accurate analogy – if you are worried about what you see as a quasi-fascist takeover of our government by left wing totalitarian people (and I personally am), then there is some reason and cause to compare this speech to actions by other left-wing totalitarian people:  Hitler, or the Soviets, or Mao, or whoever. There’s a reason that past tyrants went around the parents and directly to the youth – young minds are impressionable and it’s easier to just educate the kids than to reeducate the adults – and in principle, I can see the point that has some people so upset.

But I have to admit that even in spite of my disagreement with Obama’s policies and positions (anyone who has ever read this blog knows that I certainly not a fan), and the sympathy that I have for these people’s suspicion, my reaction is still closer to Ed’s right now than anyone else:

One pap-filled 20-minute speech about working hard and serving others is so lethal a threat to tender minds that they have to be yanked off the premises for the day to shield them from it?

I mean, he is everyone’s President and it seems kind of overwrought to say that he’s not allowed to tell kids to stay in school and do their homework and behave appropriately. If there was ever an opportunity for the bully pulpit of the presidency, surely that’s it, and especially for black students to whom he is a role model and an example of a black person who himself got to where he is today through education. As I said in the Facebook comment, I’m willing to give him the benefit of the doubt on this one.

But I think the other part of Ed’s post (and the one he linked to at LGF) is good too, and very intriguing:

If this turns out to be some hamfisted attempt by The One to pitch his agenda to kids — which would be politically insane given the outcry it would cause, a sneak preview of which may be found here — there’ll be ample time for outrageous outrage later.

Exactly. Is Obama that stupid? Maybe, but I doubt it. Given the outrage that we’ve seen, that speech is going to be scrubbed all the way down to the number of syllables in the word “school” and we’re not going to hear or see anything that could even remotely be considered to be partisan. That would be absolutely nuts from a political perspective and would give so much ammo to the other side that his term would be dead before he even walked off the stage.

So yeah, I do see their point, especially on principle, but let’s give the President the benefit of the doubt. If we thought the criticism and panic at Bush was unfair and disuniting, then it’s only fair to practice what we preach. Let him give the speech and then get outraged if we actually need to be.

Uhh, what’s so surprising here?

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

I might as well point out that this is not too surprising:

Recent town-hall uproars weren’t just about health care. They were also eruptions of concern that the government is taking on too much at once.

That suggests trouble for the president and his party, and fears of losses in next year’s midterm election are likely to shape the Democrats’ fall agenda.

At August’s town-hall meetings, voters often started with complaints about health care, only to shift to frustrations about all the other things President Barack Obama and the Democrats have done or tried to do since January. The $787 billion economic-stimulus package, the government-led rescue of General Motors Corp. and climate-change legislation all came in for criticism…

Last year’s election gave Democrats a mandate for big changes that they feel still applies. They won seats by arguing that Republicans had failed to act to keep the housing market and financial system from crumbling.

It’s been pretty clear to me since last October that the Democrat “mandate” was going to be misread. Obama ascended amidst a perfect storm: an unpopular (and perpetually smeared) 2nd term president exiting the White House, an economic crisis reach its head just before the election, and a racial element that was never seen before, all combined to given him enough votes to win.

Obama wasn’t elected to “fundamentally transform America” (although it was clear that he wanted to); he was elected because he wasn’t Bush, and more generally, because wasn’t a 60 year old white guy with a degree from Yale and an (R) behind his name.

Given how obvious that is (at least to me), what amazes me is why there is any surprise at all that there’s opposition to turning America into a leftwing fantasyland. People weren’t voting for that, they were just voting against Bush (and McCain by association).

In a very cynical sense, Rahm Emmanuel was right about never letting a crisis go to waste, but at the same time, it’s kind of silly and amateurish for such “brilliant” politicians to overreach and create their own crisis, no? Maybe that’s because they’re not as “genius” as they’re thought to be?

Who’s being selfish? (Facebook version)

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

I’ve been meaning to write this post for a number of days and either haven’t gotten around to it (like a lot of my posts lately -new houses simultaneous with new babies are not conducive to blogging, people) or otherwise just haven’t done it. Not that I haven’t tried or made a few false starts, but, like a lot of my posts, the idea for this post has bounced around in my head for a while and it’s just needed a catalyst to get going.

My catalyst here is the first 30 seconds of this vide0, where a woman waving an Obama “Stand Together for America” sign shouts out against all of the “selfish people” she apparently sees as being in between her and some free chemotherapy, or something. That video is the catalyst, because, to some degree, it ties together the different pieces of this post idea.

Now, a catalyst is not the same thing as inspiration, and the inspiration for this post started with a couple of similar, but slightly different posts I’ve seen on Facebook lately. I’ll keep the names anonymous, because this post isn’t about the people themselves, it’s just about the statements they’ve made.

Here is the first one (made while posting a link to a “the only way to fix healthcare is to turn it into the DMV and anyone who disagrees is doing so only for craven political reasons” op-ed in the Dallas Morning News):

It seems all I ever hear is ‘what’s in it for me?’ This disturbs me tremendously.

And here are the comments:

John M. Greene: Disturbs you how? That the author wants “free” healthcare or that other people disagree on its necessity?

July 23 at 10:30am

————————-

ORIGINAL POSTER: I agree with the author, God-forbid any of us have to pay for something for the greater good, just because it might affect THEM in a negative way.

July 23 at 10:36am

————————-

John M. Greene: Ahhh… I agree with you – people should be more charitable and take better care of the less fortunate among us. No argument here.

July 23 at 10:48am

————————-

COMMENTER #2: I don’t know…most people are pretty darn charitable and just don’t bother talking about it in public.

July 23 at 4:06pm

————————-

ORIGINAL POSTER (clearly exasperated): I’m not talking about charity, I’m talking about taxes, and their benefit to society at large.

July 23 at 4:14pm

Because taxes are for the greater common good and people who are opposed to taxes are selfish and just don’t want to help people. Got it.

Let’s try this from a different direction. Here is the other Facebook post, this one being a friend of a friend responding a question about her health. I didn’t respond to this, because I don’t know this person and, I dunno, it would have been rude to pick a fight on someone else’s wall:

I am tired of hearing all of these people in opposition to meaningful healthcare reform. I am also tired of paying almost $800 a month for barebones coverage when there are so many other things that I could be spending my money on, especially when the people who are opposed are people who could easily afford to have their taxes raised to help other people. We elected Barack Obama last November and need not be afraid of real hope and change in this country. This topic is just too important for us not to fix things.

So, I’ll ask again, just who is being selfish? Is it not selfish to covet someone else’s wealth – and endorse the government taking it and giving it to you – because you don’t want to spend your own money? Just whose responsibility is your own health? And if we have a duty to one another to take care of one another (and I think we do), then let’s do that, but let’s do it ourselves and literally take care of each other. It’s not compassionate to just sit back and endorse the government emptying your neighbor’s wallet because you think it’s horrible that prescriptions cost too much money and you really need a vacation. The government is not omnipotent, nor is it our proxy or are elections an excuse to pass the buck.

Look, it’s been few weeks since I made a meaningful blog post, but back in July I was writing almost every day about the healthcare reform topic and here we are 6 weeks later and nothing has changed. A vast majority of people in this county have insurance and are satisfied with it and only a very small percentage of those who don’t have it truly can’t afford it or be insured. And the thing is, we already have programs in place to help those people.

But- but- but- what about people with preexisting conditions? What about people who lose their jobs? What about the children?

Well, some of those problems could be fixed through some sort of policy change (especially the ludicrous employer-endorsed part), but generally, the answer to that one is to take care of yourself beforehand and don’t sit back and wait until there is a problem to complain that there is a problem. We’re not quite to the point yet where people are routinely denied coverage on congenital factors (yet), so all preexisting conditions were at one point new. Do you know what happens when someone has insurance and a new condition pops up? It gets fixed.

What’s so unreasonable about making existing insurance plans easier to obtain, harder to lose, and more responsive to people’s needs, and what part of any of that requires letting the federal government be in charge?

Similarly, you want to have kids? How about waiting until you can actually afford to have one and take care of him or her, including making sure that you can afford to pay to visit the doctor?

It’s not that hard, nor is it particularly selfish to point that out.