Shrug, Atlas, shrug. Mark Steyn from Investors’ Business Daily:
In less than a quarter-millennium, the American Revolution will have evolved from “No taxation without representation” to representation without taxation. We have bigger government, bigger bureaucracy, bigger spending, bigger deficits, bigger debt, and yet an ever smaller proportion of citizens paying for it. The top 5% of taxpayers contribute 60% of revenue. The top 10% provide 75%. Another two-fifths make up the rest. And half are exempt.
This isn’t redistribution — a “leveling” to address the “mal-distribution” of income, as Sen. Max Baucus, (D-Kleptocristan) put it the other day. It isn’t even “spreading the wealth around,” as then Sen. Barack Obama put it in an unfortunate off-the-prompter moment during the 2008 campaign.
Rather, it’s an assault on the moral legitimacy of the system. If you accept the principle of a tax on income, it might seem reasonable to exclude the very poor from having to contribute to it. But in no meaningful sense can half the country be considered “poor.” The U.S. income tax is becoming the 21st century equivalent of the “jizya” — the punitive tax levied by Muslim states on their non-Muslim citizens: In return for funding the Islamic imperium, the infidels were permitted to carry on practicing their faith.
Likewise, under the American jizya, in return for funding Big Government, nonbelievers are permitted to carry on practicing their faith in capitalism, small business, economic activity and the other primitive belief systems to which they cling so touchingly.
In the Islamic world, the infidel tax base eventually wised up. You can see it literally in the landscape in rural parts of the Balkans: Christian tradesmen got fed up paying the jizya and moved out of the towns up into remote hills far from the shakedown crowd.
In less mountainous terrain where it’s harder to lie low, non-Muslims found it easier to convert. That’s partly what drove Islamic expansion. Once Araby was all-Muslim, it was necessary to move on to the Levant, and to Persia, and to Central Asia and North Africa and India and Europe — in search of new infidels to mug.
Don’t worry, I’m not so invested in my analogy that I’m suggesting the Obama-Reid-Pelosi shakedown racket will be forced to invade Canada and Scandinavia. For one thing, pretty much everywhere else got with the Big Government program well ahead of America and long ago figured out all the angles: Two-thirds of French imams are on the dole. In the Stockholm suburb of Tensta, 20% of women in their late 40s collect disability benefits. In the U.K., five million — a tenth of the adult population — have not done a day’s work since the New Labour government took office in 1997.
America has a ways to go to catch up with those enlightened jurisdictions, but it’s on its way. Rep. Paul Ryan pointed out recently that, by 2004, 20% of U.S. households were getting about 75% of their income from the federal government. As a matter of practical politics, how receptive would they be to a pitch for lower taxes, which they don’t pay, or lower government spending, of which they are such fortunate beneficiaries? How receptive would another fifth of households, who get about 40% of their income from federal programs, be to such a pitch?
And what’s to stop this trend? Democracy decays easily into the tyranny of the majority, in which 51% of voters can empty the pockets of the other 49%. That’s why a country on track to a $20 trillion national debt exempts half the population from making an even modest contribution to reducing it. And it’s also why the remorseless shriveling of the tax rolls is a cancer at the heart of republican citizenship.
Pace Max Baucus, this isn’t about correcting the “mal-distribution” of income. What Mal Max is up to is increasing dependency. In the newspeak of Big Government, “tax cuts” now invariably mean not reductions in the rate of income seizure but a “tax credit” reimbursed from the seizure in return for living your life the way the government wants you to.
With ObamaCare, we’ve now advanced to the next stage — “tax debits,” or additional punitive confiscation if you decline to live your life in accordance with government fiat. ObamaCare requires you upon penalty of law to make provisions for your health care that meet the approval of the state commissars.
Unfortunately, as they discovered after passing it, the bill didn’t provide for any enforcement mechanisms. But not to worry. The other day Douglas Shulman, commissioner for the Internal Revenue Service, announced that, if you fail to purchase the mandated health insurance, he’ll simply confiscate any tax refund due to you from your previous 12 months’ withholding.
We are now not merely disincentivizing economic energy but actively waging war on it. If 51% can vote themselves government lollipops from the other 49%, soon 60% will be shaking down the remaining 40%, and then 70% will be sticking it to the remaining 30%. How low can it go?
When you think about it, that 53% of U.S. households prop up not just this country but half the planet: They effectively pick up the defense tab for our wealthiest allies, so that Germany, Japan and others can maintain minimal militaries and lavish the savings on cradle-to-grave entitlements.
A relatively tiny group of people is writing the check for the entire global order. What proportion of them would need to figure out the game’s no longer worth it to bring the whole system crashing down?
Robert Worthington says:
Greg. I ask myself, who could Obama possibly hire for the supreme court justice? Obviously a communist is in the works? What are your thoughts Greg?
April 10, 2010 — 7:18 pm
Jim Klein says:
“What proportion of them would need to figure out the game’s no longer worth it to bring the whole system crashing down?”
David Friedman could graph it for you, and this is a great example IMO of why classic economics misses the point. The direct answer is, “far less than already do,” and yet they haven’t brought anything down.
Why? Because earning is a subset of morality, of course. Until people /want/ their lives to be their own, nothing can possibly change, at least not for the better. And wants can be very tough to persuade. Luckily facts can often persuade, and the Internet allows an awful lot of facts to be spread awfully quickly. Presumably the fact that their lives /are/ their own, will cause folks to want it that way. We’re dangling by a thread, but that’s the way these things usually go and so I agree, “We’re on the cusp of great things.”
OTOH, not being one ever short of worry, here’s a new one. If you think Communism is bad, just wait for the collectivist “conservative” backlash!
April 12, 2010 — 6:46 pm
Jim says:
There you go again, blaming Barack. He hasn’t raised or changed the taxes in any way yet. The system in place now has been brought about by mostly Republican presidents of the last 30 years.
Let’s not forget that the poor keep getting poorer while the rich get richer, which leads to the tax disparity. Maybe instead of wasting money on war, they could help the poor get degrees and bring up the lower class to middle class standards.
Funny how people with zero political or economic experience criticize someone who inherited a messed up system from the previous retard president.
April 19, 2010 — 7:10 am
Greg Swann says:
> Funny how people with zero political or economic experience criticize someone who inherited a messed up system from the previous retard president.
You could do me a favor and tone down the rhetoric. This is flame-baiting. May not have been your intent, but that will be the net effect.
April 19, 2010 — 7:41 am
Sean Purcell says:
There you go again, blaming Barack. He hasn’t raised or changed the taxes in any way yet. The system in place now has been brought about by mostly Republican presidents of the last 30 years.
No one’s arguing a particular political party is to blame (well… no one but you). The idea that our current Congress and President haven’t raised taxes yet (nice word to hide behind), is blatantly false. The Health Care Reform bill alone raises taxes, fees and costs. (The article linked is the first of 22 million hits when one Googles health care reform + taxes. You should try a Google search before making such statements.) Just because you haven’t felt it yet doesn’t mean it didn’t happen. Every time the federal government prints more money for programs it hasn’t funded or bailouts it is constitutionally prohibited from exercising, that is a tax. It is probably the most insidious tax extant.
Let’s not forget that the poor keep getting poorer while the rich get richer, which leads to the tax disparity. Maybe instead of wasting money on war, they could help the poor get degrees and bring up the lower class to middle class standards.
Nonsense. statistically and philosophically. Tax in this country is progressive, that’s why it’s called a progressive income tax. The underlying sentiment is based on social justice: the majority of people deciding that the minority of earners should pay more even if they in fact use less. This is theft by majority (as opposed to taxation itself, which is simply theft). Educate yourself on our tax system and its pros vs cons here. I do agree with your assessment of war as a waste of my money, but no bigger a waste then spending it on “degrees for the poor.” Stealing my money in order to provide higher – elective – education (indoctrination?) to someone else, in the hopes that same someone could then compete with me for my income and wealth. That’s brilliant. I can be punished twice for adding value and creating wealth.
Funny how people with zero political or economic experience criticize someone who inherited a messed up system from the previous retard president.
I submit you have no idea the political or economic experience of many on this blog. Based on your comment you don’t seem to have read many of the posts. In any case, one does not need to experience a philosophy to comment on it. One need only use the most powerful tool in the world: our mind. As for inheritance, the current spending spree has been ongoing for much longer than this president – it has just never accelerated at the pace set by the current administration and congress.
April 19, 2010 — 3:22 pm