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- <text id=92TT0841>
- <title>
- Apr. 20, 1992: Let Them Eat Tax Forms
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Apr. 20, 1992 Why Voters Don't Trust Clinton
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 104
- Let Them Eat Tax Forms
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Barbara Ehrenreich
- </p>
- <p> Tax time makes one nostalgic for the days when we had a
- government. I mean way back, before U.S. Senators started
- resigning to go in search of productive employment. I mean long
- ago, when citizens sent off their tax forms marked "sealed with
- a kiss," knowing Uncle Sam would use the money to right wrongs,
- build bridges and comfort the widows and orphans. But has anyone
- seen Uncle Sam recently? There is a rumor that the Nixon team
- took out the old gent two decades ago. They found him rattling
- around in a back office, raving about health care and housing
- and a few spanking-new pieces of infrastructure to plop down
- somewhere--and they quietly sealed the door. It was a coup of
- sorts: the death of government and its replacement by the IRS.
- </p>
- <p> Face it, there isn't much evidence of government anymore
- other than the IRS. Europe still has governments, or so we are
- told--veritable busybodies of them, providing child care and
- free hospital care. We never expected all that here, just a few
- parades and space launches and water we could drink. But our
- space program is a galaxy-wide embarrassment. Our regulatory
- agencies are so feeble that factories burn down with the workers
- still in them and even the President has taken a hallucinogenic
- sleeping pill blithely approved by the FDA. Infrastructure is
- a thing of the past. As for the widows and orphans, they can be
- found massing around the Dumpsters, searching for viable crusts.
- Too bad 1040 forms aren't edible. Too bad we can't use them to
- patch up our bridges.
- </p>
- <p> I speak from the middle-class, middle-aged point of view,
- of course: too young for Medicare, too old for Head Start, too
- rich for food stamps, too poor to be invited up to
- Kennebunkport for a spin on the President's powerboat. If we
- hate incumbents, it's because we no longer know what they're
- incumbing over. For most of us, government at the federal level
- is an increasingly mythical enterprise: a media show in which
- a bunch of fellows, possibly former stars of Rogaine
- commercials, are paid to bounce checks and spit at one another
- on TV. The only thing left that really works is the inexorable
- IRS.
- </p>
- <p> There is the federal prison system, I grant you that:
- surely the vastest low-income housing program the world has ever
- seen, eating up $1.4 billion of federal spending. But the
- prisons can be regarded as a mere extension of the IRS: Who
- would pay their taxes if the alternative were not the sadistic
- embrace of the federal pen? Some of our more disillusioned
- citizens, the kind who keep talk-radio buzzing, have already
- concluded that what we have going here is a giant extortion
- system: Send us money, the IRS demands every April, or be
- prepared to spend a lengthy sabbatical locked up with a serial
- killer who has devoted the past 10 years to working out.
- </p>
- <p> All right, there was the gulf war, surely a spectacular
- display of government-in-action, offering days of suspenseful
- viewing. But the war may have been little more than a public
- relations effort on the part of the IRS. Think about it: 20% of
- federal spending goes to defense, for which a more appropriate
- term is protection. No protection racket has ever worked
- without some kind of a credible threat. Isn't it true that as
- soon as Saddam Hussein was beaten back and the U.S.S.R. became
- the pitifully hungry C.I.S., the Pentagon produced a new list
- of international bullies?
- </p>
- <p> We all know the excuse for the absence of government. The
- reason why nothing seems to come out no matter how much we pour
- in is widely known to be the federal debt. Thirty percent of
- our tax dollars go to pay off not the debt itself but the
- interest on the debt. This amounts to $200 billion a year,
- hardly any of which will ever fill an orphan's tummy or dry a
- poor widow's tear. Instead, most of it flows directly to a
- handful of institutions and relatively well-heeled folks who
- were clever enough to lend the government money at profitable
- rates. To these fortunate individuals (nearly 15% of whom are
- not even American citizens), there is indeed a U.S. government,
- or at least someone who disburses those dividend checks.
- </p>
- <p> And we must take some of the blame ourselves, we ordinary,
- middle-level citizens. For years we voted for men who promised
- to battle Big Government, also known as a "cancer," un-American
- and inimical to Our Way of Life. And they did, these brave men,
- these Reagans and Bushes: they cut and they trimmed. They
- deregulated. They privatized. They hacked at entitlements and
- skirmished with "waste"...Until nothing was left but the
- IRS.
- </p>
- <p> So I say to Washington, prove me wrong! Show that our
- taxes serve some nobler function than to perpetuate the IRS. I
- can think of two convincing approaches. One would be to use the
- 20% of the budget earmarked for defense to cancel the 30% of tax
- dollars that are earmarked for interest on the federal debt. I
- am talking about a global strike against the people to whom we
- owe the debt: Bomb 'em, strafe 'em, plow them under with tanks!
- If we could fight for oil, or whatever it was, we could surely
- fire a few rounds to lower the debt.
- </p>
- <p> The alternative, if that sounds too nasty, is to disinter
- dear Uncle Sam. I can just see that eccentric old geezer
- striding out into the daylight again, rolling up his sleeves and
- getting down to work--feeding the hungry, healing the sick,
- scrubbing the environment, giving us an infrastructure that
- isn't made out of balsa wood and rubber cement. So free Uncle
- Sam and take my money! I wouldn't mind paying taxes--to a
- government.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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