Taxation Without Reason

Taxation Without Reason
The word "taxes" is seen engraved at the headquarters of the IRS in Washington on May 10, 2021. (Andrew Kelly/Reuters)
John Stossel
2/28/2024
Updated:
2/29/2024
0:00
Commentary

My income tax is due in a few weeks!

I hate it.

I’m pretty good at math, but I no longer prepare my own taxes. The form alone scares me.

I feel I have to hire an accountant, because Congress, endlessly sucking up to various interest groups, keeps adding to the tax code. Now even accountants and tax nerds barely understand it.

I can get a deduction for feeding feral cats but not for having a watchdog.

I can deduct clarinet lessons if I get an orthodontist to say it’ll cure my overbite but not piano lessons if a psychotherapist prescribes them for relaxation.

Exotic dancers can depreciate breast implants.

Even though whaling is mostly banned, owning a whaling boat can get you $10,000 in deductions.

And so on.

Stop! I have a life! I don’t want to spend my time learning about such things.

No wonder most Americans pay for some form of assistance. We pay big—about $104 billion per year. We waste 2 billion hours filling out stupid forms.

That may not even be the worst part of the tax code.

We adjust our lives to satisfy the whims of politicians. They manipulate us with tax rules. Million-dollar mortgage deductions invite us to buy bigger homes. Solar tax credits got me to put panels on my roof.

“These incentives are a good thing,” politicians say. “Even high taxes alone encourage gifts to charity.”

“[But] Americans don’t need to be bribed to give,” Steve Forbes said in one of my videos. “In the 1980s, when the top rate got cut from 70 percent down to 28 percent ... charitable giving went up. When people have more, they give more.”

Right. When the government lets us live our own lives, good things happen.

But politicians want more control.

American colonists started a revolution partly over taxes. They raided British ships and dumped their tea into the Boston Harbor to protest a tax of “3 pennies per pound.” But once those “don’t tax me!” colonists became politicians, they, too, raised taxes. First, they taxed things they deemed bad, such as snuff and whiskey.

Alexander Hamilton’s whiskey tax led to violent protests.

Now Americans meekly (mostly) accept new and much higher taxes.

All of us suffer because politicians have turned our income tax into a manipulative maze.

We waste money and time and do things we wouldn’t normally do.

Since I criticize the government, I assume some IRS agent would like to come after me.

So, cowering in fear, I hire an accountant and tell her: “Megan, don’t be aggressive. Just skip any challengeable deduction, even if it means I pay more.”

I like having an accountant, but I don’t like having to have one. I resent having to pay Megan.

I once calculated what I could buy with the money I pay her. I could get a brand-new motorcycle. I could take a cruise ship to Italy and back every year.

Better still, I could give my money to charity and maybe do some good in the world. For the same amount I pay Megan, I could pay four kids’ tuition at a private school funded by SSPNYC.org.

Or I could invest. I might help grow a company that creates a fun product, cures cancer, or creates wealth in a hundred ways.

But I can’t. I need to pay Megan.

What a waste.

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
John Stossel is the creator of Stossel TV videos, an Award-winning news correspondent, and best-selling author. His latest book is “No, They Can't: Why Government Fails—But Individuals Succeed.”
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