Sin
Taxes & Other Orwellian Methods of
Compliance That Feed the Government’s Greed
By
John W. Whitehead
“Of
all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely
exercised for the good of its victim may
be the most oppressive. It may be better
to live under robber barons than under
omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber
baron’s cruelty may sometimes sleep, his
cupidity may at some point be satiated,
but those who torment us for our own
good will torment us without end for
they do so with the approval of their
own conscience.”—C.S. Lewis
December 13, 2019 "Information
Clearing House"
-
“Taxman,” the
only song written by George Harrison to open
one of the Beatles’ albums
(it featured on the band’s 1966 Revolver
album), is a snarling, biting, angry
commentary on government greed and how
little control “we the taxpayers” have over
our lives and our money.
If
you drive a car, I'll tax the street,
If
you try to sit, I'll tax your seat.
If
you get too cold I'll tax the heat,
If
you take a walk, I'll tax your feet.
Don't ask me what I want it for
If
you don't want to pay some more
'Cause I'm the taxman, yeah, I'm the
taxman.
When the Beatles finally started earning
enough money from their music to place them
in the top tax bracket, they found the
British government only-too-eager to levy a
supertax on them of more than 90%.
Here in America, things aren’t much better.
More than two centuries after our ancestors
went to war over their abused property
rights, we’re once again being subjected to
taxation without any real representation,
all the while the government continues to do
whatever it likes—levy taxes, rack up debt,
spend outrageously and irresponsibly—with
little concern for the plight of its
citizens.
Because the government’s voracious appetite
for money, power and domination has grown
out of control, its agents have devised
other means of funding its excesses and
adding to its largesse through taxes
disguised as fines, taxes disguised as fees,
and taxes disguised as tolls, speeding
tickets and penalties.
With every new tax, fine, fee and law
adopted by our so-called representatives,
the yoke around the neck of the average
American seems to tighten just a little bit
more.
Everywhere you go, everything you do, and
every which way you look, we’re getting
swindled, cheated, conned, robbed, raided,
pickpocketed, mugged, deceived, defrauded,
double-crossed and fleeced by governmental
and corporate shareholders of the American
police state out to make a profit at
taxpayer expense.
We
have no real say in how the government runs,
or how our taxpayer funds are used, and no
real property rights, but that doesn’t
prevent the government from fleecing us at
every turn.
Think about it.
Everything you own can be seized by the
government under one pretext or another
(civil asset forfeiture, unpaid taxes,
eminent domain, so-called public interest,
etc.).
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
That house you live in, the car you drive,
the small (or not so small) acreage of land
that has been passed down through your
family or that you scrimped and saved to
acquire, whatever money you manage to keep
in your bank account after the government
and its cronies have taken their first and
second and third cut…none of it is safe from
the government’s greedy grasp.
And
then you have all of those high-handed,
outrageously manipulative government
programs sold to the public as a means of
forcing compliance and discouraging
unhealthy behavior by way of taxes, fines,
fees and programs for the “better” good.
Surveillance cameras, government agents
listening in on your phone calls, reading
your emails and text messages and monitoring
your spending, mandatory health care, sugary
soda bans, anti-bullying laws, zero
tolerance policies, political correctness:
these are all outward signs of a
government—i.e., a societal elite—that
believes it knows what is best for you and
can do a better job of managing your life
than you can.
This is tyranny disguised as “the better
good.”
Indeed, this is the tyranny of the Nanny
State: marketed as benevolence, enforced
with armed police, and inflicted on all
those who do not belong to the elite ruling
class that gets to call the shots.
So-called “sin taxes” have become a
particularly popular technique used by the
Nanny State to supposedly discourage the
populace from engaging in activities that
don’t align with the government’s priorities
(consuming sugary drinks, smoking, drinking,
etc.).
Personally, I don’t think the government
really cares how its citizens live or die:
they just want more of the taxpayers’ money,
and they figure they can rake it in by using
sin taxes to appeal to that self-righteous
segment of every society that sees nothing
wrong with imposing their belief systems on
the rest of the populace.
Examples abound.
For instance, a
growing number of cities and states
(Washington DC, Philadelphia, San Francisco,
and Seattle, among others) have adopted or
considered imposing taxes on sugary drinks,
as much as a dollar more for a two-liter
bottle of soda, supposedly in the hopes of
forcing lower-income communities that
struggle with obesity and diabetes to make
healthier dietary choices
by making the drinks more expensive.
The
faulty logic behind these sin taxes seems to
be that if you make it cost-prohibitive for
poor people to pursue unhealthy lifestyle
choices, they’ll stop doing it.
Except
it doesn’t really work out
that way.
Study after
study shows that while sales of sugary
drinks decreased sharply in cities with a
soda tax, sales figures spiked at stores
located outside the city. In other words,
people just shopped elsewhere.
You won’t
convince former New York mayor Michael
Bloomberg of this, however. Bloomberg, a
2020 Democratic presidential hopeful,
believes the government needs even greater
tax powers in order to force
Americans—especially poor people—to make
smarter lifestyle choices. “When
we raise taxes on the poor, it’s good
because then the poor will live longer
because they can’t afford as many things
that kill them,”
stated Bloomberg.
Folks, this right here is everything that is
wrong with the power-hungry jackals that
aspire to run the government today: by hook
or by crook, they’re working hard to
frogmarch the citizenry into complying with
their dictates, because they believe
that only they know what’s best for you.
It’s this same
oppressive mindset that’s been pushing
social credit systems (here and in China)
that reward behavior deemed “acceptable” and
punish behavior the government and its
corporate allies find offensive, illegal or
inappropriate.
It’s the same mindset that supports the
government’s efforts to compile a growing
list—shared with fusion centers and law
enforcement agencies—of ideologies,
behaviors, affiliations and other
characteristics that could flag someone as
suspicious and result in their being labeled
potential enemies of the state.
It’s the same
mindset that has government agents spinning
a sticky spider-web of
threat assessments,
behavioral sensing warnings, flagged
“words,” and “suspicious” activity reports
using AI eyes and ears, social media,
behavior sensing software,
and citizen spies to identify potential
threats.
It’s the
mindset behind the red flag gun laws,
growing in popularity as a legislative means
by which to seize guns from individuals
viewed as a danger to themselves or others.
“We
need to stop dangerous people before they
act”:
that’s the
rationale behind the NRA’s support of these
red flag laws,
and at first glance, it appears to be
perfectly reasonable to want to disarm
individuals who are clearly suicidal and/or
pose an “immediate
danger” to
themselves or others.
And
it’s the same mindset that allows squadrons
of AI censors to shadowban individuals for
expressing their unfiltered, politically
incorrect opinions and beliefs on social
media: all in an effort to keep them in
line.
Rounding out
this dystopian campaign to impose a
chokehold on the populace is a technology
sector that has been colluding with the
government to create a Big Brother that is
all-knowing, all-seeing and inescapable.
It’s not just the drones,
fusion centers,
license plate readers, stingray devices and
the NSA that you have to worry about. You’re
also being tracked by the
black boxes in your cars,
your cell phone, smart devices in your home,
grocery loyalty cards, social media
accounts, credit cards, streaming services
such as Netflix, Amazon, and e-book reader
accounts.
Clearly, those helping to erect the prison
walls that now enclose us purportedly
for our own good are not people that
understand the concept of freedom or
individual rights.
Unfortunately, this is what happens when you
empower the government and its various
agencies, agents and corporate partners to
act in loco parentis for an entire
nation.
All
of the incremental bricks that have been
laid over the years as part of the police
state’s prison wall—the invasive
surveillance, the extremism reports, the
civil unrest, the protests, the shootings,
the bombings, the military exercises and
active shooter drills, the color-coded
alerts and threat assessments, the fusion
centers, the transformation of local police
into extensions of the military, the
distribution of military equipment and
weapons to local police forces, the
government databases containing the names of
dissidents and potential troublemakers—have
helped to acclimate us slowly to a life in
prison.
Funded with our taxpayer dollars and carried
out in broad daylight without so much as a
general outcry from the citizenry, these
prison walls have been sold to us as a means
of keeping us safe behind bars and out of
reach of danger.
Having allowed
our fears to be codified and our actions
criminalized, we now find ourselves in a
strange new world where
just about everything we do is criminalized.
Even so, how did we go from enacting laws to
make our world safer to being saddled with a
government that polices our social
decisions? As with most of the problems
plaguing us in the American police state, we
are the source of our greatest problems.
As journalist
Gracy Olmstead recognizes, the problem arose
when we looked “first to the State to care
for the situation, rather than exercising
any sort of personal involvement… These
actions reveal a more passive, isolated
attitude. But here, again, we see the
result of breakdown in modern American
community—without
a sense of communal closeness or
responsibility, we act as bystanders rather
than as stewards.”
Olmstead continues:
[Communitarian libertarian Robert]
Nisbet predicted that, in a society
without strong private associations,
the State would take their place
— assuming the role of the church, the
schoolroom, and the family, asserting a
“primacy of claim” upon our children.
“It is hard to overlook the fact,” he
wrote, “that the State and politics have
become suffused by qualities formerly
inherent only in the family or the
church.” In this world, the term “nanny
state” takes on a very literal meaning.
Unfortunately, even in the face of outright
corruption and incompetency on the part of
our elected officials, Americans in general
remain relatively gullible, eager to be
persuaded that the government can solve the
problems that plague us, whether it be
terrorism, an economic depression, an
environmental disaster, how or what we eat
or even keeping our children safe.
We
have relinquished control over the most
intimate aspects of our lives to government
officials who, while they may occupy seats
of authority, are neither wiser, smarter,
more in tune with our needs, more
knowledgeable about our problems, nor more
aware of what is really in our best
interests.
Yet
having bought into the false notion that the
government does indeed know what’s best for
us and can ensure not only our safety but
our happiness and will take care of us from
cradle to grave—that is, from daycare
centers to nursing homes—we have in
actuality allowed ourselves to be bridled
and turned into slaves at the bidding of a
government that cares little for our
freedoms or our happiness.
The
lesson is this: once a free people allows
the government inroads into their freedoms
or uses those same freedoms as bargaining
chips for security, it quickly becomes a
slippery slope to outright tyranny.
Nor
does it seem to matter whether it's a
Democrat or a Republican at the helm
anymore, because the bureaucratic mindset on
both sides of the aisle now seems to embody
the same philosophy of authoritarian
government, whose priorities are to remain
in control and in power.
Modern
government in general—ranging from the
militarized police in SWAT team gear
crashing through our doors to the rash of
innocent citizens being gunned down by
police to the invasive spying on everything
we do—is acting illogically, even
psychopathically.
When our own government no longer sees us as
human beings with dignity and worth but as
things to be manipulated, maneuvered, mined
for data, manhandled by police, conned into
believing it has our best interests at
heart, mistreated, and then jails us if we
dare step out of line, punishes us unjustly
without remorse, and refuses to own up to
its failings, we are no longer operating
under a constitutional republic.
Instead, what
we are experiencing is a
pathocracy:
tyranny at the hands of a psychopathic
government, which “operates against the
interests of its own people except for
favoring certain groups.”
So
where does that leave us?
Having allowed the government to expand and
exceed our reach, we find ourselves on the
losing end of a tug-of-war over control of
our country and our lives. And for as long
as we let them, government officials will
continue to trample on our rights, always
justifying their actions as being for the
good of the people.
Yet
the government can only go as far as “we the
people” allow.
Therein lies the problem: we have suspended
our moral consciences in favor of the police
state.
The
choice before us is clear, and it is
a moral choice. It is the choice between
tyranny and freedom, dictatorship and
autonomy, peaceful slavery and dangerous
freedom, and manufactured pipedreams of what
America used to be versus the gritty reality
of what she is today.
Most of all, perhaps, the choice before us
is that of being a child or a parent, of
obeying blindly, never questioning, and
marching in lockstep with the police state
or growing up, challenging injustice,
standing up to tyranny, and owning up to our
responsibilities as citizens, no matter how
painful, risky or uncomfortable.
As
author Erich Fromm warned in his book On
Disobedience, “At this point in
history, the capacity to doubt, to criticize
and to disobey may be all that stands
between a future for mankind and the end of
civilization.”
As I make clear
in my book
Battlefield America: The War on the
American People,
if you have no choice, no voice, and no real
options when it comes to the government’s
claims on your life, your movements, your
property and your money, you’re not free.
Personally, I’d rather die a free man having
lived according to my own dictates (within
the bounds of reasonable laws) than live as
a slave chained up in a government prison.
Constitutional
attorney and author John W. Whitehead is
founder and president of The
Rutherford Institute.
His new book Battlefield
America: The War on the American People
is available at
www.amazon.com.
Whitehead can be contacted at johnw@rutherford.org.
Do you agree or
disagree? Post your comment here |