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Confessions of a War Tax Resister: Trying not to Pay for War

By Kathy Labriola

portrait of Kathy Labriola

I am proud to be a Peace and Freedom Party member since 1975. I joined because of the word "peace."

I have been a war tax resister since 1978. I have tried to obstruct US wars by not paying for them with my tax dollars. As many war tax resisters have discovered, this is easier said than done.

There are many ways to be a war tax resister. There are possible negative consequences, including penalties and fines. Most people don't go to jail for war tax resistance, because the IRS just wants their money.

Phone Tax for War

One easy form of war tax resistance is to not pay the 3% federal tax on your phone bill every month. This tax is earmarked for the military. The phone company collects it from you and sends it on to the IRS, who forward it to the Pentagon. During the Vietnam war, many people withheld this tax to protest the war, and some of us have been withholding it ever since. Since the US war on Iraq began, more people are refusing to pay this tax.

If you write the phone company a letter explaining that you are refusing to pay this tax, they are supposed to adjust your bill each month to reflect that you are not being charged for the tax. Sometimes they will threaten to turn off your phone to scare you into paying this tax. However, they are legally prohibited from doing that because you owe the tax to the IRS, not to them (they just collect it).

Income Taxes

With federal income taxes, there are two approaches -- filing and not filing. Filing involves a public refusal to pay. You file your taxes every year and include a letter to the IRS stating you are refusing to pay taxes for war. Not filing means not doing your taxes at all.

Some people file their taxes but refuse to pay a small portion of federal income taxes. Some people deduct 10% of their tax bill, others refuse to pay $10.40 as a symbolic amount based on the "1040" tax form. Deducting $10.40 or even 10% of your taxes is low risk because the amount of money you owe is probably not worth the money and staff time it costs the IRS to collect it. They will probably send you threatening letters for years and do nothing.

Some people deduct 65% of their total federal taxes and refuse to pay that amount because the Pentagon gets approximately 65% of all federal tax dollars. Others, like me, refuse to pay any federal income tax because we know that 65% of every dollar we send them will go to the military. Each year I do my taxes, figure out what I owe, and send my completed tax forms to the IRS with a letter explaining why I am refusing to pay.

What They'll Do

Here are some steps the IRS will take to collect the money from you:

1) Garnish your wages. The IRS can force your employer to deduct a small amount from every paycheck and send it to the IRS until your tax debt is paid off.

2) Repossess your car. The IRS can repossess your vehicle and sell it at auction to pay your taxes.

3) Put a levy on your bank account. The IRS can force your bank to hand over money from your bank accounts to pay your taxes.

4) Put a lien on your home. This is extremely rare but it has happened. The IRS can force the sale of your house to pay your taxes. However, that is a lot of work and expense for them.

Years of Not Paying

I have chosen to file and to refuse to pay any federal income taxes. For years the IRS did nothing but send me nasty letters. Then, about every 6 or 7 years they would put a levy on my bank account and send a sheriff to take the money from the bank and deliver it to the IRS (now it's just done electronically and is not nearly so melodramatic). Sometimes whole wars would go by before they would collect on me.

At one point, in 1991, they suddenly put a levy on my account and took the money after 8 years of not collecting on me. I remember thinking at the time, "Well, I didn't pay for the Contra war in Nicaragua, I didn't pay for the bombing of El Salvador or the invasion of Grenada, but I paid for the (first) Gulf War. I only paid for one out of four wars."

Since 2001, there has been much more collection action against me. Now nearly every year they put a levy on my bank account and collect whatever taxes I owe. However, other tax resisters have told me that they are not experiencing any more collection action than before, so it seems random rather than a change in IRS policy

Not Filing a Return

The other approach to war tax resistance is not to file your taxes at all. Many war tax resisters have done this for many years without consequences. This strategy works best for people who are self-employed, make a lot of their income in cash, have low incomes, and have few assets, as they are less likely to come to the IRS's attention.

The main drawback to this strategy is that legally it is no different from just evading taxes. So if you get caught, the penalties and fines are somewhat higher than for filing and refusing to pay.

Diverting

Many tax resisters figure out how much in taxes they would owe, and donate that exact amount to a peace organization. This is known as "diverting your taxes." [See article on People's Life Fund.]

Many people ask "Since they eventually collect on you anyway, why don't you just pay them?" The truth is that I am incapable of writing a check to the IRS. I know it will be spent to kill, maim, and torture people around the world. I withhold it as long as possible, forcing them to steal it from me by putting a levy on my back account. If millions of others refused to pay taxes, our joint resistance would have more impact.

For more information contact the National War Tax Resistance Coordinating Committee at 1-800-269-7464. They have a very cool web site at www.nwtrcc.org.

[Kathy Labriola is a therapist and community activist. She lives in Berkeley. The photo of Kathy is by Frances Hailman.]


Where do your tax dollars go?

In 2004, the average California household paid $7,733 in federal income taxes. Here's how that money was spent:

Military and Defense:$2,317
Health:1,568
Interest on the debt (military)682
Interest on the debt (non-military):756
Income security:509
Education:284
Veterans' Benefits:266
Nutrition:208
Housing:166
Natural Resources:133
Other$813

This comes to 30¢ out of every dollar for military and defense, 9¢ for debt payments from past military spending, and 3¢ for veterans' benefits. That's 42¢ on the dollar. Plus there's more military spending concealed in other department budgets.

President Bush's proposed 2006 budget brings direct military spending up to 31¢ on the dollar. The U.S. now spends more on the military than all other countries in the world combined.

Why is this different from the official version?

During the war against Viet Nam, Lyndon Johnson changed the way the federal budget was calculated. He lumped trust funds like social security and highways into the general budget to cover up the growing deficit. The figures above are what the government does with the money they actually collect in income taxes and which they have control over.

"Income security" means all the programs which actually give money to people for their needs. These include SSI (Supplemental Security Income for elderly, blind and disabled people with low incomes), TANF (Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, which replaced welfare programs under the Clinton-Gore administration), child care spending, and tax credit progams.

"Other" includes science, space and technology, the State Department, agriculture, etc. There's some more military spending buried in it, but it's hard to find.

Where to find out more

We got these figures from the National Priorities Project (address below). They have a study called "Where do Your Tax Dollars Go?" which you can get from their website or probably by sending them a note and asking what it costs.

National Priorities Project
17 New South St, Suite 302
Northampton, MA 01060
413-584-9556
info@nationalpriorities.org
www.nationalpriorities.org


People's Life Fund

In 1971, war tax resisters in the San Francisco Bay Area formed the People's Life Fund (PLF), to serve as a place to put money which is not paid in taxes. There are over 50 such alternative funds in the U.S. Each April 15, the PLF makes grants to groups working for peace and justice.

The PLF is divided into three categories.

Earmarked: People earmark their contribution for a group of their choice, and make a check out to that group.

Strings Attached: Because the IRS may seize the owed amount, the PLF allows tax resisters to "deposit" owed taxes in an "escrow" account. This money is returned upon request after collection by the IRS, or if collection is imminent, or to pay legal fees. In the meantime, the interest from these deposits is used for the granting fund.

Give Away: This is a granting fund consisting of outright contributions of resisted taxes or other money, and interest from all PLF deposits. PLF members meet annually to give away the money in this fund.

People's Life Fund
P.O. Box 2422
Berkeley, CA 94702-0422
(510) 843-9877

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