For the past year now we’ve been treated to the spectacle of people screaming that they won’t pay for their country.
I’ve never heard of anything so unpatriotic.
Some Americans are willing to fight and die for their country — to put life and limb on the line and sacrifice for the good of America. Other Americans think that paying their taxes is too great a sacrifice to make. Oh sure, other people can die for America, but these people won’t spend a cent if they can get out of it.
“Lower our taxes!” they scream, while our soldiers fight.
Some of these protesters dress up like patriots, like Revolutionary War figures, and it’s a slap in the face to everything this country stands for. The Revolutionary War wasn’t fought against taxes — it was fought for representative democracy. The slogan was “No taxation without representation,” not “No taxation.” And when America was newly free and a group of farmers decided they should get to decide what taxes they would and wouldn’t pay, George Washington himself ordered them to be put down.
George Washington wasn’t a tyrant — he was a democratically elected president, and he was right. Taxes, so long as they’re set by a legitimate legislative budgeting process in a genuinely representative democracy, are a sacrifice we make so that our country can be strong and our democracy can do the people’s will.
Anyone who wants to put their wallet above their country, raise your hand and hang your head.
If you’re not paying your fair share of taxes, you don’t support the troops. Not just in the field, where taxes buy the body armor and bullets needed to fight the wars you supported, but also at home, where taxes pay for the care and services veterans need to return to society after years of sacrifice.
If you’re trying to lower taxes to the point where they can’t support our troops in the field or at home, you’re hanging our troops and veterans out to dry. Breaking America’s promise to them.
It’s not just the troops that are on the line, either; it’s our way of life.
Does anyone want a second financial crisis like the one we went through in 2008 and 2009? The best way to prevent it is by going after the banks and businesses that triggered it — and making sure they can never do it again. What does that take? Manpower: Regulators, accountants, lawyers and law enforcement. An economic security force. What pays for our economic security forces? Tax dollars. Tax dollars keep predatory companies in line.