Comments on: Paying Dues https://nwtrcc.org/2023/01/05/paying-dues/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=paying-dues Fri, 20 Jan 2023 02:37:28 +0000 hourly 1 By: Chrissy Kirchhoefer https://nwtrcc.org/2023/01/05/paying-dues/#comment-2757 Fri, 20 Jan 2023 02:37:28 +0000 https://nwtrcc.org/?p=14382#comment-2757 Michael, Thanks for sharing your thoughts. One of the more enlivening suggestions I heard at a NWTRCC conference was the suggestion to reevaluate our war tax resistance from year to year. As taxpayers in the U.S., we know that the greatest percentage of our income taxes go towards war and war preparations; we have the greatest leverage to resist these income taxes that lead to carnage. I think it would behoove all of us to examine the various actions we take in making the world better. A great thing to do in this new year!

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By: Lincoln Rice https://nwtrcc.org/2023/01/05/paying-dues/#comment-2755 Mon, 09 Jan 2023 16:45:12 +0000 https://nwtrcc.org/?p=14382#comment-2755 Michael, I think the current state of war tax resistance (WTR) is more complex than your comments, though I still struggle with what the future of the war tax resistance movement and local groups will look like. Before the advent of the internet, most individuals interested in war tax resistance had to contact a local war tax resistance group to find out more information… and some of those folks might then participate in tax day actions.

Now that anyone can become well-versed in WTR by perusing the resources that are freely available on our website, local groups have much less interaction with folks wanting to learn about war tax resistance. In any given year, we have about 40,000 unique visitors to the NWTRCC website, who look at an average of nine pages on the website. These numbers, which I believe indicate serious interest, have remained steady.

Local groups have also played a role in supporting each other during periods of collection from the IRS. During the 1980s and early 1990s, it was also common have cars and houses seized by the IRS. Collection efforts dropped significantly after 2010 with the gutting of the IRS budget and property seizures dwindled to practically nothing after a change in IRS philosophy in the late-1990s. So another major role that local WTR groups provided also became less necessary.

With the $80 billion in additional funding that the IRS will receive over the next ten years, we will likely see an increase in collections. These collection efforts may have the unintended consequence of leading isolated war tax resisters to reach out to local groups or form local groups. Most of the calls I receive in the NWTRCC office are from long-time war tax resisters who have never been in contact with other war tax resisters. They call the office because of an action by the IRS that leads them to reach out for support.

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By: Michael Wehle https://nwtrcc.org/2023/01/05/paying-dues/#comment-2754 Sat, 07 Jan 2023 09:14:44 +0000 https://nwtrcc.org/?p=14382#comment-2754 My thoughts are that this blog post seems somewhat wandering and lost. You end by remarking on the deaths of several people who inspired you to do war tax resistance. I knew Carl Kabat from the Plowshares 8, only met Lana and Steve via friends from the Des Moines Catholic Worker in 1981 or so. I had started refusing to pay Federal income taxes before I met these people, when I started work, so was not inspired by them, but I imagine your mention of their names indicates you may be reassessing your tax resistance as a result of their deaths.

At the last Tax Day protest I attended, 2017, in San Francisco, I noticed that over half of those present were people I had known from Northern California War Tax Resistance in the late 1980s. This is not hyperbole: I recently looked at a photo of this SF demonstration, and literally over half the group had been active 30 years before. That’s not a good indication this “movement” is growing. I notice NWRTCC Twitter posts go completely unreplied to, including a post asking that readers tweet their questions. This, to me, is a pretty good comment on war tax resistance in the US.

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