-Caveat Lector-

Why I Will Never Pay Income Taxes
By Betsy Ross

Posted April 6, 1998

When April 15, 1993 came, I just couldn't sign my check and send in my 1040
any more. It wasn't just because it would have taken my entire year's
hard-scraped savings to pay the government. It was that I just couldn't
stand knowing that my money was going to pay for things like CIA drug
smuggling, political assassinations, "art" that no person would ever buy
with their own money, pork projects, dishonest cops and $600 toilet seats.

If it had just been a matter of handing over a few thousand dollars every
year to keep the government from sending men with guns after me, I'd
probably still be sending in the forms. But all of a sudden, I realized that
if I wrote that check I'd be paying to send men with guns after other
people.

If it was such a lousy thing to think about having happen to me, how could I
sit down and write a check so they could do it to the man down the street?

I didn't write my check that year. But I was scared. I had just bought my
first house. Even though it wasn't much of a house, it was mine. So was the
Geo parked in the driveway. It wasn't much of a car, but it was paid for. At
first, all I could think about was that the IRS would come and take my
things away.

I didn't worry about going to prison because I never made that much money,
so I didn't figure they'd want to spend a lot of money on my trial. Also,
because I hadn't been political, I didn't figure they'd want to make an
example of me. But I knew that they'd take things, because that way they can
make money and scare other people. I once saw somebody's things being
carried out of their house by guys in some kind of official-looking outfits
and I thought how creepy to have that happen. What do you do when they take
your house, or take your car so you can't get to work? What do you say to
the neighbors?

I almost gave in a couple of days later, after not hardly sleeping because
of worrying about what the IRS might do to me. But then I turned on the TV
and I saw the Branch Davidian house burning down. Like a lot of people I'd
been watching the standoff and thinking David Koresh and the Branch
Davidians were crazy. But when the news said they'd burned up their own
children, I didn't think they were that crazy. It just didn't make any
sense. If they were that crazy, why didn't the FBI let them talk to
reporters like they wanted, so the whole country could hear how crazy they
were? A lot of things didn't make sense.

Later, the more I learned, the more the government's story didn't make
sense. And sometime in there, I thought, "Whatever else happened, I didn't
do that. I didn't burn up those people's children."

I was raised a Christian, though I never was all that religious. Once I
figured out that the Branch Davidians didn't possibly kill themselves,
though, I looked at the Commandments and wondered how many of them the
government broke. The ones about killing and bearing false witness, for
sure.

In court, if you hire somebody to kill your wife or boyfriend, you're as
guilty as the person you hired to do it. Sometimes you're even more guilty
because you're considered the mastermind. And even though I don't believe
it's true anymore, the government is supposed to be under our orders.
Whatever you think about that, it is true that people pay government agents
to do what they do. If we stopped paying them, they'd stop doing it.

I can't murder people. It's wrong, and you know it as much as I know it. If
I can't kill them myself, then how can I stand myself if I pay someone to do
it for me? Every time I hear about somebody shot by police under fishy
circumstances or tried for a crime that never hurt anybody, or bullied or
tricked by political lawyers, I think, "I didn't pay them to do that."

So you see, I can't pay income taxes again, even if I wanted to, or even if
I really chickened out. I could live without a house or a car. I could live
with all my neighbors talking trash about me. I could even live in jail, if
I had to. But I don't want to live with a guilty conscience.

It seems silly now that I worried so much about a house that mostly belongs
to the bank and a car that wasn't worth as much as the parts to fix it. But
even if they'd have been a mansion and a Mercedes, I'd feel the same. What's
more important? What you have or what you are inside?


----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----

(c)Betsy Ross 1998

06 April, 1998

http://www.curleywolfe.net/cw/RA_980406.html


Bard

Visit me at:
The Center for Exposing Corruption in the Federal Government
http://www.xld.com/public/center/center.htm

Federal Government defined:
....a benefit/subsidy protection racket!

DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic
screeds are not allowed. Substance�not soapboxing!  These are sordid matters
and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright
frauds is used politically  by different groups with major and minor effects
spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credeence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/CTRL.html

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to