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A $21 Trillion Tax Cut
by James Ostrowski
[March 20, 2001]
President Bush has proposed a $1.6 trillion tax cut. I would like  to suggest that
the president modify his tax proposal. He should increase the size of his tax cut to
$21 trillion.
Well, it's not really a $21 trillion tax cut. It's a $2.1 trillion tax cut. I got
the $21 trillion figure by projecting it for ten years, just as Bush does with his.
I don't know why Washington projects these tax cuts for ten years, since federal
budgets are only good for one year and can be changed any time thereafter.
But, you say, isn't $2.1 trillion the entire federal budget for one year? Right you
are. Let me explain my proposal, using fourth-grade math. [Note: If the following
figures are off by a couple billion bucks, blame the OMB press office for not
returning my phone call.]
The feds are going to extort $2,084 billion from us this year. But they are only
going to spend $1,868 billion. If we eliminate all overpayments, you have a $216
billion tax cut. Now, let me give you back $210 billion more, which is what we pay
in interest to those who were silly enough to lend money to the government. This has
a side benefit of discouraging anyone from lending to the government again, as well
as encouraging sound fiscal policy in the future.
Total tax cut so far-$426 billion.
Let's do some more easy tax cuts. Let's eliminate a bunch of departments we could do 
without. In the name of the Ninth and Tenth Amendments, I hereby abolish:
Agriculture
Grows no crops.
$19 billion
Commerce
Neither makes nor sells merchandise.
$6 billion
Education
Know anyone educated by the Department of Education?
$34  billion
Energy
Jimmy Carter's idea-need I say more?
$17 billion
HHS
Dump the FDA, our most lethal agency. Whatever
else HHS does, it's bad.
$54 billion
HUD
Inventor of "the projects"; destroyer of cities.
$37 billion
Interior
An independent nation larger than France.
$9 billion
Labor
Engages in no actual labor.
$12 billion
Transportation
Capitol of pork. (Keep the Coast Guard.)
$48 billion
Corps of Eng
Causes floods. See FEMA.
$4 billion
FEMA
This agency's a disaster (in dealing with the floods caused
by the Corps of Engineers).
$3 billion
EPA
If you want an important job done badly,
give it to a federal bureaucracy.
$7 billion
Foreign Aid
Retirement fund for corrupt dictators/ bribing
Egypt and Israel to pretend to like each other.
$11 billion
NASA
Challenger. Need I say more?
$14 billion
SBA
They only waste a billion dollars each year,
but they waste it magnificently.
$1 billion
By eliminating these useless and destructive agencies, we save an additional $276 
billion, all of which goes into our tax cut. I still can't believe the gigantic size 
of the budgets of HUD, HHS, Education, and Transportat
ion. I'd love to spend time detailing how useless and destructive these agencies are. 
Instead, just see any book by James Bovard.
Total tax cut so far-$702 billion.
The Justice Department/INS spends $20 billion. Cut out all the make-believe crimes 
like drug possession and failure to file form 57(e), and abolish the DEA, and we can 
cut their budget down to, say, $7 billion.
Net savings-$13 billion
Total tax cut so far-$715 billion.
The Treasury Department spends $14 billion. First, since we're eliminating all federal 
taxes, bye, bye, IRS ($8 billion!). Next, abolish the ATF and strip U. S. Customs of 
its tax-collecting and strip-search functions and
 save 3 billion. That leaves the Treasury with about $3 billion to do 
goodness-knows-what.
Net savings-$11 billion
Total tax cut so far-$726 billion
Veteran's Affairs spends $22 billion. They do important work, but they waste a lot of 
money too. They can get by with $14 billion. If not, we'll raid the huge defense 
budget-but more about that later.
Net savings-$8 billion.
Total tax cut so far-$734 billion
Medicare and Medicaid (socialized medicine) have greatly harmed the health-care 
industry. They have caused a tremendous increase in the price of health-care services 
by artificially inflating demand; they have raised cost
s by separating consumption from payment; and they have led to the bureaucratization 
of this vital industry. Like all government programs, they deliver less for more. 
Scrap them, and we save $342 billion.
Total tax cut so far-$1,076 billion.
Socialism Security impoverishes working people, prevents them from investing in real 
wealth creation, funds the welfare-warfare state, and makes our parents and 
grandparents political pawns of the federal government. Scra
p this scheme, and we save $438 billion. As Harry Browne suggests, we can sell off 
government assets and buy annuities for those dependent on Socialism Security and 
federal pensions (another $80 billion).
Total tax cut so far-$1,594 billion.
Bill Clinton ended welfare as he and Newt knew it, but they did not end welfare as we 
know it. The federal budget is loaded with redistributionist schemes that don't work 
for anybody, except for the middle-class bureaucra
ts who make large salaries staffing them and the politicians who buy votes with them. 
When you keep your own money, it's called criminal tax evasion; when others want to 
own your money, they call it an "entitlement."
By providing incentives for people not to work or get married, the welfare state has 
greatly reinforced the social foundation of the permanent underclass-single-parent 
families headed mostly by women. It also directly imp
overishes people by taxing them and every commodity, good, or service they buy. The 
poor can no longer afford to have the federal government look after them. True 
poverty, being that poverty not caused by misguided govern
ment programs, is a problem best dealt with at the local level.
There is no space here to prove that government welfare doesn't work. May I suggest a 
midsummer night's stroll through the South Bronx? For those who would prefer a more 
abstract lesson, let me just say that the failure o
f government to solve problems can be explained by just four interrelated ideas that 
are so simple, you don't have to go to college to learn them. In fact, odds are, you 
wouldn't learn them in college anyway. I didn't.
First, the private sector is superior to government as a problem-solver because 
private transactions require the consent of all parties to them. When government 
interacts with people, there is always at least one party th
at is forced to participate and that is, therefore, abused and exploited.
Second, private decisions are made by individuals and firms that know more about their 
particular circumstances than anyone else could possibly know. In contrast, 
governments cannot know as much about the persons and inst
itutions they deal with and thus are forced to make and enforce arbitrary general 
rules that apply the same to different people and different circumstances, regardless 
of the absurd or unjust consequences.
Third, because, in the words of Frederic Bastiat, people are not clay, they always 
react and respond to the state's use of power against them in ways that result in 
unintended and negative consequences from the state's po
int of view, now fashionably called "blowback."
Fourth, the widespread use of state power erodes private morality, as people learn 
from the state's actions and rationalizations that it is acceptable to use force 
against others to achieve your goals. Unfortunately, the
state and its politicians-corrupt, mendacious, rapacious, lascivious, and 
ruthless-have become the great moral teachers of our time.
Thus, the government's vaunted power to do good is an illusion. The power that 
liberals wish to apply to social problems destroys the natural harmony among people 
that leads to peace and prosperity. People are on their be
st behavior when they can achieve their goals only by coordinating their plans and 
goals with willing others. People are at their worst when they can use power to 
achieve their goals while trampling on the plans, goals, a
nd values of others.
Statists believe that people are too stupid and irresponsible to run their own lives 
but, paradoxically, are smart enough and intelligent enough to vote for politicians 
who will appoint the bureaucrats who will tell them
how to live. This is the conundrum that underlies our democracy today.
The opposite is true: People in general are capable of managing their own affairs but 
are utterly incapable of managing the affairs of millions of their fellow citizens and 
are even less capable of running a global empire
. For example, the war on poverty institutionalizes poverty, the war on drugs leads to 
the use of more dangerous drugs, urban "renewal" causes homelessness, the FDA kills 
people by depriving them of medicine, the war on r
acism increases racial tensions, the minimum wage causes unemployment, and on and on 
and on. Globally, our frequent wars and interventions have led only to more war, the 
expansion of communism, and, more recently, to the
scourge of terrorism. Because the government is not and cannot be a force for good, 
even liberals should cheer, not fear, the dismantling of the regulatory and welfare 
state.
Scrap the federal welfare state, and we save $173 billion.
Total tax cut so far-$1,767 billion.
The 2001 budget proposes to spend $288 billion on national "defense." This is a 
misnomer. Virtually all of this money is spent on our national offense. It is spent to 
provide us with the wherewithal to fight one and one-h
alf foreign wars and to police the world and intervene in the affairs of countries and 
regions far, far away, whose ancient antagonisms we do not understand and cannot 
suppress.
The true nature of our national defense posture has been obfuscated for many years. As 
for nuclear attack, we have no defense whatsoever. We have no way to stop the bombs 
from falling, and no reasonable person who doesn't
 own stock in defense industries believes that we will have such a defense in the near 
future. Query: Which is easier, (1) figuring out how to shoot nuclear missiles out of 
the air, or (2) minding our own business so othe
r countries don't want to fire missiles at us? Only a Ph.D. in political science would 
not be able to answer that question.
The actual risk of a conventional military invasion of the United States has been 
exaggerated for many decades. The last time a hostile military force invaded one of 
the United States was 1861 when the Union army invaded
Virginia. (Pearl Harbor was an air raid on a colony stolen from the natives.) The 
United States was never at risk of an invasion from Nazi Germany, and the United 
States is not now, nor will it be in the near or far futur
e, in danger of an invasion from Communist China. Think about it. Five million Chinese 
troops-a number not adequate to subdue us-would need five thousand troop ships to 
convey them six thousand miles to our shores, escort
ed by the U. S. Air Force, where they would be six thousand miles from the nearest 
supply depot.
What does threaten our security is our huge stockpile of nuclear weapons. Our strange 
love of nuclear weapons tempts us into pushing other countries around. These countries 
put two and two together and conclude that if th
ey had nukes like we do, they could push other countries around as well. The world 
becomes one big nuclear coming-out party, courtesy of the United States, the only 
country ever to explode these ghastly weapons with peopl
e around.
We can drastically reduce our "defense" spending if we limit spending to our actual 
defense needs: deterring invasion by a foreign power. We can deter such an invasion 
and cut defense spending by relying on a militia rath
er than a standing army. The problem with standing armies is that they don't stand; 
they march-usually into other countries. Also, since they are supported and controlled 
by the government, they can be used to suppress an
d control the people in times of crisis.
Here's my idea. Scrap the million-man army-keeping a small number of technicians to 
care for the high-tech stuff-and replace it with a fifty million-man militia, as in 
Switzerland. If you take the number of able-bodied me
n in America between the ages of eighteen and fifty, and subtract the crazies and 
wimps, you could have about fifty million men ready to defend the United States from 
that imaginary, non-existent invasion from the Chinese
 that will never happen. With each militiaman armed with an assault rifle, pistol, and 
shotgun (for old times' sake), they should be able to handle that five million-man 
Chinese army (which would already have been blown o
ut of the water by our streamlined Air Force and Navy somewhere around the Philippine 
Sea.)
Not only is a militia fully capable of defending the nation from attack-and, 
therefore, of deterring such a futile attack in the first place-but militias enhance 
security in other ways as well. Since militias, unlike stan
ding armies, do actually stand and defend, and do not march and invade, they are no 
threat to the security of other nations. They therefore encourage other nations to 
de-escalate their own military machines and concerns a
nd reduce the prospect of conventional or nuclear "preemptive strikes."
The other beauty of militas is that they just happen to solve a fundamental political 
problem. We give the government military power to deter foreign invasion. How do we 
prevent the evil that characterized the twentieth c
entury, a state's use of the military to tyrannize, exploit, draft, overtax, 
conscript, and massly murder its own people? The militia system reduces such risk to 
an absolute minimum by giving the bulk of the military powe
r-grunts on the ground with guns-to the people themselves. I guess the framers of the 
Second Amendment may have known a thing or two about history and political science 
after all.
We'll still need a much smaller high-tech professional navy and air force-practice 
blowing up troop ships, boys-but, with a vastly reduced mission, we can drastically 
cut the offense budget. I think the military can get b
y with $70 billion, which is five times as much as China spends. But no more 
thousand-dollar toilet seats.
Net Savings-$218 billion.
Total tax cut so far-$1,985 billion
Finally, we get to the three branches of government actually authorized by the 
Constitution. Congress's budget is $3 billion. I've been to the Russell Office 
building. These people live like kings. No wonder they never le
ave to go back to the old hometown. How are you going to keep them down on the farm 
after they've seen D. C.? Give each congressman a $2 million budget-more than they 
deserve. Round it off to an even billion.
Net Savings-$2 billion
Total tax cut so far-$1,987 billion
The judiciary's budget is $4 billion. Even though resolving disputes is the main 
rationale for government, their budget is still too high. Since we're getting rid of 
much of the federal court workload-drug and other imagi
nary crimes and administrative suits for or against the alphabet-soup agencies-they 
should be able to get by with $2 billion.
Net Savings-$2 billion
Total tax cut so far-$1,989 billion
The president's own office expense is less than a billion. I know we could gut it with 
no ill effects. After all, Lincoln ran a military dictatorship with two secretaries. 
But, it's less than a billion, and if you think I
 am going to start figuring out fractions of a billion, you're crazy. Round it up to 
$1 billion.
So, we have whittled the federal budget down to about $100 billion. That amounts to a 
$2 trillion tax cut. Not bad for one short article. But I promised a 2.1 trillion tax 
cut; I still owe you another $100 billion.
My idea for achieving that is so simple that no Ph.D. in public administration would 
ever think of it. A tax is the forcible seizure of private wealth by the state. 
Taxation violates the Eighth Commandment's ban on theft
and violates the individual's natural moral right to own himself and own the products 
of his own labor. Thus, taxation-contrary to that overrated jurist in a perpetually 
bad mood, Oliver Wendell Holmes-is incompatible wit
h civilization. What is civilization, after all, but that state of affairs in which 
human beings deal with one another, not by brute force, but by reason, resulting in a 
flowering of all the products of reason: culture, s
cience, art, community, economy, and philosophy?
The twentieth century proved, if you were paying any attention, that taxation is the 
great enemy of civilization. How do you think Hitler paid for that army? With 
voluntary contributions? How did Stalin pay for the Gulag
Archipelago? With bake sales? Ultimately, all the hot, warm, and cold wars and 
genocides and classicides and nuclearicides of the dismal twentieth century were paid 
for by taxation. Barbarism is the price we pay for taxat
ion.
Without taxation, how do we raise that $100 billion to fund the restoration of 
freedom? Here's my plan. All 200 million Americans of voting age would get a statement 
from the government suggesting that they pay their fair
 share of the budget. With a budget of $100 billion, that would amount to a mere $500 
per person.
I truly believe that the vast majority would send in their money. Some would send in 
more; some would send in less; some would send in nothing at all. That's OK. That 
would mean merely that they believe their funds would
be better spent elsewhere. If the federal government is unable to convince those 
people that its good works deserve their support, the government will have to either 
get the money elsewhere or cut its budget-just like eve
ryone else does. And don't tell me about "free riders." It's my plan that eliminates 
the free riders: people who live at the expense of unwilling others. Besides, I'd 
rather have a few "free riders" than have a whole nati
on of tax slaves (unfree carriers).
The federal government would have a few carrots and sticks to use, however. Though no 
one would be denied protection of the law for their failure to contribute, there are 
certain peripheral rights and benefits that could
be denied to recalcitrant citizens. First, no pay, no vote. The fairness of that is 
obvious. We'll exempt people who are absolutely disabled from working and unable to 
pay. Able-bodied people who are unable to contribute
could contribute in-kind services instead of money to fulfill their moral obligation. 
So, no one can complain that my proposal involves any sort of poll tax.
Second, no pay, no jury trial in civil cases. If you have a civil suit, tell it to the 
judge! Frankly, I would send my money in. Nonpayers would be charged slightly higher 
user fees for various services, passports, court
filing fees, and so on. Nonpayers would be barred from government employment. These 
and other gentle inducements could be used to persuade people to contribute. No 
fundamental rights would be taken away, however, and, if
you did not contribute, no IRS agents could have you arrested, seize your assets, or 
shoot you dead. There would be no taxes!
All in all, though, I think the vast majority will contribute. Remember, most people 
will be saving thousands of dollars with my $2.1 trillion tax cut. Also, the 
economy-unburdened by enormous taxes and the numerous burea
ucracies we have eliminated-will soar, providing us with far greater resources to pay 
the measly 500 bucks, the cost of two days' vacation.
So there you have it: a $2.1 trillion tax cut that restores the constitutional 
republic and dismantles our 140-country, global military empire-the fountain of 
terrorism, the main stimulus to an insane global nuclear arms
race, and the greatest threat to our national security in the twenty-first century.
On April 15th, give your congressmen a taxing experience: E-mail them a copy of this 
article.
-----------
James Ostrowski practices law in Buffalo, NY. See his archive and send him MAIL.
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The only real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking
new landscapes but in having new eyes. -Marcel Proust
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The libertarian therefore considers one of his prime educational
tasks is to spread the demystification and desanctification of the
State among its hapless subjects.  His task is to demonstrate
repeatedly and in depth that not only the emperor but even the
"democratic" State has no clothes; that all governments subsist
by exploitive rule over the public; and that such rule is the reverse
of objective necessity.  He strives to show that the existence of
taxation and the State necessarily sets up a class division between
the exploiting rulers and the exploited ruled.  He seeks to show that
the task of the court intellectuals who have always supported the State
has ever been to weave mystification in order to induce the public to
accept State rule and that these intellectuals obtain, in return, a
share in the power and pelf extracted by the rulers from their deluded
subjects.
[[For a New Liberty:  The Libertarian Manifesto, Murray N. Rothbard,
Fox & Wilkes, 1973, 1978, p. 25]]

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