Vermont’s Rutland Herald has run a piece on the local tax-resistance community. Excerpts:
Anti-war activist Linda Leehman refuses to put her money where her mouth is. And that’s the whole point.
By withholding about 50 percent of her federal tax bill, Leehman says she at least partially washes her hands of the blood spilled in U.S.-waged military operations.
“It’s a deeply moral and spiritual decision when you decide that killing is wrong,” Leehman, a 31-year tax resister, told about a dozen other people gathered in the basement of the Kellogg-Hubbard Library on . “I believe that war is murder. … And I have to insist on my moral right to not connect myself (financially) with what I believe is truly insane and truly abhorrent.”…
Her remarks came during a workshop for central Vermont residents looking to find out more about tax resistance.…
For Plainfield resident Lori Barg, another tax-resistance expert offering advice , Thoreau’s stance against the Spanish-American War retains its relevance 157 years later.
“What’s one bullet cost? A nickel? A dime?” Barg said, as she recounted a meeting she had with a Central American woman whose son had been killed by a bullet fired by a U.S. soldier. “Since there’s no draft for women, the only way for me to be resistant was to not pay for war.
“As horrible as I feel when I read the news, one really wonderful thing about being a tax resister is I can say, ‘I didn’t buy that bullet.’ And that makes me happy.”…
Varying forms of tax resistance carry varying degrees of consequence. A common and relatively safe strategy is withholding the 3 percent federal excise tax levied on telephone bills. About half that money goes to the defense budget, Barg says. Another low-risk method is simply keeping your income below the level at which the federal government begins to require taxes. With the help of an accountant, Barg said she has kept her annual income below that threshold.
Other resisters are bolder. Leehman, whose taxes are withheld by her employer, claimed more dependents than legally allowed, thereby preventing the government from taking its full legal share of earned income. She ends up paying about half the taxes she actually owes. Leehman also publicizes her protest by writing letters to her congressmen, local newspapers and the IRS.…
For Lea Wood, an 89-year-old World War Ⅱ veteran arrested just this week at an anti-war rally in Barre, tax resistance is “another piece” in her effort to subvert her government’s military policies.
“People will say, ‘I’m only one person, what I do is so little,’ ” Wood says. “But when water drops on a stone long enough, the stone wears away. Eventually it has a cumulative effect. And tax resistance is one way to achieve that effect.”