Some historical and global examples of tax resistance → United States → “Pledge for Peace,” Christian Peace Witness for Iraq, 2008

It wasn’t that long ago that it seemed like the war tax resistance movement couldn’t get no respect in the anti-war movement at large. But now there are multiple, independent, war tax resistance campaigns — evidence perhaps that finally this idea’s time has come.

The latest campaign is a project of Christian Peace Witness for Iraq, a coalition of many Christian groups who “are called to raise a prophetic voice, speaking truth to power and proclaiming that security cannot be obtained through military domination, but through trust in God alone.

Therefore we confess our complicity in this merciless violence and commit ourselves to finding genuine security in God, who insists that we build just relationships with all people. We call our government to immediately begin an orderly process of withdrawing U.S. troops and closing U.S. bases with a timetable supported by the Iraqi people and to work toward an end to funding war.”

Up to now, as far as I can tell, the coalition has limited itself to prayer, vigils, protest, petitioning, lobbying, and symbolic displays in pursuit of this goal. But they’ve just asked coalition members to sign on to “The Pledge for Peace” which asks them to go further, and which reads in part:

I will do everything within my power to avoid complicity in acts of war that violate my fundamental beliefs. I pledge:…

  • To resist the powers and principalities:

    Through war tax-resistance: I will educate myself about war tax-resistance and share that information with others. As I am able, according to my own calling and conscience, I will with-hold all or a portion of my own taxes until I can be confident that the United States will seek peace through a combination of diplomacy and development together with other nations of the world.


Time to check in on this year’s three big war tax resistance campaigns.

The first is NWTRCC’s War Tax Boycott”. The original idea behind this project was to have thousands of anti-war activists publicly pledge to redirect all or a portion of the federal income taxes due on to charity. As of today, about 375 people have signed on to the pledge, with about 290 “public” signers willing to put their names out.

The second is the “Don’t Buy Bush’s War” campaign, which aimed to get 100,000 taxpayers to pledge to resist their taxes (if 99,999 others would) by . They haven’t updated their counter in a while, but it currently reads 2,092 pledgers.

The third is “Pledge For Peace.” They didn’t have a target number of signers or a deadline, but wanted “self-identified leaders and opinion shapers in our congregations” to, by signing, “commit to action and to personal sacrifice” including war tax resistance. Last I looked, 134 people had signed.