Miscellaneous tax resisters → individual war tax resisters → Jim Allen

The tax resistance “April 15 Minutes of Fame” week continues, with articles in the Christian Science Monitor, USA Today, and elsewhere.

When the Tax Man cometh, they don’t answer the bell,” says the Monitor:

When Ruth Benn of Brooklyn filed her federal income taxes , she left out an important element: the check.

“In good conscience I cannot pay this money to the US government,” Ms. Benn wrote in a letter to the IRS that accompanied a completed, but unpaid, 1040 form. “I do not want my tax dollars to be used for killing and war.”

“I don’t think I’ve seen a time when so many people have made the connection to their tax dollars and war” ―Ruth Benn

Jim Allen, a retired Army social worker now teaching at St. Louis University, knows he is breaking the law by withholding some of his income taxes. But he and his wife, Jan, became fed up with the billions of dollars spent to fund the war in Iraq and decided to take a moral stand.

“I am not opposed to paying taxes, but I am when such a large percent is going to pay for war,” says Mr. Allen, who served in the Army for 20 years.

Becky Pierce of Boston says she evades the IRS by not filing at all. Each April she fills out a 1040 form to determine how much she’ll donate to charity, then puts the income tax form in her filing cabinet.

Ms. Pierce says she is part of a long American tradition of tax resistance, reaching back to when revolutionaries tossed tea into Boston Harbor. But to follow in the footsteps of American protesters such as Henry David Thoreau — who went to jail for withholding taxes during the Mexican-American War — Pierce says she must live on a Walden Pond level of thrift. “You need to have control of your money,” she says. “I’m a self-employed carpenter. No one is reporting what I make. That’s why I can go unnoticed.”

But Jim Stockwell of Micaville, N.C., refuses to take a vow of poverty for what he considers “a simple act of conscience.” He laughs about how he never paid income taxes while working as a vitamin supplement salesman in Maine and a Home Depot employee in North Carolina.

“I made bundles and bundles of money and gave bundles away [to charity],” Mr. Stockwell says. “I arranged my life my own way and the IRS never caught up with me.”

USA Today chimes in with “‘War on tax’ waged against costs of war”:

Like most Americans, Peter Smith and his wife, Ellyn Stecker, sit down each year to fill out a federal tax form. Then they write a check to the U.S. Treasury for half the sum in the “amount you owe” box.

They are among thousands of Americans who refuse to pay part or all of their federal taxes as a protest against war and military spending. “It takes two things to fight a war: people and money,” says Smith, 67, a retired math and computer science teacher. “I can’t refuse anymore to go, but I certainly can refuse to send the money.”

Smith and Stecker donate their withheld tax money to charities, such as Oxfam America, which fights global poverty and hunger, and a local shelter for battered women.

Stecker, 60, a physician, wishes the government would spend tax dollars on those sorts of programs instead of war. “You look at what your money is being spent for, and you say, ‘No, I will not give my money for that,’ ” she says.

But the IRS eventually gets its share. The couple know the routine: By July, they get a letter from the IRS asking them to pay the rest of what they owe. They respond with a note explaining their reasons for not paying the full amount.

Then there’s a final notice. The IRS says in 30 days it will extract the money from paychecks, bank accounts or retirement funds. And the agency does just that.

The couple figure that over the years, the IRS has collected about $75,000 in back taxes, penalties and interest from them. , thanks to withholding and charitable giving, they owe nothing to the federal government.

The Berkeley Daily Planet brings us “Tax Resistance: Woman Opposes War, IRS”:

Want your anti-war protest to get noticed? Don’t pay your taxes.

Susan Quinlan’s been doing it for , and she’s attracted plenty of attention from the Internal Revenue Service, which showed up at her front door demanding she pay a portion of her earnings or face imprisonment.

Quinlan refused to cooperate, the IRS slunk away and, , she’s dodging federal tax laws as gamely as ever.

Quinlan, a Berkeley resident, has retooled her life to keep negative consequences to a minimum. She doesn’t own property or maintain much cash in bank accounts and she declines jobs that require she withhold money from her paycheck.

“My approach was, I don’t want to pay any taxes at all, which means adapting my lifestyle to make that possible,” Quinlan said.

As a full-time volunteer peace advocate, Quinlan falls beneath the tax line and need not pay a dime. In the past, though, when she’s owed money, she’s had to navigate thorny legal territory to ensure her earnings steer clear of federal war coffers.

One problem facing many aspiring resisters is that taxes are typically taken out of paychecks automatically, thwarting the opportunity to resist. Solutions include self-employment, contract work, or loading up on W-4 allowances that minimize per-paycheck deductions. When April 15 rolls around, many resisters either submit a 1040 then refuse to pay their taxes or eschew filing altogether.

Quinlan opts for the latter. She hadn’t filed a federal income tax return , when the IRS came after her wages from a job she held at a nonprofit Latina employment agency. Rather than pay up, she quit, and would do it again, she said.

“I loved that job, but my commitment to not pay for war came first,” she said.

Does that mean she pockets the money and heads for the outlets?

Definitely not, she said. Like many resisters, Quinlan redirects those tax dollars to local charities and community groups.

“I always calculated what taxes would be owed because I do feel it’s important that I contribute to the community,” she said. “I just don’t want it to go to illegal, immoral, imperialistic wars.”


The war tax resistance pledges keep coming:

I feel certain fear. / The price I must pay / For a conscience clear / And for peace, I pray
Michelle Shocked, Los Angeles, California
What can we do now but knock it up a notch? I’m with Code Pink on this one.
Jill Sobule, singer/song writer
I have been a war tax resister for 24 years. For the last several years, I have not owed any tax money. When I realized that , I would be paying for the war in Iraq, I withheld the approximate eight percent of my tax dollars that would fund the Iraqi war and sent those funds to Code Pink, which has worked tirelessly to stop this extremely immoral war. I know that it is only a small step on my part, but it is one step that I felt I must take. It would be great if all of us who oppose this war would take that step; the impact would be enormous. Perhaps someday people will understand that there is no reason to fear the IRS, we have the power, and they do not. And without our money, our government would have a hard time fighting wars.
Wendy Emrich, Philanthropist and mother
[T]he Bush Administration has done a very good job of convincing us that nothing we do will make difference. Doing nothing contributes to the supporting the war. The one act we can take is to withhold a portion of our taxes. Yes, it is a risk, but if we are not willing to take a risk, then we are part of the problem.… We need hundreds of thousands of tax payers to join us. That goal will be achieved one tax payer at a time. If we want to bring an end to the war, we have act. We invite all tax payers to become part of the solution by joining the war tax resistance movement.
Jim Allen, Sociology Professor, St. Louis University
Congress and the American people would rather send our diminished tax dollars to Iraq than make the hard decisions we must make as human beings who are collectively still waging a brutal war in Iraq. All that is asked of us is that we pay taxes to fund whatever our government can come up with next. All that is asked of you now when it comes to this war — is that you do not! Our soldiers do not want our tax dollars or theirs spent on keeping them in Iraq. They want to come home and have health care and support to heal from a war that will affect them and their families for the next three generations. There will be no tax dollars for them here, as long as we keep sending more over there.
Patricia Foulkrod, documentary filmmaker
I will not be paying any taxes until our government starts to develop nonviolent solutions for international problems.
Joy Ellison, Vancouver, Washington
In the tradition of the patriots that founded this country, we must speak out against tyranny!
Suzanne Wheatley, Silver Spring, Maryland
I do not support the Iraq war nor will I support a war with Iran!
Karen Gray, Plainfield, Indiana
I do not want my taxes used to support illegal wars.
Nancy Gilbertson, Moravia, New York
About damn time someone had such a good idea.
Bert McKinley, Chamblee, Georgia
Our Government has taken the country into illegal wars based on lies, and does not act in our best interest. Tax resistance seems to be needed to move our country and the world in a better direction.
Marion Ward, Vancouver, Washington
Why wait?! I’m already redirecting my taxes from the IRS/Pentagon axis to peaceful groups.
Ed Hedemann, Brooklyn, New York
Get up — stand up! Non-violent civil resistance is essential.
Kyle Finch, Topanga, California
This I believe important: don’t pay for what you believe is evil.
Meg Palley, Nevada City, California
Whatever it takes to make a difference for my children and their children and their children’s children’s children.
“Gramma of 4,” Long Beach, California
Not only does our humanity demand that we put an end to war, the challenges of Global Climate Change and Peak Oil make it mandatory that we shift our priorities now.
Elizabeth Morrison, Los Angeles, California
I cannot live with the hypocrisy of protesting against the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan while, simultaneously, paying to fund these wars with federal income taxes. I must obey my conscience. It is the right and reasonable thing to do.
Louise Legun, Allentown, Pennsylvania
I have been a war tax resister , and have been through numerous struggles with the IRS to resist paying taxes for war. I have refused to pay taxes and the IRS has eventually collected from me by taking the money from my bank accounts, and each year I still refuse to pay them. I would urge anyone who opposes the war in Iraq to refuse to pay some or all of your federal income tax, and send a letter to the IRS with your 1040 forms stating why you are refusing to pay. It may seem risky or frightening but I urge you not to be intimidated by the IRS, they will not throw you in jail or take your house; if you don’t pay they will send you letters demanding payment, and eventually will take money out of your bank accounts (if you have anything in your accounts). The worst that will happen is that they will take the money you owe them and add on some extra fees for penalties. I strongly support Code Pink’s tax boycott campaign.
Kathy Labriola, Berkeley, California
No longer can I hold hands with such villainy.
Matt Dinsmore, Asheville, North Carolina
Thank you for the impetus and support in this campaign to resist paying for the wars. Perhaps a rebuild Iraq fund can be started for our diverted tax money.
Kaye Werner, Bellingham, Washington
Yes, let’s cut off the fuel lines to this war machine!
Brian Ciesko, Cincinnati, Ohio
Cannot wait to see what tax season brings!
Kelly Dolcini, Sacramento, California
I am already a war tax resister, . I highly urge folks to withhold all of their taxes until we elect leaders who, to put it simply, put people before profits…
Nancy Jakubiak, Clarksville, Indiana
I’m not paying whether or not anyone else doesn’t.
Rebecca Cummings, Vernalis, California
I refused to pay Federal 1040 additional taxes in . I currently owe over $4,000, and am making small monthly payments. I sent letters to the IRS and my respresentatives stating my position. I also sent those letters to the National War Tax Resistors Coordinating Committee, for publication on their website. I am looking for a few other courageous souls to join me. Thanks for making this commitment.
John Phillips, Lake Forest, California
I’ve marched and written copious letters to my reps, to no avail. Sign me up so I can help end our illegal Iraq occupation.
Laila Selk, La Honda, California
As a military family member, I will not spend one more dime on this illegal, immoral occupation that is breaking the military and its families.
Stacy Bannerman, Fife, Washington
This government is criminal and it is illegal to support it financially!
anonymous, Boston, Massachusetts
I’ll send this to as many people as I can — we must act collectively to end the illegal occupation!
Diane Haugesag, Minneapolis, Minnesota
It is time to put our money where our mouth is.
Joseph Durocher, Orlando, Florida