Some historical and global examples of tax resistance → United States → “Don’t Buy Bush’s War”, 2007–08 → Nina Rothschild Utne

Don’t Buy Bush’s War

The anti-war activist group “Code Pink” is launching a massive nationwide war tax resistance campaign that aims to get 100,000 people to pledge to resist taxes to protest U.S. belligerence in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Iran.

We have marched, we have petitioned, we have called and emailed and urged Congress to stop buying Bush’s war. It isn’t working. Congress continues to vote billions of dollars toward the occupation of Iraq without any timeline for withdrawal. It is time for us do what they don’t have the courage to do. If Congress wants to fund the war with our dollars, well, we’ll simply refuse to give them those dollars! When our political leaders have not listened to the will of the people, individuals have engaged in civil disobedience. There is a great tradition of war tax resistance in the United States and it is our time to carry on that patriotic tradition.

When there are 100,000 of us who have the courage to pledge no more money for war, we will join in an act of mass civil disobedience and refuse to pay the portion of our taxes that represents the % we spend on the U.S. military occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan. Join the resistance today — you can make a difference.

The campaign will officially launch . In Boston, an action at Boston Harbor will be attended by tax resistance pledgers including Cindy Sheehan and Ray McGovern. In Portland, Oregon, activists will read the Declaration of Independence and perform a recreation of the Boston Tea Party action. Other actions to launch the tax resistance campaign will occur in cities across the country.

Jodie Evans, co-founder of Code Pink, writes:

How much of your tax payment this year would you like to allocate for water boarding in Iraq or an invasion of Iran?

Around the world, people are puzzled as to why the U.S. public allows the Bush administration to wage illegal wars and usurp our power. Why do we tolerate it and continue to pay for it?…

…It is time for taxpayers who oppose this war to join together in nonviolent civil disobedience and show Congress how to cut off the funds for this war and redirect resources to the pressing needs of people.…

There is a great tradition of war tax resistance in the United States. During the Mexican-American War that began in , Henry David Thoreau refused payment of war taxes and called on others to join him in resistance. “If a thousand people were not to pay their tax bills this year, that would not be a violent and bloody measure, as it would be to pay them, and enable the State to commit violence and shed innocent blood.”

When Ralph Waldo Emerson visited Thoreau in jail, he asked the author of Walden, “Henry, what are doing in there?” Thoreau responded, “Ralph, what are you doing out there?”…

…Some might suspect that tax resistance is symbolic and futile. But we want to purposely put a cog in the machine of war tax collection. We believe it will lead to a deepening of opposition as tens of thousands of people say, “I can no longer in good conscience pay for these acts by my government.” Mass war tax resistance, on the scale proposed, has never been done in the U.S.

The world and history will judge us by how vigorously we resist the illegal and immoral war tactics of the Bush Administration. My husband, friends and I have decided we can’t pay for war anymore. What are you doing out there?

“I won’t pay my taxes if you won’t pay yours.” ―Nina Rothschild Utne

Nina Rothschild Utne, chair and editor-in-chief of Utne Reader, writes in an upcoming issue of that magazine that she, too, is enthusiastically joining the campaign:

War tax resistance is far from a new idea. But there is a bold initiative brewing that has an elegantly simple new angle: There is safety in numbers. The idea is to get people to sign a pledge that they will engage in civil disobedience by withholding a percentage of their taxes, but only if a critical mass of 100,000 signers is reached .

Activists have spent long hours pushing for election reform, marching in the streets, and engaging in other forms of civil disobedience against the Iraq war with seemingly no effect, so clearly a different tack is needed. The “I’ll jump if you will” approach to war tax resistance just might work.

My friend Jodie Evans, cofounder of Code Pink, is one of those people who live on the barricades, sleep little, and dedicate most every waking moment to social change. Her material desires take a backseat to her convictions, and the ragged pink mules she has worn for years as part of her Code Pink identity are the laughingstock of her friends. She has been arrested more times than she can count and has been at the epicenter of many of the most effective and mediagenic progressive campaigns of the past several decades.

But Jodie is also at home in the most rarefied strata of power. Thanks in no small part to her, the pledge list will be seeded with participants from business, Hollywood, and other influential enclaves, and the initiative will be backed by a strong communications strategy.…

Among the groups partnering to promote the “Don’t Buy Bush’s War” campaign: the 2008 War Tax Boycott Coalition, AfterDowningStreet.org, Camp Casey Peace Institute, Gold Star Families for Peace, Grassroots America, and United for Peace and Justice.


Code Pink notes, of its audacious campaign to get 100,000 Americans to pledge to resist taxes, that “if we succeed, it will be the single largest war tax resistance in U.S. history.”

It has been heartwarming to read the comments left by some of those who have signed the pledge so far:

After my son’s second deployment when he related to me the horrors of the occupation in Iraq, I vowed I would do whatever it took to end it. As we urge our lawmakers to stop funding the war, we have to be willing to do the same. It is time we stop funding with our tax dollars.
Tina Richards, founder, Grassroots America
The world and history will judge us by how vigorously we resist the illegal and immoral war tactics of the Bush Administration. My husband, friends and I have decided we can’t pay for war anymore.
Jodie Evans, Cofounder, Code Pink
I won’t pay my taxes if you won’t pay yours.
Nina Rothschild Utne, Utne Reader
We should stop the war, whatever it takes. If withholding our income taxes is a way to do it, I am all for that.
Lee Newman, Retired Captain. U.S. Air Corp, World War Ⅱ
We must stop supporting policies that use our tax dollars to bring violence around the world. Not one cent more.
Maricela Guzman, Iraq War Veteran U.S. Navy,
I am one of the majority of Americans who want the war to end and will be happy to pay my taxes when democracy and the rule of law and the Constitution is restored to our once great nation.
Steve Savitch, Tuscon, Arizona
I increased my deductions to 10 . I am so glad for this movement to show me what to do next and for the safety in numbers. I will no longer help kill people.
andee Scott, Pacific Grove, California
We must renew the American Revolutionary Spirit. We must have a Velvet Revolution to save America.
Theadora de Soyza, New Rochelle, New York
If our leaders won’t stop this travesty, then We, the People must
anonymous, Oregon, Wisconsin
Stop feeding the bush war machine… if he thinks the war is so damn important why aren’t his daughters on the front lines?
Gina Arcuri, Barneveld, New York
Time to act for justice and do the right thing. I refuse to pay a war tax!
Herb Gonzales, Jr., San Antonio, Texas
We must have the courage to take a stand. If enough of us will take this stand, I believe this government will listen.
Leo Anderson, Austin, Texas
I will not pay my taxes to support the war in Iraq.
Renata Ahmed, Brooklyn, New York
As a matter of conscience I will not voluntarily pay my hard earned money to a government whose daily order of business is waging war.
Michael Zargarov, Houston, Texas
When government is out-of-control, citizens must exert control.
Den Mark Wichar, Vancouver, Washington
I refused to pay for an illegal war. It is unconscionable and disgusting that U.S. Congress continues to fund President Bush’s war-crimes.
anonymous, Ewa Beach, Hawaii
I am so impressed and proud of your actions. Blessed be.
Vicki Noble, Freedom, California
I may not have much to withhold, but it’s all worth it! It’s time to stop this crap…
Daniel Bryan, Granc Blanc, Michigan
Hell nay, I won’t pay!
Avi Peterson, San Francisco, California
United we stand; divided we fall.
Kristine Abney, Salt Spring Island, British Columbia
Taxation without representation. Let’s fight this together and start restoring democracy.
Shawn DeFrance, Dallas, Texas
Throw the tea into the harbor. 70% of the American people oppose this war. That constitutes taxation without representation. It is time to throw the tea into the harbor. Coincidentally, that is exactly what I have been saying. Let’s have a tea party.
Bobi Meola, Berkeley, California
We are retired and don’t pay any tax. I fully support your courageous efforts to end this bloody occupation.
Chris Caldwell, Anaheim, California
Yes and though dangerous, I pledge to join in not paying the 7% taxes!
Nat Vance, Muskogee, Oklahoma
I will not pay my taxes if we bomb Iraq. I will not pay my taxes if we bomb Afghanistan. I will not pay my taxes if we bomb Nicaragua. I will not pay my taxes if we bomb Vietnam. I will not pay my taxes if we bomb Laos. I will not pay my taxes if we bomb Cambodia. Therefore, I don’t pay my taxes.
Dani Visalli, Winthrop, Washington
Spend my tax dollars on the good of the nation, not war.
Jennifer Chacon, Portland, Oregon
Together we can bleed the war machine dry by using this non-violent civil disobedience.
anonymous, Modesto, California
Already had planned to put all of my taxes for in escrow. Refusing to pay 7% is a good start, but is it really impacting enough? As Michael Venturi suggests, they will only borrow from the resources for our poor to kill their poor. The war will continue, and the 7% will be stolen from the ‘lock-box.’
Alan Scouten, Charlottesville, Virginia
Thank you for organizing this.… It is time to act. CodePink consistently does excellent work.
anonymous, Olympia, Washington
‘A nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual doom.’ — Martin Luther King Jr.
Thomas Fatone, Brooklyn, New York
Bravo. I have been advocating for just this to happen for several years.
Duncan Dow, South San Francisco, California
Cherish the people, defund the military machine.
Doug Mackenzie, Los Gatos, California
This is a great idea. Next a national strike!
Claire Chang, Gill, Massachusetts
I already signed onto NWTRCC’s War Tax Boycott, refused to file for and have quit my full-time job to live below the taxable threshold. If Congress won’t defund the war, the last bulwark of democracy, The People, must.
NTodd Pritsky, Cambridge, Vermont
This is a bandwagon that most Republicans should hop onto since they abhor paying taxes. Alert everyone you know about this cause there is larger safety in larger numbers.
Laura Martin, Clarkson, Georgia
Let’s protest with our dollars this time.
Maria Kanaan, Chicago, Illinois
Thank you all! If Congress wimps out by giving Bush more $$, than we must not provide it. Enough! I refuse to pay for murder.
Friend Burton, St. Louis, Missouri
Time to defund the war.
Larry Harper, Sebastopol, California
I consider myself in good company — like all the ‘traitors’ who fought off British control and taxation without representation, who wrote the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution.
Friend Johnson, Cedar Falls, Iowa
Let’s put our money where our mouths are — since Congress doesn’t have the courage to stop funding war — the people will.
Susan Eleuterio, Highland, Indiana
Things have to change with this disastrous war and administration, and women will be the ones to do it.
Joni Goodale, Orlando, Florida
In a governmental system based on money and corporate profits, the most effective form of protest comes from withholding payment of taxes.
Daniel Woodham, Greensboro, North Carolina
Thank You! It is about time… I am so ready to join those who are ready to live their convictions.
Tighe Barry, Santa Monica, California
With 50% of the federal budget being used for military purposes, I cannot in good conscience pay for war while praying for peace.
Lincoln Rice, Milwaukee, Wisconsin
I will refuse to pay taxes for war even if fewer than 100,000 people pledge because I cannot in conscience pay for these wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Peter Smith, South Bend, Indiana
It’s about time citizens used their green to bring peace.
Heli Taylor, Los Angeles, California
Not one more dollar!
Deidra Lynch, Orlando, Florida

And this is just from those who have signed up by the beginning of !