Miscellaneous tax resisters → individual anarchist or libertarian tax resisters → Teresa Warmke

“Fr33 Aid” is a group of volunteers who organize free first aid and health services and who educate people about first aid skills (like CPR) and about the value of voluntary mutual aid at libertarian/anarchist-leaning events.

According to a press release on their site, dated , they have given up on their frustrating quest to gain government-certified non-profit status. Instead they are going to try to withdraw from the state-monitored banking system and the use of state-controlled currency and instead do as much of their operations as possible with the newly-developed currency known as “bitcoin.”

“When we founded Fr33 Aid in , the banks all required a taxpayer ID number and government paperwork,” said Teresa Warmke, Fr33 Aid’s co-founder and treasurer. “Bitcoin changed everything. We can focus on our mission now that Fr33 Aid’s assets are safe in our Bitcoin wallet.”

In a follow-up Q&A, Warmke explained: “Now that there are ways for us to do banking without government involvement, we decided fulfilling [IRS requirements] would not be a responsible way for Fr33 Aid to spend its money nor for our volunteers to spend their time.”

The organization will continue to accept donations denominated in dollars from people who have not adopted bitcoins, but will convert such donations to bitcoins “in a timely manner.” This way, Warmke says, “If at some point either the bank or a government tries to confiscate our account for taxes they believe we owe or failure to file paperwork, they would only be able to find a few dollars for their trouble.”

Bitcoins are very interesting. They are a form of currency that is backed by the full faith & credit of its community of users and the sophisticated and clever algorithm they agree to use and that gives the currency value as a medium of exchange. It is composed of numbers, minted by mathematics, often never takes material form, is recognized by no government, and backed by no material goods… and yet it seems strikingly more secure and useful and dependable than the currencies we have grown used to (for which, on close inspection, many of these same frightening conclusions hold true).

I’ve been hearing about them for months, but only recently have I investigated them in earnest. I don’t feel economically or mathematically sophisticated enough to give them a full-throated endorsement, but I’ve learned enough to know that most of my initial skepticism about bitcoin was superficial and invalid. This may very well be the real thing: a currency that is not controlled by a central authority, but by the community of people who use it; and one that is relatively easy for people to safeguard from government attempts at confiscation or restriction of trade across national boundaries.

(This would be an example of the tax resistance tactic of abandoning government currency or of switching to alternative currencies, which I covered on earlier Picket Line posts, and is related to the tactics hide taxable or seizable assets, join cooperative business arrangements, manufacture & sell alternatives to taxed goods, and participate in barter and other off-the-books transactions.)


Some links that have flashed by my browser in recent days:

IRS Follies

International Tax Resistance News

  • Anjali Damania and Alyque Padamsee have started a taxpayers union and have launched a tax strike to protest government corruption in India.

    Padamsee claimed that he always does everything legal and correct. He said, “I checked with lawyers. We are a group of like-minded people, and the tax paying population of this country, and they said, anyone who works together could form a union. And by law, a union is allowed to strike. We will strike by not paying tax. We plan to assemble a million people with a fee of Re 1 each, but all this is at the planning stage. We are talking with senior lawyers and will have them on board. Our main aim will be to make the government accountable. If there are any recommendations, people can contact me.”

    However, it is not yet specified which tax the Tax Payers’ Union will not pay, as there are various taxes in India, and most of them are indirect tax, which one pays in form of service, or while buying products. The other important taxes which concern an individual directly, include income tax and professional tax.

    This idea seems to be catching on. Justice Arun Chaudhari, from the Nagpur bench of Bombay High Court, in a ruling during a recent corruption case, said:

    In my considered opinion, corruption can be beaten if all work together. To eradicate the cancer of corruption — the “hydra-headed monster,” it is now a high time for the citizens to come together to tell their governments that they have had enough. That is the miasma of of corruption. If the same continues, taxpayers may resort to refuse to pay taxes by “non-cooperation movement.”

  • Tommaso Cerno, a journalist and gay rights activist in Friuli, Italy, has made waves by announcing, in a letter published in Repubblica, a tax strike for gay rights.
  • George Theofanou, who participated in the “won’t pay” protests against road tolls in Greece, has been charged €21,787.20 by the Greek tax agency for his failure to pay €427.20 in tolls. Theofanou issued a defiant letter, denouncing the “mafia” government and vowing to continue resisting.
  • Farmers are the latest group to organize to protest taxes in Greece, driving their tractors to Athens, blocking highways, and attacking government buildings.
  • Textile businesses in Vaishali were shuttered as the textile union launched a strike against a new tax.

War Tax Resistance

  • My Waging Nonviolence article, on how the War Tax Resisters Penalty Fund is a model for civil disobedience campaigns by demonstrating how to blunt the force of government deterrents, has been picked up by Truthout and OWSNe.ws.
  • The POWERevolution blog has a new post about war tax resistance. Excerpt:

    If the government does not allow us the freedom to direct our taxes toward more enriching and sustainable funds, we will begin the process of taking that freedom for ourselves. We will discontinue paying taxes to the government, and instead redirect our money into a community fund that distributes our income in a way that serves all of us. As long as we continue paying for the current system in the form of taxes, we are complicit in the violence and corruption committed by it. By withdrawing our funding of it, we withdraw our consent of its actions.

  • Bernard J. Berg recalls how he came out of the U.S. military doubtful that what he was doing deserved to be called “service”:

    I too served in the Navy, just before Vietnam, helping to keep the sea lanes safe for United Fruit Co. and the Dulles brothers. I later joined the war tax resistance effort sponsored by Lehigh-Pocono Committee of Concern. Money which should have gone to the IRS to pay for our war crimes went into the fund to be used for worthy causes. But the IRS had the last laugh as it garnered my bank account and got more money for illegal wars with the fines it extracted from me.

Miscellany

  • I just learned about the following presentation which was made at the 2013 Bitcoin Conference, and features Angela Keaton from AntiWar.com, Carla Gericke of the Free State Project, and Teresa Warmke of Fr33Aid, discussing how nonprofits can benefit from using BitCoin:
  • The number of U.S. citizens who are renouncing their citizenship is climbing, continuing a dramatic trend since 2008.