How you can resist funding the government → a survey of tactics of historical tax resistance campaigns → reach out to potential resisters at the time and place of payment → Tax Day actions → 2012

We’re not buying it. Fair taxes for all, war taxes from none.

graphic from a handbill that people from New England War Tax Resistance are handing out at a tax day event organized with Occupy Boston

War tax resisters are finding that it is no less of a delicate balancing act trying to merge their message with the left-wing Occupy movement than it was with the right-wing TEA Party.

Ed Agro reports (excerpts):

…I took part part in meetings for tax day with the Boston groups that have taken the lead in planning.

Reconciling the WTR message and those that OB & the unions & NV trainers want to get out has been challenging. It hasn’t been that the coalition is averse to WTR (though folks have the usual questions), but that the mandate to the working group was to find a consistent bottom-line demand that would get the most assent from the public while at the same time giving all factions space to present their part of the story. From my call that went out to the E. MA resisters:

The coalition that planned the tax day events is made up of Occupy Boston, peace, and social-justice groups. After much discussion it was agreed that the message should be kept simple and the slogan “Corporations and the 1%: pay your taxes!” would be the best way to focus the public’s attention during this one-day event; I agreed with the strategy. While it could be argued that WTR, war, and militarism rather than greed and corruption might be a better focus, the WTR community in the Boston area just doesn’t have the resources to pull off that sort of demonstration, let alone lead a coalition. On the other hand those fighting corporatism, greed, and the abuse of the tax system are beginning to understand the connection of these ills to the militarization of America, and have welcomed our collaboration.

I know it’s at first blush difficult to reconcile the call that corporations should pay their fair share of taxes at the same time that we’re asking citizens to refuse taxes that go for warmaking. But it’s not impossible, we just have to be patient and continue to show the connections.…

I don’t see myself marching under a “pay your taxes” banner any time soon, but some folks apparently see the ideological inconsistency as being a price worth paying for possible coalition-building.

Our own local tax resistance group is holding a demonstration on tax day along with CodePINK, Global Day of Action on Military Spending, BAY-Peace, and others. Some of these groups also have a pro-tax message, though not one necessarily out of line with mainstream war tax resistance (“Taxes for education not militarization”), and not one that forms a banner covering the demonstration as a whole.

The “tax the rich” message is very popular in Occupy circles, and war tax resisters who know that a rich person’s taxes are as badly misused as a poor person’s taxes have their work cut out for them when trying to put their own message forward.

But speaking of tax day actions, NWTRCC has a list of ’em going on nationwide on and around .


was the deadline to file federal income tax returns, which is traditionally a day for protesters with a tax-related message to get their rallies on.

Members of BAY-Peace perform a war tax protesting song-and-dance in front of the Federal Building in Oakland, California on .

In my neck of the woods, a number of groups including Northern California War Tax Resistance, BAY-Peace, CodePINK, Global Day of Action on Military Spending, Iran Pledge of Resistance, Courage to Resist, and Occupy Oakland, marched downtown and held a rally at the Federal Building. I showed up long enough to take a quick look-see and get some photos, but was feeling too sick from a head cold to stick around long.

Here are a couple more of the early tax day action reports that have been trickling in:

War tax resister Clare Hanrahan spoke at a rally in Asheville, North Carolina. Democrats and organized labor were hoping to make the rally a celebration of “the Buffett rule” and other “tax the rich” messages, but Hanrahan reminded them what tax money pays for. “My speech at today’s tax-day rally was a bit too seditious for MoveOn,” she writes, saying that group canceled their appearance at the rally when they heard a war tax resister would be speaking. Here’s what she had to say.

War tax resisters in Portsmouth, New Hampshire held their annual “penny poll” outside the local post office, asking passers-by to vote with pennies for their idea of what the nation’s spending priorities ought to be. This, then, is contrasted to the priorities reflected in the federal government’s budget.


Here is the text of Clare Hanrahan’s great speech that she delivered at a rally in Asheville, North Carolina. Her speech repulsed the contemptible vampire liberals of MoveOn (they withdrew from the rally when they heard a war tax resister would be addressing it) better than if she had been wearing a garlic wreath, holding up a silver cross, and shooting holy water from a super-soaker.

“The greatest changes in history have only come when people are willing to put everything on the line.” Julia Butterfly Hill

Environmental activist and tree-sitter Julia Butterfly Hill took direct action when the IRS claimed she owed them $150,000 from a court settlement. Instead of aiding and abetting war, Julia redirected this money to education, arts and cultural programs, community gardens, programs for Native Americans, alternatives to incarceration, and environmental protection.

When war is illegal, isn’t paying war tax a crime?

I have refused to pay war taxes . That’s the year I took the pledge. That’s when I decided to break the deadly habit of paying for war.

It’s not just our federal taxes that fuel war, but our lifestyles of waste and habitual consumption, this privilege that we maintain on the backs of the destitute of the world, is upheld by the Pentagon and its deadly force.

I’m one of thousands of people around this country who openly identify themselves as War Tax Resisters. Some file and refuse to pay. Some refuse to file or cooperate in any way. Some refuse a portion of federal taxes, some refuse to pay any at all.

Most War Tax Resisters are also Peace Tax Payers, redirecting refused war-tax dollars to fund community needs. Local alternative Funds throughout the U.S. each year deliver more than $50,000 in refused war taxes to support constructive projects.

As we gather here today to call out Bank of America, to demand that they stop participating in this business of death — to demand that they stop funding mountain top removal coal mining enterprises, stop facilitating the buildup and modernization of nuclear weapons, and stop loaning millions to criminal enterprises like Eric Prince and Blackwater/Xe, the largest mercenary operation in the world.

As we say to Bank of America and its shareholders: Stop!

Are we willing to risk our own economic privilege to obstruct this business of death?

Who will block the doors to the post office today when most Americans will voluntarily submit taxes on the demand of the IRS — the taxes that fuel the Pentagon!

When war is illegal — I ask you — isn’t paying for war a crime?

Whatever the risk to property or privilege, career or liberty, we must stop. We must stop supporting this system of destruction. Not merely because it is immoral and unjust, but because it is illegal — according to International Law.

The Pentagon and media are aligned in their efforts to hide the costs: the maimed soldiers, the battlefield carnage, the grieving widows, the broken souls, the poisoned Earth — funded with nearly one-half of every tax dollar obediently submitted under threat.

The mandate of the Nuremberg War Crime Tribunal of is clear:

Individuals have international duties which transcend the national obligations of obedience. Therefore [individual citizens] have the duty to [refuse to obey] domestic laws to prevent crimes against peace and humanity from occurring.

We cannot say we did not know.

We who refuse to cooperate with the Internal Revenue Service in its coercive efforts to collect the funds to wage illegal wars, are in fact upholding International Law and treaties that compel citizens to refuse to cooperate with the crimes of their government.

Each citizen has a responsibility to ensure that their own personal conduct does not breach international law.

According to the International Criminal Court a person is criminally liable who “aids, abets or assists” in the commission of such a crime “including providing the means for its commission.”

Governments cannot wage war without the money to buy weapons, pay troops or purchase supplies. Without the support of taxpayers and moneylenders war would be impossible.

When war is illegal, isn’t paying war tax a crime?

Look around. The crime scene is everywhere. Let’s just talk about what we harbor here in these ancient mountains — weapons of mass and indiscriminate destruction — weapons that violate all the criteria for acceptable weapons of war, including: “Distinction” (between combatants and non-combatants), “Proportionality” (causing excessive loss of civilian life); “Protection of Environment” (causing “widespread, longterm & severe damage”).

In Jonesboro, Tennessee, weaponized uranium in the form of armor-piercing bullets is manufactured at AeroJet. It contaminates, kills, and deforms for generation after generation. In Erwin, Tennessee, Nuclear fuel Services manufactures the fuel for Trident Nuclear Submarines — the first strike nuclear submarines, themselves a violation of International law, and in Oak Ridge at the Y-12 nuclear bomb factory where billions more are being spent to upgrade the U.S. nuclear weapons arsenal for generations.

The United States is the number one military spender and arms exporter in the world.

U.S. war crimes include “crimes against peace” such as the “planning, preparation, or initiation of a war of aggression.” “Crimes against humanity,” (both civilians and soldiers). Violations of the rules as to the “means and manner by which war is to be conducted once begun.” These include the following prohibitions: “killing of civilians, indiscriminate bombing, the use of certain types of weapons, killing of defenseless soldiers, ill treatment of POWs and attacks on non-military targets.”

We can’t say we didn’t know.

Any violation of these two sets of laws is a war crime — when done on purpose, as the U.S. has done, they are grave breaches — Nazis and Japanese following World War Ⅱ were hanged for such grave breaches.

The United States and its leaders have committed international crimes. As global citizens, under International law, we are complicit in these crimes against humanity, these war crimes.

When war is illegal, paying for war is a war crime.

How long, I ask, will it take those of us who know the futility of the Pentagon’s wars, how they rob us of our brightest and best, how they kill and rape and maim, tear apart families, lay desolate the land, leave orphans and widows and broken and discarded veterans wandering our streets, filling our jails, or bringing the violence of war back home?

How long, war-tax payers, will you persist in this deadly submission?

We can’t say we didn’t know.

When war is illegal, isn’t paying war tax a crime?




The issue of More Than a Paycheck, NWTRCC’s newsletter, is now on-line, and includes:

  • Clare Hanrahan’s tax day speech: “We must stop supporting this system of destruction. Not merely because it is immoral and unjust, but because it is illegal — according to International Law.”
  • counseling notes — Congress considers revoking passports from tax delinquents, the IRS struggles to cope with a flood of tax fraud, and Ed Hedemann suggests low-income tax resisters inflate the numbers on their income tax statements so they have something to resist.
  • international news — tax resistance in Spain, and a new nonviolent campaign guide from War Resisters’ International
  • legal news — updates on the Frank Donnelly and Cindy Sheehan cases
  • action reports and photos
  • reports from the NWTRCC national gathering in Chicago
  • a collection of brief “how I became a war tax resister” anecdotes from attendees at the Chicago conference