| All of this is fact not fiction.  You can easily find these facts in your local library.   The income tax was begun in 1913 as an amendment to the constitution, legally ratified by far fewer than the required
                                    36 states.  Is it legal?  A bit of theft from the extremely rich, which politicians even then had decided, "didn't
                                    need it".  That was the idea, and like all government plans to steal, transfer, and subsidize, it has become a monumental
                                    horror.  Today, some corporations spend more on tax preparation than on any other single expense, including raw materials
                                    and labor.  The IRS has become a social tool, the true "Elixir of Life" for the social manipulators and denizens of D.C..   In the early 1950's, Uncle Sam took less than 3% in income taxes and 1% out of the first $3,000 in wages, or $30 for
                                    social security, making less than $100 total a year for the average beginning worker.  According to an article in The
                                    New Republic of December 2nd, 1991, in 1948, a married couple with median income and two children, paid only 2% in state,
                                    federal and social security taxes.  In 1999, social security was 15.3%, plus 2.9% for medicare, out of the first $62,700
                                    in wages, or $11,411.40, and then perhaps 30% in federal taxes...if you were lucky.  That is about an even 50%, plus
                                    hundreds of hidden taxes on every phone call you make, over 40 cents on every gallon of gas you buy, luxury and excise taxes,
                                    and hundreds more at the federal level alone.   There are taxes on payroll, personal property, pensions, severance, social security, corporation, stock transfer, tobacco,
                                    tonnage, transportaion, utilities, accumulated earning, ad-valorem, alcoholic beverages, amusements, apparel, business, capital
                                    gains, consumption, corporate income, dividends, employment, estate, excise, franchises, fuel, furnishings, gas, sales, gifts.
                                    gross receipts, health care, holding company, income, inheritance, land, license, and the list of taxes can go on and on. 
                                    Sales taxes at the local level are usually 4 to 8 times higher than they were in the early 1950's, and property taxes, especially
                                    in the east, can be a couple of hundred dollars a month for a small, rather ordinary home.   In 1916, the income tax law had a bit over 11,000 words.  The 1996 version, however, had over 7 million words, 10
                                    times the number of words that are in the Bible.  In 1928, the income tax was 1.5% on any income over $4,000, which is
                                    the equivalent of $100,000 today.  It has all happened so gradually that we haven't noticed it.  The old frog in
                                    water story applies here.  If you place a frog in a pot of cold water, and very gradually raise the heat to a boil, he
                                    won't notice the difference; a painless execution.  If total taxes had gone from 10% to the current 75% all at once,
                                    we would have mutinied.  Yes, I said 75%.  Think about it.   Everything that we buy, has all or some of the above-mentioned taxes glues onto it's price.  Ajax widgets are made
                                    in a factory somewhere, employing people whose wages are taxed.  That factory pays fuel tax, property taxes, and a hundred
                                    other taxes, which go into the price of the widgets.  Food and manufactured goods of all kinds have the makers' taxes
                                    included in their prices.  A loaf of bread bought in a grocery store or bakery has property taxes for the farmer, bakery,
                                    garage for the delivery trucks, oil refinery, truck factory, tire factory, and the factories for every single part in the
                                    truck, tractor and various pieces of machinery that go into making and delivering the bread.  There are taxes on the
                                    property and workers for the milling of the flour, egg producer, maker of the yeast, milk, wrappers, slicers, oven, and even
                                    the printers who print the wrappers and ink that goes into them.  All these factories, shippers, farmers, stores etc.
                                    have labor and property taxes to pay as well as telephone, fuel, and a host of other taxes, all of which add to the cost of
                                    that single loaf of bread.  One economist 30 some odd years ago, said that a $1.00 loaf of bread had $.95 in taxes. 
                                    Then, of course, you pay your own taxes of probably 75% counting sales, social security, income, telephone etc.  Is a
                                    75% taxation estimate too low?  I think so!   The National Taxpayer's Union says that taxes have gone up 175,000% in the last 83 years.   "Thou shall not steal." - Exodus 20:15 - King James Version   Taxes are theft, defined as obtaining someone else's property through force.  Almost everyone is willing to be hurt,
                                    stolen from, or taxed a little, in order to do a great good.  A good such as catching thieves and punishing them, administering
                                    justice, or protecting our shores, but finally a point is reached when we won't do it, revolt, or at a minimum, cheat on our
                                    tax return.  We may still harbor a love of what taxes should do, but deeply resent what they are doing, such as redistributing
                                    wealth, being used as a tool of the pigheaded politicos' ideas of social justice, or other incongruous schemes.  Upon
                                    realizing what tax money is being used for, most will do everything in their power to avoid what has become a pestilence.   The consequence of taxes being levied on everyone and everything, are that the average single wage earning family is
                                    rare, and almost extinct.  We have become a virtual feudal society, with the boss man being the government.  Mom
                                    has to work, as does Dad, just to survive.  So many taxes are hidden and obscure, that most families actually believe
                                    both parents are working "to make ends meet", or to raise their standard of living, rather than what is really going on, and
                                    that is to pay the taxes.  Taxes consume the entire second income, and most of the primary, if all of the hidden taxes
                                    are included.  Politicians perhaps never intended to cause marital breakups and both parents having to work...just to
                                    survive...but they have.  The consequences of the current tax system and the myriad of hidden taxes, are that poverty
                                    is widespread, people can't seem to "get ahead", home ownership is impossible for many, marriages fail due to stress, and
                                    of course delinquency is common among those kids who do not come home to a mother, but may be classed as "latchkey" kids,
                                    or who may have to go to a daycare center.  No one in his or her wildest dreams in 1913 could have envisioned what has
                                    happened to the size of government and the abuse poured on us by the IRS.     "The hardest thing to understand is income tax" - Albert Einstein   Taxing income encourages hiding it, and discourages saving it.  Taxes on spending rather than income, makes far
                                    more sense...if you believe that such is necessary.  Rich people have more dollars, and naturally spend more, so they
                                    would pay a higher tax...automatically graduated by their own habits, not government gobbledygook.  How better to collect
                                    a graduated tax than to collect it on spending?  With a tax on spending, known as an excise tax, there would be no income
                                    tax forms, no IRS, and taxes would be paid at each purchase, not deducted out of a paycheck.  The retailers would collect,
                                    not the hated IRS.  No individual tax forms would be needed, and the so-called "underground economy" would be taxed,
                                    because their dollars are also spent.   Another observation on the tax situation seems appropriate at this time, and that is the matter of "equality". 
                                    For decades now, cantankerous baby kissers have attempted to legislate "equality" in everything, even though that is impossible. 
                                    Everything that is, except income taxes!  How does a graduated tax satisfy "equality"?  A graduated tax was one
                                    of Karl Marx's 10 points to destroy the capitalistic world.  If everyone is supposed to be equal, treated equal, equal
                                    under the law, and every other non-sensual area, why are not income tax rates "equal", for one and all?  How is it fair
                                    or "equal" for one person to pay nothing, and another pay 36% or more?  To be fair and "equal", all should pay the same
                                    rate, with none exempt or gouged.   With the constant "added liquidity" to the economy, the dollars constantly become worth less and less making everything
                                    we buy cost more and more dollars, pesos, yen, francs or marks.  "Adding liquidity" is a polite way of saying "run the
                                    presses even faster", so we can all be proud of our increased "wealth", from various financial transactions...other than the
                                    NASDAQ of course.     
                                    
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