BROOKLYN, New York - April 10 - Taxpayers rushing to the IRS or
post offices on Monday, April 17, the last day to
file 2005 taxes, will be greeted by signs and
banners protesting the use of taxes for war. And,
from Chico, California, to Fort Collins,
Colorado, and Louisville, Kentucky, to Cambridge
Massachusetts, members of the public will be
asked to take a "penny poll," by dropping coins
into jars representing budget categories to show
how they would like their tax money disbursed.
These informal penny polls show year
after year that funding education, health care,
and human resources are the highest priorities,
with the Pentagon receiving a much smaller share.
This result is consistent with a February 2005
study by the Program on International Policy
Attitudes where adult Americans favored increases
in social spending and gave military spending the deepest cut averaging 31%.*
With over $5 billion per month going
to pay for war and occupation in Iraq and
Afghanistan, and the death toll in military
personnel and civilians increasing each day,
anger is rising over the gluttonous use of
resources-human and monetary-consumed by war. In
many cases the people holding the signs will be
individuals who openly refuse to pay some or all
of their income taxes because they cannot in good conscience pay for war.
Each year the National War Tax
Resistance Coordinating Committee (NWTRCC)
collects a list of tax day actions to share with
activists and the media (see below). This year
the list includes activities in over 35 cities
and town. In Portland, Oregon, Berkeley,
California, and Madison, Wisconsin, war tax
resisters will publicly redirect their federal
tax dollars to community organizations.
Redirection is an intricate part of refusing to
pay federal taxes to the IRS; resisters instead
pay their taxes by giving the money to
organizations that meet human needs, care for
victims of war, and work for peace and justice.
Along with redirection ceremonies
and vigils, hundreds of activists around the
country will hand out informational leaflets
detailing for passers-by how their income tax
money is really used. The National Priorities
Project calculates the cost of the Iraq war per
household at $3,000, and the War Resisters
League's analysis of the Bush administration's
budget puts military spending at 49% of the federal budget. **
Rebecca Nellenbeck of Ithaca, New
York, made the decision to refuse to pay for war
for the first time in 2005. "There is so much
money. There just isn't enough to pay for
endless, illegitimate, illegal, unjust wars and
care for our children, not to mention pay for
education and healthcare." Rather than send her
income tax money to the IRS, she chose to give it
to a veterans' hospital, her local post office
and library, and a health care fund.
The National War Tax Resistance
Coordinating Committee (NWTRCC), founded in 1982,
is a coalition of local, regional and national
groups to provide information and support to
people who are conscientious objectors to paying taxes for war.
* Program on International Policy Attitudes
** National Priorities Project - cost of war per
household
** War Resisters League budget analysis
A Listing of Tax Day Actions
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