Economic Fascism and
Tax Slavery
"Words mean what
I say they mean, Alice," said the Mad Hatter
Nelson Hultberg
May 26, 2003
For a number
of decades, our universities and colleges have been teaching
a serious fallacy in political philosophy (or "poly sci"
as it is now called) that has distorted our thinking about governments
and corporations in the modern world. This fallacy is that our
present system of political organization is a free enterprise
system, i.e., capitalism.
This is not
true. What we are calling capitalism in our schools and in our
media is not capitalism. We abandoned free enterprise long ago
in the aftermath of WW I in favor of Mussolini's "corporatism,"
i.e., economic fascism, where Big Business, Big Government,
and Big Finance form combines to exploit the people with monopolized
prices and corrupted dollars.
This is one
of the crucial issues of our time, and it needs to be clarified
if we, who believe in the propriety of capitalism, wish to lead
America back toward a free-market system of sound money and fair
taxation. It becomes especially crucial, seeing that the next
5-10 years threaten us with a collapse of the Western economies
that could bring severe chaos and misery, out of which would
arise great pressure to further centralize our government in
Washington and further suppress our fundamental freedoms.
Defining Our Terms
To get at the
roots of this fallacy, we first need to define the terms of fascism
and capitalism. Webster's Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary says
the following (to which I have added clarifying remarks in parentheses):
Fascism -- a political philosophy,
movement or regime that exalts nation and often race above the
individual, and that stands for a centralized autocratic government
headed by a dictatorial leader, severe economic and social regimentation,
and forcible suppression of opposition. (The state has power
over every aspect of the economy to plan and regulate its workings.
The factors of production are owned privately, but controlled
by the gov-erning authorities as to what and how they are to
produce, and what level of profits they are to retain.)
Capitalism -- an economic system
characterized by private or corpor-ate ownership of capital goods,
by investments that are determined by pri-vate decision rather
than by state control, and by prices, production, and the distribution
of goods that are determined mainly by competition in a free
market. (The state is neither to own nor operate the factors
of production, nor to interfere in the peaceful decisions of
their operation, leaving them to be controlled by the natural
laws such as supply and demand that operate within the marketplace.)
Obviously the
two systems are different in the fact that fascism advocates
STATE control over the factors of production and their
profits, while capitalism advocates PRIVATE control over those
factors.
The primary
distinction between the two systems is that capitalism is a system
of economic organization without government involvement,
thus its descriptive adjective of "laissez-faire,"
which means to leave alone. The government's job is basically
to preserve the peace and perform those few limited functions
granted by the Constitution.
Under fascism,
the government's job is to intervene into the marketplace to
control all the various economic interactions of its participants.
Its role is to manipulate the economic interactions through regulations
and the conveyance of special privileges. Government assumes
this power because it is felt that this is the only way stability
and order can be maintained in society.
Under capitalism,
the term "private" means free of government control
or involvement. Thus, PRIVATE enterprise is FREE enterprise.
Private businesses are entities in which the individual owners
(rather than public officials) make the decisions of hiring,
pricing, wage determination, production levels, policy planning,
profit disposal, etc. Government is divorced from these
economic decisions.
Under fascism,
ownership of businesses are left in "private" hands,
but the government rigidly regulates all businesses confiscating
much of their profits and using them as the government sees fit.
Thus business entities are private in name only. The term "private"
is still used, but it no longer means free of government involvement.
It is used within the context of government-business "cooperation."
However, such terminology is a fraud because there is never any
cooperation when government is involved. Government simply
tells businesses what it wants done and legally mandates
that it be done. There is no choice in the matter. Those who
don't do as the government says are imprisoned or fined egregiously.
Fascism is
thus a command economy where massive centralized government is
developed to regulate its citizens' lives. The major power centers
of society -- government, corporations, and banks -- form a triad
to monopolize and manipulate the economy according to their liking,
their aggrandizement, and their profit at the expense of the
individual and his rights.
"The essence
of fascism," writes Thomas J. DiLorenzo of Loyola College,
"is that government should be the master, not the servant,
of the people. Think about this. Does anyone in America really
believe that this is not what we have now? Are Internal Revenue
Service agents really our "servants"? Is compulsory
"national service" for young people... not a classic
example of coercing individuals to serve the state? Isn't the
whole idea behind the massive regulation and regimentation of
American industry and society the notion that individuals should
be forced to behave in ways defined by a small governmental elite?"
[Ideas on Liberty, June 1994, p.
289.]
"Virtually
all of the specific economic policies advocated by the Italian
and German fascists of the 1930's," says DiLorenzo, "have
also been adopted in the United States in some form, and continue
to be adopted to this day. Sixty years ago, those who adopted
these interventionist policies in Italy and Germany did so because
they wanted to destroy economic liberty, free enterprise, and
individualism. Only if these institutions were abolished could
they hope to achieve the kind of totalitarian state they had
in mind." [Ibid., p. 292]
Who Benefits from
Fascism?
Why then do
our political elites, our corporations, and our bankers attempt
to maintain the fiction that we are a capitalist economy when
we are so obviously becoming every decade more and more of a
government manipulated FASCIST economy?
Whenever the
facts of reality are being distorted by the authorities of a
society, one needs to ask, "Cui bono?" Who benefits?
In this case, the beneficiaries are those who seek the regimentation
of Americans under a massive centralized government in Washington.
Our political elites, our corporations, and our bankers wish
to smuggle us into a centralized despotism because they envision
more power and wealth for themselves, but they clearly realize
the strong positive connotation of the words "private"
and "free." Thus they continue to use these words to
describe their policies, even though they know that what they
are implementing is neither private nor free.
The semantic
corruption that is happening here permeates our entire society.
Our courts and our government operated schools maintain the fiction
that all businesses in today's economy are FREE, PRIVATE entities,
when in actuality the government is subtly making them into CONTROLLED,
PUBLIC entities by usurping their rights and instituting a myriad
of regulations over their business policies.
To understand
this requires only simple logic and common sense. Business owners
do not have true control of their businesses without the right
to freely set prices and wages, retain their profits, formulate
policy as they see fit, etc. Ownership without control is a fiction,
a contradiction in terms. But this is what we have in America
today -- ownership without real control. Government sets price
ceilings and floors, dictates wages through laws and labor courts,
and confiscates profits. This is Mussolini's corporate-statism,
i.e., fascism -- not full blown fascism yet, but well on its
way. Under such a regime, government becomes a "partner"
to all corporations, and they, in essence, operate jointly. But
as Ayn Rand pointed out decades ago, what kind of "partnership"
can there be when one of the partners makes use of arbitrary
dictates backed up by guns and the law?
Indeed, what
kind of "partnership" is it when Washington's black
limousine crowd skims off whatever profits it can bamboozle 51%
of the people to vote for? What kind of partnership is it that
allows businesses to continue to operate only if they remain
obedient to Washington's dictates? This is not free enterprise!
This is the evolution of economic fascism! Our corporations in
America become more and more fascist every decade because the
Federal Government assumes more and more control over them through
regulations or tax policy, or both. Ironically many corporations
welcome the omnipresent regulatory arm of government, because
it can often be used to monopolize their markets and protect
them from competition.
A perfect example
of corporations welcoming government involvement to establish
a monopoly of their industry is our mega-banks and the Federal
Reserve System. Through special privilege legislation granted
by the Federal Government, our banks have succeeded in forming
a giant fascist cartel that now wields enormous and dangerous
power over our economy and our lives. Because the Federal Government
has granted to the banking cartel the power to indiscriminately
print paper money via the legal tender laws, they can now siphon
off our wealth at will through monetary inflation.
What we have
here is the two-fold tyrannization process that Marx advocated:
Corrupt the language and the money, and capitalism will fall.
Take all the important words that support a free society and
turn them inside out. If it is done in a sophisticated enough
manner, the intelligentsia will buy into it, and the people will
follow. Combine the debasement of words with a debasement of
money through a centralized government-run bank, and a free society
can be enslaved. Is this not what has been happening to us over
the past century in America? Vital words such as "freedom,"
"private," "rights," and "enterprise"
are being twisted in the schools and the media to mean what the
collectivists want them to mean. In addition, the value of our
money is being steadily depreciated to line the pockets of mega-bankers
and government bureaucrats. And the people are ignorantly buying
into it to sanction more and more government.
Marx's prediction
is coming true, but ironically not in the form of his espoused
socialism, which died in 1989 with the collapse of the Berlin
Wall. It is coming true in the form of Mussolini's "corporate
statism." The collectivists of the world have merely shifted
to the ideology of fascism; their tyrannical goals are alive
and well in both Moscow and Washington.
Fighting the Tyrants in Washington
Hopefully the
reader can see that fascism is growing in America through government
intervention into the economy and the myriad controls that Washington
forces upon our businesses and banks. But it is not inevitable;
we do not have to meekly tolerate its growth. Fascism (like any
other form of collectivism) cannot be sustained without confiscatory
taxation. Thus if we wish to stop today's tyrannical drift in
Washington, we must become concerned with RADICAL TAX REFORM.
Any perusal
of history shows that every dictatorship that has ever solidified
its tentacles around its citizens' lives has used the ability
to tax their income as its lever to power. For this reason, the
Founders were firmly committed to a country WITHOUT AN INCOME
TAX. Therefore this must be our ultimate goal -- total repeal
of the income tax. But in fighting this fight, we must remember
two things: 1) We're up against fascist mentalities. They are
ruthless, totally amoral, and in love with power over all other
pursuits in life. They have formed a tacit alliance with masses
of unthinking voters by subsidizing them at the expense of those
productive members of the middle and upper classes. To overthrow
this corrupt game will require courage and commitment of the
highest order. 2) Secondly, we must understand that while radical
LEGAL change can sometimes be won quickly in the courts, radical
POLITICAL change comes about only through incremental
victories.
Those who have
formed the anti-income tax movement in America today obviously
possess the courage to fight -- people like Irwin Schiff, Larken
Rose, Bob Schulz and their followers. These are the modern day
Samuel Adamses and John Hancocks of America. I have the utmost
respect for them. They have put their money where their mouth
is. They've risked, and often, sacrificed their personal freedoms
in the process. They have challenged Goliath armed with their
Constitutional slingshots, and they have struck some mighty blows.
Goliath is still standing, yes, but no tyranny can forever prevail
in the face of such committed patriots. A day of liberation is
coming.
But in the
meantime, in order to speed up the process and increase our chances
of winning, I believe what we need is a two-pronged attack on
the federal income tax: 1) attack the actual existence of the
tax and its application legally through the courts as Schiff,
Rose, Schulz, et al are doing, but also 2) attack the progressivity
of the tax through political channels as I have suggested in
"Gold
Money and Equal Tax Rates." This way we have a back-up option for
reform if the Schiff-Rose-Schulz constitutional challenges continue
to get stonewalled by corrupt judges.
Our problem
lies in the fact that the courts are basically corrupt. Most
federal judges simply look the other way as the U.S. Attorneys
engage in contemptible fabrications when the issue of the income
tax is brought before them. Why? Because the judges know that
if the income tax is declared UNconstitutional in either its
writing or its application, then what is to replace it to shore
up all the government programs and bureaucracies that have been
amassed over the years (about $1 trillion worth of expenditures)?
They fear the system will implode without the income tax; and
no judges are going to opt for that. They are going to PRESERVE
the system at all costs. They will justify their corruption of
the Constitution in regard to the income tax with the convenient
excuse that "it's in the national interest."
Thus I have
grave doubts whether any court in this land will soon declare
the income tax to be UNconstitutional, even in application, as
long as massive government bureaucracy needs to be paid for.
The courts will always preserve the system by sophistry and semantic
corruption.
This means
that, though Irwin Schiff, Larken Rose, Bob Schulz, et al are
fighting the good fight, it may not be enough, or at least not
enough to repeal the income tax in our lifetimes! In my opinion,
we will have to dramatically reduce government first before we
can get the courts to act responsibly and declare the income
tax to be UNconstitutionally applied, and then eliminated. This
is because we will then have a government that can be supported
by tariffs and excise taxes as the Constitution authorizes. As
a result, the judges will not fear that the system will collapse,
and they will begin to interpret the law correctly.
The position
of the anti-income tax movement has always been that we don't
have to worry about the government being supported in the absence
of income tax revenues because we can fund all legitimate federal
functions with tariffs and excise taxes. This is true; we can
fund the legitimate functions in this way. The problem
consists in getting from where we are today to legitimacy. This
is a goal that cannot be achieved overnight. While phasing down
to a smaller more Constitutional structure, the government will
still need revenues.
For example,
the Federal Government took in about $1.2 trillion in revenue
from the income tax in fiscal year 2000. These revenues went
toward supporting a lot of waste and boondoggles. But lets say
that we chopped $400 billion of waste in three years as The
People's Budget showed could be done [Regnery, 1995]. We
still have $800 billion to account for.
Let's then
say that we somehow convince the American people to abolish the
Fed and pay off the national debt by swapping non-interest paper
(money) for interest-bearing paper (bonds) as Vincent LoCascio
recommends. By phasing out the privilege of fractional reserve
banking over 10 years, his plan would be non-inflationary, and
it would chop another $300 billion in annual interest. ["Pay
Off the National Debt,"]
We now need
only $500 billion in revenue to fund the military and other assorted
functions. Would tariffs and excise taxes suffice at this juncture?
Perhaps, especially if a small national sales tax of say 3% is
enacted (a sales tax is defined in the dictionary as an "excise"
tax, and would, according to some legal minds in the tax reform
movement, be Constitutional).
How to Better Insure Victory
But the question
is how do we get from where we are to legitimacy? I submit that
this can best be done by eliminating the progressivity of
rates in our present tax system. It is progressivity of rates
that leads to "infinite demand" for government services,
which causes relentless government growth. But if everyone were
required to pay out of his own pocket (i.e., with a flat tax),
then the American people would not want all this government expansion.
In fact they would suddenly want just the opposite. They would
start voting for those politicians that campaigned on REDUCING
government instead of EXPANDING it. We would have a monumental
shift in political opinion in this country simply by eliminating
progressivity. If combined with a restoration of gold backing
to the dollar, it would stop government growth cold, and in fact
start shrinking it. [For a more detailed explanation of why this
is so, see my previous article, "Gold
Money and Equal Tax Rates."]
Of course,
I could be wrong in my estimation of the establishment's ability
to continue to stonewall in the courts. The Constitutional challenges
that Schiff, Rose and Schulz are raising could conceivably bear
fruit sooner than anticipated. Justice has a strange way of working
itself out sometimes. Right when things look bleakest is often
right before an amazing breakthrough comes that liberates us
all. But any objective look at prosecutors and judges tells one
that they are tremendously skilled at twisting language to serve
their special purposes. They learn very early in life the art
of sophistry and how to combine it with twisted semantics to
fashion falsehood into bogus legal decisions that will be tolerated
by an unthinking public. This is how tyranny comes to a country
-- via the twisted sophistry of its schools and its courts.
One thing I
am sure of is this: There can be no hope for America until people
understand the connection between progressivity of tax rates
and government expansion. And there can be no hope until they
understand that our currency must have gold to back it in order
to keep it sound. I don't think the people are quite ready yet
to listen to these two truths, but they will be ready to listen
when our financial system implodes sometime in this next decade.
I have read
most of Irwin Schiff's books, and I think that he brilliantly
attacked the illegality of the income tax. Also I am somewhat
familiar with the formidable works of Larken Rose and Bob Schulz.
However, just like Schiff before them, I fear that Rose and Schulz
will end up getting stonewalled because of the dilemma in which
the judges find themselves. They can't interpret the law honestly
without destroying the system. So they will continue to misinterpret
the law, suppress the truth, and rationalize their stand -- using
the "national interest" as justification.
This is why
we need a two-pronged attack. If we concentrate on "progressivity
of tax rates" as well as the "legitimacy of the tax
itself," and if we promote our cause through a political
campaign to the people as well as a legal appeal in the courts,
we could increase considerably our chances of winning and reversing
government expansion. What a monumental achievement that would
be! In other words, we must not rely solely on the minutia of
tax law and its constitutionality because the judges will probably
continue to rule in favor of preserving the fascist system.
Also, we must
never allow ourselves to fall for the establishment's definition
of key words like "private" and "free." Such
semantic distortions are used to perpetuate more collectivism.
The dictator mentalities need for everyone to believe that if
business entities are always labeled "private" and
"free," that makes them so despite the fact that the
Federal Government is controlling and manipulating their economic
interactions and confiscating their profits.
"Words
mean what I say they mean, Alice," said the Mad Hatter.
Our Mad Hatters are the fascists who sit in our courts and teach
in our schools. We need to conduct an end run around them. That's
what I have in mind with the two pillars strategy for
a third political party that I outlined in my previous two articles,
"Gold
Money and Equal Tax Rates" and "The
Ark of Freedom."
But this would require enacting a modest flat tax while we are
working toward the total abolition of the income tax. Are the
Constitutional purists willing to do this? Hopefully they will
be.
With the income
tax and Federal Reserve abolished, the American Republic would
be reborn. The Founders' vision would once more be a magnificent
part of human history. We as a people would once again be free.
This will not be easy; it will require all our efforts, both
intellectual and activist, pulling together with every ounce
of courage we can muster. But when the tide has finally changed,
and America is brought back to her rightful form of government,
the sense of reward will be unimaginable. That shining city on
the hill that the philosophers talk about will be ours to have
and enjoy. And if we were to wisely construct appropriate Constitutional
amendments to prohibit any recurrence of an income tax and a
central bank, then our shining city on the hill could be a reality
for our children and their children for centuries into the future.
This is, after
all, what the Founders had in mind in 1787. We were supposed
to be a free country, not just for the 19th century, but for
all of time. What a resplendent vision to fight for. It can happen
if we understand the nature of the powers that oppose us, and
if we understand the tricks and tactics that they are using.
It's all in the words we use, the money we accept, and the taxes
we tolerate. These need to be made true and fair again.
Nelson Hultberg
Email: nelshultberg@aol.com
May 25, 2003
Nelson Hultberg is
a freelance writer in Dallas, Texas. His articles have appeared
in such publications as The Dallas Morning News, the San
Antonio Express-News, Insight, Liberty, The Social Critic, Ideas
On Liberty, and The AIER Report.
He is the author
of Why We Must Abolish The Income Tax And The IRS (laissezfairebooks.com
and amazon.com), and is presently finishing a book on political-economic
philosophy entitled Reality's Golden Mean: The Case for Libertarian
Politics and Conservative Values.
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321gold
Inc
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