Paying taxes is one of the least enjoyable things in life. But all
taxes arent equal. Some fund pork or programs the government has no
business being involved with. Others genuinely provide for the
common defense and help support our troops, especially in times of
war. This close to Memorial Day, it would seem like a slap in the
face to the millions who have fought to defend us to oppose paying
those bills.
Thankfully, wars end, and so sometimes do the taxes
used to support them. The Treasury Department just announced it was
going to set aside one such tax and even give us a reimbursement for
the excess amount collected in the last three years. This one was a
luxury tax on long distance phone service. Its going away because
the tax was raised to help pay for a war now long over.
That makes sense. The first Gulf War began and ended in
1991 and wait a second. The tax wasnt for that war. OK, well
Vietnam was more than 30 years ago and it makes sense that the tax
end now.
Only it wasnt a tax to pay for Vietnam. Not Korea,
World War II or even World War I.
Thats right. Our Treasury Department finally agreed to
end a tax that was first instituted in 1898 to fund the Spanish
American War.
Imagine that. In a year when the battleship Maine
exploded, when Teddy Roosevelt was charging his way up San Juan Hill
and when Admiral George Dewey was steaming into Manila Bay, this tax
was sneaking its way into our lives. One hundred and eight years
ago. Its a war thats too often forgotten, so its only fair that
the tax to pay for it was just as forgotten. (Of course, no one
forgot to collect it.)
Ronald Reagan once said the closest thing to
immortality was a government program. Politicians gave birth to this
temporary tax before Reagan was born and it outlasted even the
long-lived 40th president.
It was a story so ludicrous that even some in the media
dusted off their history books and told the story of what government
can really be like. Maybe the fact that we only got a three-year
reimbursement for a 108-year-old tax had something to do with it.
NBCs Today program didnt just focus on how crazy
this tax was. Reporter Tom Costello told viewers on May 29 that you
also could pay taxes getting makeup done or buying fruit in a
vending machine. In Kentucky they tax sex. Horse sex, actually. A
$500,000 thoroughbred stud fee means a $30,000 tax, he added.
Costello also claimed There's always been a love-hate
relationship between politicians and taxes. They love them, we hate
them.
Thats where he dropped his history textbook and picked
up a copy of Spin magazine. You and I might hate paying ridiculous
taxes, but the media love taxes.
Where was Costellos tax-hating attitude when
journalists were talking recently about a windfall profits tax or
higher gas taxes? They were firmly in the big-government, big-tax
camp where they havent just pitched a tent, theyve built condos.
When Congress recently OKd $70 billion in tax relief,
the media treated it like rich folks had struck oil. Reporters had
the audacity to bemoan a cost to government. ABCs Good Morning
America team gave $20 bills to shoppers at a New Jersey mall to
show how little that cut would help some people. What the news
reports buried under mountains of such subtlety was that the plan
saved 15 million middle class families from being included in the
dreaded Alternative Minimum Tax.
At least NBC went to an expert in its story on the end
of the Spanish-American War tax. They brought in John Berthoud, head
of the National Taxpayers Union and a member of the Business & Media
Institutes advisory board. Berthoud put it succinctly, saying,
Politicians are going to tax you when you walk, when you drive,
when you go to work, when you paint.
In short, government will tax us until we scream and
then throw in a scream tax on top of that. But despite the best, or
worst, efforts of politicians and the media, sometimes taxes can go
away. Even if it takes 108 years.
In keeping with the Spanish-American War theme, perhaps
taxpayers should adapt a rallying cry from that era: Remember the
Maine phone tax. It was a victory 108 years in the making.
Dan Gainor is a career journalist and The Boone Pickens Free
Market Fellow. He is also director of the Media Research Centers
Business Media Institute
www.businessandmedia.org.
Tax Gave New Meaning to Long Distance
May 31st, 2006 2:00 PM
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