Very interesting article and it might actually work here in the religious fundamentalist South.
http://www.knoxville.com/kns/national/article/0,1406,KNS_350_2150676,00.htmlKeeping heavy tax burden on poor called immoral
By TOM SHARP, Associated Press
August 1, 2003
NASHVILLE - Tax systems that put an unfair burden on the poor are worse than bad policy, they are morally wrong, a law professor from the University of Alabama told Tennessee's Tax Structure Study Commission on Thursday. Susan Pace Hamill, a tax attorney, law professor and Methodist, became part of Alabama's running tax debate after she wrote a master's thesis for the Beeson Divinity School at Samford University titled "An Argument for Tax Reform Based on Judeo-Christian Ethics."
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She said that during a yearlong sabbatical at Beeson, which is affiliated with the Baptist church, she went through the Bible with evangelical scholars to identify the major points where justice is addressed and arrived at "two ironclad moral concepts."
"Regressively taxing the poor is oppression. It's bad tax policy, it's bad economic policy, it's stupidity and it's morally wrong," she said. "If the poor kids have no chance, the moral value of your community is money and power. It's mammon. And as the Old Testament tells us, that community will eventually devour itself."
"You cannot oppress the least of these, the poorest and most vulnerable," she said. "And if your community reflects godly moral values, the least of these must have at least a minimum shot to better themselves."
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"Regressively taxing the poor is oppression. It's bad tax policy, it's bad economic policy, it's stupidity and it's morally wrong," she said. "If the poor kids have no chance, the moral value of your community is money and power. It's mammon. And as the Old Testament tells us, that community will eventually devour itself."
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