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It's a way to pump up the Republican base--nothing more.
I present this proposal for your consideration.
One of the Republicans' favorite drumbeats is "the tax code is too complicated. Simplify!"
Please note that this drumset is only played by dedicated antitax crusaders like Grover Norquist, head of the National Taxpayers Union, and Republicans who are trying to win elections. It is never played by business leaders like the Waltons and Bob Nardelli.
Business leaders don't want tax simplification. Business leaders have spent too much money buying congressmen to want tax simplification to go through--because tax simplification will cost them more money.
Look at the two main tax-simplification proposals: Flat Tax (also called "Fair Tax") and National Sales Tax. Both of them eliminate deductions. Modern American business can't operate without being able to deduct things like cost of materials and cost of labor. They could reinvent themselves to be able to operate without deducting any of their expenses, but at the cost of massive job loss, massive reductions in reinvestment, massive changes in the American way of life.
Charities--especially churches--fear an America without deductions. One of my favorite stories is about some hospital who every year has a banquet for its biggest donors. At it, the very top donors are invited to make a few remarks. They let the top 20 up there, and most of them get up and thank God, thank their families, thank whoever. The most generous benefactor got up and thanked the Internal Revenue Service because "if charitable contributions weren't deductible none of us would be here tonight." The "regular people" like you and I are the backbone of any charity. A university might be grateful for the rich man who gives a one-time contribution of a million dollars, but they're dependent on the twenty thousand ordinary men who give twenty dollars a month. If your taxes go up quite a bit, as they will in any tax simplification scheme, many of those twenty-dollar checks will stop coming. I'm certain that Jerry Falwell prays every night that God protects the Internal Revenue Code in all its complex glory.
It's a great campaign platform plank: we're going to Simplify the Internal Revenue Code. Every year on April 15, the Republicans get a copy of Title 26 of the US Code, which is huge, and wheel it out in front of the press to show them how overlarge it is. They brought it in on a forklift once--and that makes some sense; if you bind Title 26 in nice leather covers and palletize it, it makes a three-foot-high pile of books. They put it on a flat cart and had a jockey push it in once. It's a fun stunt. But how much of Title 26 is applicable to normal non-rich, non-railroad-owning Americans? Oh, 'bout half an inch of it--the thickness of IRS Publication 17, "Your Federal Income Tax." This is, after "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas," "Barbarians at the Gate" and "Jane's Military Communications," my favorite book. Get a copy of it--you can download a PDF from the IRS--and you've got everything you'll ever need to do your own taxes. (Over in the Lounge there are frequent "your favorite book" threads. One of these days I'm going to put "IRS Publication 17" down. It is a great book and--the best part--it's free!)
Tax simplification, if it ever came into fruition, would kill the Republican Party once and for all. If in Year One you passed tax simplification, and the freepers saw their taxes go up by half in Year Two and saw their jobs disappear in Year Three, there'd be no way they could blame this on Clinton.
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