As an example of the numerous tax resistance methods, below are some of the legal and illegal techniques used by war tax resisters:
Legal Avoidance A resister may lower their tax payments by using legal
tax avoidance techniques.
Paying under protest Some taxpayers pay their taxes, but include protest letters along with their tax forms. Others pay in a protesting form—for instance, by writing their cheque on a
toilet seat or a mock-up of a missile. Others pay in a way that creates inconvenience for the collector—for instance, by paying the entire amount in low-denomination coins. This last method is less effective in countries where small coins are
legal tender only in limited amounts, allowing the tax authority legally to reject such payments; for example in England and Wales, 1p coins are legal tender only in amounts up to 20p.
Reducing taxable income and consumption , started by
Thomas in 1981 and supported by tax resister
Ellen Thomas Other tax resisters change their lifestyles so that they owe less tax. For instance; to avoid
consumption taxes on alcohol, a resister might
home-brew beer; to avoid
excise taxes on gasoline, a resister might take up
cycling; to avoid income tax, a resister may reduce their income below the
tax threshold by embracing simple living or a
freegan lifestyle. For example, British citizens pay no income tax if their income is below the
personal allowance. In the US the equivalent tax-free annual income is the
standard deduction, though many deductions and credits allow people to earn much more than this and still avoid income tax. These individuals believe that their government is engaged in immoral, unethical or destructive activities such as war, and that paying taxes inevitably funds these activities. These methods differ from
tax evasion in that they stay within the tax laws, and they differ from tax avoidance in that the goal is to pay as little tax as possible rather than to keep as much post-tax income as possible.
Illegal Evasion A resister may decide to reduce their tax paid through illegal tax evasion. For instance, one way to evade income tax is to only work for
cash-in-hand, therefore circumventing
withholding tax.
Redirection Some tax resisters refuse to pay all or a portion of the taxes due but then make an equivalent donation to charity. In this way, they demonstrate that the intent of their resistance is not selfish and that they want to use a portion of their earnings to contribute to the common good. For instance,
Julia Butterfly Hill resisted about $150,000 in federal taxes, and donated that money to after school programs, arts and cultural programs, community gardens, programs for Native Americans, alternatives to incarceration, and environmental protection programs. She said: I actually take the money that the
IRS says goes to them and I give it to the places where our taxes
should be going. And in my letter to the IRS I said: "I'm not refusing to pay my taxes. I'm actually paying them but I'm paying them where they belong because you refuse to do so."
Refusing specific taxes Some resisters refuse to willingly pay only certain taxes, either because those taxes are especially noxious to them, or because they present a useful symbolic target, or because they are more easily resisted. For instance, in the United States, many tax resisters resist the
telephone federal excise tax. The tax was initiated to pay for the
Spanish–American War and has frequently been raised or extended by the government during times of war. This made it an attractive symbolic target as a "
war tax". Such refusal is relatively safe: because this tax is typically small, resistance very rarely triggers significant government retaliation. Phone companies will cooperate with such resisters by removing the excise tax from their phone bills and reporting their resistance to the government.
Refusing to pay The most dramatic and characteristic method of tax resistance is to refuse to pay a tax – either by quietly ignoring the tax bill or by openly declaring the refusal to pay. Some tax resisters resist only a portion of the taxes due. For instance, some war tax resisters refuse to pay a percentage of their taxes equivalent to the military percentage of the government's budget. ==See also==