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Ben Stein How Not to Ruin Your Life

Ben Stein, How Not to Ruin Your Life

Big Brother and Your Taxes

by Ben Stein

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Posted on Monday, April 20, 2009, 12:00AM
Here is a scary story for you.

Recently a friend of mine, who lives in a city in Northern California, called me, extremely upset. She said she had just received a letter from the California Franchise Tax Board, the ruthless entity that collects taxes in sunny California.

The letter referenced her 2006 taxes, asking her how she had the means to buy a certain very expensive car she owns. She was asked to document how she had the money for it and why they saw no sign of that income on her 2006 return.

The fact is that the woman in question was in a serious car accident in late 2005. Her prior car was totaled. So she got a lump sum insurance payment of about $30,000. Rather imprudently, she used that money as the down payment on an extremely pricey car -- the sort of car she really does not have enough income to afford.

That's her problem, and she will deal with it.

The scary part is that the California Franchise Tax Board knew what kind of car she bought and how much she paid for it, and they could and did compare those numbers with her earlier years' income.

The Servant Becomes the Master

This shows that information gathering by taxing authorities has gone way past where it should be. The whole incident reminded me of the beginning of ‘Terminator', when we learn that, at a certain stage, machines become self-conscious and have the will to take over the earth. The servant becomes the master. And since the master is a machine, it has no feelings other than the will to control.

If the taxing authority knows what kind of car a taxpayer has and how much it cost to buy, what's next? Can the state match up our credit card purchases with our social security numbers and then keep a total of how much we have spent in 2009? Can the IRS or the Franchise Tax Board then have a program that figures that if we spent X, especially on Y and Z items, then we must have had an income of A? Can it then send us a letter demanding to know why we did not pay tax on amount A?

More frightening, the taxing authority can slap liens on taxpayers, and sometimes the taxpayers don't learn about it until later. Can the IRS or the state authority compute what their machines "think" we owe, and then simply debit that amount from our bank or brokerage accounts? If there is not enough there to pay what they figure we owe, can they put liens on our homes and garnish our wages?

If the IRS really gets rolling, can they get an instantaneous, automated look at our checking accounts? Can they compute what the machines think we owe by the checks plus the credit cards, and then attach our wages or our bank accounts until we pay?

Soulless Machines

Our government, to some people, appears to be a fair-minded, careful body. And many bureaucrats do fit that description, although many do not. But what happens when soulless machines take over the tasks of tax gathering?

Then we humans have to gather our records and try to fight back as well as we can. How long until we go into an audit and don't even talk to a human being but instead have a machine scan our documents and then instantaneously give us an answer?

The answer, of course, will always be "pay up."

At present, only the top echelons of wage earners pay any meaningful amount of tax. But once the collection process is fully computerized, what is to stop the IRS or the states from collecting at least a few ounces of flesh from everyone?

The future liabilities of the government -- thanks to wild overspending by both the Democrats and Republicans -- are almost incomprehensibly large. The needs of the states are critical right now. What is to stop the politicians from making machines our oppressors to squeeze out every dime they can from us?

A Plea for Privacy

And what about some minimal amount of privacy? I am happy to pay my taxes. I like the fact that some of what I pay goes to the military and police and firefighters. But I don't want the government to know all the details of my life, which is what they are clearly on the way to knowing.

For years now, I have been hearing that we need a very large sales tax instead of an income tax, and I have pooh-poohed the idea as being too regressive. But now that I see where the income tax system is going, I am eager for a fresh look at a national sales tax, which would stop the government from prying into our lives.

Taxes are a basic part of life, and we all have to pay our fair share. But Big Brother is a lot closer than we think, via the tax system, and I don't like that one bit.

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217 Comments

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  • Zac - Monday, July 27, 2009, 6:37PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 4/5

    That is unfortunate that they now can question your larger purchases like that. Although, if she itemizes, she should have taken the sales tax deduction for the purchase of the car. If she didn't, then that might be a good way to get back at them by amending her return and getting a refund plus interest on the tax she should have saved. 1040fix.com

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Friday, June 19, 2009, 4:00PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    This may sound crazy but I think Ben is dead wrong. I hate paying my taxes as much as the next guy...but what I hate more is seeing others not paying their share...I have lots of self employed friends who brag about not reporting their full income...most of us who earn wages can't do so...It seems to me a fair system means that we all pay what we owe...so until we get rid of the income tax or the self employed get religion let the government look at spending patterns...they have no other choice...unless Ben think's it OK for some classes of citizens to cheat where the rest of us can't...By the way the privacy argument he makes is specious...just do a search on your name on Lexus-Nexus and you wil be really scared...the private sector already has a file on each of us...

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Friday, May 8, 2009, 8:33AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    One has to ask the "don't complain about taxes" person if he/she is willing to send in extra because there is not enough. ABSOLUTELY complain about taxes that go towards vote buying rather then absolute needs that private industry will/can not take care of. Volunteer fire departments to fantastic jobs. Recently, where I live, the County took over ALL volunteer fire departments - by force - against a referendum by the voters, because the County wants a larger empire to rule. Now we have the inefficient County employing more people to monitor and control what was functioning fantastically before they came in. Now we have HIGHER taxes due to the outrageous appetite of the government. TAXES ARE TOO HIGH.

  • MelT - Monday, May 4, 2009, 6:30PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 4/5

    So many great thoughts and statements to this article. We all know taxes are important. Everyone should pay to maintain and improve shared social structures such as our police and firefighters and our servicemen. All Americans should be happy to pay to maintain our vast systems of transporation and the roadways the use. However, American's don't have to continue paying into the current system if they are willing to make their voices heard and take action for a tax revolution. Not reform...no no, revolution. For years a growing grassroots movement has been gaining momentum to change they way we are taxed. It's called The Fair Tax. The idea is to tax everyone at the same level. The rich, the poor, the middle class. Just because you make a lot of money doesn't mean you should carry everyone else. Just because you're poor doesn't mean you deserve a hand out or support. The Fair Tax needs fine tunning; however, this new system is leaps and bounds ahead of our aged and failing system. If any American truly wants our tax system to improve, to be "fair", do something. Contact your state representatives, get involved locally. Most importantly, don't complain without offering a solution.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Monday, May 4, 2009, 1:57PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    Liberals: 2 2=5 Men with balls (i.e. conservatives): There! Are! Four! Lights!!!!!!!!

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