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Let me ask you a question: Do you think you pay enough taxes? Throughout
the year you paid federal taxes through withholding, including Social Security
payroll taxes. You also paid state income taxes, unless you're fortunate
enough to live in Texas or another state without an income tax. You paid local
property taxes. You paid local sales taxes every time you bought something,
and you paid numerous miscellaneous taxes such as vehicle license fees and
federal gas taxes. Like most people, you probably feel taxed to death by all
these city, county, state, and federal taxes. Well, hold on to your wallets,
because the United Nations now wants to impose a whole new level of global taxes
on us.
UN bureaucrats think rich nations like America ought to give more money to
poor nations- a lot more- simply because we're rich. Never mind the billions
of foreign aid tax dollars we send overseas every year; never mind the billions
donated to overseas charities by Americans, the most charitable people on earth.
The UN mindset blames the western world for poverty everywhere, assuming that
our relative wealth must have come at the expense of the third world. The poor
countries themselves are never deemed responsible for their own predicaments,
despite their often corrupt governments, lack of property rights, and hostility
toward wealth-producing capitalism. Somehow, it's always our fault. So
the UN holds conferences to talk about how we should pay to make things right,
and the idea of a UN tax naturally arises.
Understand that the UN views itself as the emerging global government, and
like all governments, it needs money to operate. The goal, which the UN readily
admits, is to impose a comprehensive set of global laws on all of us- laws
that supersede sovereign national governments. To do this, the UN needs a global
military, a global police force, international courts, offices around the globe,
and plenty of highly-paid international bureaucrats. All of this costs money.
Rest assured that the UN is absolutely serious about imposing a global tax.
In fact, it has been discussing a global currency tax for years. The "Tobin
tax," named after the Yale professor who proposed it, would be imposed on all
worldwide currency transactions. Such a tax could prove quite lucrative for
the UN.
The Tobin tax is not the only idea being considered. Some have suggested taxing
all airline travel or carbon emissions. The ultimate goal is an income tax,
which will be imposed after we've all swallowed the concept of UN taxing
authority.
Fortunately, the House of Representatives last week passed my language in the
2007 Foreign Operations bill that prohibits the Treasury from paying UN dues
if the organization attempts to implement or impose any kind of tax on US citizens.
But that only protects us for another year. Given the stated goals of the UN,
it would be foolish to believe the idea of a global tax will go away.
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Dr. Ron Paul
Project Freedom
Congressman Ron Paul of Texas enjoys a national reputation
as the premier advocate for liberty in politics today. Dr. Paul is the leading
spokesman in Washington for limited constitutional government, low taxes, free
markets, and a return to sound monetary policies based on commodity-backed
currency. He is known among both his colleagues in Congress and his constituents
for his consistent voting record in the House of Representatives: Dr. Paul
never votes for legislation unless the proposed measure is expressly authorized
by the Constitution. In the words of former Treasury Secretary William Simon,
Dr. Paul is the "one exception to the Gang of 535" on Capitol Hill.
Copyright © 2006-2008 Dr. Ron Paul
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