The
Depardieu Revolution
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: Why
the War Party Fears Hagel
When Socialist
President Francois Hollande took office, he swiftly made good on
his pledge to raise the top tax rate on Frenchmen who earn a million
euros a year – to 75 percent.
The regime
would now confiscate three of four dollars that the most successful
Frenchmen earned. Paris also imposes a wealth tax on assets worth
more than $1.7 million.
This broke
it for Gerard Depardieu, the famed actor and bon vivant who has
performed in scores of films in such roles as Jean Valjean in Les
Miserables and Cyrano de Bergerac.
Depardieu put
his Paris mansion up for sale, crossed the border into the Belgian
village of Nechin, gave up his French passport and is renouncing
his French citizenship. A tiny community of French already reside
in Nechin, a kilometer beyond the reach of Hollande's tax police.
Depardieu says
that this past year 85 percent of all he earned went for taxes.
Over a 45-year career, he contends, almost $200 million in income
has been taxed away by the French government.
"I don't like
the rich," Hollande has said.
The sentiment
is reciprocated. One French radio station claims that 5,000 French
citizens have fled since he took office.
Hollande's
regime, writes Edward Cody of The Washington Post, has all
but declared Depardieu a traitor. Labor Minister Michel Sapin calls
him an example of "personal degradation." Culture Minister Aurelie
Filippetti charges him with "deserting the battlefield in a war
against the economic crisis."
"When someone
loves France, he should serve," says Hollande, calling Depardieu
"pathetic" and "unpatriotic."
Which raises
a question for Americans. For our revolution was born of a tax rebellion
against the Stamp Act, the Townshend duties and the tea tax that
led to the Boston Tea Party.
Purpose of
these taxes: Have the colonies pay a fair share of the cost of the
French and Indian War, in which British soldiers had driven the
enemies of the colonies out of the Ohio Valley.
But when farmers
in Pennsylvania rebelled against a whiskey tax to defray the cost
of our Revolutionary War, President Washington marched out with
13,000 militia to crush that tax rebellion.
While the socialist
left has come down hardest on Depardieu, he is well within a tradition
of the cultural left.
As The Associated
Press' Thomas Addison reports, when the British top tax rate was
95 percent in the 1960s, the Beatles' George Harrison wrote "Taxman"
with the lyrics, "There's one for you, 19 for me."
In 2005, Beatles'
drummer Ringo Starr moved to Monaco, where the income tax rate is
zero.
Sean Connery,
the first "James Bond," departed Britain in the 1960s for Spain
and the Bahamas, writes Addison, "another spot with zero income
tax." In the 1970s, his successor as 007, Roger Moore, also chose
tax exile in Monaco. In those years of confiscatory tax rates in
England, the Rolling Stones relocated to Southern France.
What does this
teach us?
That socialism,
the forced redistribution of income and wealth from those who produce
it to those who do not, eventually forces a man to choose between
himself and his family – and his government.
Socialism creates
and exacerbates a conflict in loyalties. A regime that takes three
of every four dollars a man earns is an enemy of what that man works
to accomplish for himself and his family.
Mitt Romney
was castigated for keeping bank accounts in the Caymans, Bermuda
and Switzerland. Yet countless U.S. companies leave profits abroad
to evade U.S. taxes.
Californians
flee to Nevada, Arizona, Idaho and Colorado to escape Golden State
taxes. Are they disloyal to their home state, or are they doing
what is right by their families, their first responsibility?
With federal
income taxes on America's most successful rising today to almost
40 percent, New York City residents will also pay a top rate of
12 percent to the state and city plus a 9 percent sales tax on their
purchases, plus payroll taxes for Medicare and Social Security,
plus property taxes, auto taxes, gas taxes and cigarette taxes.
For many successful
Americans, over half of all they earn is now taken by government.
And reading The New York Times' year-end editorial, these
may soon be seen as the good old days.
The
Times urges Obama to consider sweeping new taxes to "reduce
income inequality." Among the revenue raisers for which it urges
consideration: Almost tripling the capital tax rate to 40 percent,
capping deductions for high earners, restoring the estate tax to
confiscatory levels, higher tax rates or surcharges on multimillion-dollar
incomes and raising the corporate tax rate – already the highest
in the world.
"All that would
be only a start," says the Times. A carbon tax, a value-added
tax, a financial transactions tax should all be looked at.
Can a man love
his country and hate its government? Of course. Ask Alexander Solzhenitsyn.
Ask the patriots of '76.
This un-American
and egalitarian fanaticism rearing its head today may one day force
just such a question upon American patriots.
January
2, 2013
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. His latest book is Suicide
of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025? See his
website.
Copyright
© 2013 Creators Syndicate
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