Doug
Casey on Tax Day
Interviewed
by Louis James, Editor, International
Speculator
Recently
by Doug Casey:
The US Constitution
L:
Doug, the Taxman
cometh, at least for most US citizens who file their annual tax
papers on April 15. We get a lot of letters from readers who know
about your international lifestyle and wonder about the tax advantages
they assume it confers. Is this something you care to talk about?
Doug:
Yes; something wicked this way comes, indeed. But first, I have
to say that as much as I can understand the guy who flew his airplane
into an IRS building, as
we once discussed, I do not encourage anyone to break the law.
That's not for ethical
reasons – far from it – but strictly on practical grounds. The
Taxman can and will come for you, no matter how great or small the
amount of tax he expects to extract from you. The IRS can impound
your assets, take your computers, freeze your accounts, and make
life just about impossible for you, while you struggle to defend
yourself against their claims and keep the rest of your life going.
The number of IRS
horror stories is beyond counting. As the state goes deeper
into insolvency, its enforcement of tax laws will necessarily become
more draconian. So you absolutely don't want to become a target.
L:
So… just bow down and lick the boots of our masters?
Doug:
Of course not. People can and should do everything they can to pay
as little in taxes as possible. This is an ethical imperative; we
must starve the beast. It could even be seen as a patriotic duty
– if one believes in such things – to deny revenue to the state
any way possible, short of endangering yourself. Starving the beast
may be the only way to force it back into its cage – we certainly
can't count on politicians to make the right choices – they're minions
of the state. They inevitably act to make it bigger and more powerful.
It's sad to see well-intentioned people supporting someone like
Mitt Romney because they naïvely think he'll reduce the size of
the state and its taxes. The man has absolutely no ethical center;
he'll just try to change the government to suit his whims.
L:
Can you expand on the ethical imperative aspect?
Doug:
Yes. The first thing is to get a grip on who owns the moral high
ground. The state, the media, teachers, pundits, corporations –
the entire establishment, really – all emphasize the moral correctness
of paying taxes. They call someone who doesn't do so a "tax cheat."
As usual, they have things upside down.
Let's start
with a definition of "theft," something I hold is immoral and destructive.
Theft is to take someone's property against his will, i.e., by force
or fraud. There isn't a clause in the definition that says, "unless
the king or the state takes the property; then it's no longer theft."
You have a right to defend yourself from theft, regardless of who
the thief is or why he is stealing.
It's much as
if a mugger grabs you on the street. You have no moral obligation
to give him your money. On the contrary, you have a moral obligation
to deny him that money. Does it matter if the thief says he's going
to use it to feed himself? No. Does it matter if he says he's going
to feed a starving person he knows? No. Does it matter if he's talked
to other people in the neighborhood, and 51% of them think he should
rob you to feed the starving guy? No. Does it matter if the thief
sets himself up as the government? No. Now of course, this gets
us into a discussion of the nature of government
as an institution, which we've talked about before.
But my point
here is that you can't give the tax authorities the moral high ground.
That's important because decent people want to do the morally right
thing. This is why sociopaths try to convince people that the wrong
thing is the right thing.
If an armed
mugger or a gang of muggers wanted my wallet on the street, would
I give it to them? Yes, most likely, because I can't stop them from
taking it, and I don't want them to kill me. But do they have a
right to it? No. And every taxpayer should keep that analogy at
the top of his mind.
L:
I also believe that the initiation
of the use of force (or fraud, which is a sort of indirect, disguised,
form of force) is unethical. It doesn't matter what the reason
for it might be nor how many people might approve of the action.
But some people claim that taxation is really voluntary – the price
one pays for living in society… and if I'm not mistaken, the US
government says the federal income tax is voluntary.
Doug:
[Snorts] That is a widely promoted lie. It's propaganda to help
statists claim the moral high ground, confuse the argument, and
intimidate people who aren't critical thinkers. Just try not volunteering
to pay it and see what happens. Taxation is force alloyed with fraud
– a nasty combination. It's theft, pure and simple. Most people
basically admit this when they call taxation a "necessary evil,"
somehow mentally evading confrontation with the fact that they are
giving sanction to evil. But I question whether there can be such
a thing as a "necessary evil." Can anything evil really be necessary?
Can anything necessary really be evil?
Entirely apart
from that, if people really wanted anything the state uses its taxes
for, they would, should, and could pay for it in the marketplace.
Services the state now provides would be offered by entrepreneurs
making a profit. I understand, and am somewhat sympathetic, to the
argument that a "night-watchman" state is acceptable; but since
the state always has a monopoly of force, it inevitably grows like
a cancer, to the extent that the parasite overwhelms and kills the
host. That's where we are today.
I think a spade
should be called a spade, theft should be recognized for what it
is, and evil should be opposed, regardless of the excuses and justifications
given for it. Ends do not justify means – and evil means lead to
evil ends, as we see in the bloated, corrupt, dangerous governments
we have all over the world.
L:
That runs counter to the conventional wisdom, Doug. Evil or not,
most people think taxation is part of the natural order of things,
like rain or day and night. Death and taxes are seen as the two
inevitable things in life, and you are a silly idealist – if not
a dangerous madman – if you believe otherwise.
Doug:
That saying about death and taxes is both evil and stupid; it's
a soul-destroying and mind-destroying perversion of reality. It's
evil, because it makes people reflexively accept the worst things
in the world as permanent and inevitable. As for death, technology
is actively advancing to vanquish it. Who knows how far medicine,
biotech, and nanotech can delay the onset of death? And taxes are,
at best, an artifact of a primitive feudal world; they're actually
no longer necessary in an advanced, free-market civilization.
People also
once thought the world was flat, that bathing was unhealthy, and
that there was such a thing as the divine right of kings. Many things
"everyone knows" just aren't so, and this is one of those. A government
– for those "practical" people who think they need one – that stuck
to the basic core functions of police and courts to defend people
against force and fraud and a military to defend against invasion,
would cost a tiny, tiny fraction of what today's government costs,
and that could be funded in any number of ways that essentially
boil down to charging for services.
As it is now,
the average US taxpayer probably works half of the year just to
pay direct and indirect taxes. That doesn't even count the cost
of businesses destroyed by regulation and lives lost to slow approval
of new treatments by regulators, or a million other ways governments
burden, obstruct, and harass people.
L:
I just looked, and Tax
Freedom Day this year is April 17.
Doug:
That means that all the work the average guy does until April 17
goes to pay for the government that failed to protect him on September
11, 2001, failed to protect him from the crash of 2008, and continues
failing him every day. We pay for an organization bent on doing
not just the wrong things, but the exact opposite of the right things
in economics, foreign policy, and everything else we've talked about
in all our conversations. It's rather perverse that Emancipation
Day – the day the first slaves in the US were freed in the District
of Columbia in 1862 – is April 16. But what is a slave? He's someone
who is deprived by force of the fruits of his labor. Sound familiar?
I disapprove of slavery, in any form – including its current form.
However, Tax
Freedom Day is an incomplete way of looking at things. What's
the cost to business forced to install equipment to meet government
regulations? That's not paid as a tax, but it's a serious burden.
There's something called Cost
of Government Day that's a somewhat more inclusive estimate
of the burden the state imposes on the average guy…
L:
I just looked for that too and don't see that a date for 2012 has
been announced yet; but Cost of Government Day for 2011 was August
12. According to that estimate, the average US taxpayer slaved away
for about two-thirds of the year to pay for the state and got to
keep only a third of the fruit of his labor for his own benefit
and improvement.
Doug:
That may be a more accurate way of looking at the burden of government
the average guy has to bear, but it still doesn't even begin to
address what economists call "opportunity
cost." Basically, I don't just look at what the state we have
costs us in cash, but in terms of the innovation and growth we don't
have because of government policies, laws, and regulations. This
covers everything from new medicines to all sorts of new technologies
to different forms of social and business organizations to the cleaner
intellectual atmosphere I think we'd have without government propaganda
machines cluttering it up.
I don't believe
in utopia, but I do believe our world could be far freer, healthier,
and happier than it is today – without any divine intervention,
magic, or changes in the laws of physics. Just a different path,
every bit as possible as the one we've taken to where we are today.
L:
As in the alternative reality L. Neil Smith wrote about in his book
The
Probability Broach?
Doug:
At least as far as the humans in that story go, yes, it's a good
illustration of how much more advanced the world might be, based
on a different turn of events.
Back in this
world, I think that without any major differences in technological
development and without assuming that people would spontaneously
become angels, the average standard of living worldwide would be
much higher if… Well, there are lots of turning points, some of
which we've discussed. Just in the 20th century, things
would be very different if America had stayed out of WWI, or had
not ratified the 16th Amendment to the Constitution,
or had not elected FDR.
L:
Okay, but those things did happen, and we live in the world we have
today – the one you call a prison planet. How should people try
to do what's right in such a world without ending up in jail?
Doug:
First, it's important to think about what's actually possible, because
people will not even try to reach for what they are sure is impossible.
The world needs idealists to challenge us all to aim higher… including
idealists willing to go to jail for what they believe in, like Thoreau.
But even he said that while he encouraged all people to disobey
unjust laws, he wouldn't ask those who support families to get themselves
locked up and leave their families destitute.
So my take
is as we started out saying: It is both ethically and practically
imperative to starve the beast. The less cooperation of any sort
we give the state – but especially the less money we give it – the
less mischief it can get into. We're unlikely to get politicians
to vote for getting the state off our backs, out of our pocketbooks,
out of our bedrooms, and out of other people's countries as a matter
of principle, but we could see the state get out of places it doesn't
belong simply for lack of funds. And if everybody treated minions
of the state with the contempt they deserve, most of them would
quit and be forced to find productive work. As Gandhi showed us,
civil
disobedience can not only be an ethical choice, but a very powerful
force for change.
L:
Any specific advice?
Doug:
Get a good accountant, take every deduction you can, and look for
ways to legally reduce your tax burden. For example, our readers
should know that charitable contributions in the US get deducted
after the alternative minimum tax wipes out your
other deductions. That means that a substantial fraction of every
dollar you give a registered 501(c)(3) nonprofit does not
go to the federal government.
Now, as you
know, I
don't believe in charity, at least not in the institutional
sense, but wasting money on charities is far, far better than giving
it to the government to use bombing innocents and creating enemies
for generations to come. And if that charity happens to be something
like the Institute
for Justice, the Fully
Informed Jury Association, or any of the other libertarian think
tanks dedicated to reducing the size and scope of government, you
get to help fight the beast and starve it at the same time.
L:
I do my economics
and entrepreneurship camps in Eastern Europe under the auspices
of the International
Society for Individual Liberty – of which I should disclose
that I am a director. I have to admit that it pleases me greatly
to see funds that would have gone into making bombs to drop on foreigners
and hiring more goons in uniform to oppress people at home redirected
to something I consider constructive.
But what about
the international diversification question: can that help reduce
your tax burden back home?
Doug:
It's different for different countries, and each individual should
consult a tax specialist with the details of his or her own case,
or proposed case. However, there is an exclusion
for Americans who live abroad for a whole tax year – it was
around $100,000 the last I looked. So there are very good tax reasons
for Americans to live abroad. There are even better reasons for
Canadians, Europeans, and almost everyone else to leave their native
country – many can live 100% tax-free. I guess it's just a sad testimony
to the medieval-serf mentality that most people suffer from that
few people take advantage of this. They're born someplace, and they
stay rooted there, like a plant. Oh well, everybody basically makes
his own bed, reaps what he sows, and gets what he deserves…
However, as
appealing as the "permanent
tourist" idea is, I recommend international
living first and foremost as a way to protect your assets. As
we've discussed before, real estate in foreign countries cannot
be repatriated or confiscated by the government that thinks of you
as its milk cow. There is nothing illegal or nefarious about buying
real estate abroad, and it could come in very handy if things get
really chaotic back home, wherever that happens to be.
[Editor's note:
There's nothing wrong with internationalizing your assets either;
learn
the five highly effective ways to do it.]
L:
Okay… any investment implications to discuss?
Doug:
Sure, but nothing new to our readers. Starving the state-beast is
the right thing to do, ethically and practically, but I believe
the state's days are numbered anyway. The thing to be aware of is
that the beast won't go quietly, and in its death throes it can
do a lot of harm. Still, like Nietzsche said, "That which is about
to fall deserves to be pushed."
In the meantime,
much higher taxes are on the way. More and more currency controls
are coming. You may have heard that the US is contemplating a law
denying issue or canceling the passport of anyone accused of owing
more than $50,000 in taxes. I expect the transformation of what
was once America into a police state to continue, and I expect other
"developed" nations – especially Europe, Canada, and Australia –
to follow suit. And this will happen whether or not the global economy
exits the eye of the storm as I expect it to.
So you want
to rig for stormy weather and invest for continuing crisis. Own
gold for prudence, speculate on related stocks and others that may
benefit from government profligacy, and as we've just been saying,
diversify your assets and personal living arrangements internationally.
The day is
coming when your local government may stop seeing you as a milk
cow and start seeing you as a beef cow, and you want to have options
before that day.
L:
The Casey mantra. Any chance you're wrong?
Doug:
Anything's possible. But we just asked ourselves that question in
our conversation
on the illusion of recovery, and I just don't see a way out
for the old economic order.
L:
Okay, Doug. I hope our readers don't tune us out for sounding like
a broken record – I believe it's vital that they do take action,
preparing for more volatility in the markets ahead. And hedging
one's bets against social chaos may sound a bit extreme, but as
an option, it sure is something that can help one sleep better at
night.
Doug:
I didn't formulate the rules for this crazy game; I'm just trying
to play it competently.
L:
Right then. Until next week.
Doug:
Next time.
April
14, 2012
Doug
Casey (send him mail)
is
a best-selling author and chairman of Casey
Research, LLC., publishers of Casey’s
International Speculator.
Copyright
© 2012 Casey
and Associates
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