Paul Sheldon (2013)

| Letters

For decades I have refused to pay a modest amount of my federal income taxes because about half of that money goes to paying the costs of war. The human costs are incomparably greater. The IRS may get the money eventually, but I live better knowing that I have not simply co-operated with a violent system that I believe is morally evil. The IRS calls the collection procedure a voluntary system (we are responsible to fill out the forms ourselves; no one holds a gun to our head when we put the check in the mail), and I chose not to volunteer. I include the following letter with my taxes.

April 10, 2013

To the Internal Revenue Service:

I support my country in all its peaceful endeavors, but for reasons of conscience and religious faith I do not support my country in its preparation for war and in war making. I am deeply troubled by the fact that about half of the federal income tax that I owe the government is budgeted for military-related expenditures. My payment of this tax enables my country to buy the tools and manpower to kill my fellow man. I am working for passage of the Religious Freedom Peace Tax Fund bill that would enable pacifists to pay their full taxes without paying toward war.

As a Quaker and a pacifist and a parent, I have considered my personal responsibility to God and my country and my family. I am conscientiously unable to support any war, and the current wars are certainly no exception. For these reasons, the enclosed check is $25.00 less than the amount we owe the government, as best I have been able to calculate, on line 76 of our Form 1040. Instead, a check for this amount has been sent to UNICEF for the support of needy children around the world.

Paul and Fran Sheldon

P.S. Phone tax resistance is still alive and well on the local (not inter-state) portion of our phone bill. I resist there also and have redirected more than $1000 without ever being collected on or had phone service interruption (although I’ve talked to a lot of people at times, and that is perhaps the most important part of the witness).