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LARGE PRINT EDITION! More at LargePrintLiberty.com. Frank Chodorov was an extraordinary thinker and writer, and hugely influential in the 1950s. This is his American classic that argues that the income tax, more than any other legislative change in American history, made it possible to violate individual rights that were at the core of the founding.He argues that income taxes are different from other forms because they deny the right of private property and presume government control over all things. The introduction is by former IRS commissioner J. Bracken Lee.
Frank Chodorov was an extraordinary thinker and writer, and hugely influential in the 1950s. This is his American classic that argues that the income tax, more than any other legislative change in American history, made it possible to violate individual rights that were at the core of the founding. He argues that income taxes are different from other forms because they deny the right of private property and presume government control over all things. The introduction is by former IRS commissioner J. Bracken Lee.
Bill McBride, Author of the short thought-provoking book, The ROOT of all EVIL, is a native of Northwestern Arkansas. Also known as William Eugene McBride, Bill has lived all over the nation and has visited 44 states of the 48 contiguous United States of America. Bill McBride moved to California in 2003 And has been a resident of San Jose since 2009. A professsing Christian, Bill McBride slams religion as a contributor to much of the hatred in our modern world. McBride is a former Newspaper Reporter for small town newspapers in Pea Ridge, Arkansas; Miami and Bartlesville, Oklahoma; Harrison, Arkansas; and Clovis, New Mexico. He was graduated from New Mexico Highlands University at Las Vegas, New Mexico in August of 1986 with a BA in Psychology and the Behavioral Sciences. Bill's first college was in 1968 and 1969 when he was a student at Point Lookout, Missouri - outside of Branson. He graduated high school in May of 1968 from the Pea Ridge, Arkansas High School. After getting the idea for his book, Examining The Root of all EVIL, in the Spring of 2020 (shortly before the Covid-19 Lockdown), Bill McBride began interviewing various strangers in San Jose with this question. "What do you think is the ROOT of all EVIL?" About 50 people were interviewed, and almost everyone replied with the word, "Money!" Few knew the exact Bible Verse in which the Bible Writer specifically said it is "the love of money [which is] the root of all Kinds of Evil."
How America was Tricked on Tax Policy explains how regular citizens were “tricked” by the outdated view of economists that much heavier taxation of labor rather than capital is economically justifiable. The truth is that workers pay their taxes while the rich pay very little. Based on reputable sources of information, including publications of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), official statistics data, and the publications in high-ranked journals, the book paves the way for a new policy-making process aimed to achieve more sustainable taxation and to increase the wellbeing of citizens as the main goal of any modern state policy. Dealing with critically important and underexplored topics in tax policy, the book challenges an enshrined dogma that is rarely challenged at the level of policy. In doing so, this book envisions policy changes that could be highly impactful in a new political administration. This book proposes that governments should look for not just corporate income tax rate reduction when announcing their tax reforms but should equally focus on the reduction of the overall tax burden on labor. The negative impact and high social cost of wage taxation is exemplified by the key areas of tax policy that are relevant for every wealthy state, such as taking due care of public health, investing in education and wellbeing of children, and supporting small business for the overall benefit to society. The book compellingly argues how tax policy could be improved by incorporating science and scientific methods.
Why do protesters sometimes take to the streets to demand lower taxes on the rich? In this urgently relevant study, sociologist Isaac William Martin examines how these protesters used tactics that they learned in movements of the poor and powerless-and sometimes won big.