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Anti-war
protesting the U.S.-led war in New York's Times Square
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WASHINGTON,
April 17 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Thousands of
Americans reported their taxable income to the U.S. government by the
deadline Tuesday, April 15. But they included no payment to war taxes.
"I
can't in good conscience feel that I can take resources that are given
to my family to live on and share and give them to other people who
will use them to kill people," Bill Ramsey, a human rights
activist in St. Louis, Missour, told Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Ramsey,
who estimated that between 4,000 and 6,000 U.S. citizens are
redirecting their tax dollars this year -- from a peak of some 20,000
during the Vietnam War -- said in his letter to the IRS that he was
refusing to pay "because of the horrific, brutal war the U.S. has
been waging against Iraq."
The
letter adds: "Because of my fundamental opposition to killing, I
cannot willingly pay for the military. Not only do I find the killing
of people ... morally repugnant, I do not believe such acts protect me
or solve problems, whether they be international or domestic."
Ramsey
has refused to pay federal income taxes since the 1972 "Christmas
bombing" of Haiphong and Hanoi killed more than 1,500 Vietnamese
civilians.
"People
have given me money to be active on human rights issues," he
reasons. "I don't have the right to turn that money around and
give it to the Pentagon."
Instead,
he redirected 1,700 of his tax dollars to the cause of human rights
this year.
Retired
schoolteacher Chloe Giampaolo was outside the offices of the Internal
Revenue Service (IRS) on Tuesday as a small group of war resisters
protested the use of tax dollars to pay for past, present and future
wars.
"I
won't stand by and do nothing," said Giampaolo, whose tax bill
this year amounted to 800 dollars. "We need leaders. We don't
need maniacs, and that's what we have right now."
The
65-year-old pensioner said she is willing to go to jail for her stand
against war.
However,
few war tax resisters -- including many who have refused to pay their
taxes for decades -- wind up behind bars.
"The
IRS has generally shown little interest in prosecuting war tax
resisters," a Washington group's leaflet explains.
"Prosecutions, when they do occur, tend to generate sympathy and
support for resisters."
Ed
Hedeman, author of the recently published "War Tax Resistance, A
Guide to Withholding Your Support from the Military," said he has
been resisting paying war tax for 32 years.
He
said figures for this form of civil disobedience were difficult to
obtain because the IRS "don't want to give credence to the
movement."
IRS
spokesman Bruce Friedland told AFP: "We don't keep such
statistics."