JOSEPH N. BELL -- The Bell Curve
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I got 600 bucks from the feds last week. Given the state of journalism
these days, I don’t sneeze at 600 bucks. We have a lot of places to put
it. But it doesn’t feel right. Every time I look at that check, I think
of how many thousands of dollars the new tax law that provided my $600
will put in the pockets of the Texas oil pals of George W. Bush and Dick
Cheney. And of the pittance the hard-working men who do my yard will get.
And of the public programs that will suffer because their support money
is disappearing in a tax cut heavy on the high end.
The day I got my check, there was a front-page story in the Los
Angeles Times pointing out that because of this windfall for the rich,
government analysts now project a surplus so much smaller than expected
that the feds may have to draw on the Medicare trust fund to meet current
expenses and finance other critical programs. All because of that $600
check I got in the mail.
It has occurred to me that my wife and I could make some sort of
ironic statement by offering the money to Bush administration programs
that might be struggling because of the tax cut. Maybe to help pay Dick
Cheney’s light bill. Or to finance oil drilling in Central Park. Or to
design a massive bank of ice machines to protect the United States and
ensure that future generations die from poisoned air before global
warming gets us.
Or we could think even bigger. We might contribute to the development
of a test target for our anti-missile weapons that could be shot down
more easily -- in broad daylight and without decoys, of course -- and
thus justify a few more billions for a weapon that will be instantly
obsolete if it is ever made to work.
But this is all idle musing. Statements -- especially when they
involve money -- are unhappily only practical for the rich or the very
highly principled. To the less-than-rich, soft-in-the-head people like
me, there isn’t enough personal satisfaction in making statements to
compensate for the trip we have long wanted to take or the home repairs
we need to make or the appliance we need to replace -- which, of course,
the pols count on. And so we use the money and resent the administration
that laid this choice on us and the Democrats who supported it.
The thing that irritates me most is the smug, self-congratulatory
message printed on the bottom of the check that says: “Tax relief for
America’s workers.” This should amuse the people who do my yard --
providing they get a check. If the spin doctors who decided to use these
checks as a public-relations platform were even marginally honest, the
legend at the bottom would read something like: “Tax windfall for
America’s richest.”
Then I could have cashed it in a better frame of mind, knowing at
least I wasn’t buying into the baloney about “America’s workers.”
One of the funniest incidents to come out of the tax debate was a
rally called by the Republican leadership to support the Bush tax cut for
“America’s workers.” The rally organizers needed bodies as a backdrop for
TV coverage but found the only people planning to show up were the
Armani-suit types, which conveyed the wrong message.
So -- as reported in the New Republic -- they sent a memo to corporate
lobbyists that said, in part: “We do not need people in suits. If people
want to participate -- and we do need bodies -- they must be dressed
down, appear to be real worker types. We plan to have hard hats for
people to wear.”
Two Sundays ago, the Times Opinion section carried an article that
should be required reading in Washington. Among other things, it pointed
out that nearly a third of the adults requesting emergency food aid are
now working people with jobs. And the Economic Policy Institute estimates
that 29% of American families with young children don’t earn enough to
live at any acceptable level of comfort and security. These aren’t
indigent bums. They are hard-working people, many of whom pay income
taxes, and all of whom owe payroll taxes. Getting such low-earners off
the tax rolls, not fattening the income of the already rich, should be
the thrust of tax reform. Or to bring it closer to home, not the $600 I
received, either.
At least I know where the first $100 will go. My stepson, Erik, was
notified that he won’t get a rebate because we used him -- for the last
time -- as a dependent on our 2000 tax filing. So $100 seems the least we
can do. Erik earned $12,127 working six months last year and paid $1,394
back in income taxes. Next year, under the new law, he might, in addition
to his personal exemption, get an extra 20 or 30 bucks off his tax bill
-- enough to buy a tank of gas for the car he needs to get him to work.
Since the architects of the Bush tax cut believe in treating everyone
equally, Erik’s 30 bucks might well translate to $30,000 or even $300,000
for Americans whose tax base comes in a few million higher than Erik’s.
Fair is fair.
I’ve been thinking about appropriate things I might write across the
bottom of my estimated tax payment due next month. If the feds can do it
to my rebate check, I see no reason why I can’t send my own
public-relations message to the government. After dismissing clever
ripostes no one at IRS would understand, I came on the obvious answer.
I’m going to write on the bottom of my check: “Tax relief for America’s
workers.” And mean it.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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