Pubdate: Wed, 10 Apr 2002 Source: Item, The (SC) Copyright: 2000 The Item Contact: http://www.theitem.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1105 Author: David Peek APRIL 15 SHOULD BE A DAY OF AMERICAN PRIDE There are lots of good ways our tax dollars are put to use. Paying taxes. Never has such a simple act enraged so many. But this year, I'm trying to be positive. I'm trying to identify some good things that my paying taxes helps to bring about. OK ... forget just the "good things." I'll focus on many of the not- so-good things our tax dollars help to create, too. In light of the Sept. 11 attack on America, most of us are grateful we've got a strong military to serve and protect us. Smart bombs, aircraft carriers and Marine privates cost money - lots of money. For sure, we've all heard about Defense Department abuses, $900 toilet seats, $500 hammers and the like, but it's times like these that Apache helicopters and F-16 mechanics are worth their weight in gold. The recovery effort at Ground Zero in New York City is also a good thing. The absolute devastation that occurred that day in lower Manhattan is impossible to describe, but it has to be fixed. In honor of those who died, to honor the spirit of America, to show our enemies that we might bend but we will never break, that giant scar in everyone's heart needs to be healed. It won't happen without an influx of federal assistance, either. In this instance, our tax dollars are being well spent. There are lots of other good examples, too. Veterans benefits, dams and levees for flood control, the Bureau of Mines, alternative sources of energy, the Centers for Disease Control, financial assistance to third world countries, the FBI, secondary education, the Eisenhower Interstate Highway system, the U.S. Coast Guard, to name just a few. But all too often, most especially around April 15, we forget the pluses our society brings to our lives, while we concentrate on the negative, the inane, the absurd. Take the U.S. Congress, for instance. If you remember your 10th-grade civics lesson, you'll recall there are three branches of government: the executive, the judicial and the legislative. The executive branch is the president, the White House, the Cabinet and all that follows on. The judicial branch is the court system, from the U.S. Supreme Court on down. And the legislative branch is the Senate and the House of Representatives. Without reservation, the blackest of financial black holes, the darkest den of dismal dollar-wise depravity is still the U.S. Congress. What these folks do, all in the name of the American people, while at the same time being paid by the American people, borders on the criminal. If James Madison and Thomas Jefferson could only see us now. Our elected representatives, our so-called citizen legislators who travel to Washington to serve the greater good, do less in 180 days than a lazy house cat does in 24 hours. Their job is to protect the little guy - the one who has no voice, the one who can't protect himself. Truth is, if they aren't millionaires when they step foot on the bank of the Potomac, they most surely are when they leave. In salary, in insurance and retirement benefits, for serving their constituents only a few short years, they can live out their lives in relative ease. The majority of the 535 men and women who inhabit the marble walls of Capitol Hill are there for one simple reason. To get re-elected. Or, for some, to get elected to an even higher office. In so doing, they've never met a camera they didn't like. Under the guise of doing the people's business, they preen and posture for the folks back home. Some even stay up late and make long speeches before an empty House Chamber while the cameras of C-Span continue to roll. Partisanship reigns. Republicans hate Democrats. Democrats hate Republicans. Spending tax dollars on certain members of Congress is no different than spending tax dollars on toilet water. They end up being flushed down the drain. The executive branch isn't without its losers, either. The so-called war on drugs is an absolute joke. More drugs, harder drugs, more exotic drugs are on the streets and in the schools of America than ever before. If taxpayers demanded an accounting of the money spent on the drug war and a list of the successes it's brought forth, they would be astounded. The same goes for closing our borders to illegal immigrants. Cheap labor is too big a business in this country to think the flow of nighttime border crossings from Mexico will be stopped. Again, it's good money - our money - being thrown after bad. The Central Intelligence Agency needs revamping. We're paying way too much for round-the-clock protection of former presidents and their extended families. Contractor ripoffs of the defense establishment continue. Our national parks are understaffed and our highways and bridges are crumbling. But the Washington establishment continues to grow. I've intentionally avoided the trap of discussing double taxation, involuntary taxation, hidden taxation and disparate taxation. Besides, Boston Harbor doesn't need any more pollution, even though tea leaves are biodegradable. Sure, wealthy Americans pay the most taxes. Regardless of your tax bracket, though, if you're in the 15 percent range or the sky high 38.6 category, to see tax dollars continually squandered on foolhardy promises is idiotic. April 15 should be a day like any other day, a day we're proud to be Americans. A lot of folks make a habit of complaining about the "Infernal" Revenue Service, too. Truth be known, it's not the IRS, it's not a handful of self-centered politicians and bureaucrats, it's us. Until we once more get involved, until we make our elected officials once more accountable, until we take back our government, we'll get what we deserve. Meantime, all the huffing and puffing, all the finger-pointing and chest thumping, won't change a darn thing. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart