Well, I’ve filed my federal and state tax returns. I now file this report on what it’s like to
be brow-beaten by Uncle Sam, who scowls more fiercely around this time of the
year. Last year I earned $12,000 less
than I did in 2010, yet the tax table tells me I owe the IRS just $780 less
than in the previous year. The “making
work pay” credit has been eliminated by our astute leaders, you see, and
they’re right; working hard IS pointless.
My $6,376 check to
the government, dated April 1st, 2012, will retroactively pay for some
long-forgotten Congressman’s ear-marked project approved in 1992. The bill for nearly half of everything the
federal government does TODAY will eventually go on my, and your, children’s
tab. The guy who, with his marginal
savings, is currently paying for all of Obama’s green initiatives is the
factory worker in China—the same worker making the solar panels which undercut
Solyndra’s products.
I feel my $6,376
check entitles me to ask a few questions about the government. Why, when it cannot run the postal service
competently, does the government think it can manage the health-care industry,
which is one-sixth of our economy?
The goal of the
Environmental Protection Agency, originally, was to keep us from having to
breathe foul air. Recently the agency
designated our very exhalations (carbon dioxide) as a pollutant, which means we—far
from breathing bad air—are now producing it.
The EPA has met the enemy, and he is us.
But the government isn’t always overly
ambitious. For instance, since it cannot
seal our southern border, or deal effectively with Iran, it resorts to campaigning
against bullying, steroids in baseball, and the use of incandescent lamps.
The government
sure is big, and my own world so, so small.
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