HON. RON PAUL
OF TEXAS
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Wednesday, February 7, 2007
2007 Ron Paul 24:1
Mr. PAUL. Madam Speaker, I am pleased to introduce the Liberty Amendment, which repeals
the 16th Amendment, thus paving the
way for real change in the way government
collects and spends the peoples hard-earned
money. The Liberty Amendment also explicitly
forbids the federal government from performing
any action not explicitly authorized by
the United States Constitution.
2007 Ron Paul 24:2
The 16th Amendment gives the federal government a direct claim on the lives of American
citizens by enabling Congress to levy a
direct income tax on individuals. Until the passage
of the 16th amendment, the Supreme
Court had consistently held that Congress had
no power to impose an income tax.
2007 Ron Paul 24:3
Income taxes are responsible for the transformation of the federal government from one
of limited powers into a vast leviathan whose
tentacles reach into almost every aspect of
American life. Thanks to the income tax, today
the federal government routinely invades our
privacy, and penalizes our every endeavor.
2007 Ron Paul 24:4
The Founding Fathers realized that the power to tax is the power to destroy, which
is why they did not give the federal government
the power to impose an income tax.
Needless to say, the Founders would be horrified
to know that Americans today give more
than a third of their income to the federal government.
2007 Ron Paul 24:5
Income taxes not only diminish liberty, they retard economic growth by discouraging work
and production. Our current tax system also
forces Americans to waste valuable time and
money on complacence with an ever-more
complex tax code. The increased interest in
flat-tax and national sales tax proposals, as
well as the increasing number of small businesses
that questioning the Internal Revenue
Services (IRS) withholding system provides
further proof that America is tired of the labyrinthine
tax code. Americans are also increasingly
fed up with an IRS that continues to
ride roughshod over their civil liberties, despite
recent pro-taxpayer reforms.
2007 Ron Paul 24:6
Madam Speaker, America survived and prospered for 140 years without an income
tax, and with a federal government that generally
adhered to strictly constitutional functions,
operating with modest excise revenues.
The income tax opened the door to the era
(and errors) of Big Government. I hope my
colleagues will help close that door by cosponsoring
the Liberty Amendment.