Christian Right Tax Policy
I first learned about this issue working with Rich Meagher, when he published an article in the Public Eye about how the "free-market"-promoting Heritage Foundation began wooing Christian conservatives in the 1990s, making, as he put it, the tax revolt a defense of "family values." I followed up with a radio documentary, Who Would Jesus Tax?, discovering that the Christian Right lobby group FRC Action was gearing up its state outreach to oppose the progressive income tax and promote the flat or sales tax instead. Leading the effort was its lobbyist Tom McClusky, who once worked at the secular the National Taxpayers Union. I never did a print version of this documentary but had a chance to dig up my old interview with McClusky in reporting about liberal churches, Protestant and Catholic, taking on anti-tax sentiment in evangelical heartland states like Alabama and North Carolina. In a story published in Religion Dispatches, I wrote, He used arguments saying regressive tax systems are better for families, and that the federal government should step back from a role in helping the poor. The local activists in Alabama find that some whites don't want to reduce burdensome taxes on the poor because they see the poor as black and overly benefitting from public spending. In meetings at churches and in communities, Alabama organizer Kimble Forrister told me many people have no answer when he asks them how they benefitted from state spending of tax revenue -- no mention of clean water, public schools, roads, police and fire services. You can hear Mr. Forrister for yourself on this new radio documentary I made on progressive tax movements for Making Contact. This is chastening to me because I wondered whether, in my years rightfully complaining about the proportion of my tax dollars going to war, that I forget to defend the notion of public services and our role as citizens in promoting the public good through government action. The head of the NC Council of Churches, George Reed, didn't forget that piece.
We look to scripture for guidance and see Jesus feeding the hungry, his acts of compassion. In a democracy some of that has to be done working together through government and taxation because the task is so big and affects all of us. We're doing it for the common good, through taxation and the services taxes support. Rev. Reed: I won't forget in the future.
Christian Right Tax Policy | 3 comments (3 topical, 0 hidden)
Christian Right Tax Policy | 3 comments (3 topical, 0 hidden)
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