IRS on the Chopping Block: Rep. Buddy Carter’s Vision for a Fairer America

CN
5 hours ago

In a so-called act of principled defiance against an oppressive system, U.S. Representative Buddy Carter (R-GA) has introduced the Fair Tax Act, a radical proposal to replace the labyrinthine federal tax code with a transparent national sales tax. This bill, which abolishes the IRS and eliminates income taxes, is a declaration of the individual’s right to their earnings and their liberty to choose.

The Fair Tax Act, or H.R. 25, seeks to repeal personal and corporate income taxes, payroll taxes, the estate tax, and gift taxes. Instead, it proposes a 23% consumption tax on new goods and services. The legislation would unshackle Americans from the burden of federal withholding, allowing them to retain their entire paycheck—a recognition that an individual’s earnings are theirs by right, not a privilege granted by the state.

Proponents, including Carter and co-sponsors like Rep. Barry Loudermilk (R-GA), emphasize the fairness and simplicity of the system. It broadens the tax base by capturing revenue from previously untaxed sources—such as the underground economy, illegal immigrants, and tourists—while providing a monthly rebate to households to offset taxes on essentials. This measure, the bureaucrats argue, ensures that even the poorest are protected from undue burdens while incentivizing savings and investment.

Advocates of bitcoin (BTC) and free-market proponents are enthusiastically circulating Carter’s bill across social media platforms such as X and Reddit this weekend. While many appreciate the prospect of abolishing the IRS, some are uneasy about the considerable scale of the consumption tax required to fund goods and services.

Critics claim the consumption tax may disproportionately affect those with lower incomes, who spend a larger share of their earnings on consumption. However, the bill put forth by Carter and his allies rejects the premise that government confiscation of income is inherently more equitable.

Further, the Fair Tax Act demands a constitutional amendment to repeal the 16th Amendment, thereby preventing the federal government from ever reinstating income taxes. Without this safeguard, the state could use dual taxation to undermine the very freedom this legislation seeks to secure.

More than a mere policy change, the Fair Tax Act is a call to restore the dignity of the individual and the integrity of the market. As Carter and his co-sponsors contend, this is not just a tax reform—it is a philosophical commitment to the values of liberty, productivity, and justice. “The Fair Tax is exactly that – fair. It is the only tax proposal out there that is pro-growth, simple, and allows Americans to keep every cent of their hard-earned money,” Carter states.

Though forward-thinking in its conceptual framework, the bill faces slim prospects for passage in Congress. Furthermore, the consumption tax it proposes raises profound ethical concerns. It has high risks of discouraging consumer spending and potentially slowing economic growth significantly. It punishes productive achievement by seizing wealth at the point of its use, undermining the moral right to property. To Libertarians, taxation, when coerced, no matter what type, is legalized theft—an expropriation of earned value by force.

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