From owner-imap@chumbly.math.missouri.edu Thu Dec 5 14:30:38 2002
Date: Wed, 4 Dec 2002 22:48:25 -0600 (CST)
From: AntiBlackAdder@here.com (AntiBlackAdder)
Subject: Congress Shows It True Colors, Rewarding TREACHEROUS
Expatriate
Article: 147955
To: undisclosed-recipients:;
from TomPaine.com
http://www.tompaine.com/feature.cfm/ID/6827
As the war on terrorshows troubling signs of becoming a war of error, the Bush administration is waging a far more successful war on behalf of its corporate backers. The latest victory comes courtesy of Congress' 11th hour reversal of a provision in the Homeland Security bill banning government contracts for companies that move offshore to avoid paying U.S. taxes.
This vote, shamelessly draped in the American flag, is so
hypocritical, so despicable, and such an unmitigated screw you
to every American taxpayer that it has sent me scrambling in search of
a barricade to storm.
The sleazy backroom maneuvering that yielded this year-end dividend
for expat corporations offers a perfectand perfectly
nauseatingcase study in how Washington works. The same leaders
who never miss a chance to be seen tearfully singing God Bless
America
with their hands over their disloyal hearts have allowed
profits to trump patriotism, even in a time of war.
Earlier this year, with the stink of Enron, Global Crossing, and
WorldCom filling the air, the House and Senate, after sensingand
exhaustively pollingthe public mood, voted overwhelmingly to keep
corporate expatriates from milking and bilking the government at the
same time. It was a political no-brainer. A red, white and blue
slam-dunk. After all, the sooner the issue was stamped taken care
of,
the sooner those bothersome questions about Dick Cheney's
serial use of offshore shelters while running Halliburton would fade
away.
And with the dogs of war in full cry, no politicians in their right mind dared come out in favor of allowing tax dodgers to stick their hands in Uncle Sam's pockets. Out on the campaign trail, even the most corporate-friendly campaigners made it clear that they stood foursquare against such unpatriotic behavior.
We ought to look at people who are trying to avoid U.S. taxes as a
problem,
roared President Bush. I think American companies
ought to pay taxes and be good citizens.
Trent Lott was equally
exercised. It agitates me that companies will be doing that,
he
fumed. Cue God Bless America.
Then Election Day came and went, and lots and lots of big corporate
checks were cashed. It was payback time. And a bipartisan who's
who of power lobbyistsincluding former Senate Majority Leader Bob
Dole, former House Ways and Means chairman Bill Archer, former House
Appropriations chair Bob Livingston, and former Senate Intelligence
chairman Dennis DeConcinimade sure that the expat companies'
government gravy train was kept running, Mussolini-style,
right
on schedule.
With the public's attention diverted elsewherenamely Iraq, and J-Lo and Ben's engagementthe tax haven crowd found a much more receptive audience in Washington. Operating behind closed doors, and with next to no public debate, the lame duck Congress made an abrupt u-turn and sliced-and-diced the no-contracts-for-tax-cheats rule. And without blinking an eye, the president happily signed the bill into law.
That barely muffled cheer you might have heard came from the Caribbean-based corporate offices of companies such as scandal-ridden Tyco, Arthur Andersen progeny Accenture, and Ingersoll-Rand, a corporate chicken that, in a show of national mourning and solidarity, flew the coop a mere three months after the 9/11 attacks. All have avoided paying tens of millions in taxes by reincorporating offshore while pocketing tens of millions in federal contracts. And now, thanks to their good friends in Congress, they'll continue to do so. Not only do they not have to help pay for homeland security, but they're helping themselves to the spoils of the Homeland Security Act.
Time and again since 9/11, the president has stressed that patriotism
entails more than waving the flag or reciting the Pledge of
Allegiance. Patriotism,
he said this summer, is proven in
our concern for othersa willingness to sacrifice for people we may
never have met.
I guess the tax exiles and their heavy-hitting
lobbyists didn't get the sacrifice
memo.
The IRS estimates that corporate imigris are depriving the U.S.
Treasury of around $70 billion a year. Twenty years ago, one out of
every six federal tax dollars was generated by a corporation. That has
now fallen to about one out of every 10. Meanwhile, the rest of us are
being asked to shovel our dollars into the crater left by Bush's
tax policies. Maybe that is what the president had in mind when he
talked about sacrificing for people we may never have met
:
digging a little deeper so corporate execs basking in the sun-dappled
glow of tax-free profits won't have to.
It's bad enough that companies that enjoy all the benefits and protections of operating under the American system are allowed to avoid paying their fair shareespecially when we are told, again and again, that we are at war. But allowing those same companies to suckle at the taxpayer teatin the name of keeping our homeland more secure, no lessis nothing less than scandalous.
Our leaders should be ashamedand make overturning this dreadful decision the first order of business when the 108th Congress convenes in January. But I won't be shocked if they don't.