The tax man as a domestic defense force We often view the IRS as an adversary, a bureaucratic machine designed to drain our bank accounts. This perspective is a strategic failure. In reality, a robust tax agency functions exactly like a national military. Just as an army prevents foreign invasion, a well-funded tax authority prevents domestic billionaires from colonizing the wealth of the middle class. When we defund the auditors, we aren't saving money; we are lowering the drawbridge for the ultra-wealthy to seize public and private assets. The aggressive strategy of the ultra-wealthy High-net-worth individuals don't just hide money; they play an aggressive game of jurisdictional chess. Without an "army" of specialized auditors to check this behavior, the wealthy effectively grant themselves the greatest tax cut in history. Gary%20Stevenson points out that billionaires like Elon%20Musk and Jeff%20Bezos thrive in environments where the state lacks the resources to challenge their financial structures. Neuter the agency, and you remove the only legal entity capable of standing between a billionaire's ambition and your property. Why the public cheers for its own destruction There is a deep irony in the political success of Margaret%20Thatcher and Ronald%20Reagan. By weaponizing the natural human distaste for taxes, these leaders convinced the working class to support policies that dismantled their own protections. When the public cheers for tax cuts, they often inadvertently cheer for the defunding of the very "army" that keeps billionaire influence in check. This branding failure has allowed the ultra-wealthy to frame the IRS as the villain, rather than the protector of the American public’s collective wealth. The stakes of a disarmed treasury If the state cannot collect from those at the top, the burden shifts or the infrastructure collapses. The ultimate goal of unchecked billionaire influence is the acquisition of tangible assets—your home, your land, your security. A disarmed IRS means there is no friction to stop the total consolidation of wealth. To protect the market and the individual, we must reframe taxation not as a burden, but as the essential defense spend required to maintain a fair and competitive society.
Jeff%20Bezos
People
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