Hi, my name is Annabelle, and I'm a taxaholic. It's hard for me to admit this, but I think it's time to own up: I'm powerless over the idea that taxes are not a bad way to fund programs that might do some good for our country. My addiction has really gotten the better of me now that Bush has vetoed Congress's main social spending bill, which was to fund admittedly unworthy social endeavors like cancer research, mine safety, job training and Head Start.
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Happily Never After
Annabelle Gurwitch: Gay and ready to tie the knot? Take some advice from a couple of heteros: marriage isn't all it's cracked up to be.
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Poor Is the New Rich!
Annabelle Gurwitch: As waves of poverty wash over the once-affluent, it's nice to know that you can share the pain.
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Worst News of the Year
Annabelle Gurwitch: Here's what's gone wrong so far--and it's only April.
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Are We There Yet?: A Liberal Votes in California
Annabelle Gurwitch: Who knew provisional voting could be a teaching moment?
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How Do You Like Me Now?
Annabelle Gurwitch: If Hillary wants Americans to like her, she should start doing the things Americans like.
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Why I Won't Be Invited to Mitt Romney's White House
Annabelle Gurwitch: My top-ten list of reasons why I gave God the old heave-ho.
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Taxaholics Anonymous
Annabelle Gurwitch: My name is Annabelle, and I love paying taxes.
Invitations to parties stopped coming, and I was finding myself home alone, writing e-mails to liberal organizations late into the night. And then once the tax cut kicked in and all of us Americans received and immediately spent that $300 refund, I would lie awake at night, mad that Republicans had demonized big government and obsessively thinking about how we might have used those taxes to fund superfluous stuff like repairing infrastructure or securing Social Security and universal healthcare.
Over the past few years my habit has only gotten worse, and I recently hit bottom. I had a slip after Bush's veto and thought up a new tax.
Here's my tax of choice: the presidential candidacy tax. Sure, this might create a hardship on candidates who don't raise a lot of money, but let's cut the charade: the networks don't think they have a chance anyway--just ask Mike Gravel. Plus, with the recent revelation that Republicans are recruiting wealthy candidates who can fund their own campaigns, it's the perfect time to institute the tax.
Furthermore, we deserve it, for having to endure the ever longer run-up to the election season. I think I am owed something for listening to Rudy Giuliani waffle on whether waterboarding is torture, comparing it to running for President. He didn't specify if his candidacy was torturous to him or torturous for us, but in any case, let's really make him suffer: let's squeeze some cash out of him. We should pass the tax soon though, on the off chance that Michael Bloomberg enters the race. If Bloomberg announces his candidacy, we might even raise enough to eliminate the alternative minimum tax.
OK, I guess that's all the time I have. Thanks for letting me share my experience, strength and hopes. I'd like to wrap this up with our prayer. And speaking of prayer, I recently learned I have something in common with Fred Thompson besides the fact that he and I probably have about the same chance of being elected President. Thompson has said if he were elected his first act upon entering the Oval Office would be to pray. I liked that sentiment, but maybe he and the other candidates would consider joining in our prayer:
God grant me the serenity to accept the taxes I cannot change, the courage to change the taxes I can and the wisdom to know the difference.
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