Geithner and the "privilege" of being American

This brings us to the third problem with Mr. Geithner’s argument, a fundamental logical inconsistency. If being governed, or over-governed, is a privilege for America’s citizens, shouldn’t everyone pay for the privilege? Why are more than half of all American workers paying nothing at all in income taxes? And if the issue is the need to “pay more” for our privilege, why should only those making over $250,000 be the ones who pay more? If being an American really is a privilege, then certainly all who are thus privileged should pay something.

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Still, the real problem with this whole privilege argument goes back to what the Founding Fathers were thinking. Being an American is a right, not a privilege. The privilege belongs to those who are temporarily allowed to serve this great nation in a decision-making capacity. When they turn this privilege into a right to distribute government largess in ever larger quantities—and in ways, to use Jefferson’s phrase, a “wise and frugal government” would not—it is those in government, and not the governed, who bear the responsibility for our budgetary problems.

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