0:00
/
0:00
Transcript

ARCHIVE: Taxation is representation

Author Vanessa Williamson on why taxes are democratic, how the Boston Tea Party was a lot like Occupy, and how voters can learn to love paying their share once again

It’s tax time again — and while we understand many of you might consider the topic dreary at best (and scary at worst), this discussion with tax policy expert Vanessa Williamson about why taxes are not just democratic but downright revolutionary may change your mind.

We talked to Williamson late last year, but given the season, we’re making the interview available to all. We hope you’ll support our work — consider joining us today.


In The Price of Democracy: The Revolutionary Power of Taxation in American History, author Vanessa Williamson explores how the story of American democracy is a story about taxes, from the Revolutionary fight against taxation without representation, to Progressive efforts to make the consolidation of extreme wealth impossible, to the conservative argument that taxation is theft. Williamson told us about:

  • How the Boston Tea Party wasn’t a revolt against taxation, but an Occupy-style protest against the bailout of a too-big-to-fail company

  • Why high-tax countries are more democratic than low-tax countries

  • What’s truly radical about a progressive tax

  • Why American citizens identify as “taxpayers”

  • What happened to the funds the Trump White House impounded

  • And how to get Americans to embrace the idea of paying their share

If you pay taxes and want to know more about why, you won’t want to miss this one. Just click on the video player above to watch the conversation.

Share

Leave a comment


Your support is how we keep the lights on, pay our staff a fair wage, and build the new media we all deserve. When you subscribe, you help us reach more people.

Join us today, or if you are already a member, give a gift or group subscription.

Give a gift subscription

Get 20% off a group subscription


Discussion about this video

User's avatar

Ready for more?