Confession: I like paying taxes

R. Alex Anderson February 26, 2026
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A well functioning government is a good thing, actually, and such a thing needs money to run. So, I pay my taxes.

I know it'd be aggressively democratic for me to be able to say how I want my taxes allotted, and there are reasons we don't do that. But gosh... Does nearly half the discretionary spending have to be for killing people?

A state representative in the Utah legislature recently proposed a bill to prevent undocumented immigrants from accessing state-funded welfare, including food banks and homeless shelters. I don't think it will pass, but some of the arguments in favor of the bill were about how the government shouldn't act like a charity.

I... uhh... I disagree? I would love it if more of my tax dollars went towards helping people. Isn't "promote the general welfare" part of the US constitution? (Granted, in Utah, the highest portion of the state budget is public education, which I'm all for.)

A few ideas from this armchair politician (some of which require changing ones perspective from seeing these people as enemies or "less-than" to seeing them as neighbors):

I don't think I said that any of this is strictly anti-corporation, but it should be clear that some corporations would benefit from this kind of stuff and some would not be too happy with it. To them I say: I think the kind of business you're in is bad business, and you should get out of it and into good business (I'm looking at you, coal).

But a lot of this is pro-human, and the best pro-human actions aren't scalable. This will require a lot of people connecting with their clients and constituents one-on-one. It can't be automated; this is by design.

Anyway, this list isn't exhaustive, nor are these ideas without real flaws and real tradeoffs. I get that. But hey, a guy can dream, right?

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