I took this from frontpage.com. An excellent article. Hugh Murray
Tips for Right-Wingers on the IRS Scandal
Instead
of showing endless loops of IRS employees wasting taxpayer dollars
line-dancing — Breaking news: Government employees waste millions of
your dollars every single day! — I think it would be more useful for the
public to hear a few crucial facts about the exploding scandal at the
Internal Revenue Service.
At
Tuesday’s congressional hearings on the IRS, witnesses provided
shocking details about the agency’s abuse of conservative groups.
The
IRS leaked the donor list of The National Organization for Marriage to
their political opponents, the pro-gay-marriage Human Rights Campaign.
This is not idle speculation: The documents had an internal IRS stamp on
them. The list of names was then published on a number of liberal
websites and NOM’s donors were harassed.
The
IRS demanded that all members of the Coalition for Life of Iowa swear
under penalty of perjury that they wouldn’t pray, picket or protest
outside of Planned Parenthood. They were also asked to provide details
of their prayer meetings.
Rep.
Jim McDermott, D-Wash. — who was ordered by the D.C. Circuit Court to
pay more than $1 million to John Boehner in 2008 for the sleazy maneuver
of publishing an illegally taped private conversation — blamed the
conservative groups themselves. “Each of your groups was highly
political,” he lectured them, noting that they wouldn’t have been asked
any questions if they hadn’t requested tax-exempt status.
Even
a fair-minded person — not to be confused with Jim McDermott — might
hear about the IRS’ harassment of groups with “tea party,” “patriot” or
“liberty” in their names and think: “How do we know the IRS wasn’t
equally hard on left-wing groups?”
What
might be more helpful than clips of IRS staff line-dancing would be for
reporters, say at Fox News, to mention a few examples of the wildly
partisan left-wing groups that the IRS has certified as tax-exempt.
Among the many left-wing groups with tax-exempt status are:
–
ACORN (now renamed as other organizations, but all still tax-exempt),
“community organizers” who engage in profanity-laced protests at private
homes, dump garbage in front of public buildings and disrupt bankers’
dinners in order to get more people on welfare in order to destroy the
capitalist system and incite revolution;
–
Occupy Wall Street, which — in its first month alone — was responsible
for more than a dozen sexual assaults; at least half a dozen deaths by
overdose, suicide or murder; and millions of dollars in property damage;
– Media Matters for America, a media “watchdog” group that has never noticed one iota of pro-Obama bias in the media;
– Moveon.org, which ran ads comparing Bush to Hitler under its 501(c)(4) arm;
–
The Center for American Progress, an auxiliary of the Democratic
National Committee funded by George Soros and staffed by former Clinton
and Obama aides to promote the Democratic agenda;
– The Tides Foundation, which funnels money to communist and terrorist-supporting organizations;
– The Ford Foundation, which has never found a criminal law that isn’t “racist.”
These
groups are regarded by the IRS as nonpartisan community groups, merely
educational, while dozens of patriotic, constitutional, Christian or tea
party groups are still waiting for their tax exemptions.
That’s
to say nothing of Planned Parenthood, PBS and innumerable other
Democratic front-groups that not only have tax exemptions, but get
direct funding from the government.
By
contrast, the conservative groups being raked over the coals by the IRS
actually were nonpartisan. The tea party forced sitting Republican
senators off the ticket in Alaska and Indiana, and toppled
“establishment” Republicans in Utah, Delaware, Nevada, Florida and
Texas. Far from being a secretly pro-Republican group, the tea party has
been a nightmare for Republicans.
Show me one instance where the Center for American Progress was more of a problem for Democrats than Republicans.
It
is obviously in the interest of the left to show us liberal groups also
harassed by the IRS, so it’s striking that they haven’t been able to
produce one yet.
Instead,
they hearken back to the Bush years to claim that the IRS once audited
the NAACP, which is treated as ipso facto political harassment.
First
of all, the NAACP doesn’t exactly have a sterling record of rectitude
when it comes to organization funds. In the 1990s, the NAACP used
tax-exempt contributions to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars of hush
money to the mistress of then-executive director Benjamin F. Chavis Jr.
— as detailed in enraged columns by Carl Rowan at the time.
Find
a tea party organization that’s done that, and we’ll understand the IRS
conducting a three-year proctology exam on the group.
Second,
the Bush-era audit of the NAACP was prompted by a blindingly partisan
speech given by NAACP chairman Julian Bond at an organization meeting in
Philadelphia in July 2004. Bond attacked a slew of elected Republicans
by name, denouncing the entire party as one whose “idea of equal rights
is the American flag and Confederate swastika flying side by side.”
That’s
what we call “black-letter law” on improper activity for a tax-exempt
organization. As a 501(c)(3) group, the NAACP is prohibited from
supporting or opposing any candidate for elective office.
The
NAACP responded to the IRS’ letter by screaming from the rooftops that
it was political payback. Consequently, Bush’s IRS commissioner
requested that Treasury’s inspector general investigate the IRS’
tax-exempt unit for political bias. The IG’s report found no politics in
the NAACP audit and — to the contrary — that more “pro-Republican”
groups (18) than “pro-Democratic” groups (12) had been audited.
Nonetheless,
the NAACP simply refused to cooperate with the IRS. There was nothing
the Bush administration could do. No Republican was going to allow the
NAACP’s tax-exempt status to be revoked on its watch. Two years later,
the IRS simply issued a letter clearing the group.
Today,
the NAACP openly engages in partisan activity, such as a current
weeks-long protest of Republican legislators in North Carolina.
Finally,
a tip to the Democrats trying to defend the IRS: As a devoted
true-crime TV viewer, I can tell you that when you’re caught red-handed,
it’s never a good defense to say, “Why would I be so stupid to kill my
wife right after taking out a huge life insurance policy on her?”
You were that stupid and you got caught.
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