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NEWSLETTER

September Meeting
Mark Your Calendar

Gay Allies Mobilize Support for Gore

E-mail John Hancock

Hate Crime Bill Clears Major Hurdle

Final Vote on Hate Crimes

Final Vote on "Scouting For All" 

From Barney Frank’s Position Paper on "Scouting For All"

Gay Birds of a Feather Parent Together at Israeli Zoo

How To Be A Good Republican

Dutch Approve Gay Marriages

Global Shell Games
In Their Words

DOMA Revisited

It Happened in September

SEPTEMBER Meeting

Thursday, September 28, 2000, Miller Community Center, 330 19th Ave. E., Seattle

Proposed Agenda

  • 7:30 – Call to Order & Chair’s Report

  • 7:35 – Consideration of Slate (unopposed) Candidates

  • 7:40 – Endorsement of Judicial Races

  • 7:50 – State Initiatives

  • 8:30 – County Ballot Issues

  • 8:50 – City Ballot Issues

  • 9:15 – Announcements & Adjourn

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MARK YOUR CALENDAR

September 19 – Primary Election

September 28 – General Election Endorsement Meeting

October 8 – Last Day to Register for General Election

THERE WILL BE NO HARVEY MUGGY MEMBERSHIP MEETING IN OCTOBER

November 7 – General Election

THERE WILL BE NO HARVEY MUGGY MEMBERSHIP MEETING IN NOVEMBER

December - Holiday Party (Date & Place to be announced)

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Gore & Gornisht

The LA Jewish Journal has a button that has a picture of Al Gore, and underneath it "Gore"; and  next to it a picture of George W., and underneath it "Gornisht".

Footnote: The word "Gornisht," in Yiddish, very loosely translated, means "Nothing."

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Gay Allies Mobilize Support for Gore

By Deb Price / The Detroit News - August 28, 2000

Gay allies of Al Gore are wisely rushing to capitalize on the Democratic convention and the healthy bounce it's given him in the polls to energize and mobilize the sizable gay vote.

The National Stonewall Democratic Federation, for example, is launching an all-out blitz at gay restaurants, festivals, neighborhoods and bars to register voters and hand out scorecards comparing Gore and Republican presidential nominee George W. Bush. Meanwhile, the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) plans to gear its annual "National Coming Out Day" on Oct. 11 to registering gay college students nationwide.

"We have a lot of work to do to counteract what the Republican Party and gay Republicans have been trying to do -- blur the positions of the candidates," says Michael Colby, executive director of Stonewall Democrats, which is distributing Gore-Lieberman buttons, yard signs and bumper stickers that include the gay-rainbow flags or pink triangles.

Since a great many potential gay voters are too young to clearly remember the bad old days before Clinton became the first gay-friendly president, activists are making a special effort to educate them. HRC spokesman David Smith says one top messages will be "two words: Scalia and Thomas." He's referring to Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas, the anti-gay Supreme Court justices who Bush says are the models for the kind of justices he would pick.

Already, "It's the Supreme Court, Stupid!" pins are showing up on gay lapels. Memories are still fresh of this summer's painful 5-4 Supreme Court defeat allowing the Boy Scouts to discriminate against gay troop leaders. Gore has vowed to pick progressive justices.

The turnout rate of gay voters, a key voting bloc for Democrats, could be critical to Gore's chances. In the 1998 elections, 4.2 percent of voters identified themselves as gay, lesbian or bisexual, a voting bloc nearly as large as Latinos (5.3 percent) and larger than Jews (2.6 percent), Voter News Service exit polls found.

Democrat Bill Clinton won 72 percent of the gay vote in 1992 and 66 percent in 1996. But gay Republicans think Bush will draw gay votes away from Gore. "A lot of gay Republicans were turned off by the anti-gay rhetoric of the past and voted Democratic. But now I think they'll come back," predicts gay Republican Carl Schmid.

Yet an interactive Harris Poll conducted in June found that in a head-to-head contest between Gore and Bush, gay and lesbian voters would support Gore over Bush, 83 percent to 16 percent.

Gore's gay boosters are stressing that Gore wants to build on the gay-rights ground broken by Clinton.

Gore vows to work to get rid of the "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" law, which only allows gay soldiers to serve if they are closeted and celibate. He's also promised to create a commission to study the inequities gay couples face because we can't legally marry -- exclusion from Social Security spousal benefits, for example. His platform supports an "equitable alignment of benefits" for gay families.

Plus, Gore wouldn't need on-the-job training as president on gay issues. He would be able to approach them with familiarity and commitment, no differently than, say, environmental or foreign policy issues.

The first vice-president ever to address a gay group, Gore told HRC in 1998, "The cause we celebrate tonight is not some narrow special interest. It is really the cause that has defined this nation since its founding: to deepen the meaning of fundamental fairness, ... to build a good and just society on this bedrock principle: equal opportunity for all, special privilege for none." (Gore's speech and gay record are available at algore2000.com.)

Gore backers point to his choice of running mate Joe Lieberman as a sign of his commitment to fairness for gay Americans. Lieberman is one of the lead Senate sponsors of the bill to outlaw anti-gay job discrimination. In front of more than 200 gay delegates, Gore vowed in his convention acceptance speech to make its passage a priority.

For eight years, gay Americans have counted on Al Gore. Now he's counting on gay votes.

Deb Price is a Detroit News columnist.

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E-mail John Hancock

from the Small Business Association of WA

John Hancock, the insurance company, has done a very courageous thing.  They put together a series of commercials to be shown during the Olympics. They are pretty nontraditional and one of them shows 2 women at the airport where they are just bringing home their newly adopted Asian baby. They are so loving and it is so sweet you can't help but cry. They congratulate each other on what great moms they'll be, etc.  It is clear they are a couple and this is a lesbian adoption.

They aired this commercial during the gymnastics trials last week and the right wing went nuts and bombarded John Hancock Co. with nasty phone calls.

There is a strong chance Hancock will pull this Commercial and it will never be seen during the Olympics if they don't hear some (Many!) positive responses as well.

Please email them and have everyone you know do the same.  Four TV stations said they wouldn't show it and Hancock stood up to them saying they wanted it in writing why they refused.  They then all agreed to show it!  Hancock is kickin' butt for the Gay and Lesbian community!  Let's give them the Kudos that they deserve.

Here are the email directions: 

Go to:  Http://www.jhancock.com

When you are at the website, click on "how to reach us" in the left menu bar.  The screen that it brings up will have a hyperlink "website feedback." Use this to send them your thoughts on the commercial.  Tell them you saw the "2 women & baby commercial" and then praise it, praise them, and ask to please continue to air it.  You also can let them know if you're in the market for insurance if you'd like or you can opt out of that choice.

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Hate Crime Bill Clears Major Hurdle

Human Rights Campaign – September 13, 2000

WASHINGTON - The Human Rights Campaign lauded the House of Representatives for their historic vote today in favor of hate crime legislation.  The move represents the first time both the House and Senate voted in favor of comprehensive hate crime legislation and clears the way for a hate crime law to be enacted by the end of the year, says HRC. 

"This monumental vote represents enormous progress and has brought a comprehensive hate crime law within our grasp," said HRC Executive Director Elizabeth Birch. "We are so close to being able to protect hate crime victims and their families, but we will not rest until the president signs this bill."

In June, the Senate voted 57 to 42 to pass the language of the Hate Crimes Prevention Act (HCPA) - renamed the Local Law Enforcement Enhancement Act of 2000 - as an amendment to the Department of Defense (DoD) authorization bill. Today Rep. John Conyers, D-Ga., filed what is known as a "motion to instruct," that directs the House conferees to retain the hate crime legislation that passed the Senate in the DoD bill. The House today voted 232-192  -- including 41 Republicans - in favor of this motion which marked the first ever House vote on including sexual orientation in comprehensive federal hate crime legislation. 192 Members of the House have cosponsored the legislation (H.R. 1082).

A new poll released yesterday by the Garin-Hart-Yang-Research Group shows that hate crime legislation is widely supported by the public. According to the poll, nearly 66 percent of voters say they would be less likely to vote for a candidate who voted against legislation to "strengthen the prosecution of violent hate crimes motivated by prejudice against race, religion, gender or sexual orientation of the victim."  A plurality of 44 percent of voters said they would be "much less likely to vote for a candidate who opposed hate crime legislation."

"Hate crime legislation is a winner with the public and members of Congress who supported this legislation will be rewarded at the polls, while those who did not will find they have a lot of explaining to do before Election Day," said HRC Political Director Winnie Stachelberg.

In anticipation of this vote, President Clinton spoke at a White House East Room ceremony today in support of the legislation. In addition, key supporters of hate crime legislation gathered yesterday for a press conference on Capitol Hill. Press conference participants included House Minority Leader Richard Gephardt, D-Mo.; Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass.; Rep. Connie Morrella, R-Md.; Judy Shepard, mother of hate crime victim Matthew; and Cmdr. David O'Malley, Laramie, Wyo. Police Department.

If passed, the bill would extend current federal hate crime protection - which covers race, religion, color and national origin -- to gender, sexual orientation and disability. It would serve as a tool to help law enforcement by allowing federal assistance, when necessary, in the investigation and prosecutions of hate crimes. This legislation has broad support from notable law enforcement agencies and state and local leaders including 22 state attorneys general, the Police Foundation and the National Sheriff's Association.

A coalition of organizations, including the Human Rights Campaign, the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, and the American Association of University Women are leading the lobbying effort to pass hate crime legislation.

The Human Rights Campaign is the largest national lesbian and gay political organization, with members throughout the country. It effectively lobbies Congress, provides campaign support and educates the public to ensure that lesbian and gay Americans can be open, honest and safe at home, at work and in the community.

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Final Vote on Hate Crimes (Roll Call # 471)

 

  Yes No Not Voting
Republican 41 174 5
Democrat 190 17 4
Independent 1 1  
Total 232 192 9

How Your Washington Congressmembers Voted

Yes

No

  • Jay Inslee (D-1st District)
  • Brian Baird (D-3rd District)
  • Norm Dicks (D-6th District)
  • Jim McDermott (D-7th District)
  • Adam Smith (D-9th District)
  • Jack Metcalf (R-2nd District)
  • Doc Hastings (R-4th District)
  • George Nethercut (R-5th District)
  • Jennifer Dunn (R-8th District)

 

 

Final Vote on "Scouting For All"  -  HR 4892 (Roll Call # 468)

  Yes No Present  Not Voting
Republican 1 216 1 2
Democrat 11 144 50 6
Independent 2
Total 12 352 51 8

How Your Washington Congressmembers Voted

Present

No

  • Jim McDermott (D-7th District)
  • Jay Inslee (D-1st District)
  • Jack Metcalf (R-2nd District)
  • Brian Baird (D-3rd District)
  • Doc Hastings (R-4th District)
  • George Nethercut (R-5th District)
  • Norm Dicks (D-6th District)
  • Jennifer Dunn (R-8th District)
  • Adam Smith (D-9th District)

 

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From Barney Frank’s Position Paper on "Scouting For All"

 We oppose discrimination by the Boy Scouts of America.

But revoking the Boy Scouts' federal charter is not the way to address this problem.   

 The BSA is a wonderful organization. That's why we want every boy to be able to be a part of it.

 Notwithstanding the BSA's recent claims, the truth is that discrimination has never been an organic element of what the organization was about. When the BSA was chartered, it did not profess to be a discriminatory organization. The position it now asserts is of very recent origin.

Since a federal charter carries with it no tangible benefits, revocation of the charter would be an empty gesture that would not alter the practices to which we so strenuously object.

 Nor does the bill as drafted afford the organization any opportunity to remedy its deficiencies before losing its charter. This is unfortunate, because we have faith that the ongoing debate within the scouting organization will resolve itself in a positive way -- at which point the BSA will again be worthy of the imprimatur this resolution seeks to remove.

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Gay Birds of a Feather Parent Together at Israeli Zoo

From Correspondent Jerrold Kessel JERUSALEM (CNN) September 18, 1999

Zoo keepers involved in an ambitious breeding program for endangered Griffin vultures are getting a helping hand from a different type of vulture couple.

Keepers noticed that Dashik and Yahuda, two male vultures at Jerusalem Biblical Zoo, had built a nest together and were mating. So they decided to give the couple an artificial egg to see what would happen.

"They were sitting incubating perfectly," said the zoo's head keeper, Itzik Yadid. Since they were incubating so well, sharing between the two of them, the next step was obviously to give them a chick to raise.

So far, Dashik and Yahuda have raised two baby birds, Diva and Adi Gordon, with results that exceeded expectations. "We're very proud of them. They've done a marvelous job," said bird keeper Sharon Sterling. "They've behaved extremely well, the best parents we've ever seen."

Keepers had initially thought about separating Dashik and Yahuda and trying to bring in a female to create a heterosexual vulture couple. "And then we said, 'Why should we do it? If they are together, if they are raising a chick together, why should we separate them?'" Yadid said. "So we decided to let them stay together and keep raising chicks together."

There more reason to seek parenting help from the gay vultures. Normally, female Griffin vultures lay only one egg a year. But if the egg is taken from the mother, she will lay a second egg, a process known as "double clutching.

"By providing suitable surrogate parents for the eggs that are taken, bird keepers can increase the number of vultures that are bred. Griffin vultures, once a common sight in the Mideast, have nearly disappeared. The zoo is trying to reintroduce them through the breeding program.

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How To Be A Good Republican

By: Ann Richards (former Democratic Governor of Texas)

  1. You have to believe that the nation's current 8-year prosperity was due to the work of Ronald Reagan and George Bush, but yesterday's gasoline prices are all Clinton's fault.

  2. You have to believe that those privileged from birth achieve success all on their own.

  3. You have to be against all government programs, but expect Social Security checks on time.

  4. You have to believe that AIDS victims deserve their disease, but smokers with lung cancer and overweight individuals with heart disease don't deserve theirs.

  5. You have to appreciate the power rush that comes with sporting a gun.

  6. You have to believe...everything Rush Limbaugh says.

  7. You have to believe that the agricultural, restaurant, housing and hotel industries can survive without immigrant labor.

  8. You have to believe God hates homosexuality, but loves the death penalty.

  9. You have to believe society is color-blind and growing up black in America doesn't diminish your opportunities, but you still won't vote for Alan Keyes.

  10. You have to believe that pollution is OK as long as it makes a profit.

  11. You have to believe in prayer in schools, as long as you don't pray to Allah or Buddha.

  12. You have to believe Newt Gingrich and Henry Hyde were really faithful husbands.

  13. You have to believe speaking a few Spanish phrases makes you instantly popular in the barrio.

  14. You have to believe that only your own teenagers are still virgins.

  15. You have to be against government interference in business, until your oil company, corporation or Savings and Loan is about to go broke and you beg for a government bail out.

  16. You love Jesus and Jesus loves you and, by the way, Jesus shares your hatred for AIDS victims, homosexuals, and President Clinton.

  17. You have to believe government has nothing to do with providing police     protection, national defense, and building roads.

  18. You have to believe a poor, minority student with a disciplinary history and failing grades will be admitted into an elite private school with a $1,000 voucher.

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Dutch Approve Gay Marriages

Associated  Press  September 12, 2000

THE HAGUE, Netherlands -- The Netherlands, long among the gay rights vanguard, enacted a bill converting the country's "registered same-sex partnerships'' into full-fledged marriages, complete with divorce guidelines and wider adoption rights for gays.

Proponents say the legislation will give Dutch gays rights beyond those offered in any other country. Lawmakers approved the measure by a vote of 107-33. All three parliamentary factions in the governing coalition backed the proposal.

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Global Shell Games 

  How the corporations operate tax free

By Sen. Byron Dorgan Washington Monthly - July/August 2000

Remember the Pentagon's $600 toilet seats and $426 hammers? Now there's a new list to think about: Ball point pens purchased from Trinidad for $8,500. Disposable plastic gloves from Japan at $46.22 a piece. Wrist watch batteries from China at $8,252 each. Apple juice from Israel at $2,052 a liter.

It's a shopping spree a defense contractor might love. But this time the Pentagon is not involved; nor any other part of the government, for that matter. Instead the strange prices are the work of multinational corporations, and one of the biggest tax avoidance scams this country has ever seen. The ideological Right makes a big deal over what it calls "Tax Freedom Day"--the day on which Americans supposedly have fulfilled their tax burden for the year. They neglect to mention that every day is tax freedom day for these multinationals. More than two-thirds of foreign-based multinationals doing business here--and only a slightly smaller fraction of U.S.-based multinational firms--pay no federal income tax at all. Many of the rest are paying a relative pittance. As a result, U.S. taxpayers are losing over $40 billion a year by one estimate, which is enough to pay for a prescription drug benefit in Medicare.

Considering that corporate profits have soared in recent years something here does not compute. The manipulation of prices at the border is a big part of this screwy equation. It points to one of the great contradictions in the push for globalization. From its proponents we hear no end of rhapsodizing over the new "world without borders" that is going to bring peace and prosperity without end. Yet when the discussion turns to the rules of trade, as opposed to the theology of it, then the advocates often sing a different tune. They suddenly become dogged defenders of the very same national borders they deride as obsolete. They want to wipe out national boundaries when it means lowering standards for such things as workplace safety, the integrity of the food supply, and the like. But they want to maintain a balkanized world when national boundaries serve to protect them against higher standards. Tax policy is an example. It is not a coincidence that as global trade has expanded, the tax burden has shifted increasingly onto working people. In the U.S., corporations are contributing a paltry 10 percent of the federal income tax burden, about one-half the level they paid in the 1960s, with further declines projected in coming years. It is a symptom of a set of ground rules that let corporations reap the greatest benefits of trade and make workers bear the primary burdens. It is what happens when the trade debate wafts off into the slogans of the global economy and doesn't attend to the details--details that may leave ordinary Americans with the short end of the stick.

Moving Out

If there is one provision in the U.S. tax laws that demonstrates the hypocrisy of some free-traders, it is the subsidy for corporations that move their plants abroad. Globalization is supposed to give us a market free of preferences and subsidies, in which nations compete according to their "natural advantage." Yet the same people who preach about this idealized world market support a tax system that violates it in the most fundamental way. The U.S. tax code actually rewards companies that move their factories, know-how, or financial operations abroad. Close shop in the U.S., shift your assets to Singapore, China, or Bermuda, and the U.S. Treasury rewards you for your trouble. Under a practice called "deferral," runaway plants pay no tax at all on their earnings abroad until they bring that income back into the U.S., which may be never.

This may strain belief. Corporations already have no shortage of enticements to abandon the U.S. in favor of such locales--sweat-shop wages, weak environmental standards, sometimes even slave labor. The last thing the federal government should do is create a tax bribe on top of all that--or so one would think. Yet that's exactly what Congress has done. This reward system for runaway plants, and other assets, costs federal taxpayers some $3.4 billion a year and rising. It is part of why the U.S. has lost well over 3 million well-paying manufacturing jobs since 1979.

Why does such a thing exist? Deferral illustrates a basic principle of tax boondoggles: "Once in, never out." There is no provision in the tax code called "deferral." It is the result of other provisions drafted for other purposes. It was tolerable in the beginning because multinationals were not that large a part of commerce. In the aftermath of World War II, when Europe was devastated and America had productive capacity to spare, it seemed justifiable. As Europe and Asia became commercial rivals, however, deferral became an indiscriminate subsidy the U.S. could not afford. But by this time it had a big corporate constituency that had latched onto deferral as a way to multiply the benefits of tax havens around the world. Try to change it, and you will be accused of trying to dismantle the free enterprise system, and of turning America into the next Haiti. I speak from experience on this.

Nowadays the subsidy lobby argues that deferral is necessary for U.S. companies to compete in foreign markets. But I cannot understand why the U.S. government should be so solicitous of U.S.-based firms if they aren't going to invest in the U.S in the first place. Why should American taxpayers pay for the services of a military defense that benefits these companies--including trade negotiations and defense--while they scramble around the globe looking for ways to avoid their fair share of the bill?

Lobbyists also say that the deferral bonus is only temporary, until the earnings come back into the U.S. Yet in practice those profits tend to pile up abroad where they can be used for currency speculation or new overseas investment. "There are huge sums out there--trillions of dollars," says Michael McIntyre, a law professor at Wayne State University. Moreover, tax lawyers have created a minor industry out of devising ways to bring those profits back into the U.S. without the tax collectors noticing. The 1986 tax reform act tightened up this area somewhat. But where there's a tax lawyer, there's a way. "I suspect there are people who do it regularly and are hoping not to be audited," says McIntyre, who used to devise such strategies himself. But let's give them the benefit of the doubt. Let's grant, for the sake of argument, that corporations need deferral to compete in foreign markets.

That still doesn't explain why they need it when they move plants abroad and then sell the products back into the U.S. In that case, the provision is a direct subsidy for putting U.S. factory workers out of work. It is a slap in the face to the company that strives to keep its jobs here at home.

The answer to the deferral problem is simple. I have been proposing it in Congress for several years. At the very least we ought to eliminate this practice when U.S. firms set up factories in foreign tax havens and then sell those products back into the U.S. This would provide a measure of justice for the company struggling to keep its workforce in the U.S., and it would move us a step closer to a global marketplace that functions the way its advocates say it should.

Shady Transfers

Moving plants and other assets abroad is one way multinationals avoid their fair share of the tax burden. Another is the use of accounting shell games to shift their income to outside the United States. This second scam is called "transfer pricing." Multinationals can take advantage of transfer pricing because the face they present to tax administrators and other legal authorities is very different from the face they present to the public. To the public, Sony Corporation--to take a random example--is simply Sony. Whether people are shopping in New York or Topeka, Oslo or Gdansk, the company appears the same. And as a general rule when the company reports its earnings to shareholders, it does so as a unified world-wide business. To tax agencies, however, the multinational presents itself as a complicated network of affiliates legally organized hither and yon. There might be a Sony U.S., a Sony Brazil, a Sony in tax havens such as Singapore and Bermuda, ad infinitum. Sometimes there are valid reasons for such arrangements. But in practice, corporations can use their complex intra-corporate webs to play all sorts of games, and taxes are high on the list. This is where the $8,252 wrist-watch batteries come in. The prices seem ridiculous, but only if you don't understand the game. The multinational doesn't really spend that money because it charges the inflated price to itself. It takes the money out of one pocket--its operations in the U.S.--and puts it into another, which is its operations abroad. The effect is to shift profits out of the U.S. and therefore beyond the shelter of the Internal Revenue Code. You can't make money buying ball-point pens for $8,500 and selling them for $3.98 and that's what transfer pricing is all about.

Transfer pricing is probably the single most important reason that so many major corporations pay little or no federal income tax. "The bottom line is that the American public is being robbed," says Finance Professor Simon Pak of Florida International University who has studied this question closely.

Professor Pak and his colleague, Professor John Zdanowicz, have estimated that this scam cost U.S. taxpayers some $43 billion last year, or more than $117 million a day. They reached this estimate by examining customs receipts, which declare the purchase or sale prices of products passing across the U.S. border. They tallied both the extraordinarily high prices for products coming into the country, and the extraordinarily low prices for products going out. (Low nominal export prices are another way to shift income out of the U.S.) Then they used a sophisticated computer model to make a conservative estimate of the revenue implications.

The results make the Pentagon procurement office seem a model of probity. I've already mentioned some of the super-high prices for imports. The export prices were just as absurd: There were missile launchers sold to Venezuela for $59.50; automatic teller machines to the Dominican Republic for $45.25; venetian blinds to Germany for 12 cents; tractors to Canada for $448.41. I know a lot of farmers in North Dakota who would like to get a deal like that. A revenue loss of over $40 billion is not a small amount of change. But money is not the only issue. It undermines the legitimacy of the whole federal tax system when the large and powerful can avoid their share of the burden through strategies like these. One would think the Treasury would be concerned, and it is in a sense. Yet the way it tries to address the problem is so out of touch with reality that it seems lifted from an episode of the Keystone Kops.

Basically, the Treasury accepts at face value the lawyer's fiction that a multinational corporation is composed of truly independent entities, incorporated in different nations and seeking their own maximum advantage in the market. It pretends that Sony Bermuda, say, really is totally separate from Sony U.S., Sony Japan, and the rest. IRS agents literally comb through the transactions between a U.S. subsidiary and its affiliates abroad, and try to adjust them to "arms length prices"--i.e., what the price would have been if the entities really had been independent of one another.

This is like trying to disentangle a vat of spaghetti with a toothpick. Conceptually, the approach is totally out to lunch. The subsidiaries of a multinational corporation aren't independent. They are like organs of the same body. One reason a multinational exists is to overcome the limitations of arms-length dealing. "The very existence of integrated multinational corporations is evidence that the arms-length system does not reflect economic reality," says Reuven S. Avi-Yonah, assistant professor of law at Harvard University Law School.

In other words, the quest for an arms-length price for transactions within a multinational group is a quest for something that does not generally exist. Stanley I. Langbein, a professor at the University of Miami law school who served in the Treasury's Office of International Tax Counsel, agrees that the arms-length method "does not work and cannot be made to work."

The result is a hapless, bureaucratic undertaking that is an enormous drain on resources. The audit hours are endless, as is the resulting litigation. The General Accounting Office has called these cases "burdensome, time consuming, and expensive" for all concerned. In 1992, a survey found that some $32 billion in disputed revenue was tied up in pending Tax Court proceedings over transfer pricing issues, twice the amount of three years earlier. (The Tax Court has not made such a tally since.) In one such case, the defendant, Mobil Oil, submitted 1.3 million pages of unlabeled documents as evidence. One suspects that judges do not look forward to cases of this kind. But that Mobil Oil is willing to go to all that trouble suggests how much they stand to lose--or gain.

The sad part is, there's a better way. The states have had to deal with the basic problem--corporations operating across jurisdictional borders--much longer than the federal government has. And from necessity, the states devised a method that is relatively simple. It started with the railroads, which tried to tell the states that their property in a given jurisdiction was worth just the salvage value of the tracks and ties. "Wait a minute," the states replied. Those tracks were part of sprawling corporate enterprises, and you couldn't reckon the value of the part without taking into account the value of the whole.

So the states developed the "unit rule," which regards the railroad as what it is--a unitary business, though operating in different states and perhaps through various corporate entities. Accordingly, for purposes of property-tax assessment, the states apportioned the value of the whole over the various parts. Later, when the states enacted income taxes they applied this same basic method. They took the income of the entire enterprise and apportioned it among the different states according to a formula. If a tenth of the property, payroll, and sales were in a particular state, then a tenth of the income got reported there as well, regardless of the accounting gymnastics that a company might contrive. The formula determines only how much a company reports, not how much tax it pays. If the state wants to have low rates, or no tax at all, that's its own business. The formula method isn't perfect of course. No method is. But compared to the Treasury's approach it is a big step forward. It renders moot much of the sophisticated tax lawyering and accounting shell games that corporations employ. If every nation employed a formula approach then tax administration would be simpler and companies could focus on their business rather than on tax avoidance, which would be good for all concerned.

Some states actually have applied the formula approach to multinationals, which was a natural extension. Is there that much difference--especially after NAFTA--between the border that runs between North Dakota and Montana and the one between those states and Canada? Yet most multinationals went ballistic, and the battle against the "unitary" method quickly became a cash cow on K Street--one of those contentious Washington issues that drags on for years beneath the radar of mainstream media. Eventually, pressure from multinational corporations became too great, and California --the leader in the simplification movement--had to relent. Other states followed suit. Today about half a dozen states permit multinationals to file as unitary businesses but don't require it. Once again, corporations can choose globalization when it suits them but can hide behind national borders when it doesn't.

The truly weird part is that Treasury has seen the futility of its archaic methods. It is moving slowly toward the formula approach--but in an obscure, case-by-case way. The latest chapter in this administrative fiasco is something called Advanced Pricing Agreements or APAs. Basically the corporations sit down with the IRS behind closed doors and negotiate their transfer prices. In effect, they negotiate their own tax bills; and as though that weren't bad enough, Congress, in its infinite solicitude, has made these agreements secret except for publication in vague general terms. To put this another way, there are two income-tax systems in America today. Working people pay what they have to, while the largest corporations pay pretty much what they want to. The IRS actually has shifted audit resources in recent years so that it comes down harder on small taxpayers and easier on the bigger ones. The rampant corporate avoidance is taking us down the path of countries such as Italy, where people think that only suckers pay. Speaking of the secret APAs, Professor Avi-Yonah writes, "This is hardly the type of practice one wishes to encourage in a tax system based on both voluntary compliance and the impression that wealthy taxpayers are subject to the same standards as everyone else."

The practice also confirms what many Americans suspect about the global economy generally--that if you are a real person you bear the burdens, and if you are a large corporation then you enjoy the gains. The burdens should be shared so that the gains can be shared too.

As with deferral, the answer here is not hard. We need to develop consistent formulas to apportion the income of multinational firms. Such an approach would not be perfect. But it would be an improvement and it would demonstrate to people that the actual rules of trade are in synch with the rhetoric of globalization. People are getting taken; and unless we start looking at the details--unless we debate the rules of trade in concrete terms rather than as theologians--things are going to get worse.

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In Their Words

"I distrust those people who know so well what God wants them to do, because I notice it always coincides with their own desires." - Susan B. Anthony

"We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars." - Oscar Wilde

"When I dare to be powerful - to use my strength in the service of my vision, then it becomes less and less important whether I am afraid." - Audre Lorde

If homosexuality is a disease, lets all call in queer to work. "Hello, can't work today. Still queer." - Robin Tyler

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DOMA Revisited

A message from the Chair

Two very important measures for our community came before the House of Representatives this week. And we batted 500. In the first, Anti Hate Crime legislation was passed by a vote of 232-192 as a "motion to instruct" attached to a Defense Department authorization bill. The Senate had previously approved the legislation by vote of 57-42. Clinton has stated he will sign this legislation. Too late for too many – but an important step.

The other legislation in the limelight was the "Scouting For All" bill sponsored by Rep. Woolsey. Woolsey had requested hearings to bring the issue to full debate. Instead, the Republican leadership brought the issue forward under "Suspension of the Rules". This is a process used to expedite non-controversial legislation. It is usually the sponsor of the bill that moves to suspend the rules. In this case, the motion was made by an open opponent of the bill. The move was made in an attempt to force members into a difficult vote shortly before the elections. (REMEMBER DOMA???) The liberal leadership of the House urged a "Present" vote as a vote of protest to the Republican leadership’s misuse of the rules. The bill was defeated by a vote of 12-362 with 51 members voting "Present". Of the three openly gay members of Congress, two voted "Present" (Barney Frank, D-MA and Tammy Baldwin, D-WI) and one voted No (Jim Kolbe, R-AZ). (See page 3 for more details.)

I’d like you to read "Global Shell Games" (pages 5-7) closely. It’s about something we all know is happening – but no one can quite figure it out – and the "system" perpetuates the inequities of corporate greed at the expense of the individual. This is an issue that is difficult to report on – because it is so complex – but hopefully we’ll soon see this blow sky high.

Remember to vote – and please plan your next 7 weeks to include time to Get Out The Democratic Vote. An awful lot rides on this election – including the Supreme Court and Redistricting. Call me at 324-2026 if you want to get involved and don’t know how.

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It Happened in September

  • 1292-John de Wettre, a knife-maker, was executed for sodomy after being condemned at Ghent (present-day Belgium). He was burned to death at the stake. It was the earliest known record of an execution for sodomy in Western Europe.

  • 1487-Givanni Maria Ciocchi del Monte, later known as Pope Julius III, was born. He created scandal by picking up a young, uneducated hustler and appointing him to the rank of cardinal.

  • 1779-Alexander Hamilton wrote to John Laurens, "Like a jealous lover, when I thought you had slighted my caresses, my affection was alarmed and my vanity piqued."

  • 1967-The US television show "NYPD" aired an episode about the blackmail of gay people. It is the first time the word "homosexual" was used in a network drama.

  • 1982-President Reagan vetoed a bill which would have granted $500,000 to the Centers for Disease Control to fight AIDS.

  • 1997-Bernard Widmar and Henry Korn of Boise, Idaho held a party with 200 guests to celebrate their golden anniversary. They met in Chicago while they were both in college on the G.I. bill.

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Last updated 02/09/01 Copywrite Harvey Muggy Stonewall Democrats 2001