Marco Rubio Wants To Fight Abortion and Trans Battles in the Tax Code
Tax loopholes for corporations end up making it easier for politicians like Rubio to meddle in private decision making.

With the passage of state laws intended to restrict access to abortion, some companies like Bumble, Yelp, and Salesforce have announced programs to assist employees who have to travel to other states in order to obtain the procedure. After the apparent leak of a draft Supreme Court opinion which would overturn the right nationwide, Amazon announced that for any employees who have to travel in order to receive an abortion, it would reimburse up to $4,000 annually.
Last week, Sen. Marco Rubio (R–Fla.) responded by threatening legislation.
Employees' health care costs are typically tax deductible as business expenses for their employers. Rubio's bill, the No Tax Breaks for Radical Corporate Activism Act, would bar a company from deducting the costs of reimbursements not only for abortions but also for gender-affirming medical treatments for transgender children. In a statement accompanying the legislation, Rubio said, "Our tax code should be pro-family and promote a culture of life."
But directly disincentivizing behavior is a fundamental misuse of the tax code, and it's unlikely to work anyway.
To be sure, government policies are inherently incentivizing: For example, laws against robbery and murder are intended to keep people from robbing and murdering. Regarding taxes, people with incomes near the top of their tax brackets are disincentivized to increase their income, to avoid paying a higher rate.
But writing specific incentives into the tax code is an inherent market distortion, where politicians choose what products and activities they think people should be buying and partaking in. This can take the form of cronyism when certain types of products are favored. Even something as seemingly benign and beneficial as a tax credit for purchasing electric vehicles can just become a giveaway to favored companies. Additionally, when a benefit exists, it makes it that much easier for a politician to threaten to take it away: Even the health cost deduction Rubio is targeting is, itself, a distortion that incentivizes employer-provided health insurance plans.
Politicians use the tax code to achieve social policy goals because it is typically easier to insert a targeted tax credit than to pass a bill creating a new welfare program. But in practice, these carve-outs make everything more complicated: When the various COVID-19 relief bills apportioned money for stimulus checks, even with funding for additional staffing, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) was slammed with calls from people awaiting their payments. When the tax code is the means by which benefits are distributed, then the tax collectors must also function as a social services agency.
Worse, it's not even apparent that these benefits have their desired effect. A 2014 study of a tax on high calorie foods showed that such a tax can lead to more purchases of high calorie foods. In 1997, Iris Lav of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a progressive think tank, told The New York Times, "There's very scant evidence that the tax code has ever changed people's behavior."
Ironically for Rubio, this used to be Republican orthodoxy. In 1964, Ronald Reagan declared, "We cannot have [true tax] reform while our tax policy is engineered by people who view the tax as a means of achieving changes in our social structure." But since then, Republicans as well as Democrats have used the tax system as a shortcut to achieving their desired policy outcomes. As a result, filing one's annual taxes is an expensive, grueling process.
To the extent that taxation has any legitimate purpose, it is to fund the basic function of the federal government. Anything further, like incentivizing family or "a culture of life," is simply government coercion by another name.
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Next you'll tell me that the CDC is telling landlords that their tenants don't have to pay rent!
But it’s ok if they mandate a vaccine at work.
In a statement accompanying the legislation, Rubio said, "Our tax code should be pro-family and promote a culture of life."
Rubio's social engineering is more proof that D and R are starting to merge. Reward the behavior you want, penalize what you don't. The rest is just details.
Coke vs Pepsi, that is the nature of todays D vs R.
"Coke vs Pepsi, that is the nature of todays D vs R."
So libertarians might be.... Dr. Pepper? Or...
Or a double shot, straight up.
+
RC cola. Some people claim to like it but can't be found anywhere.
Moxie
Or malort
Amazon announced that for any employees who have to travel in order to receive an abortion, it would reimburse up to $4,000 annually.
A lot of guys at Amazon are going to become birthing persons over this.
"Starting to merge"? That's fucking hilarious!
Government inducing business to act in the interests of the homeland?
What would we call this if it were a Team Blue initiative?
Accidental?
Bumble, Yelp, and Salesforce have announced programs to assist employees who have to travel to other states in order to obtain the procedure.
This is good business. I have personally witnessed significant numbers of women who got pregnant and had to pull back their hours and limit the projects and travel they could do in my industry which... in the end, holds back their salaries and promotions thus furthering the wage gap.
Companies should be, in my opinion, mandating abortion depending on the position and responsibilities of the employee.
Yeah, there is that dark part of this. I can't remember where it was, but I remember listening to some very older-type feminist argue that the cost of entry for women and men into elite institutions is increasingly that they give up their hope of having a family, or at least push it off until it's so late it requires medical intervention frequently.
That said, that's a cultural issue for sure, not a legal one. We likely need some great awakening or something to turn people back towards family being a central portion of our lives and meaning.
Like a lot of things, the Babylon Bee pretty much nails this issue.
"What about my career as a corporate drone who loves binge-drinking on the weekends!" cried one woman at the steps of the Supreme Court building while holding a protest sign reading "My Body, My Choice, My Vanity, My Career, My Parties, My Barren, Loveless Life."
This under the headline, "Moloch Warns of Looming Child Sacrifice Supply Chain Issues"
https://babylonbee.com/news/moloch-warns-of-looming-child-sacrifice-supply-chain-issues
That is some truly funny and subversive shit there.
Great line.
"What about my career as a corporate drone who loves binge-drinking on the weekends!" cried one woman at the steps of the Supreme Court building while holding a protest sign reading "My Body, My Choice, My Vanity, My Career, My Parties, My Barren, Loveless Life."
"To the extent that taxation has any legitimate purpose, it is to fund the basic function of the federal government."
HAHAHAHAHA If only that were so.
Yep. If that were true, everyone would pay taxes, and pay the same rate on everything; no deductions or exemptions.
5 trillion dollar budget, 250 million taxpayers, 20K apiece, every year.
Dump every cabinet position and related agency that is not mentioned in the US Constitution, 10% ought to do it.
You don't spread it out across each taxpayer, you spread it out according to income.
A $25,000/yr worker pays half what a $50,000/yr worker pays.
If the Constitution didn't forbid it, I'd spread it by the person - most legitimate federal expenses benefit people by the each, not by how much the person makes (ex, defense - I have only one life, same as my neighbor who makes half what I do, and the same as the other neighbor who makes twice what I do).
To the overall point of the article, that Rubio's idea is stupid and he shouldn't try it, sure.
That out of the way...
Regarding taxes, people with incomes near the top of their tax brackets are disincentivized to increase their income, to avoid paying a higher rate.
Wrong. Read up on how progressive tax rates work.
[...] Republicans as well as Democrats have used the tax system as a shortcut to achieving their desired policy outcomes. As a result,filing one's annual taxes is an expensive, grueling process.
Wrong again. Filing taxes is expensive and grueling as a hand-out to tax filing agencies like Turbo Tax. This is a crony-capitalism consequence, not a policy consequence.
I guess I never learned how to not keep records.
I never spent more than 3 hours filing federal income taxes, even when I was running my consulting business as a corporation and filed corporate taxes and personal taxes. Most of that was double checking math back in the dark ages when the smartest thing on the desk looked a lot like a calculator. Never paid a tax guy, never paid a program.
Your crazy.
My the time I get to 5 or 6 different schedules and all the verbage about referencing line N and worksheet X and chart FUCKME, I give up and pay to have it done.
My guess is that Rubio's reading of the mood of Republican voters is about as bad as Lancaster's. I think most Republicans aren't getting their panties in a wad about companies offering these services. These situations aren't like Disney, where the company is trying to dictate the rules, generally. This is between the company and their employees. That said, I noticed that, of the companies you cite - Amazon, Bumble, Yelp, and Salesforce - only Bumble is not headquartered in a deep blue state. Yelp and Salesforce's expected outlay to transport women in California to where they can get abortions is likely to roughly approximate zero.
The problem is that such treatments are being given at all to children not who is paying for it. I think Rubio mistake here is he is giving away the game. If the problem is who is paying for the treatments, then it is a given the treatments are okay and should be legal just so long as you pay for it yourself. Well, if they are okay and should be legal, why shouldn't employers be able to pay for them?
The answer is they shouldn't be legal.
First, if there is a more Orwellian and disgusting term than "gender affirming" in place of sex change, I am hard pressed to come up with it. Stop lying reason. Call it what it is.
Second, children do not have the capacity to consent to such treatment. And since such treatment is life altering, permanent, and in no may medically necessary, it should be illegal for anyone under the age of 18 to get such treatment. If they want it, they can get it when they are older and it is their choice. No one, not parents, not doctors, nor anyone has any moral right to make the decision for them.
Reason continues to totally disregard the rights of children and any sense of morality or honesty in its quest to fight the leftist culture war.
Yeah, when you say "gender affirming surgery" you're fully bought-in.
To being a lying piece of shit.
It would be nice if we'd call things what they are instead of adopting the language of activism.
"Experiencing homelessness"
Bum or hobo were perfectly descriptive words that described a good number of people who were "homeless".
Gender and sex are separate concepts. That's why I need surgery to affirm my 'gender'.
Gender is a social construct, that requires radically changing my biology to conform to.
But who are we to question revolutionary truth with our bourgeois logic?
If gender is a social construct (we are so told) and has nothing to do with sex (or sexuality), then why would someone need to get physically altered to change their gender? To change their sex, yes, that takes a knife and sutures.
Was the big women's lib thing that sex shouldn't control what one did, how one dressed? Is that what gay lib is about, loving who one wants?
Gender is linguistic concept le/la, der/die/das, etc that serves no purpose but to give language teachers one more way to take points off of exams.
Gender is the term that Americans came up during the first progressive era, because sex was a dirty word. They were complete synonyms until the 60s.
Eunuch was a perfectly good word. For the FTM let me coin the word Newnuch.
Eunuch is another good word.
"Experiencing homelessness"
In some places they are The Unhoused.
They're Unhoused here as well. They're "unhoused' when talked about as a group, "experiencing homelessness" is how they're referred to individually.
Used in a sentence:
We have to do more to help "the unhoused".
A man "experiencing homelessness" raped a woman jogging in the park.
He was just affirming her gender...
"delusion affirming surgery"
and in no may medically necessary
Who decides if a particular treatment is "medically necessary"? You?
No, the dictionary does. Words have meaning you half wit. And sex change operations are not something that is necessary for health or life or limb. They are an elective surgery akin to a boob job or a tattoo.
Children cannot meaningfully consent to that. And you can't consent for them you sick fuck.
Wait, the dictionary can diagnose patients now? Huh.
And sex change operations are not something that is necessary for health or life or limb.
Not even for mental health? Never ever ever?
Shouldn't the doctors and the counselors and the therapists and the psychiatrists be making these types of decisions?
Doctors, psychiatrists, therapists and counselors also prescribed lobotomies and electroshock therapy. They're not always right.
Totally doesn't believe in critical theory or post modernism.
"Not even for mental health? Never ever ever?"
Yes.
Next?
Sex change is almost as bad. We should actually be calling it genital reconfiguration.
Still cheaper than having to pay for the employees healthcare costs when they give birth. This isn't a "woke" decision by the companies, it's purely financial.
I don't think paying for sex changes for children saves any money.
Let's lift the tax exemption from Jesus clubhouses instead.
Oh, that's right -- Little Marco likes to go to the Jesus clubhouse in his neighborhood, so the rest of us have to subsidize it by paying higher taxes.
Yeah because it is not like "Freedom of Religion" is enshrined in the Constitution or anything.
But go ahead and start taxing churches. When you do that, they will then be free to be as political as they like. I don't think you are going to like that very much. But, feel free to give a shot there sparky.
I don't even get the beef with not taxing churches. We don't tax any religious organization, including Planned Parenthood. You wanna start taxing churches? Fine with me, Planned Parenthood, pay up.
Not only is Planned Parenthood untamed, but it receives half a billion dollars from taxes every year.
The other fun part is when they realize it's impossible to do that with churches without bringing in the rest of the non-profit sector:
Colleges and Universities? BOOM!
The NGO sector? KERPLOOWEY!
Scientific research institutions? SPLAT!
Yes. Most churches are pretty poor and wouldn't show any income to tax anyway. The organizations you mention, however, are nearly all leftist and do quite well for themselves.
You can tell how big of an idiot someone is whenever they bring up taxing churches
I would be fully in favor of having a corparte, and personal income tax of 100% for all companies and execs that openly support progressives. Cal it the reap what you sow tax law
Hitting the sacramental wine? (corparte,)
Nah when I'm drunk I'm a much better speller
Insanity inspires insanity. Democrats want to tax those that refuse the vaccine at insane rates, so why shouldn't Republicans use the same power of taxation to instill their will on others?
Maybe just knock of with the tax code as a political weapon on both sides?
Just don't forget it was Obama that weaponized the IRS.
And fdr and Johnson.. Noticing a pattern?
Rubio said, "Our tax code should be pro-family and promote a culture of life."
I don't know about that, but it ought to be considered perfectly reasonable to deny a tax deduction for elective surgery. It should be taxed more like salary or bonus.
A tax deduction for tranny surgery or an abortion means that I'm subsidizing those perverse activities.
I don't want to
Their freedom to do those things does not supersede my freedom to decline to pay for them.
I'm all for this law
Steve, if you're voting for abortion restrictions or politicians who do, you and fellow state residents need to take responsibility for raising the children since you have forced women to have babies they may not have wanted to have. Be a man.
I also suggest you advocate as part of the legislation that your state become pro-active in finding the fathers and attaching their wages toward raising the child until 18, or college if it goes. They should be held as responsible as you are making the woman.
Joe Friday, you should take a ride down Niagara Falls in a canoe.
A tax deduction means you are being taken for a ride by politicians who are playing your for a sucker. The Tax code has gone from 1% to 90% to somewhere in the middle yet the Feds don't much more than about 22% of GDP. Every change is to play people like you for suckers. Tax code should be repealed in favor of an a-political flat or fair tax with a baseline 'deduction' (no taxes due) on a basic income adjusted for inflation - in the $25 to $30,000 a year range.
Reason is your enemy.
Biden, Reason's guy, is also sending another half billion to Ukraine.
https://twitter.com/JacobMBliss/status/1523791294275133440?t=z33mTPZKPS39DxziWLAPZg&s=19
EPA Senior Adviser for Environmental Justice Wants ‘Environmental Reparations’ to Heal Relationship with Nature
[Link]
The author misunderstands the tax code. He says in the beginning of the article that people near the top of a tax bracket are disincentivized to make more because they will wind up in a higher tax bracket. That isn't how it works. You only pay a higher percentage of tax on the money above whatever the new tax bracket is. For example, if your taxes jump from 30% to 35% if you make over $90k, and you earn $95k, you only pay the 35% on the $5k, not the whole $95k. I would expect an assistant editor at Reason to understand the tax system better.
The best thing about making a lot of money is reaching the social security cap early in the year and laughing at the peons in the middle class who pay that tax on the full amount.
That is correct.
“I would expect an assistant editor at Reason to understand the tax system better.”
New here?
You are absolutely correct, but not at the lowest level. I was on some state aid way back when I had my kid. That jump from 12k/yr to 18 in 2004 was fucking brutal. The poverty line is much higher now, but taking 30k in bennies away from someone going from 25 to 28 (or whatever) is definitely a huge disincentive. Especially when your skillset has you reaching your ceiling at 50-60k/yr 15 years down the road.
"Our tax code should be pro-family and promote a culture of life."
As opposed to those corporations that hate families and love death.
Everyone knows what these euphemisms mean, but Republicans talk in them nonetheless, and they're right to, because their voters are actually that stupid.
gender-affirming medical treatments for transgender children
One day, but no time soon, elites who articulated such doublespeak will be castrated
Slavery = freedom
Responsibility = oppression
Black on black violence = whitey did it
I get how a health care tax break shouldn't exist in the first place, because they tie people to their employers' health plans.
If we're to have a health care tax break, however, then we'll have to have some definition of health care.
Would the exemption apply to Christian Science faith healing?
Would it apply to cutting open a vein and letting the bad humors out?
Would it apply to cutting one's genitals for "gender-affirming" purposes?
Would it apply to "procedures" which used to be forbidden to physicians, such as, say, abortions?
'Our tax code should be pro-family and promote a culture of life." No our tax code should be repealed in it's entirety and replaced with a non biased a-political fair tax. What a Rube.
Rubio is proposing to REDUCE the extent to which the tax code incentivizes employers to provide "health care", and Reason has taken precisely the opposite of the libertarian position on this.
But of course, for Reason, it's abortion first and libertarianism second.