Paul Mishler
My grandparents were immigrant workers. In 1905 they fled their home in Kishenev (now in Moldova) after the Czar's police led mobs on a rampage through the Jewish community burning homes, businesses and synagogues and killing and assaulting men, women and children. Like all immigrants, then and now, they came to this country looking for a better life.
When my mother was a little girl, growing up in the Bronx, in New York City, her father took the subway one hour each way to work as a dressmaker in the Lower East Side. He had moved with his family from the slums of lower Manhattan to the Bronx because, as he often said, "the air was better". He spent his life as a worker in the garment factories of New York. He was a member of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union (the ILGWU) and because of this he was able to support his family, not as a wealthy man, but as a worker. Both of his children went to college and they both became professionals. And both remembered how important unions were to their family.
When my grandfather died, still young, my grandmother got a job in a hospital. With my grandfather's union pension and her wages she was able to support herself. But hospital wages were among the lowest in the city-most hospital workers in the 1950s lived below the poverty line. In 1961 hospital workers in New York won the right to form a union and Local 1199 Hospital Workers Union was born. My grandmother was a charter member.
While my academic parents were quite broad-minded and tolerant there was one lesson they insisted on- you should never cross a picket line!
The effort to organize maintenance and food service workers at Notre Dame is a joint effort by UNITE!-HERE (a merger between the garment workers and the Hotel/Restaurant Workers) and SEIU (Service Workers International Union). This joint effort is called SWU or Service Workers United. UNITE! is composed of a number of, formerly separate, garment workers unions, including my grandfather's old union, the ILGWU. And SEIU includes my grandmother's union, now Local 1199 SEIU.
I support the union drive at Notre Dame not just because of my job or my political philosophy. It is to honor the lives and work of my grandparents. It's personal. The workers at Notre Dame (including many immigrants) deserve the respect, the wages and rights on the job that my grandparents fought for, and won, with their unions. Notre Dame workers deserve no less.
Peter Smith
I was a product of the 50's: Civil Defense drills, the Red
Menace, McCarthyism, super patriotism, Korean War, etc. I joined
NROTC in college so my parents would not have to pay my tuition
and books. I had two younger sisters they needed to send to
college. I did not like Navy life and resigned after spending
the required four years in service, although my politics were
as right wing as ever. While I was in the Navy we had to endure
countless counter-insurgency lectures, as the military advisors
were already starting their work in Vietnam. I arrived at the
University of Wisconsin in the fall of 1964 and immediately
joined a group called Young Christian Students (YCS), since
it was the only student group at the Catholic Center.
The YCS group at Wisconsin was very reflective and at the
same time very action oriented. We were encouraged to take on
projects that would help alleviate some injustice at the University.
Some of these projects were next to impossible. One of my friends
and I tried to figure out how to stop students from wasting
so much food in the dining hall. But, by tackling projects which
seemed unattainable, I learned that it is not success that is
important, but commitment to do what seems to be right and constant
questioning of that commitment by dialogue with those who hold
other views. Although I didn't know it then, this commitment
and questioning is at the heart of the nonviolent lifestyle.
It was during this time of intense reflection/action that
we heard that Martin Luther King Jr. had been beaten and attacked
by police dogs when he and a small group of his followers had
tried to march from Selma to Montgomery. This news electrified
the nation, and young people from all over the country piled
on buses to travel to Alabama to march with him. But the buses
were all redirected to Washington, D.C. Dr. King only wanted
those trained in nonviolent direct action to be with him. He
was afraid that untrained hotheads would retaliate violently
against his oppressors, and the civil rights movement would
lose its moral high ground.
The YCS group rented a bus and traveled to Montgomery when
Dr. King decided to open the march on its last day to all who
supported his movement. That march was a conversion experience
for me. I had to overcome my fear and engage in my first nonviolent
direct action. The line of march was several people abreast
and stretched as far as the eye could see in both directions.
We flowed out into the square in front of the Alabama capitol
with its confederate flag flying high overhead and spent the
afternoon listening to speeches by very committed individuals,
including Dr. King himself.
I was to hear Dr. King again in Chicago a few years later,
when he was speaking out against the Vietnam War, and I was
moved to the core by his simple eloquence. His message of non-violence
rooted in Christian principles, his courage to stand up for
what he believed in when the odds seemed insurmountable, motivated
me to dedicate my life to non-violent struggle against racism
and other forms of injustice.
The student body at Wisconsin had many confrontations with
CIA officials, military recruiters, and DOW Chemical Company
representatives. Often the smell of tear gas would accompany
me on my way home from class. I engaged in several direct actions
involving ROTC at Wisconsin. Many of my friends were burning
their draft cards and/or fleeing to Canada to avoid the draft,
but since I had already served, I was exempt from the draft.
After graduating in 1968, and starting a teaching job at a predominantly
black college in New Orleans, I found it hard to keep up my
resistance to the war. Then I heard about war tax resistance
and that the government was drafting my tax dollars to kill
Vietnamese. I started with phone tax refusal, but soon escalated
to refusing the military portion of the income tax - it was
over 60% in those days. I had three small children, so it was
important that my wife supported our resisting war taxes. By
that time I had moved to South Bend, Indiana, and found that
many Notre Dame students were ready to take action against the
war. We set up a small draft counseling office and held many
demonstrations on campus and in town. I first committed civil
disobedience during the May Day, 1970, "Shut Down Washington"
events and experienced 14 hours and a macing in the DC jail.
Although I offered to start paying taxes as a good faith gesture
after Nixon ended the war, it soon became clear that there was
no reduction in military spending. My wife and I have been refusing
to voluntarily pay the military portion of our income taxes
ever since. We file the 1040 each year but refuse to send the
payment. Because my wife is self-employed, and I claimed 10
allowances on my W-4 form, we avoided withholding on the refused
amount. Unlike other war tax resisters, we have never succeeded
in shielding our bank accounts and salaries from the IRS. They
have collected everything they claim we owe plus penalties and
interest. They have garnished wages, seized bank accounts and
my IRA, put liens on my house, and even taken insurance payments
due to my wife's medical practice.
However, I have found it very empowering to be able to say
"No" to the government as it has continued to wage wars in Nicaragua,
Grenada, Panama, Colombia, Iraq, and many other places. In answer
to the many who have questioned the effectiveness of our resistance,
we point to the way it has helped us stay active as citizens
over the years. We tell folks that the penalties and interest
are used to pay IRS employees and don't end up in the general
fund. Also, the power of nonviolence is at work. The comptroller
who tried to get me fired when my wages were first seized wrote
a note expressing his respect for my stand when he retired.
When I vigil on the corner every Monday or refuse to pay the
military portion of my income tax each year, Dr. King's example
is always before me, pointing out the way of nonviolence with
its belief in the innate ability of people to change their minds
and hearts when confronted with the power of truth and love.
I was interviewed on Northern Spirit Radio about WTRPF, NWTRCC, MPJC, and other topics in April, 2015. The link is below.
northernspiritradio.org/episode/supporting-war-tax-resisters-sharing-brunt