America is slashing taxes like a gambler on a hot streak, blind to the debt piling up behind the table. The moment most people stop paying, they stop caring—and that’s when accountability dies in silence. Easy money breeds lazy oversight. This tax-cut craze is a sweet lie that will leave a bitter, expensive hangover.
I watch America celebrate tax cuts the way a gambler celebrates a lucky streak—loud, proud, and blind to the bill coming due. Under Donald Trump, refunds are flowing, fueled by trillions in deficit spending. Across the aisle, some Democrats like Senators Cory Booker and Chris Van Hollen are pushing plans that could wipe out federal income taxes for about 55% of filers. Both parties are sprinting toward the same cliff, smiling for the cameras while the ground cracks beneath their feet.
I call it what it is—America is cutting taxes like there
is no tomorrow. And that is not bold leadership. That is economic denial
dressed up as generosity.
Let’s strip away the nonsense. America is not overtaxed.
Compared to other wealthy nations, the U.S. runs a relatively low tax burden.
Meanwhile, the deficit is already sitting around 6% of GDP, a number that
should make any serious economist pause. The Congressional Budget Office has
warned that this number is not stabilizing—it is climbing. That is not a
warning light. That is a flashing siren.
I have seen this movie before. In the 1980s, Ronald
Reagan cut taxes hard, promising growth would pay for it. Growth came, yes—but
so did exploding deficits. National debt tripled during his presidency. Fast
forward to the early 2000s, George W. Bush pushed through tax cuts while
fighting two wars. The result? Budget surpluses flipped into deep deficits. The
pattern is not complicated. Cut taxes without cutting spending, and you are not
solving a problem—you are delaying it and making it worse.
You cannot outrun arithmetic.
Now the same playbook is back, but louder, faster, and
more reckless. Refunds are hitting bank accounts, and politicians are acting
like they have discovered free money. But nothing is free. Every dollar handed
out today is borrowed from tomorrow. And tomorrow always shows up.
I hear people say, “But tax cuts put money in people’s
pockets.” Sure, they do. But that is only half the story. The other half is
inflation, debt interest, and market backlash. When the government borrows
heavily, it competes with private investment. Interest rates rise. Growth
slows. The party ends.
Look at the United Kingdom in 2022. Liz Truss tried a
similar stunt—massive tax cuts without a clear funding plan. The bond market
did not clap. It revolted. Yields spiked, the pound crashed, and her government
collapsed in weeks. That was not theory. That was reality hitting hard and
fast.
America is not immune. At some point, investors will look
at rising deficits and ask a simple question: “Can this be sustained?” When
that doubt creeps in, borrowing costs jump. And when borrowing costs jump,
everything else follows—mortgages, business loans, credit cards. The middle
class pays the price, not the politicians who wrote the checks.
Now let me get to the part nobody wants to say out loud.
If too many people stop paying taxes, they stop caring about how taxes are
spent. That is not a moral judgment. That is human nature.
Taxes are not just revenue. They are skin in the game. When
you pay, you pay attention. You ask questions. You demand results. But when
more than half the population pays little or nothing, that connection breaks.
Government becomes something distant, something abstract—a machine that gives
rather than a system that must be managed. That is how accountability dies.
Quietly. Gradually. Then all at once.
I think about the old idea often linked to thinkers like
Adam Smith—that citizens must feel the cost of government to demand efficiency.
Strip that away, and you create a dangerous divide: a shrinking group of
taxpayers carrying the load, and a growing group of recipients watching from
the sidelines. That is not unity. That is tension waiting to explode.
Politicians know this, but they gamble anyway. They
believe tax cuts win votes. Sometimes they do, briefly. But history shows that
voters are not as easy to fool as politicians hope. Trump cut taxes in his
first term and still lost in 2020. Rishi Sunak pushed tax relief before the
2024 election and still got crushed. People care about real prices—groceries,
rent, gas—not abstract tax percentages.
And here is the twist: wages have actually grown faster
than inflation in recent years. But people still feel poorer. Why? Because
prices are high. That is what hits emotionally. Cutting taxes does not fix
that. It just masks it for a moment, like pouring water on a grease fire.
Short-term relief, long-term damage.
State-level ideas are getting even wilder—property tax
breaks for seniors, income tax elimination for certain workers. Each one sounds
good in isolation. Together, they form a pattern: a country trying to escape
responsibility instead of managing it.
I do not buy the fantasy that the rich alone can carry
the system. Proposals like a 5% wealth tax on billionaires sound appealing, but
they are unstable. Wealth is mobile. Capital moves. Push too hard, and it
leaves. Then the system breaks from the other side.
So where does this road lead? It leads to higher debt,
weaker markets, and a government increasingly disconnected from its citizens.
It leads to a political system where promises get bigger and reality gets
ignored. It leads to a reckoning—slow at first, then sudden.
And when that moment comes, America will not be asking
how to cut taxes. It will be asking how to survive the consequences. I say it
plainly because someone has to. This tax-cut craze is not smart policy. It is a
sugar rush. It feels good now. It sells well. It wins headlines. But like every
sugar rush, it crashes. Hard.
Soon America will come to regret its war on taxes. Not
because taxes are perfect, but because abandoning them without a plan is worse.
Much worse.
This article stands on
its own, but some readers may also enjoy the titles in my “Brief BookSeries”. Read it here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.






