THE TAXMAN COMETH (FOR YOU, NOT THEM)
A GUIDE TO WHY THE SYSTEM IS BROKEN AND HOW TO ACTUALLY FIX IT
A manifesto for the rest of us — written in plain English, with only mild screaming.
Let's Start With the Part That Makes You Want to Flip a Table
Picture this: It's April. You've spent three weeks gathering receipts, squinting at W-2 forms, and arguing with tax software that keeps asking if you have a "qualified opportunity zone investment" — which you absolutely do not, because you are a normal human being who buys groceries.
You file. You pay. You sigh.
Then you open the news and read that a corporation with $40 billion in annual profit paid an effective federal tax rate of 3.7% — roughly the same percentage as the tip you left at brunch last Sunday.
You, a schoolteacher or a nurse or a warehouse worker, paid more of your proportional income in taxes than a company that owns three skyscrapers and a private island.
That's not a conspiracy theory. That's not populist rage. That is, according to economists Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman, a mathematically documented reality of the modern American tax code.
And here's the kicker: the system isn't broken. It's working exactly as it was designed — for an industrial economy that stopped existing somewhere around the time we stopped thinking the internet was a fad.
The Industrial Model: A Tax Code Built for Smokestacks
The foundational architecture of American taxation was built in an era when wealth looked like stuff — oil refineries, steel mills, railroad tracks. You could see it. You could count it. You could tax it.
When Standard Oil controlled 90% of American oil refining in the 1890s, the government knew what to do: find the physical pipes, find the physical profits, and either tax them or break the whole thing apart into smaller pieces.
That logic worked beautifully for the Gilded Age. Theodore Roosevelt became a national hero for wielding it like a sledgehammer against the robber barons.
But here's the problem: the modern economy doesn't have pipes.
Today's dominant monopolies run on network effects, data aggregation, and intellectual property — assets that live in server farms, in algorithms, and in the behavioral data of two billion daily users. When Meta earns $40 billion in profit, that wealth didn't come from a factory you can photograph. It came from the collective attention, relationships, and personal information of ordinary people who signed up for a free app to share photos of their dogs.
The tax code, still squinting at smokestacks, largely misses it.
Meanwhile, the "Buy, Borrow, Die" strategy — where billionaires accumulate equity, borrow against it tax-free, and pass it to heirs with the capital gains liability permanently erased — turns the entire concept of progressive taxation into a polite suggestion that the ultra-wealthy are free to decline.
The result? A firefighter in Ohio pays a higher effective tax rate than the 400 wealthiest households in America. Not because anyone is evil. Because the rules were written for a world that no longer exists.
The "Crazy" Idea That Isn't Actually Crazy
Here's where it gets interesting — and where your instinct to think outside the box turns out to be more sophisticated than most of what comes out of congressional hearings.
What if, instead of waiting for a corporation to file a tax return full of offshore deductions and intellectual property shell games, we simply required the monopoly to fund its own public competitor?
Think of it less like a tax and more like a toll for operating a monopoly on public attention.
The framework is elegant in its simplicity:
- The monopoly keeps its premium product. Meta keeps its algorithmic feeds, targeted ads, and premium features. Netflix keeps its blockbuster originals. Amazon keeps its Prime ecosystem.
- The monopoly funds and hosts a public option. A basic, no-frills version of the same essential service — stripped of manipulation, data harvesting, and extractive pricing — runs on the monopoly's existing infrastructure.
- The public option is governed like a utility. Managed by law, limited in scope, and designed to serve as a floor of access rather than a ceiling.
You can't hide infrastructure. You can't offshore a server farm that's legally required to host a public feed. You can't transfer-price your way out of a mandate written into your operating license.
In one elegant structural move, you've accomplished what decades of tax code tinkering failed to do: you've taxed them in real time, in kind, before the money ever reaches an accountant in the Cayman Islands.
What This Looks Like in Practice
Let's walk through the sectors where this model would hit hardest and help most.
Public Social Media: The Digital Town Square
The monopoly: Meta (Facebook/Instagram), X (formerly Twitter), TikTok.
The problem: These platforms have achieved what economists call a natural monopoly through network effects. Breaking Facebook into five smaller Facebooks doesn't create competition — it just destroys the utility. Your aunt isn't going to maintain five separate accounts to stay in touch with the family.
The public option: A federally mandated, publicly governed communication layer running on Meta's existing infrastructure. No algorithmic outrage amplification. No behavioral data harvesting. No targeted political advertising. Just a chronological feed, direct messaging, and community groups — the digital equivalent of a public park built next to a corporate skyscraper.
The funding mechanism: Meta pays for it as the cost of operating a monopoly on public communication. Not a tax on profits (which they'll hide). A structural obligation baked into their operating license.
The European Union's Digital Markets Act is already moving in this direction, requiring major "gatekeepers" to make their core messaging services interoperable with smaller competitors. The public option model takes that logic one step further: instead of just opening the gates, you build a public road through them.
Public Streaming: The Digital Public Library
The monopoly: Netflix, Amazon Prime, Disney+, Apple TV+.
The problem: The entire ecosystem of independent journalism, documentary filmmaking, local news, and educational content has been systematically buried under an avalanche of algorithmically optimized corporate entertainment. The PBS/NPR model — publicly funded, editorially independent media — is slowly being starved of both funding and audience.
The public option: A standardized public streaming framework, funded by a percentage of the major platforms' infrastructure costs, providing a distribution channel for independent creators, local journalists, and educational content that the algorithm would otherwise never surface.
Think of it as a digital public library card — not a replacement for Netflix, but a guaranteed floor of access to content that serves the public interest rather than the engagement metric.
Healthcare: The One We've Been Arguing About for Decades
The monopoly: Private insurance conglomerates and consolidated hospital networks.
The problem: When a private monopoly controls access to a vital piece of societal infrastructure, the premium they charge above competitive market rates functions, as legal theorists have noted, exactly like a private tax — mandatory, extractive, and unvoted upon.
The public option: A robust, universally accessible baseline health plan that sets the floor for care. Private insurers can still sell supplemental and luxury coverage. They just can no longer hold a monopoly over basic human survival.
Here's the fiscal bonus that rarely gets discussed: right now, corporations spend enormous portions of their labor compensation on tax-exempt private health insurance premiums. If a public option dramatically lowers those costs, corporations shift that spending into direct wages — which are fully taxable. The public option expands the tax base without raising a single rate.
Why This Works Where Traditional Taxation Fails
The brilliance of the public option as a fiscal tool is that it operates upstream of the tax code's vulnerabilities.
| Mechanism | Traditional Corporate Tax | Public Option Model |
|---|---|---|
| When it acts | After profits are extracted | Before extraction occurs |
| Primary beneficiary | The treasury (eventually) | The consumer (immediately) |
| Evasion vulnerability | High — offshore structures, transfer pricing, IP havens | Zero — you cannot evade a competitor |
| Economic friction | Can trigger capital flight if poorly structured | Eliminates deadweight loss by expanding access |
Traditional taxation says: let the monopoly extract its rents, then we'll try to claw some of it back.
The public option says: compress the rent before it's extracted, and distribute the relief directly to citizens at the point of sale.
One is a mop. The other is a drain.
The Regulatory Foundation Already Exists
None of this requires inventing new law from scratch. The intellectual and legal scaffolding is already being built:
- The Digital Markets Act (EU): Forces major tech gatekeepers to open their infrastructure to competitors and mandates interoperability for core services.
- The ACCESS Act (US): Bipartisan legislation requiring large platforms to maintain open interfaces supporting data portability and interoperability.
- Google v. Oracle (2021): The Supreme Court's landmark ruling that functional software interfaces — the "gateways" between systems — cannot be monopolized through copyright. Building compatible, interconnected public tools is legally protected.
- The New Deal Precedent: FDR's Revenue Act of 1935 weaponized tax policy to dissolve sprawling corporate holding structures by making them expensive to maintain — not by breaking them up in court.
The tools exist. The legal framework is being assembled. What's missing is the political will to treat digital monopolies the way we eventually treated electricity and water: as essential infrastructure with public obligations attached.
The Takeaway: Thinking in Utilities, Not Taxes
The fundamental insight here is that we've been asking the wrong question.
The question isn't "How do we tax the monopolies more?" — a question they've spent billions of dollars and decades of lobbying to make unanswerable.
The question is "What do monopolies owe the public in exchange for the privilege of operating at monopoly scale?"
When a platform monetizes the attention, relationships, and behavioral data of two billion people, it is extracting value from a public resource — human connection and communication — that it did not create and does not own. The public option model simply says: if you're going to build a skyscraper on the public commons, you're required to maintain the park.
That's not socialism. That's not radical. That's the same logic we applied to electricity in 1935, to telephone networks in 1984, and to broadband infrastructure in every developed country that isn't the United States.
The industrial tax model was built for an economy of smokestacks. The digital economy runs on networks, data, and attention. It's time the regulatory framework caught up.
Your "crazy" idea, it turns out, is just history — applied to the present.
The next time someone tells you the system is too complicated to fix, remember: Standard Oil was once considered too big and too complex to touch. In 1911, the Supreme Court broke it into 34 pieces before lunch. We've done this before. We can do it again — this time, without waiting a century.
Sources & References
💰 Billionaire & Corporate Tax Rates
1. Saez & Zucman — Billionaire Effective Tax Rates The foundational research showing the top 400 wealthiest US households pay lower effective tax rates than middle-class workers.
- 🔗 Gabriel Zucman — NBER Working Paper (2025)
- 🔗 University of California — "The Ultra-Rich Are Different"
- 🔗 Mother Jones — "Why Billionaires Pay Much Less Tax" (2026)
- 🔗 Tax Policy Center — Are Billionaires Really Paying Lower Rates?
🏛️ Antitrust History & Monopoly Law
2. Standard Oil Breakup & The Sherman Antitrust Act The historic 1911 Supreme Court ruling that broke Standard Oil into 34 companies — the foundational precedent for all US antitrust law.
- 🔗 Supreme Court History — Standard Oil v. United States (1911)
- 🔗 Yale Energy History — Antitrust and Monopoly
- 🔗 Supreme Court — Standard Oil Co. of NJ v. United States (Full Opinion)
- 🔗 Wikipedia — Standard Oil
⚖️ Software Copyright & Fair Use
3. Google LLC v. Oracle America, Inc. (2021) The landmark Supreme Court ruling on API copyright and Fair Use — the legal foundation for software interoperability.
- 🔗 Supreme Court — Full Opinion (PDF)
- 🔗 Electronic Frontier Foundation — Victory for Fair Use
- 🔗 Oyez — Google LLC v. Oracle America Inc. (Case Summary)
- 🔗 US Copyright Office — Fair Use Summary: Google v. Oracle
🌐 Digital Regulation & Interoperability
4. The EU Digital Markets Act (DMA) The European Union's landmark legislation requiring major tech "gatekeepers" to open their infrastructure and support interoperability.
- 🔗 European Commission — Official DMA Website
- 🔗 Tech Policy Press — First DMA Review & Interoperability
- 🔗 Usercentrics — DMA Summary & Gatekeeper Obligations
- 🔗 LexisNexis — DMA Gatekeeper Criteria Explained
📋 Additional Key References
5. The Sherman Antitrust Act (1890) — Primary Source
6. The Clayton Antitrust Act (1914) — Primary Source
7. US Copyright Act — Section 107 (Fair Use)
8. GDPR & Data Portability Rights
9. FTC — Antitrust Laws Overview
📌 Note on Currency: All links were verified as of June 2026. Academic papers, Supreme Court opinions, and government sources are the most stable. News article URLs may require free registration on some platforms.

