Originally published in ANALOG, September, 1983. 
Copyright  1983 by Jack C. Haldeman II. 

WE, THE PEOPLE 
by 
Jack C. Haldeman II 


       The eggs were just the way he liked them. Mark ate slowly, enjoying the 
luxury of a leisurely breakfast. Outside his window the city was beginning to 
stir. Rain had been programmed for last night, and the streets were still damp. 
Across the room his cat was curled up in a patch of sunlight on the sofa, his 
tail swishing back and forth. The apartment was quiet, and he dragged breakfast 
out as long as he could. Finally he got up, set his plate on the floor for the 
cat to lick, and walked across the room to his desk. 
       "Good morning," he said automatically. 
       "GOOD MORNING, MARK. DID YOU SLEEP WELL?" 
       Mark looked at the words as they danced across the screen. "Kind of a bad 
night," he said. "My arthritis is acting up again." 
       "THAT'S TOO BAD, MARK. WAS IT YOUR KNEES?" 
       "No, just my hands this time." He looked at his swollen knuckles and ran 
them through his thinning gray hair. There were worse things. 
       "THAT'S THE THIRD TIME THIS MONTH. DO YOU WANT ME TO FLASH DR. CROMWELL?" 

       "No, that's okay. I'll be seeing him next week." 
       "DO YOU KNOW WHAT TODAY IS, MARK?" 
       "Saturday." It couldn't be his birthday. He'd told the desk to stop 
reminding him of those several years ago. 
       TODAY IS APRIL 15TH." 
       "So what?" 
       "THIS IS TAX DAY. WE HAVE TO FILE BY MIDNIGHT." 
       "I forgot," he said. 
       "YOU HAVE BEEN PUTTING THIS OFF FOR MONTHS. SHALL WE START?" 
       Mark looked around the room. The cat was busily licking the plate. He 
felt old. You could block out birthdays, but not the IRS. "I guess we might as 
well get it over with," he said. 
       "THIS IS A PATRIOTIC OBLIGATION, MARK. YOU SHOULD FEEL PRIVILEGED TO DO 
YOUR PART." 
       "Can the pep talk. Let's go." 
       "DO YOU WANT THE SHORT FORM OR THE LONG FORM?" 
       "Don't be stupid." 
       "I AM REQUIRED BY LAW TO ASK YOU THAT." 
       "Does anybody use the short forms?" 
       "CERTAIN CONVICTED FELONS MUST USE THE SHORT FORM, HAVING SACRIFICED 
FREEDOM OF CHOICE." 
       "I'm not a convicted felon and I'm not an idiot. Let's have the long 
form." 
       "VERY WELL, MARK. BASED ON LAST YEAR'S INCOME OF $52,753.68, YOU HAVE AN 
ADJUSTED TAX OF $4,963.47. WOULD YOU LIKE TO SEE THE CALCULATIONS?" 
       "Yes." 
       Mark scanned the figures as they rolled by. His income was higher than 
he'd thought, but not much more than comfortable, what with prices these days. 
Semi-retired, he did occasional projects for a variety of ecological 
organizations. He worked at home. He didn't get out much anymore. 
       "They look okay," he said. 
       "DO YOU WISH TO ITEMIZE THE ALLOCATION OF YOUR TAX MONEY?" 
       "Now you're being stupid again. Why else would I use the long form? 
Doesn't everybody?" 
       "PLEASE DON'T BE HARD ON ME, MARK, I'M ONLY DOING MY JOB. I HAVE TO ASK 
YOU THAT. IN RESPONSE TO YOUR QUESTION, ROUGHLY 99.987% OF THE ELIGIBLE 
TAXPAYERS USE THE LONG, ITEMIZED FORM." 
       Mark nodded. A person would have to be crazy to pass up the chance to say 
how his money would be spent. 
       "AID TO DEPENDENT CHILDREN." 
       Mark was old enough to remember the hungry times, the children who had 
grown up without hope. "One hundred dollars," he said. 
       "OFF-SHORE DRILLING SUBSIDY." 
       "Zero." They were almost all gone now, much to Mark's relief. 
       "RE-EMPLOYMENT TRAINING PROGRAM." 
       "Fifty." 
       "NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE ARTS." 
       "Fifty." He tried to imagine a life without music, without the sculptures 
and paintings all over town. He remembered how much Mary had liked the weekly 
concerts by the river and he recalled that day in the park with the kids and the 
dancers. "Make that seventy-five," he said. 
       "NEUTRON BOMB RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT." 
       Mark laughed. They tried to slip that old chestnut by every year. "Zero," 
he said. A bomb that killed people and left buildings intact was crazy, pure and 
simple. If they could refine it so it killed only generals, he might be 
interested. 
       Mark relaxed and let the categories roll by. He always put his taxes off 
until the last minute. A lot of people did. 


       Alice Thompson was an actress. At 43, she felt her career was just 
peaking. She had worked her way up through the ranks from community theater to 
stage productions to Hollywood, from ingenue roles to character parts. She had a 
comfortable income, good investment advice, a secure career. She portioned out 
her calculated tax with good humor: the Actors' Old Folks Home, a theater 
scholarship at her Alma Mater, the Playwrights' Association, two summer camps 
specializing in drama, the National Repertory Theater. She had little interest 
in the mundane affairs of state and saw no reason to spend any money on them. 
She had a little left over. 


       Erik Hesse was a janitor. He was sixty-three and had been a janitor for 
over forty years, from the day he got married. It hadn't been a bad life, 
especially after the union came in. These days it was hard to get someone to do 
nontechnical work so he made a pretty decent wage. When the time came, Erik went 
to a tax preparer to find out how much money he had to allocate. He put it in 
off-track betting, weather control (he hated shoveling snow off the sidewalk), 
the sports cable network, two research projects that concerned beer, and woman's 
gymnastics. Erik had a granddaughter who was into somersaults. Even so, he had a 
little left over when he finished and no place to put it. 


       Raymond Montonero was a Supreme Court Justice. There was less and less 
for him to do, however. People were working their problems out together in an 
aura of optimism that astounded him. It seemed that the more control people had 
over the government, the more control they used in their daily lives. He 
carefully allocated his tax bite to the Congressional Library, scientific 
research, and social programs. He worried over the remaining balance for a long 
time. 


       Tom Hanna was a red dirt farmer in the Oklahoma panhandle. His family had 
worked the same land for five generations and even though it wasn't a large 
spread, it was theirs. He was a proud man, and when he came in from the fields 
that Saturday he took his taxes seriously. He allocated the bulk of it to the 
Farm Bureau and the County Agriculture Commission. The rest he parceled out to 
the two state universities for operating expenses. He had a boy down at OU 
playing football and studying to be a veterinarian. Still, he had a little left 
over. 


       And so it went that day, all over the country. People put money into the 
programs that touched their lives and ignored the rest. They turned out to be 
excellent judges of the things they needed. The quality of life in the country 
had improved tremendously since the introduction of the Uniform Tax Act. 
       It had all started with a box on the tax form to support presidential 
campaigns. The next box to come along allocated money for the space program. 
Within two years the Mars project was completely funded. That unexpected success 
had lobbyists descending on Washington like a plague. Everyone wanted a special 
box on the tax form. Eventually they all got it. 
       Economists predicted chaos, but what they got was cooperation. People 
knew what they wanted, and for the first time in history they were able to get 
it. Unpopular projects came to a grinding halt as money for them was withheld. 
Politicians were forced to be more in tune with the desires of the public. 
Control of the purse-strings turned out to be the ultimate democratic tool, even 
more effective than the ballot. 
       Times changed. They changed for the better. 
       Mark's cat had climbed onto his lap and fallen asleep. He relaxed in 
front of the desk, stroking the cat and responding to the programs almost 
automatically as they rolled across the screen in the quiet room. They were 
presented to him randomly. Each taxpayer got them in a different order, so that 
position on the list didn't favor any one program over another. 
       Mark had been doing tax forms for years, so it didn't take much thought. 
He remembered his mother's last years and increased his amount for Aid to the 
Elderly. He allocated money for the school lunch program and aid for the 
handicapped. He supported environmental programs and medical research. Although 
solar energy was the norm now, he put a few dollars into geothermal studies. He 
refused to put any money into bailing out two major oil companies. If they 
couldn't change with the times, that was their problem. 
       He studied last year's military expenditures carefully. What was the 
sense in having enough weapons to kill everyone on the face of the Earth six 
times over? He cut back even farther than he had last year. He made up the 
difference in veterans' benefits. Being one himself, he had a vested interest. 
       Vietnam had cut a bloody swath through his family before he was born, but 
he hadn't managed to escape the oil wars and that fiasco in South America. The 
jungle had cost him two brothers, a hip, and a knee. No amount of aid could 
bring back his brothers or his friends. It had been such a useless loss. 
       The words on the screen were blurry, and when he blinked his eyes he 
realized he'd been crying. He softly cursed. He slipped one hand out from 
beneath the cat and wiped his eyes. The words became clear once more. 
       "THAT'S THE END OF THE LISTING, MARK. YOU STILL HAVE A BALANCE OF 
$795.32. WOULD YOU LIKE ME TO RUN THE SCREEN AGAIN?" 
       "No." The tears were coming again, damn it. He blinked his eyes. 
       "YOU MUST ALLOCATE ALL YOUR TAX MONEY." 
       He thought of his brothers, and the times they'd had growing up. The days 
seemed bathed in the warm glow of summer sunshine. They were precious days, gone 
forever. He knew that every person who had died in any war on any side for any 
cause had been grieved for, just as he was grieving now. It tore at his heart. 
All that pain, all that suffering. 
       "WOULD YOU LIKE ME TO RUN THE SCREEN AGAIN?" 
       "No," he said softly. 
       "WOULD YOU LIKE TO ADD AN ADDITIONAL CATEGORY?" 
       "Yes." It was barely a whisper. 
       "READY. ENTER NEW CATEGORY." 
       "Peace," he said, and his single word floated in the quiet apartment. 
       "COULD YOU PLEASE BE MORE SPECIFIC, MARK?" 
       "I said peace, damn it," he shouted. "Everlasting, forever peace!" 
       The cat jumped from his lap at the outburst, and Mark pushed his chair 
back, leaving the desk. His eyes were still full of tears, and he felt like a 
fool. 
       If he was a fool, though, he wasn't alone. On that particular April 15 
over two hundred million taxpayers added their voices to his. 
       By Christmas it was an accomplished fact. 
