(Hat tip:  As much as I hate to admit it, I got this from Malicious Malkin’s sidebar, where it’s taken up temporary residence.  (Then again, that’s about the only reason I still ever go there anyway – certainly it’s not for anything that might come out of her  skanky piehole, eh what?))
Zombie over at PJ Media has something that, the more I think about it, the more I like it:  A new version of the 1040 form that corresponds to this piece-of-shit “Buffett Rule” that Bambi keeps trying to bully Congress into passing.
When Obama first proposed the Buffett Rule last year, I made a post called Voluntary Tax Rates and Personalized Earmarks: How to Solve the Debate over Taxes as the true version of the Buffett Rule. Because, you see, Buffett originally didn’t call for a higher tax rate on the wealthy in general; instead he said that he himself wanted to pay more taxes. Sure, he was just using himself as a personal example, but I thought: Hey, he could be on to something here. Why don’t we all decide at what rate we individually pay taxes? That‘s the Buffett Rule: You want to pay more taxes? Fine — pay ‘em. And if you don’t want to pay more, or even want to pay less — well, we have an option for that too.
To that end, I produced a new version of the IRS’s 1040 form which featured (exactly as the post’s title implied) “voluntary tax rates and personalized earmarks.” But that was last August. Who, after all these months, remembered to use those new forms now that Tax Day has rolled around again?
So I have now updated the revised 1040 form for 2011 and am offering it for download today, April 15, for your convenience.
The form itself is below the fold, with a link to download it for yourself if you’d like.
I’d pay ten percent in taxes, allocated to national defense.  What about you?