A Frank Letter to the Homeless Man Under the Bridge

h2>A Frank Letter to the Homeless Man Under the Bridge

letter-to-homeless

I see you standing here, asking for help, about once a week. You are always polite, and I respect that. I’d like to do something for you… something that would matter long-term. Giving you a few notes or coins now and then may be fine, but I’d really like to improve your situation more permanently.

In other words, I’d like to give you a job.

I used to hire people, and I especially liked hiring people who had been denied breaks. I did that whenever I could. If you and I could be transported back in time, I’d hire you. And I’d feel good about it, because I think having a job would do you a lot of good.

That fact is, however, that I can’t hire you, and I’d like you to know why.

I used to run my own contracting firm. I enjoyed the work and I liked being able to drive past a building and say, “I made that.” Having employees, however, was torture. I liked having them in some ways, of course – I liked the guys and it made me happy to see them take care of their families with paychecks that I signed. That was very gratifying. But it wasn’t enough, and there are three reasons why:

#1: Making Payroll

My first problem was simply cash flow. I was solely responsible for having enough money in the bank every week, and that could be nerve-wracking, especially when customers weren’t paying their bills on time. It’s not fun to think that a family won’t be able to buy groceries if you can’t collect your invoices.

Still, that part didn’t cause me to give up on employees. It was hard, but so long as my employees were working, we were making money, so there was always something coming in at some point. Somehow, I was able to pull it off.

#2: Being Hated

Over time, some of my employees became jerks. This seemed to grow from envy and from stupid ideas about labor versus management. These guys decided that I was getting rich off of them, and demanded I pay them more – more than they deserved and more than the company could afford.

And the really nasty part was this: It was always the guys I had done the most for who hated me most. And as soon as I sat down with them and explained why I couldn’t pay them more, they started stealing from me.

I fired the thieves, of course, but these experiences really soured me on employees. I had not only given these guys a job, but I had legitimately felt good about helping to feed their families. In return, they hated me, called me names, and stole from me.

By itself, that was almost enough to make me swear off employing people, but not quite.

#3: The IRS

What really drove me over the edge was dealing with the government and the IRS in particular. They were abominable.

I had to file forms with every payroll, and if anything on them was wrong, they penalized me – heavily. And if I paid them a single day late, they penalized me – heavily. And if they said I did something wrong – even if I didn’t – there was no way to change their verdict. Reason and evidence simply didn’t matter.

I eventually talked to a tax lawyer who explained the situation to me. He said:

Forget about fighting, Paul. There is no ‘innocent until proven guilty’ in tax court. You’re automatically guilty, and you have to try to prove yourself innocent… which is very hard and very expensive. Just pay them. I know you hate that, but you have no other choice. Fighting them would ruin you.

It wasn’t just the money that got me about this – it was that they were nasty, arrogant, heartless tyrants. Having the facts on my side didn’t matter. Intelligent arguments didn’t matter. Either I paid what they demanded or they would hurt me worse.

In many ways, it wasn’t much different than the local gang of street thugs demanding protection money.

So, that’s why I can’t hire you: Having employees locked me into a single role in life, that of a despised slave. When I finally realized that, I walked away.

I was lucky that I had the ability to move into specialties and to thrive in difficult niches; other guys probably couldn’t have.

So…

What I really want you to know is this:

I’d like to help you. You deserve a chance at a decent job. I’d like to be the guy who gave it to you, but the system demands that I must live as a slave in order to do so. And I won’t do that.

I very much wish that things were different, and I feel sorry every time I drive by that I can’t hire you. But I would never ask anyone to live as a slave, and I won’t live that way myself.

I wish you well, and if life in these parts should ever pull back from the present reign of oppression, I hope to run into you. And on that day, I hope to either hire you or do business with you.

We would both have much to gain from it.

Paul Rosenberg

[Editor’s Note: Paul Rosenberg is the outside-the-Matrix author of FreemansPerspective.com, a site dedicated to economic freedom, personal independence and privacy. He is also the author of The Great Calendar, a report that breaks down our complex world into an easy-to-understand model. Click here to get your free copy.]

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7 Comments
KaD
KaD
February 6, 2014 7:51 pm

Most of the people with these signs are not homeless. The real homeless are typically drunks (#1 reason for homelessness in the US), drug abusers (#2 reason), mentally ill (#3 reason) or are homeless by choice (#4). The real homeless are not typically social. The ones doing this are on SSDI/welfare and other forms of assistance and just want money for beer, cigarettes and lottery tickets. I can give you many examples. One day a young man came out of my apartment complex and went straight to the nearby highway exit ramp and held up his sign. I had two friends who went clubbing one night and were approached by several men about their ‘hungry homeless’ families. So they said “Get them, we’ll buy pizza for all of you”. After which the ‘homeless’ people waved them off and walked away.

KaD
KaD
February 6, 2014 7:52 pm

“I very much wish that things were different, and I feel sorry every time I drive by that I can’t hire you”.

If there’s one thing I’ve learned in life it’s that no one who says this is really sorry; because if they were they’d DO something about the situation they’re ‘sorry’ about instead of just saying ‘sorry’.

Treemagnet
Treemagnet
February 6, 2014 10:57 pm

About ten years ago, we made a payroll tax payment electronically, one day late. I happened once, as we had caught it and many weeks later an IRS guy came in. He said what I already knew, and walked away with $3,000. So yeah, I can relate. Total bullshit, and honestly it left me feeling astounded with that very new and alarming outlook. My accountant said pretty much the same thing by the way.

NickelthroweR
NickelthroweR
February 7, 2014 1:42 am

Greetings,

As my partner and myself expand our product line, we now face the question as to whether or not we should bring on employees. I am very proud of the fact that I have an American Made product and that I source parts, when possible, from other American vendors. With a simple partnership, it is quite easy to keep tax and paperwork issues to a minimum though it does expose us personally should anything ever go south. Still, I’d rather go that route than expose myself to the nightmare of having to be responsible for all the tax and paperwork issues that come with an employee. I wish I could hire people when I need them without any hassle but the system just doesn’t work that way.

I live in S. California and I would have to pay 9 different agencies to cover the federal, state and local taxes levied against wages. Is that crazy or what? And, as some have stated, miss any of those payments and these agencies can just waltz in and seize your property.

I had a talk with a friend of mine this evening and she was telling me that she did not pay her quarterly because she did not have much business that quarter and the IRS emptied $20,000 from her bank account just because they felt like it. She went on to state that she regretted incorporating, expanding and hiring staff as Federal, State and Local “agents” could raid her business and bank accounts whenever they wanted and take whatever they wanted.

It is terribly sad that it has come to this.

BUCKHED
BUCKHED
February 7, 2014 12:43 pm

I have a friend who owns a fairly large business ( over 400 employees ). He spends over 500K just doing the taxes on the business itself. The cost of taxes for the employees etc is another 250K. And we wonder why businesses don’t expand ?

MikeG
MikeG
February 7, 2014 4:05 pm

I have a passion for guns and coffee, I want to start a business making bullets or java so bad. But when I ask people I know who own small businesses for advice, the dream seems more like a nightmare.

Westcoaster
Westcoaster
February 7, 2014 4:10 pm

Seems to me the government is working hand in hand with the largest corporations to snuff out small business. Frequently the large companies (through their lobbyists) inject regulations into bills which are easily handled by the large companies in-house legal department, while a small company could never afford to comply with simply because of the cost of outside counsel.
We’re rapidly turning into a “The Fascist states of America”.