The Kochs will have an even greater reason to hate the Internal
Revenue Service because due to a devious, and illegal, Koch plot to
affect legislation neutering…
There are myriad reasons why someone has intense hostility towards, and
aversion to, a person or thing that typically derives from fear, anger,
or a sense of personal injury. The particular “thing” that
conservatives, particularly the Republican-libertarian conservatives,
loathe more than America’s most dangerous enemies is the government and
its various agencies; especially those tasked with enforcing laws and
regulations. The two men who wield ultimate control over the
conservative movement and own the Republican Congress, Charles and David
Koch, certainly hate the government, but they have particular antipathy
for two agencies they believe are “despotic” and illegal simply because they exist and are not under Koch brother control.
The Koch brothers have made no secret that they want
the Internal Revenue Service and the Environmental Protection Agency
eliminated from existence and have spared no expense to thwart the
activities of the EPA. Now they will have an even greater reason to hate
the Internal Revenue Service because due to a devious, and illegal,
Koch plot to affect legislation neutering enforcement power of the
Environmental Protection Agency, the Internal Revenue Service is
beginning an investigation into an illegal Koch tax deduction. The
illegal tax write-off is for payment to a scientist for phony reports “absolving the fossil fuel industry of any responsibility for anthropogenic climate change.”
The IRS has received several complaints
from the environmental group Greenpeace demanding it investigate the
secret relationship between the Koch brothers and a well-known climate
denying scientist with questionable scientific credentials, The
so-called “scientist,” Dr. Willie Soon, received over $1,6
million to create phony reports claiming climate change is not only
non-existent, but that if it does exist there is no relationship to
carbon emissions related to fossil fuels.
The particular issue of interest to the IRS is that
the Koch brothers illegally wrote off as a tax deduction the payment to
Soon for reports created specifically to affect legislation in Congress
and state legislatures; a clear violation of the law. Earlier this year,
the New York Times exposed the “special secret relationship” between Soon and the Kochs, ExxonMobil, and a large Southern coal-fired utility that included deliberately false scientific data Republicans regularly use to deny the existence and effects of global climate change claims made by 98% of the world’s real climate scientists.
Apparently there is nothing illegal about Soon’s
well-known false ‘studies,’ or that as a so-called ‘expert’ he is
renowned for “obscuring” empirical data about climate change he promised
were “deliverables” to the Koch brothers. In fact, it has also been no
secret that Soon has been on the payroll of “major polluters” for a long
time. However, the damning revelation discovered by Greenpeace that attracted the attention of the IRS is that the Charles G. Koch Foundation, a “tax exempt charity,”
was paying for Soon’s phony studies as part of the Koch’s lobbying
efforts against renewable energy and climate change solutions. What that
means is that the Kochs were able to write off payments to Soon on
their taxes that violates Internal Revenue Service rules prohibiting “tax-exempt charities” like the Charles G. Koch Foundation from influencing legislation; any legislation.
Last week, the IRS responded to a letter
from Greenpeace that pointed out this illegal lobbying by the Koch
brothers. The IRS letter encouraged Greenpeace to submit additional
information to the IRS Dallas office and confirmed they were reviewing
Greenpeace’s complaint. The complaint contained details of Soon’s
interactions and correspondence with the Koch brothers including
seriously damning evidence that Soon was paid handsomely by the Charles
G. Koch Foundation to specifically create papers denying the existence
of climate change.
In fact, in his proposals
to the Kochs, Soon promised specifically to create work that conceals
the cause and existence of climate change for the stated purpose of “informing public policy;” a commonly used euphemism for lobbying legislation. Following through on his pledge, Dr. Soon used the Koch-funded ‘studies‘ while testifying
in Kansas against renewable energy legislation to convince state
legislators to vote against clean energy standards. The same dubious
research was used in Congress to deny “that greenhouse gases are the dominant cause of climate change.”
Soon even sent a letter to the Kochs boasting about the usefulness of
his phony research in congressional testimony that he said contributed
“very useful progress” toward Charles G. Koch’s “special project.” Soon’s letter also requested a funding extension to ensure greater progress toward the “Koch project.” Obviously the Koch “special project”
is affecting legislation at the state and federal level defeating
renewable energy standards and preventing legislation addressing climate
change solutions; something that is illegal for a ‘tax exempt charity‘ like Koch’s Foundation.
As Greenpeace pointed out to the Internal Revenue
Service, the Charles G Koch Foundation knew damn well that funding Dr.
Soon’s work was as legally a risky move as taking a tax deduction for
influencing legislation. In unrelated letters
to the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, the Koch Foundation was
extremely careful in attempting to stress that the Koch money funding
Soon’s phony reports “will not be used to influence legislation.”
However, the facts are clear that Soon used the Koch-funded reports in
testimony before both the Kansas legislature and the United States
Congress specifically to advance the Koch’s fossil fuel interests in
affecting legislation on renewable energy standards and putting a halt
to climate change solutions; both instances are clear violations of
Internal Revenue Service rules prohibiting “non-profit charitable
organizations” from using their tax-exempt funds to influence
legislation.
The Koch brothers have given substantial amounts of money, over $79 million, to “climate change science denial organizations” since 1979, and it is unclear how many of those substantial millions came from the Koch’s network of so-called “tax-exempt charitable organizations.”
The Koch’s are notorious for funneling “dark money” through various
organizations, many of them tax-exempt charities, and it is likely the
fact that they have been successful in not getting caught that drove
their hubris and informed them to use a ‘charity’ with Charles G Koch’s
name attached. They obviously did not take into account that an
international organization like Greenpeace would ever take the
initiative to investigate their internal correspondence and interactions
with their highly-paid climate denier Soon.
Now
that their illegal malfeasance has been exposed in documentation, the
Internal Revenue Service can go forward and give the Koch’s a real
reason to hate them even more; stripping them of their tax-exempt
status. For its part, Greenpeace deserves the highest praise possible
for not only fighting to protect Earth’s environment, but for having the
courage to go after America and the environment’s greatest enemy;
Charles and David Koch.
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