These celebrations are well deserved. The United States has
given the world remarkable scientific discoveries, technological breakthroughs
and an economic model that continues to inspire millions.
Yet amid the celebrations, one question is unlikely to be
asked.
How closely do the taxpayers examine the way their tax
dollars are spent beyond their own borders?
The United States devotes an extraordinary share of public
resources to defence and national security. Every military deployment, overseas
base, weapons package and security commitment begins with a tax dollar earned
by a US worker or business. Governments justify such spending as essential to
protecting national interests and maintaining international stability.
Critics argue that some foreign interventions and prolonged
military engagements have instead contributed to instability and imposed heavy
human and financial costs.
Reasonable people may disagree over these competing views.
What should not be disputed, however, is the taxpayer's right to ask questions.
In every democracy, taxpayers are more than a source of
government revenue; they are stakeholders in national policy. They have every
right to demand transparency, accountability and measurable outcomes whenever
vast sums of public money are committed abroad.
If corporations are expected to explain how they spend
shareholders' money, governments should be equally prepared to explain how they
spend taxpayers' money.
The strength of the United States has never rested solely on
its military power. It has also rested on the confidence of its citizens that
public institutions remain accountable to the people they serve.
As the United States enters its next quarter millennium,
perhaps the most meaningful expression of patriotism is not louder celebration,
but deeper scrutiny. Democracies flourish not when citizens applaud every
decision of their governments, but when they ask whether every tax dollar
reflects the values, priorities and aspirations of the people who earned it.
