High Yield Markets
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Investing
  • Stock
  • Editor’s Pick
Politics

The UN Is About to Institute a De Facto Tax on American Citizens: ‘The Ultimate in Taxation Without Representation’

by October 16, 2025
October 16, 2025

United Nations General Assembly session with delegates and officials engaged in discussion, featuring the iconic UN emblem in the background.

United Nations General Assembly session with delegates and officials engaged in discussion, featuring the iconic UN emblem in the background.

The United States boasts plenty of coal, wood, and fowl — enough to provide all the tar and feathers required.

Indeed, the globalist bureaucrats at the United Nations should remember how Americans deal with unconstitutional attempts at taxation.

According to the Wall Street Journal, the U.N. this week stands “poised to impose what amounts to a global tax on carbon emissions” — what the WSJ called “the ultimate in taxation without representation.”

Despite lacking both sovereign authority and enforcement power, the U.N.’s London-based International Maritime Organization could attempt to saddle ships with taxes ranging from $100 to $380 per metric ton of carbon dioxide that exceeds a certain emissions level.

Meanwhile, President Donald Trump’s administration has threatened sanctions against countries whose U.N. bureaucrats vote for such nonsense.

Shockingly, the WSJ called this “the first instance we can find of the U.N. claiming the ability to levy a tax — the revenues from which will be paid directly into a U.N.-controlled fund.”

The IMO, of course, would both establish and manage that fund.

Needless to say, a power grab of this nature awakens American patriots to the perils that beset our ancestors.

“No taxation without representation,” Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida wrote Tuesday on the social media platform X.

Then, the governor told a historical truth that every American should understand.

“Being taxed by the UN would be far more offensive than the taxes imposed by Great Britain against the American colonies more than 250 years ago. Those taxes sparked the American Revolution,” DeSantis added.

Finally, the governor spoke for Americans (including yours truly) who resent haughty international bureaucrats.

“The UN should be defunded, not seeded with new tax revenue,” DeSantis concluded.

No taxation without representation.

Being taxed by the UN would be far more offensive than the taxes imposed by Great Britain against the American colonies more than 250 years ago.

Those taxes sparked the American Revolution.

The UN should be defunded, not seeded with new… pic.twitter.com/D8rdVhN5iX

— Ron DeSantis (@RonDeSantis) October 14, 2025

DeSantis, of course, had it right when he declared U.N. taxes “far more offensive” than those imposed by the 18th-century British Parliament. In fact, the architects of those long-ago British taxes seemed legitimately blindsided by the violent American opposition.

Take the 1765 Stamp Act, for instance, which taxed printed materials such as newspapers, almanacs, and college diplomas. In their defense, British officials could reasonably claim that the tax would weigh heaviest on literate and well-to-do Americans.

Nonetheless, the manliest members of that manly, revolutionary generation denied Parliament’s authority to levy such taxes in the first place. A young John Adams even accused the British of targeting printed materials so as to deprive the colonists of knowledge.

Whatever British officials’ motives might have been, they simply could not collect the taxes. By Nov. 1, 1765 — the date the act took effect — violence or the threat thereof, including tarring and feathering, had driven nearly all stamp distributors from office.

Thus, it boggles the mind that anyone at the U.N., which has not exactly ingratiated itself with Trump or his supporters, would think that Americans, of all people, would concede an international organization’s pretended authority to tax us without our consent.

This article appeared originally on The Western Journal.

The post The UN Is About to Institute a De Facto Tax on American Citizens: ‘The Ultimate in Taxation Without Representation’ appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

previous post
EXCLUSIVE: A Colorado Court Will Attempt to Strike an Expert’s Testimony Confirming Election System Issues in Tina Peters Case While She Languishes in Prison
next post
Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier Files Supreme Court Lawsuit Against Gavin Newsom and California Over “Sanctuary” Policies for Illegal Aliens

You may also like

Election Denier Kathy Griffin Doesn’t Think Trump Won...

October 17, 2025

Democrats Enlist Obama to Endorse Abigail Spanberger in...

October 17, 2025

STUNNING DEVELOPMENT: After a Decade of Corruption and...

October 17, 2025

‘Trump’s Favorite Democrat’: Pennsylvania Dems Start Planning Senator...

October 17, 2025

The Kenyan High Court has also now suspended...

October 17, 2025

Bolton Lashes Out at Trump After Grand Jury...

October 17, 2025

BREAKING: KISS Guitarist Ace Frehley Dead at 74

October 17, 2025

SHOCK VIDEO: Father Caught on Tape Forcing Young...

October 17, 2025

Trump-Hating Illinois Governor JB Pritzker Raises Eyebrows With...

October 17, 2025

Capitol Police Launch Investigation After Swastika Found on...

October 17, 2025
Join The Exclusive Subscription Today And Get Premium Articles For Free


Your information is secure and your privacy is protected. By opting in you agree to receive emails from us. Remember that you can opt-out any time, we hate spam too!

Recent Posts

  • Prohibitions Increase Violence

    October 16, 2025
  • Yes, Governments Do Freeze Funds

    October 16, 2025
  • Using Government Arts Funding To Wage Culture War

    October 15, 2025
  • Should Governments Prosecute Fraud?

    October 15, 2025
  • Election Policy Roundup

    October 15, 2025
  • About Us
  • Contacts
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Email Whitelisting

Copyright © 2025 highyieldmarkets.com | All Rights Reserved

High Yield Markets
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Investing
  • Stock
  • Editor’s Pick