WASHINGTON—In a sweeping simplification that officials praised as “both elegant and inevitable,” the federal government on Thursday unveiled a new tax code that reduces paperwork by combining every American’s income with the national debt into a single, all-purpose number that nobody has to look at ever again.
“For years, taxpayers have pleaded with us to make filing easier,” said Dana Lark, chair of the Treasury’s Simplicity Task Force, standing at a podium labeled It’s All The Same Money. “We discovered the root of the complexity: Americans have incomes, and the nation has a debt, and unfortunately these are separate. By recognizing they are fundamentally the same bucket, we’ve eliminated duplicative columns.”
Under the new system, filers will complete the U.S. Individual National Everything Return (Form ALL), a minimalist, one-step document that asks a single question: “Are you part of the nation?” A box marked Yes is pre-checked in pencil. Instructions direct filers to sign their name and optionally circle a number that “feels right.” If the number is circled clockwise, it will be treated as a revenue; counterclockwise will be treated as a loss; counterclockwise with flair will qualify as an Earned Income Deficit.
“This is extremely efficient,” said Acting IRS Commissioner Nolan Foye. “Instead of everyone filling out a 1040 while the government tallies a separate national debt, we will staple the country’s pay stub to its credit card bill and say ‘same.’ If the number is negative, that means the public has already paid in the form of vibes.”
Officials said all previous forms would be consolidated into a streamlined suite of statements, including the W-2Broke (Wage and Woe Statement), the 1099-IOU (Miscellaneous Regrets), and Schedule Sigh. The standard deduction will be replaced by a standard apology. Itemized deductions will be allowed for receipts, as long as filers can prove the receipt made them feel seen.
A Treasury press release touted pilot-program results: 93% of participants completed their return in under seven seconds, primarily by closing the browser tab; 81% described the new process as “somehow both more honest and less real”; and 14% went on to spontaneously refinance their feelings. “We estimate Americans will save 2.1 billion hours annually, 14.8 billion sighs, and at least three printer jams per household,” the release stated.
Tax brackets have been replaced by four “funding moods.” Individuals will now be classified as Chill, Neutral, Focused, or Given Up. “Instead of marginal tax rates, we use a Debto-Emotive Coefficient,” explained Lark. “You multiply your gross income by how you felt when you tried to afford eggs in March and carry the one into the national ledger.” Individuals who report “Mixed” may be eligible for the new Refundable Consolidation Credit, which is paid as store credit to the concept of tomorrow.
Economists were divided, then immediately reconciled for ledger purposes. “What they’ve done is take your paycheck and the federal deficit, put them in a blender, and serve it as a smoothie called Fiscal Closure,” said Dr. Milo Achebitt, a macroeconomist at the Nonpartisan Center for Inevitable Outcomes. “On paper, this dramatically simplifies compliance. On not-paper, they have invented a universe where money is a suggestion and time is a receipt.”
Achebitt noted that most filers would see “balanced” outcomes under the new approach. “If your household earned $62,000, congratulations: you now ‘owe’ negative $62,000 to the unified figure known as Us. If your household earned $220,000, same thing, but with a more assertive hyphen,” he said. “Everyone will technically be due a refund from themselves.”
Opponents of the plan complained that the overhaul would devastate tax preparers, who have spent decades mastering a labyrinth the government has now paved over with a single shrug. “They took my 21 years of expertise and replaced it with a checkbox labeled ‘We tried,’” said Ruthie Kline, a certified public accountant in Phoenix, who demonstrated the new IRS mobile app, I—RS?, which consists of a single button reading I’m Cool With It. “I had a client ask me about capital gains. I told him to light a candle and whisper his cost basis into a jar labeled ‘Roll Forward.’ This is not sustainable.”
Members of Congress from both parties hailed the simplicity while expressing carefully calibrated concerns. “This is a bipartisan win for households who just want tax season to be over,” said one Senate aide, adding that the caucus would be “monitoring impacts on households, small businesses, large businesses, and whatever it is the middle one is now.” A House spokesperson said the change was “long overdue” and that the House was already drafting a follow-up bill to “make the national debt tax-deductible against itself.”
The public responded with cautious optimism and immediate confusion. “I opened the form, saw my name was already filled out under ‘Taxpayer/Nation,’ and it said ‘Thank you for everything, us,’” said Janice Villarreal, a paralegal in Des Moines. “It asked if I wanted to round to the nearest billion. I clicked ‘Round Up — Be Brave’ and got a confetti animation that said ‘You did numbers!’ I think I’m done?”
In a webinar titled Your Return, Our Hole, Treasury officials fielded questions from filers about common scenarios. Those who are self-employed will fill out Schedule Be Your Own Burden and can deduct any business expense described in a sentence that begins with “Technically.” Freelancers receiving 1099-IOUs should report all income as “exposure” unless they keep the lights on with it, in which case they should report it as “lights.” Those with student loans can claim the new Knowledge Depletion Allowance by writing, in blue ink, “School was real.”
“For families, we’ve simplified dependent credits by allowing the United States to claim the United States as a dependent,” Foye added. “This opens up savings for everyone. We are, collectively, a child.”
Although the IRS said audits would be “reimagined as performance reviews conducted by the national debt itself,” individuals can still request a reconsideration using Form 1040-X? (The Question Mark Is Part Of It). In place of an audit letter, taxpayers will receive a pastel postcard reading, “We looked at the numbers. It’s fine. Is it fine with you?” Additional documentation may include a witnessed nod.
The private sector is already adapting. A leading tax software company announced it would pivot to mindfulness coaching “to help customers through the difficult task of accepting outcomes.” Supply chain consultants debuted a subscription box that delivers three paperclips, a small rubber stamp that says Same, and a sticker of a smiling ledger that reads We Did A Math. Banks began offering Shadow Accounts so customers can watch their unified balance move in “attractive, calming arcs.”
When asked how the new system would actually reduce the national debt, Lark paused. “The objective is to reduce forms,” she said. “Whether the numbers go up, down, sideways, or straight through is a separate issue. But we are confident that by uniting income and debt, we will experience fewer forms than we have ever experienced. Some days, that’s enough.”
Pressed further on compliance and timing, Foye assured that nothing fundamental would change for filers. “Tax Day remains April 15. If you need more time, file an extension using Form TBD, which grants you until Whenever.” In cases where the merged number does not come out even, the government instructed filers to “carry the one and pretend we always did.”
Treasury also announced a limited-time amnesty: anyone who has ever accidentally underpaid, overpaid, or correctly paid will be automatically forgiven and placed into the new category of Did Great. Those who wish to opt out can do so by physically opting out, which the agency defined as “walking into the ocean fully clothed.”
In a concluding presentation slide titled We Good?, officials unveiled the final step in the simplification journey: once Form ALL is filed, the United States will mail itself a single check for the total amount due and then walk it across the street to deposit into itself.
As with all refunds, the government cautioned that the country should expect to wait six to eight weeks for the money to clear, at which point it will be pleased to learn it has reimbursed itself plus interest payable to itself, which it regrets to inform itself it has already spent.
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