In an opinion piece disguised as news, the New York Times (I.R.S. Scrutiny Went Beyond the Political) reports that many applicants for tax-exempt status were singled out for scrutiny, not just political groups.  Groups like “Break the Bonds,”
 “Cash for Musicians,” and advocates of medical marijuana and open 
source software were selected for extra scrutiny under the IRS’s  “be on
 the lookout” program. They were 
subjected to long waits, intrusive inquiries and bureaucratic hassles 
that appear unrelated to politics. It was not just the Tea Party that 
suffered such indignities. Rather, the problem is not the politicization
 of the IRS but a “process that became too rigid and too broad.”
  
Big whoopee: The Times
 is telling its readers that the IRS might actually be doing its real 
job of preventing shady money-making organizations from disguising 
themselves as charities. So, the IRS does something other than harass 
conservative organizations. Let’s hope so.
 
go to forbes.com
 
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