When you try to pull a political stunt to make a point, try to make sure it won't backfire on you and make you out to be exactly the dimwit you are:
Fed up with people complaining that the state doesn't have the money it needs to do its job, lawmakers added a voluntary-contribution fund called "I Didn't Pay Enough" to Arizona's income-tax form this year.
And, much to the surprise of some lawmakers, 386 taxpayers thought the new program was such a good idea, they willingly kicked in an extra $13,204 to the state's general fund, according to the Department of Revenue.
Arizonans call the state's bluff, pay extra taxes
So much for the argument that the citizenry refuses to pay for services. Will the Grover Norquist-sponsored tax pledge (which I'll refer to as the "drown it in the bathtub" pledge) come back to bite the Republican controlled government of Arizona? If the Democratic party has it in them to exploit every single misstep, like the one above, then yes.
Right-sized government? Yes please! Apparently the right size of government means increasing revenues to raise the level of services back to where they were before the mini-Norquists started death-paneling Medicaid transplant patients.
When the chips are down, even Arizonans will pay up. Well, the non-Randians anyways.