Popular rebellion has often accompanied oppressive taxation. Almost all the protests were against taxes that ignored the ability to pay. Here are just a few examples.
Poll Tax Rebellion (Britain)
The regime of Margaret Thatcher replaced local taxes on property with a single ‘flat’ tax per head of population. The tax proved cumbersome to collect and met with mounting resentment; one in five adults had to be summonsed for payment. On 31 March 1990 a massive demonstration in Trafalgar Square turned violent. By November 1991 Thatcher had resigned, the ‘poll tax’ widely cited as an immediate cause of her demise. It was shelved and replaced with a modified property tax.
Orphan Voice staff helped the children put up a Christmas tree and make ornaments.

The orphanage walls were brightly decorated with holiday signs and banners.
Dai Loc (Vietnamese: Đại Lộc) is a district of Quang Nam province in the South Central region of Vietnam. As of 2009 the district has a population of 169,000. The Dai Loc distirct covers an area of 586 km2 with Ai Nghia town as capital