Yes, Rachel keeping people in prison for refusing to pay their taxes decade after decade is an attribute of totalitarianism. A political policy of incarcerating people for refusing to pay their taxes for extremely long periods of time (in what amounts to life sentences for many of them) aligns with political totalitarianism.
And because it does, that means it's unjust and a negative deviation from the principles of liberty enshrined in the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution/Bill of Rights, the early founder's documentation, and scripture itself. Even under the Mosaic Law in ancient Israel, people were not imprisoned for lengthy periods (much less given life sentences or executed) for refusing to pay their taxes. And while the New Testament exhorts people to pay their taxes, it does not advocate for what you do either.
Rachel, you're wrong. Building a sprawling enslavement state by imprisoning enormous numbers of non-violent low grade offenders for decades, or the rest of their life, is unjust totalitarian behavior unsupported by scripture or the principles the U.S. was founded on. But, because of people like yourself, that's what's increasingly occurring.
Rough justice in America: Too many laws, too many prisoners | The Economist
The U.S. now incarcerates about 22% of the world's known prisoners despite comprising about 4.4% of the global population. Too many people locked up for too long for too little. Life sentences for first time offender non-violent low grade convictions is totalitarian. This is true, whether or not, the government misuses laws passed to stop drug cartels on everyday citizens that want to build dinosaur parks. Continue to delude yourself otherwise but know that you're an enemy of liberty, truth, and justice for all.
And that's in the case of moral law. In the case of immoral laws that violate God's morality, such as existed over much of the world under state atheism in the 20th century in which millions and millions of people were interned in gulags simply for professing Christianity for "tenners" (e.g. ten year sentences); this is exponentially true.
People like yourself Rachel lend credence to non-Christian accusations that Christians are totalitarian.