loquasagacious
NCAP Mooderator
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- 2004
This issue has been touched on in a couple of recent threads so I thought it rated it's own thread: If you accept Government money must you accept Government regulation?
No:
We are compelled to pay tax (under threat of kidnap at gunpoint ) and it is unrealistic for us to resist this, therefore we should try and get as much money out of the State in welfare as we can while avoiding regulation.
The less the state regulates it's welfare the closer it's expenditure is to the will of the people and the less evil the tax and spend state is.
Richard has argued that libertarians should actively defraud the state in an effort to extract more welfare than we pay in taxes and bring about it's downfall.
Yes:
This is perhaps the position of ideological purity as the implication is that libertarians must reject welfare because to accept it would be to become involved in the state voluntarily (as opposed to involvement through taxation which is compulsory).
On the other hand it seems to make intuitive sense that there ain't no such thing as a free lunch and if you accept Government money then it is entitled to regulate you because that is sound financial management (return on investment, etc).
Thoughts?
No:
We are compelled to pay tax (under threat of kidnap at gunpoint ) and it is unrealistic for us to resist this, therefore we should try and get as much money out of the State in welfare as we can while avoiding regulation.
The less the state regulates it's welfare the closer it's expenditure is to the will of the people and the less evil the tax and spend state is.
Richard has argued that libertarians should actively defraud the state in an effort to extract more welfare than we pay in taxes and bring about it's downfall.
Yes:
This is perhaps the position of ideological purity as the implication is that libertarians must reject welfare because to accept it would be to become involved in the state voluntarily (as opposed to involvement through taxation which is compulsory).
On the other hand it seems to make intuitive sense that there ain't no such thing as a free lunch and if you accept Government money then it is entitled to regulate you because that is sound financial management (return on investment, etc).
Thoughts?