Uncle
Banned
the rich prick should pay more moneys in tax what the fuck
You could argue that it does earn its money by providing goods and services for the public (regardless of whether you think those goods and services could be provided more effectively by the private sector). Also, afaik, taxation is economically good because it redistributes income to lower income earners who spend proportionately more, thus boosting economic growth. I'm pretty sure that's right.Why is the government the only entity that doesn't have to work to EARN its own money? If we look at the system in the naked sense, taxation is legalized and organized theft on a grand scale. Taxation IS robbery.
You are ignoring the fact that an individual's income and property are also largely a function of their physical and social attributes which are distributed unevenly in society. The former are essentially given (ignoring biotechnology and the like) while the latter are little more than arbitrary. Whether one is born female, black (yes, 'female' and 'black' are social as well as biological categories), poor, rural or otherwise has, variably over the course of history, typically limited the ease with which one may increas one's holdings or social standing. There is no hard work or perseverance involved, on the part of the individual in question, in simply being born a male WASP into a wealthy, upper-class family in a nice suburb of a wealthy country.If we analyze the taxation system, we understand that every individual in society acquires their income through hard work and perseverance. This "income" that we make can be through the sale of our bodies, goods and services or voluntary exchange.
The government in a typical liberal democracy is a categorically distinct entity from things like individuals, households and businesses. I'm not sure why it should be so affronting that such a government acquires money in a different way?Why is the government the only entity that doesn't have to work to EARN its own money? If we look at the system in the naked sense, taxation is legalized and organized theft on a grand scale. Taxation IS robbery.
lol ok.Why?
A little off topic maybe, but not all high income earners pay 45c in the dollar. The marginal rates say they should, but all those top bracket earners ($150k+) I know are smart enough to explore all possible options of [legally] reducing their tax. As they should.
A "flat rate" taxation system is always spruiked by those that don't understand the dynamics of the tax environment.
Family trusts, son. Family trusts.lol ok.
where ever there seems to be a loop hole in tax obligations the ato have done some patchwork. the rich pay a lot more tax than you think, nub
A government is a group of people organised in a particular social relation. That something is a government, in the broad use of the term, does not ensure legitimacy, but I am inclined to think that legitimate taxation is possible. In part I think the answer lies in debunking the myth of free, rational agents. We are irrational, short-sighted and emotionally driven. Most notably there are strong arguments which aim to show that our natural form of morality, which is adapted for small community living, is maladapted for life in the global economy in which we must regularly make choice which impact on an unknown other. For similar reasons it seems unlikely that our salvation lies in charity. Therefore I wish to at least posit possibility (of the open-minded, rather than philosophical, variety) that philosophy or institutional structures may play a role in correcting for our failings.Why is the government "categorically distinct?" When you strip it of its fancy titles, it is just a group of people. What gives them the right to use force to compel people to do things against their will?
Its not good enough to say simply being a 'liberal democracy' makes this legitimate. It is simply a dictatorship of the majority. The fact that the majority of people within a certain area may want something, does not give them a right to impose it on a minority. Or a JS Mill puts it; "If all mankind minus one were of one opinion, and only one person were of the contrary opinion, mankind would be no more justified in silencing that one person than he, if he had the power, would be justified in silencing mankind."
Today private property is built upon private property which was previously acquired by force. We continue to live off the fat of the exploited and disenfranchised. Taxation helps us to address this inequity through service provision and redistribution of wealth. It doesn't bother me that a group of anarcho-capitalists are offended by this policy.Ok, there is some merit in this. At some point most land became private property simply because it was seized by force. But today, private property is rarely acquired by force.
It is almost always acquired by voluntary exchange or the production of new things (i.e. mixing labor with capital.
However, the government does not acquire property in this way. If you continually refuse to pay taxes, it will lock you up, and if you try to resist or escape it will kill you. Its important to remember that taxes are backed up by this underlying threat of very dire consequences.
You have sidestepped this crucial difference, and failed to explain why it is legitimate.
My intuition is that our intellectual failings seem to suggest that government intervention of some form will be required to overcome these failings. What form this government should take is less clear.Good point, sup monkey sphere. There is a strong case that people will see others who are suffering as being too remote from them to help them voluntarily.
The problem I see, is that government intervention also fails to address the problem adequately. Its hard to prove, but there is certainly a case that welfare dependence helps perpetuate relative poverty.
Aye, of course not - it is only an approximation (and an extremely rough one at that). I am open to alternative proposals, however, the sheer impossibility of constructing a full history of economic transactions requires that we approximate at some point.Ah, but taxation does not distinguish between legitimately acquired property and that which if traced far back enough could be said to have been illegitimately acquired.
The fundamental problem is that it punishes people who are productive and are contributing to the wealth of society, and creates a disincentive for people to perform this crucial function.
The threat of violence doesn't bother me that much because it stands only as a threat. I am assuming that anarcho-capitalists are generally aware of the consequences of not paying tax - just as they are aware of the dubious status of vandalism, speeding and possession of firearms (to examples which are more controversial than murder and the like). The law limits freedom in all sorts of way. Granted, it is imperfect, but I feel that we would do well to come to accept this. A perfect political constitution is, in my opinion, a Platonic pipedream. If individuals choose to evade tax then they do so knowing full well that there are potential consequences (just as they do when they drive too fast or carry a firearm).I'm pretty sure more people than a few anarcho-capitalists are offended by taxation, or at the very least, by the current rates.
and you still haven't really addressed the threats of violence to enforce taxation criticism yet.
No (=strawman), because your restriction on positing does not serve a socially useful purpose (amongst other things). Surely you can be fairer in your exposition than that. I did not say that threats of violence legitimate further violence as long as people are aware of these threats. I assume that you allow for violence against individuals who kill or assault others? My logic will, at least in part, be similar, but with relevant extensions to address the differences in terms of freedom/harm etc.So you can use violence, and threats of violence, as long as you make people aware of the threats and act consistently?
So if I say, "I will kill you if you make a post the disagrees with me", and I establish clear guidelines as to what constitutes such a post, if you then disobey me, is it legitimate for me to kill you?
I'm trying to help you understand my views rather than trying to form a forceful argument (and less still one which appeals to authority). I chose those examples because I know that you disagree with them on the grounds of freedom - this is why they are relevant (and murder is not).Re: firearms and other "laws that limit freedom"; likening taxation to other things you know I disagree with does not bolster your argument. Its just an appeal to authority.
If his wife does ample work to justify being paid, then I don't see any issue with income-splitting.I think that the tax its a bit unfair for those that earn a middle class wage. Also flaws within the system such, an example being someone who earns over 100k being able to spit the income with his wife such that his wife won't have to work and will pay a huge amount less tax than anyone else. Fairness vs Equality?
Which, accepting that you're not a token Libertarian (I dunno, you might have changed for the worse), is ludicrous.They can if you privatise everything, abolish most public goods and services.
lol ok.
where ever there seems to be a loop hole in tax obligations the ato have done some patchwork. the rich pay a lot more tax than you think, nub
Pace T, this is more what I was referring to regarding perfectly legal avenues to distribute income through a family using a Family Trust structure....Using family trusts to minimise tax by distributing income among family members will be harder, with the Government extending tax file number withholding arrangements for so called "closely held trusts" to ensure distributions paid to beneficiaries are the same as the amount included by those beneficiaries on their tax returns.
The measure, expected to raise up to $50 million a year, would stop rorts such as pretending to pay an out-of-work brother $70,000 a year to mow the lawn...
It is indeed.Its a constant game of cat and mouse. The government closes a loophole and people find a new one to exploit.
In the process of collecting revenue, we pay a fortune to a whole bunch of unproductive bureaucrats and equally unproductive people in the tax minimization industry to play this silly little game.