And you. Do you breathe clean air, drink clean water, travel on roads, go to the store, use money to obtain goods, and so on and on and on? Do you create yourself or make yourself all of these things? In addition to the particular costs of things, there is the underlying cost of providing simply the opportunity and possibility of these things - which in some cases involves protecting you and your access to them from people who would take them away from you.We’re talking about taking the fruits of someone’s labor, their money, their property, which I’ve said countless times. — NOS4A2
No I don’t advocate for denying the comforts you and entire generations of people have become dependent on, built as they were from the appropriation of other people’s wealth. — NOS4A2
The imposition of the Euro is like a stealth European war. — synthesis
Lol! Very good.Back to the herd. — NOS4A2
As a moral person, sure you do. But I suspect you're such a person who rails at the decadence of convenience while asking the waiter for a re-fill.Speak for yourself. I never entered in to it willingly. I have no other choice but to comply. — NOS4A2
Questions are points now? Did you know you can make arguments in other ways? — NOS4A2
believe one has a right to his property — NOS4A2
At issue is not the right, but what constitutes your property. Is everything you acquire by any means yours simply by virtue of having laboured for it?
If so, then spoils of war and theft both result in rightful property.
As does tax. The government must undergo some work to acquire tax, no?
There are two ways by which one can acquire the means for his survival: through the products of his own labor or by appropriating the products and labor of others. I prefer the former and repudiate the latter. — NOS4A2
s not police restraint and eventual imprisonment not a violent reprisal clearly stated in law? — Isaac
I'd like to think so too. So the crux of the matter isn't anything to do with legal property, it's to do with the fairness of each person having their needs met. we'd allow the starving man that loaf, regardless of the means by which he acquired it, regardless of his legal rights to it, regardless of the fact that another has a claim on it...rather we'd allow him it entirely on the grounds that he should have it, that it would be inhuman to deny him it.
So how are taxes different, in essence? — Isaac
It is. Therefore, the threat is clearly stated and no assumption needs to be made. — Tzeentch
What happens when all-benevolent loaf-of-bread-sharing governments turns into something else? — Tzeentch
What it comes down to, is governments forcing their inhabitants to act in accordance with subjective moral viewpoints through threats of violence.
That I may or may not agree with said moral viewpoints is, as far as I am concerned, not relevant; the means are unjust. — Tzeentch
I don't see what difference that makes. — Isaac
That's a different matter altogether. Not liking what a government is doing and not liking governments are two very different positions. — Isaac
Again, this just assumes the threat of violence is required. when you work for someone, they're required to pay you by threat of violence. So how do you avoid that? — Isaac
What do you suggest we do (in cases of moral conflict) to resolve those conflicts other than use democratically elected governments to decide which course of action to take and enforce it if necessary? — Isaac
By "they" in your context you mean government. Who do you imagine government is? What do you imagine government is for?Why do they need it ? — javi2541997
They did, a long time ago. They came up with government. What alternative do you offer?Let people figure it out for themselves. — Tzeentch
Who do you imagine government is? What do you imagine government is for? — tim wood
An assumption takes place in the head of the assumer. If an individual wants to make assumptions about my reaction to them taking my property, then I am the subject and not the actor.
In the case of taxation, the government is clearly the actor and overtly threatens with violence. — Tzeentch
That's a different matter altogether. Not liking what a government is doing and not liking governments are two very different positions. — Isaac
Sure. But I think it is relevant. — Tzeentch
Again, this just assumes the threat of violence is required. when you work for someone, they're required to pay you by threat of violence. So how do you avoid that? — Isaac
This is not an action I am undertaking or even voluntarily a part of. It is not my responsibility to avoid it, though I can voice my displeasure at this state of affairs as I am doing now. — Tzeentch
Beyond protecting people from physical violence and overt threats thereof (in a more general sense: protection citizens' constitutional rights), I don't see much a role for government in the arbitration of moral conflicts. Let people figure it out for themselves. — Tzeentch
Are we really free with the money/income we earn each month? Because if we do not pay taxes the government will enforce us to do it. So we are not free at all. — javi2541997
Why would you think you could spend money that doesn't belong to you? — Isaac
why we have to enforce it by laws? Why is not innate sharing our benefits to others as human behaviour? Probably because most of the people would avoid paying taxes? — javi2541997
But... Whey they control us? Do not they believe in us? I guess it us noticeable that a considerable amount of rich people do not want pay taxes. I guess they are just somehow selfish but here we have the debate itself.
Are we really free with the money/income we earn each month? Because if we do not pay taxes the government will enforce us to do it. So we are not free at all. In this point, you are even more free buying a property than having the money in a bank.
All of the state’s institutions are directed towards preserving its own life, increasing its own power, and enlarging the scope of its own activity. — NOS4A2
There are two ways by which one can acquire the means for his survival: through the products of his own labor or by appropriating the products and labor of others. I prefer the former — NOS4A2
We live in large enough societies that your actions will affect people you don't even know and will probably never meet. — Isaac
All of the state’s institutions are directed towards preserving its own life, increasing its own power, and enlarging the scope of its own activity. — NOS4A2
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