I think that sounds a bit exaggerated. Yes, taxes do seem excessive but the state provides services in return. Without those services you would have to pay private companies to police your neighborhood, to collect refuse, to repair roads, etc., and I'm not sure that would come out much cheaper.
By taxing my income, my property, they confiscate the fruits of my labor. — NOS4A2
I did not request those services. So why should I have to pay for them? — NOS4A2
I don’t remember the argument but sure I’ll try to defend it. — NOS4A2
I use roads all the time. — NOS4A2
Great, then we'll start again. On what grounds is the pre-tax wage your property?
Then you've seriously misunderstood the arrangement. Do you get chucked off a lot of fairground rides too? The roads aren't free, they're there for you to use on the assumption that you (or others in your community on your behalf) pay for them. If you don't agree to this, don't use them.
A wage is payed to me for my labor. Do you think it should be payed to someone else? — NOS4A2
I am well aware that roads aren’t free, and I use them because I pay taxes. What I don’t agree to is the coercive and involuntary arrangement. — NOS4A2
So your grounds for ownership is that it was given to you? Is everything given to you automatically yours? I'd hate to lend you a lawnmower.
Moral integrity?
t was given to me on the assumption that I get to keep it. — NOS4A2
Not only should my money be stolen for the construction of roads, but I should refrain from using them? That sounds like a double loss. — NOS4A2
Wow. So you've never used a road? Do tell us how. — Isaac
Build your own road and use that.
The “appropriate proportion” is defined by the state, and is added to the cost at the expense of the consumer, in other words, people like myself. — NOS4A2
It’s not like the employer is giving the state their own money back. It’s taken from the tax-payer at every point. — NOS4A2
It’s true; I am operating on the assumption that a slave is chattel — NOS4A2
the conditions of slavery are not the same as the conditions of wage labor — NOS4A2
This admittedly common sense view of slavery, not as penetrating as your own no doubt, suffices for me to distinguish slavery from wage labor, and why I refuse to consider wage labor as wage slavery. As far as pejoratives go, it’s a weak and boring one. — NOS4A2
I don’t think it can be argued that slavery was voluntary or consensual, or that slaves should be blamed for their conditions, so we’ll just leave that one aside. — NOS4A2
It’s true that leaving a job can lead to financial hardship, but then again it can prove beneficial. — NOS4A2
surplus value is not equal to profits and wages are often paid in advance of revenue. That and the collapse of the labor theory of value renders the theory pretty useless. — NOS4A2
Your so-called “say in what the state does with taxes” is false. I wager you have not followed a single dollar of your taxes to any final destination. If you cannot know where it goes, you cannot have a say in where it goes. All you’ve done is hinged your servile hopes on the promises of politicians and bureaucrats, pretending that selecting from a rogues gallery of state careerists amounts to having a say in government. — NOS4A2
There is no alternative to present.
— NOS4A2
Build your own road and use that. — Isaac
you're dealing with a person who voted for Donald Trump.
Donald Trump. This is the level of intellect here. So don't be disappointed if you get exactly no where. — Xtrix
You've still not provided any grounds on which the money is the property of the tax-payer. I'll ask again, on what grounds is the pre-tax wage your property?
Yeah, I've actually had this exact conversation with @NOS4A2 before. we reached...https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/509272...then Nos walked away unable to defend his position.
I already did. It was the agreed-upon wage for the labor I provide. — NOS4A2
On what grounds is it the state’s property? — NOS4A2
Force and confiscation aren’t legitimate forms of acquiring property for me, so reiterating that the state claims a right, therefor it has the right, to the fruits of my labor isn’t good enough for me. — NOS4A2
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