zlacker

[parent] [thread] 59 comments
1. zucked+(OP)[view] [source] 2021-07-02 18:23:45
Total off-topic: out of curiosity, what levers does she think are moral to pull to encourage folks to pay taxes?
replies(4): >>throwa+j7 >>intric+W9 >>Wincys+9e >>little+Fp
2. throwa+j7[view] [source] 2021-07-02 19:00:36
>>zucked+(OP)
Fee for service like any other consumer transaction.
3. intric+W9[view] [source] 2021-07-02 19:13:34
>>zucked+(OP)
I'd say why government focuses on the weak when enforcing taxes and doesn't go after the rich and their notoriously tax avoiding multinational organisations?
replies(1): >>Wincys+le
4. Wincys+9e[view] [source] 2021-07-02 19:34:31
>>zucked+(OP)
Same as what happens when you don't pay your utility bills, your services stop.
replies(5): >>jdlsho+of >>Zhenya+dh >>ALittl+ph >>kchoud+2i >>godels+8q
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5. Wincys+le[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 19:35:30
>>intric+W9
Yes, property and sales taxes are regressive taxes. But all taxes should be voluntary because the government doesn't own you or your property.
replies(1): >>tables+rH
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6. jdlsho+of[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 19:41:59
>>Wincys+9e
How do you enforce that? Taxes pay for roads, parks, local goverment offices, etc. Is somebody who is behind on taxes prohibited from using public roads? Are they prohibited from entering the courthouse?
replies(4): >>bena+Wi >>throwa+Hl >>FreeSp+4n >>tables+AE
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7. Zhenya+dh[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 19:53:54
>>Wincys+9e
What's just as interesting to the naysayers:

In California: why do people pay different (sometimes significantly) amount of taxes on identical houses next door to each other but receive the same level of service just based on WHEN and HOW MUCH they paid for the property?

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8. ALittl+ph[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 19:54:52
>>Wincys+9e
Would the police stop taking my calls?
replies(2): >>adamre+Fk >>Wincys+zL
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9. kchoud+2i[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 19:57:27
>>Wincys+9e
I like this.

* Remove access to healthcare

* Revoke driver's licenses

* Remove access to courts

I agree that while the government doesn't own you, you still operate inside the collective and have obligations towards it.

Of course, this is no reason for facebook to mark you as an extremist.

replies(4): >>Wincys+fj >>vkou+ck >>throwa+Bk >>godels+Ap
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10. bena+Wi[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 20:01:06
>>jdlsho+of
You know how they want that enforced. They don't.

She's talking about making taxation voluntary.

Which seems on the wrong side of crackpot to me.

Of course anyone who goes on and on about "the threat of violence" when talking about taxes is not going to discuss the issue in good faith. "Building libraries by gunpoint" is a thought terminating cliche. They're a brand of libertarian that elevates the very concept of being required to do something they don't want to as violence against them.

They are exhausting to deal with.

Taxes are the dues you pay to live in the community you stay.

There's a lot the government should stay out of, but there's also a lot the government should be doing as well. And as long as the government should be doing things, it'll need money to do those things.

replies(1): >>throwa+Nk
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11. Wincys+fj[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 20:02:28
>>kchoud+2i
Half the American population uses private health insurance, but yes. It is better to lose services than to go to jail or have your home confiscated for not paying taxes. And some people can choose to join mutual aid societies that provide these services on a voluntary bases.
replies(1): >>kchoud+Vk
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12. vkou+ck[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 20:06:51
>>kchoud+2i
I like this, as well. Remove access to the justice system. If you aren't participating in society, there is no reason for society to lift a finger to protect you from theft, assault, fraud, deportation, etc. Subject them to the same entry restrictions as anyone else crossing a border into a country.

Sovereign citizens will very quickly discover that participating in society provides them with a lot of value.

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13. throwa+Bk[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 20:09:07
>>kchoud+2i
Do they lose access to police protection as well? Would it be possible for someone else to forcibly take that house?
replies(1): >>kchoud+3m
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14. adamre+Fk[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 20:09:20
>>ALittl+ph
Another twist: if I pay more in taxes, would the police listen to me more? Can I use the police more to my benefit against those that pay less in taxes?
replies(1): >>Turing+8m
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15. throwa+Nk[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 20:10:12
>>bena+Wi
So don't pay your taxes and refuse to leave your property. Sooner or later, men with guns will show up.
replies(1): >>bena+6o
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16. kchoud+Vk[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 20:10:26
>>Wincys+fj
If you want to opt out of taxes, the legal remedy you are seeking is renunciation.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statelessness#United_States

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17. throwa+Hl[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 20:13:59
>>jdlsho+of
Roads and other services can be paid for by their users, in driver license fees and vehicle registration fees. If you don't use the roads, you don't pay those fees. Sure, you will pay them indirectly if you have to have other people drive you around or deliver things, but it's still all voluntary.
replies(1): >>jdlsho+hr
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18. kchoud+3m[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 20:15:38
>>throwa+Bk
Naturally: policing is after all a state sponsored service.
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19. Turing+8m[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 20:15:57
>>adamre+Fk
> if I pay more in taxes, would the police listen to me more?

I'm pretty sure that's already the case, though it's typically not explicitly stated.

Crimes in expensive neighborhoods often get a lot more police attention than crimes in the ghetto.

replies(2): >>FreeSp+co >>adamre+xo
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20. FreeSp+4n[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 20:19:57
>>jdlsho+of
We don't tax tourists to use any of those services. In most jurisdictions public roads are funded through fuel and registration levies.
replies(2): >>jdlsho+9s >>krapp+jE
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21. bena+6o[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 20:26:18
>>throwa+Nk
Don't pay your mortgage/rent and that will also happen.

Because that's what happens when owe money that you don't pay.

You chose where to live when you bought that property. That choosing is an implicit agreement with the government of that area to pay them taxes in exchange for certain services (schools, roads, police, fire, etc). And you are part of that choice whenever elections come up. Sure, you may vote 'No' on every tax increase, but that doesn't exempt you. Because, once again, as part of the agreement you implicitly made, you agreed to abide by the decision of the group in order to live in the area.

replies(2): >>Animal+bt >>danthe+9A
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22. FreeSp+co[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 20:27:02
>>Turing+8m
Most residents of wealthy neighbourhoods would disagree, e.g. the wealthiest district of Atlanta is actively seeking secession: https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/buckhead-secession-a...
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23. adamre+xo[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 20:28:54
>>Turing+8m
I thought of this, too. It exists in a class/geographical system, but not at the individual level.
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24. godels+Ap[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 20:35:21
>>kchoud+2i
> Remove access to healthcare

US doesn't have single payer. You pay for it out of pocket (if it comes from your employer, well you're exchanging service for service instead of service for money).

> Remove access to courts

This would be unconstitutional. In the US you are entitled to a fair trial even if you aren't a citizen.

25. little+Fp[view] [source] 2021-07-02 20:36:09
>>zucked+(OP)
I also wonder what she thinks about people not paying their rents to their landlords.
replies(1): >>nindal+Uz
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26. godels+8q[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 20:38:55
>>Wincys+9e
> your services stop.

What services? Some of these are inalienable rights. Citizen or not.

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27. jdlsho+hr[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 20:45:27
>>throwa+Hl
That’s a different argument. You’re arguing that all taxes should be replaced by service fees. It’s also a problematic argument, because it’s highly regressive, extremely annoying or intrusive in practice (do I swipe my credit card every time I step into a park or call the fire department? Do I carry a tracker that monitors my activities and automatically bills me?) and also doesn’t address the question of social services.

But that aside, WincysWife isn’t arguing for a change in how money is collected, but how non-payment is penalized. The statement was that you lose access to services. My question, which hasn’t been answered, is how that is enforced when so much that the government does isn’t a simple “service” that is provided to you directly.

(It may be tempting to respond with another non-answer, such as “the government shouldn’t do those things,” but again that’s dodging the question. The government does do those things, and I’m trying to get at a real-world answer, not a hypothetical.)

replies(2): >>tables+771 >>Wincys+C91
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28. jdlsho+9s[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 20:50:55
>>FreeSp+4n
On the contrary, many jurisdictions have taxes that are directed at tourists/travelers. Usually collected through lodging taxes.
replies(1): >>FreeSp+4u
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29. Animal+bt[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 20:58:10
>>bena+6o
> Because that's what happens when owe money that you don't pay.

When you owe money that you don't pay, and you refuse the normal first consequence (eviction).

replies(1): >>bena+ox
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30. FreeSp+4u[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 21:02:57
>>jdlsho+9s
The vast majority of tourist taxes are minimal ($5-$50) and have no relation to duration (arrival/departure taxes).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tourist_tax

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31. bena+ox[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 21:19:39
>>Animal+bt
That applies to what the person I responded to as well. So my statement still is fine within that context.

Taxes aren't some special category of owed money that carries with it a unique consequence.

replies(1): >>Wincys+gc1
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32. nindal+Uz[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 21:32:56
>>little+Fp
Seems to me that all private transactions are contracts. Contracts are meaningless unless they can be enforced. I’m not aware of any practical mechanism to enforce contracts other than the threat of state violence. Ostracising people who break contracts might work in a small community but wouldn’t scale to a large one.

My understanding is that HN has no shortage of libertarians. Maybe one of them could tell us if there’s an alternate way to enforce contracts.

replies(1): >>little+zF
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33. danthe+9A[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 21:34:10
>>bena+6o
Don't pay off the mob, and they show up because that what happens when you owe money that you don't pay.
replies(1): >>bena+UA
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34. bena+UA[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 21:38:15
>>danthe+9A
Equating the government with the mob and taxes with extortion are also thought terminating cliches.

Do you ever wonder why you have to make such hyperbolic analogies to even come close to a point?

replies(1): >>danthe+DD
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35. danthe+DD[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 21:55:12
>>bena+UA
There are very few interactions where someone comes up to you without your consent and demands money at the threat of force. If anyone other than the government tries to do that we'd call it theft.

Look at how the Amish were able to opt out of social security.

replies(1): >>jdlsho+JJ
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36. krapp+jE[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 21:59:49
>>FreeSp+4n
We more than make up for the cost of tourists using public services with the money they spend on tourism. Also they pay sales tax where that's applicable.
replies(1): >>FreeSp+VF
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37. tables+AE[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 22:01:22
>>jdlsho+of
> How do you enforce that? Taxes pay for roads, parks, local goverment offices, etc. Is somebody who is behind on taxes prohibited from using public roads? Are they prohibited from entering the courthouse?

Those people are usually against public roads. Utopia is a toll road, I guess.

They have the same problem as many people who are more "against" something than for anything: in their focused zeal to stop that one thing they oppose, they propose a whole lot of other things that are actually worse or don't make sense. They also tend to have a hard time seeing that because they're so transfixed by the thing they hate that they're blinded.

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38. little+zF[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 22:07:12
>>nindal+Uz
AFAIK the libertarian view on this topic is pretty clear. Violating a contract is violating the “Non aggression principle” and the landlord is considered as acting in self-defense.
replies(1): >>nindal+Hr1
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39. FreeSp+VF[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 22:09:25
>>krapp+jE
Just as we more than make up for the cost of residents using public services with the money they spend on living costs.
replies(1): >>krapp+gI
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40. tables+rH[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 22:21:31
>>Wincys+le
> But all taxes should be voluntary because the government doesn't own you or your property.

Yeah, it doesn't own it: the relationship is more fundamental than that. Government (and its primitive antecedents) is the system that enables you to own property in the first place, and taxes (or their equivalents) are the price of admission to that system.

I wouldn't mind making taxes voluntary if it also meant surrendering property and other rights (though of course to be just that surrender could only happen after a formal renunciation of the obligation, not just a failure to pay). So you could choose to not pay taxes, but then all your property would become legally abandoned and you'd lose the protection of the law.

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41. krapp+gI[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 22:27:38
>>FreeSp+VF
The money residents spend on living costs is spent and circulates within the local economy, it doesn't go to the government (excepting sales tax, maybe.) How would a government fund infrastructure and services with that?
replies(1): >>FreeSp+FK
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42. jdlsho+JJ[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 22:42:40
>>danthe+DD
I can’t agree. There are many interactions in which payment is expected, and, if not provided, you will be threatened with force. I.e., eating at a restaurant.

A lot of people decided, before you were born, that people living in your location would pay taxes. You or your parents chose for you to be subject to those rules when you moved there or were born. By continuing to live there, you subjected yourself to those rules. If you don’t agree, you can move somewhere else. However, part of those rules means you may have to give up something you value in exchange—citizenship, the right to vote on the rules, property, exit taxes, etc.

Unfortunately for you, there is no desirable place on this planet that doesn’t follow this “our land, our rules” approach. Most of them are very picky about who can be citizens. Luckily for you, you’re one of the privileged few who gets to live in one of the good places. (I presume, since you’re commenting here.)

You call taxes theft. I call NOT paying taxes theft—taking from the common good we and generations before us have all worked to establish.

replies(1): >>Wincys+9c1
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43. FreeSp+FK[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 22:51:20
>>krapp+gI
Personal income taxes are only a recent phenomena, introduced to bolster war efforts. Nothing prevents a nation funding itself through corporate and consumption taxes alone.
replies(1): >>krapp+UN
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44. Wincys+zL[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 22:59:24
>>ALittl+ph
They could stop taking your calls, but that's better than being thrown in jail or having your home confiscated for not paying taxes. And also, those who have an issue with corruption in their local police department could choose to not pay taxes that support the cops and instead hire a private security firm, or form a local gun group.
replies(1): >>ALittl+YL
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45. ALittl+YL[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 23:03:28
>>Wincys+zL
If the police stop talking my calls, what is to stop the local tax man from beating me up and taking all of my stuff as taxes? Do I still get the protection of the courts and laws?

Also: Do people who don't pay taxes, e.g. homeless, unemployed, destitute, not get the benefits of police protection?

replies(1): >>Wincys+YP4
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46. krapp+UN[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-02 23:22:25
>>FreeSp+FK
But we're discussing voluntary taxation here - corporations (already masters at tax avoidance under coercive taxation) would never opt in, nor would consumers volunteer to pay more for goods and services when they could simply pay less.

And since neither involves paying directly for a government service, there's nothing the government could deny in the absence of payment.

replies(2): >>FreeSp+X41 >>Wincys+lb1
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47. FreeSp+X41[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-03 03:22:37
>>krapp+UN
> But we're discussing voluntary taxation here

Income taxes are no more voluntary than consumption taxes.

> corporations (already masters at tax avoidance under coercive taxation) would never opt in

130 countries have already backed a global corporation tax rate.

> nor would consumers volunteer to pay more for goods and services when they could simply pay less.

They already do. A gallon of gas is $1.8 in Malaysia, $3.5 in America, and over $8 in the Netherlands.

> And since neither involves paying directly for a government service, there's nothing the government could deny in the absence of payment.

The good/service one is purchasing is the incentive itself.

replies(1): >>krapp+s81
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48. tables+771[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-03 03:57:08
>>jdlsho+hr
> It’s also a problematic argument, because it’s highly regressive, extremely annoying or intrusive in practice (do I swipe my credit card every time I step into a park or call the fire department?

It's a parody of libertarianism, but that's exactly how Ferengi society worked in Star Trek, e.g. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bVa8NaYTMIQ, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fNCX6InQ3ZQ. There was one five minute scene I remember as a kid where Quark literally was dropping money in a box a couple times a minute to get his questions answered somewhere.

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49. krapp+s81[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-03 04:21:43
>>FreeSp+X41
>Income taxes are no more voluntary than consumption taxes.

Yes, that was my point. Replacing income taxes with corporate and consumption taxes in a voluntary taxation system doesn't make sense, as there's no incentive to volunteer to pay any of that.

>130 countries have already backed a global corporation tax rate.

130 governments may have backed a global corporation tax rate, but that's still coercion of taxes by threat of violence. No corporations have voluntarily agreed to anything of the sort.

>A gallon of gas is $1.8 in Malaysia, $3.5 in America, and over $8 in the Netherlands.

Those prices are set by gas companies and taxation, consumers didn't agree to those prices, and they certainly didn't agree to the taxes. I never signed a contract agreeing to gas for $3.50 a gallon.

>The good/service one is purchasing is the incentive itself.

But the government isn't providing either, a private business is. And as the tax is voluntary, that business has no incentive to deny customers who opt out because those taxes doesn't affect revenue. Rather, any business that would deny service for that reason would find itself quickly devoid of customers.

Give people a choice, and they'll only pay for what benefits them personally. People won't pay for schools to educate other people's children, or schools that teach a curriculum with which they disagree. They won't pay for libraries whose books they don't read, or for parks, because homeless people hang out there. People will just buy smoke detectors and not fund the fire department. People won't fund the police, they'll just buy insurance or keep a gun under their pillow. They won't pay to fix the roads unless they're inconvenienced by a pothole. And welfare and other social programs would just vanish altogether. Most people would refuse to pay any taxes at all to a government run by a political party they didn't vote for.

There's a reason taxes are collected at the point of a gun - you can't trust public altruism to fund a modern state.

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50. Wincys+C91[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-03 04:37:08
>>jdlsho+hr
I'm trying to reply but the website makes me wait between comments, probably because I have a new account.

There are lots of ways to raise money that don't involve throwing people in jail or confiscating their property for not paying. Pay per service is one, but not the only one. One should be able to cancel their subscription to government services and not have to pay. The Amish already do this for payroll taxes, do they are exempt because they have a mutual aid society that takes care of their medical and retirement needs.

We already live under a regressive tax system, especially for local governments which rely on sales and property taxes. Our current tax system is not convenient, and we pay a lot for poor service.

It would be silly to make a fuss over someone using a park if they don't pay taxes, but it could be dealt with like any other trespassing. My local park is paid for by the HOA, not the government, and it's not that big of a deal. We already have a system in place for paying for the roads. We pay the gas tax, and we have a system where you have to have a driver's license and insurance, and in many places you have to pay property taxes and/or sales tax on your car, and pay registration fees. It would be a simple matter to suspend someone's license for not paying taxes. Or you could decide to allow non-tax-payers to drive as long as they pay the gas tax when they fuel up.

I'm not saying that the government shouldn't necessarily do those things, but people should have the option to get their needs met by different organizations and not have to pay if they wish. For social needs like healthcare, education, welfare, that is very easy to do, just like the Amish do. Subscribe to a different organization that takes care of those things, and they will probably have a tithe or fee requirement, and rules, and that's fine as long as the person agrees to it. The only problem with the government system we have now is that we have no way of consenting or not consenting, and if we disobey, even if we are being peaceful and aren't violating anyone else's rights, we can be thrown in jail or have our property confiscated. It would really be quite simple to fix the flaw in the system. The only reason we haven't is because we're going off of a system made by people who were thinking outside of the box by rejecting monarchy. We then rejected slavery, gave rights to women, etc. We are still figuring out how to be moral.

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51. Wincys+lb1[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-03 05:10:23
>>krapp+UN
"Give people a choice, and they'll only pay for what benefits them personally." This isn't actually true, people pay to charities all the time. We used to have a robust system of mutual aid societies before the government squashed them. And if someone chooses to only pay for what benefits the personally, that's their right.

"People won't pay for schools to educate other people's children, or schools that teach a curriculum with which they disagree." People donate to schools and set up scholarships for the poor. But we expect parents to pay for the needs of their children for everything else, including daycare, feed, housing, etc. And if a parent can't afford the property taxes they will be made homeless. And why should someone be forced to pay for a curriculum they disagree with?

"They won't pay for libraries whose books they don't read" People set up little free libraries, no reason it couldn't be set up in a larger scale, all paid for voluntarily without taking people's homes if they don't pay. I would say housing is more of a need than a library. And everything is practically free online already. But a library could be a service built into your mutual aid society along with the school for your kids.

"or for parks, because homeless people hang out there." We pay a few bucks every time we go to the arboretum, and if we wanted to we could pay a yearly fee to become members. Our HOA pays for the local park. No reason to steal people's houses to pay for a park, creating homeless people. Why am I paying so much money in taxes if society isn't even going to take care of homeless people? I would want my tax dollars to go to that before a park or a library!

"People will just buy smoke detectors and not fund the fire department." Well, I hope we all have fire detectors. There's no reason that fire protection can't be bundled in with your homeowner's insurance, which is required by your mortgage holder. The city has no liability if the house burns down and the fire department fails to save it. Let the homeowner's insurance, which carries the liability, hire the fire fighters.

"People won't fund the police, they'll just buy insurance or keep a gun under their pillow." The Parkland school shooting victims would tell you that the cops didn't help them, and the court ruled that the police had no obligation to protect those children, and it was fine for them to wait outside while they knew children were being shot. If you want to pay for police protection that's fine, but if someone wants to hire a private security firm, (which could be bundled in with homeowner's insurance like fire protection), or own a gun, or organize a local gun club, or whatever, that's fine. It would keep the local police department honest if they knew that if people didn't like their service they would stop paying.

"They won't pay to fix the roads unless they're inconvenienced by a pothole." In some places the government is terrible at fixing potholes and Domino's Pizza is doing it. But this should be paid for by the gas tax as I explained in detail in a different comment to someone else. If you choose not to drive, and choose not to pay for the roads, you shouldn't have your house taken, you just shouldn't be allowed to drive on the roads.

"And welfare and other social programs would just vanish altogether." Well this just isn't true at all. We used to have mutual aid societies that worked really well. But then the government put regulations on them and started government programs that did many of the same things like social security, medicare, medicaid, unemployment insurance, etc. We still have insurance for many things the government doesn't cover like life insurance, health insurance, disability insurance, etc. And if people do find themselves without a mutual aid society, or insurance to help them when someone thing happens there are people willing to help. We saw how people stepped up to work the food banks during the lock-down and there was a lot of need. Food stamps doesn't pay for much and there was still need and charity stepped in.

"Most people would refuse to pay any taxes at all to a government run by a political party they didn't vote for." That sounds great to me. People wouldn't have to fight anymore. I have neighbors that are Catholic, Muslim, Buddhist, Protestant, Jewish, Mormon, and we don't fight about it. We can all go to our place of worship, tithe or give money to whatever organization we want, follow whatever rules, etc. But when it comes to government policy, like what will the taught in the schools, then it becomes a fight. We had a school board meeting be done virtually last minute because the school board claimed they were afraid for their safety because so many angry parents were showing up. If we are getting to the point where we can't even have a school board meeting without fear of violence, it's time to try freedom.

"There's a reason taxes are collected at the point of a gun - you can't trust public altruism to fund a modern state." Yes, the reason is because this is the way the King of England did it, so we did it, and we're still doing it, even though it's not right. It's not like anyone has seriously considered it, tried it, found it lacking and decided to go back to the old way. That's why these ideas sound so foreign to you and you have so many questions. Few have ever seriously considered this before.

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52. Wincys+9c1[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-03 05:21:44
>>jdlsho+JJ
A system like that could work if you are actually presented with the social contract when you turn 18 and you can choose to sign it or not. I never consented and my ancestors can't consent for me. I'm glad you are acknowledging that the government owns all the land and we are merely renters and they can increase the price every year however they want. But that still doesn't explain why the government can throw us into jail for doing things like not paying income tax. Surely if the problem is that we aren't paying the bill we should be allowed to leave the country, but we are told we aren't allowed to leave the country. So the government claims the right to own us. We never consented, we have no way to express that we do not consent, they own all of our property, and own our bodies, and our only option is the leave the country which is very difficult. What great benefit are we getting from all this? To live in a 1st world country? But the reason 3rd world countries are terrible is because they violate the rights of their citizens even more than 1st world countries do. Well managed countries that give their people freedom quickly develop and become nice places to live. And this seems like a good deal to you? You're satisfied that we have reached the peak of human flourishing and can not be improved upon any more?
replies(1): >>jdlsho+0f3
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53. Wincys+gc1[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-03 05:24:07
>>bena+ox
If you don't pay income taxes they might throw you in jail. No private debtor can do that.
replies(1): >>Animal+gM2
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54. nindal+Hr1[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-03 09:57:45
>>little+zF
And the landlord does what to the tenant who won’t pay? Threaten the tenant with a gun?

Or does she rely on the coercive power of the State? The State that maintains a monopoly on violence.

replies(1): >>little+rO1
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55. little+rO1[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-03 14:46:54
>>nindal+Hr1
Obviously, there's as many variants of libertarianism as there's libertarians, but AFAIK most of them agree that there should be no state.

I think threatening the tenant with a gun to get the money then kick him out of the flat is the way it should go for most libertarians. You'd appreciate the irony of this not being an aggression.

(there's a reason why libertarianism is almost only found in the US: it lays on the Far West myth a lot)

replies(2): >>nindal+qq3 >>alenti+CSq
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56. Animal+gM2[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-03 22:49:47
>>Wincys+gc1
If you don't pay your mortgage, and you refuse to leave, they might still throw you in jail. Ditto if you don't pay your car loan, and you try to keep them from taking the car.
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57. jdlsho+0f3[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-04 05:23:11
>>Wincys+9c1
I appreciate you taking the time to write thoughtful responses. I’m on mobile so I’ll be brief. (Edit: Hah! Apparently not.)

In a nutshell, I didn’t find your arguments convincing. You weren’t able to express how your initial idea (don’t take property from people who don’t pay taxes) would work. Instead, you made it “work” with another, grossly impractical idea that we replace taxes with service charges. Your rebuttal to my concerns about that idea (inconvenient, regressive) was that other things are also inconvenient and regressive, as if that somehow excuses an idea from being inconvenient and regressive. You could have at least tried to argue it would be less inconvenient and regressive.

The cherry on the cake, though, was your championing HOA dues. Not only does that show a profound “let them eat cake” lack of awareness and empathy for people who struggle to make ends meet, it’s functionally equivalent to a tax! It’s a fee paid by a community to support the common good of the community. And do you know what happens to people who don’t pay HOA dues? Go on, look it up.

Yeah, you’ll get sued and your house could get foreclosed.

Your HOA is a just like a small government. If you have kids and they inherit your house, they will be subject to its rules, just like you are subject to the rules of your country. If they don’t like those rules, they can move out, just like you can. They might take a loss, just like you might.

Anyway, again, I appreciate you making an account and engaging civilly on this. I can’t imagine we’ll ever agree, so I’ll let you have the last word.

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58. nindal+qq3[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-04 08:30:33
>>little+rO1
Thanks for the response. This is fascinating.
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59. Wincys+YP4[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-04 23:53:25
>>ALittl+YL
The police are the tax man. But we would still have self-defense so we would not have to submit to a thief. If you don't want to pay for the courts and the justice system then no, you would not be entitled to use that justice system.

It's the government that makes the rules, they decide to make people homeless for not paying property taxes, and to charge sales tax on food, even for the destitute. In my city this winter a homeless person was bothered by the cops, they stole his blanket, and then he froze to death where they left him outside. Ask anyone who's been homeless if they fear the police or not.

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60. alenti+CSq[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-07-13 07:04:22
>>little+rO1
You're claiming most libertarians are anarchists. Do you have a source for that? As far as I know, it's far from true.
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