holy king
Deity
That implies some self-discipline and purpose; "I bagsy everything I see" doesn't.
roma abramovich does not approve.
That implies some self-discipline and purpose; "I bagsy everything I see" doesn't.
Some people might see that threat of violence by the state as a form of violence in itself.
Even though they only managed to get to a position of being regarded as a legitimate political group through the use of violence in the first place?
Violence is good so long as you behave like a state. Got it. You are coherent, at least.
If you look at some of the biggest proponents of the tax is theft reasoning on this site, you will see why I agree with you.You'd get different poll results if you actually polled taxpayers and not a bunch of life slackers lurking in the basement of their parents house.
Revisiting this thread, in all seriousness, I can't see any logical framework from which to say taxation is NOT theft. I still think we need some of it, but I don't see how you could possibly argue that taking someone's money for "Society" is not theft.
Nobody is forcing me to be part of a nation. So no.
Uh, yeah you kind of are. Just by being in the government's borders you are considered to be "Part of the nation" and so have to pay taxes, and rather ridiculous tax rates as well (When you count income taxes, sales taxes, property taxes, other taxes, it adds up...)
This "Nation" crap is really getting old. Just accept what you are doing for what you are doing. We're accepting a minimal amount of theft for an absolutely necessary purpose. Or a lot of theft, as the case may be![]()
Yeah dude but nobody is forcing you to be part of those borders. Just like nobody is forcing you to be part of a corporation or work at a certain place. The nation is just a bigger corporation, sell your share for as much as you bought it (0) and get out.
(Other political affiliations, read organization, community, religious institution instead of corporations)!
Yes, it's a payment for society.. much like $2 is payment for a 2L bottle of soda.
You pay and get something in return. Not theft.
Bit of a silly argument this, really.
The thing is though, to "Leave" a nation you also have to leave your private property behind. So its still, ultimately, a form of theft.
If you say that the deal you get from society is far, far better than what you give up from taxes, at least to a certain point this holds true. I'd say from a minarchist position this is pretty much true for everybody, while, as you expand the government more and more, some people will inevitably be getting jipped. If I stole a dollar from you and gave you the keys to a brand new Ferrari, I highly doubt you'd complain too much. But its still fundamentally theft. That said, I don't especially care about that theoretical point, in the cases like the ones above when the deal is fundamentally a good one.
I object when the deal becomes a bad one for me, like stealing my ferrari and giving me a dollar.
Like, for instance, when the US intervenes in foreign wars, or gives out foreign aid (I don't personally object as much to the latter due to my personal desire to help people out, but I'd rather that be my choice) I'm not getting anything for the money I'm being forced to spend. So not only is it theft, its not even justifiable because I'm not getting a better deal out of it.
Same with social security as we have it now. I should have a private account, for me, with the money I put in. Instead, I'm not only paying into the social security of two generations before I was born, I'm ALSO paying into whatever other crap programs the government decides to loan themselves money for. And who's telling when they'll pay it back?
Or the drug war? I'm not getting anything for my money there as well.
Sir. I am sure that you are allowed to carry your house on your back if you are strong enough! Otherwise there are house-moving companies...sigh. And the land you can sell.
Don't go into the circle again. I just took you out of it, took you out of the box. Try to think about it for a bit.
Second of all you shouldn't be using the word theft in this context at all. Theft is the unlawful seizure of W/E. As you are subject to the laws of the nation you participate in it is obviously not theft. How ever immoral you may consider it to be.
I'll give you an example. In Sweden we have in our nation decided that all land is free for all to walk upon - you can not claim this exclusive right on the land within our borders. Thusly nobody can claim that someone is "stealing" it when using it in a non-harmful manner. Even if you may claim it to be wrong, immoral or unnecessary. Semantics can be fun, they are sometimes enlightening.
The difference is that you can't hold a gun to my head and say "Buy this soda, pay $2, and enjoy the benefits." If you were to do so, that you do actually give me the soda doesn't mean you didn't steal the $2 from me.
Voluntary contractual agreeements =/= extortion and theft.
Yes, I am a pacifist. I don't think we get exemptions for violence just because we have a social structure to do it for us.Excuse me asking, ParkCungHee - are you a pacifist? It's just not terribly clear what your position is. I'm really just guessing.
If you follow the logic of "if I can do it, it's a right, if I can't do it, it's not a right" through though, the state doesn't deprive people of the right to use violence and coersion. I'm in my house with one other person there. They trust me intimately, and I have a heavy tool on my desk. Anytime I like I could go over and bludgeon their brains out.trader/warrior said:Same way people would keep killing each other in the absence of the state, without anyone to enforce rights, surely I would have the right to do whatever the hell I want including killing and coercion untill somebody with more power or more violent means decide to stop me. So it seems to me you are supporting peoples rights to do precisely what you accuse Cutlass of supporting.
Yes, of course! My position is not that the state is some special, particular evil with a unique metaphysical position, but precisely that is is not. That injustice and immorality are unacceptable no matter what form they take.Is injustice and immorality Ok as long as you are not involved with it? Do you not even feel a slight connection to such events through humanity and the global community? Should you not be fighting fighting all such instances rather than focusing entirely on the state?
It is convenient for me to live outside of international waters. I do not see why others have a superior moral claim that I must bear the costs of leaving because I object to their coercion.Don't you also live within the state out of the convenience of not having to live outside the law or in international waters or whatever?
Is that not how things already work? As far as I can make out of that wall of text, you are falling back on the argument that "if we did not have a government, the largest armed force would be able to do whatever it wishes." But isn't that a description of the society we already live in?Is this not precisely how it would work in a "stateless" society?
So you're fundamentally okay with theft, provided that it can be somehow justified? If so, through what logic are you arriving at these "justifications"? if not, then how can you advocate for any degree of taxation whatsoever?Revisiting this thread, in all seriousness, I can't see any logical framework from which to say taxation is NOT theft. I still think we need some of it, but I don't see how you could possibly argue that taking someone's money for "Society" is not theft.
Are you allowed to refuse the transaction?Yes, it's a payment for society.. much like $2 is payment for a 2L bottle of soda.
You pay and get something in return. Not theft.
Bit of a silly argument this, really.
So you're fundamentally okay with theft, provided that it can be somehow justified? If so, through what logic are you arriving at these "justifications"? if not, then how can you advocate for any degree of taxation whatsoever?