Society benefits from innovation whether or not income stemming from that innovation are taxed.
Agreed. Taxes are not society's benefit from innovation, they are the means to recoup the cost of the infrastructure supporting the innovation and of continuing to support future innovation and opportunities for success.
Obviously that's how it works. But is that how it should work?
I absolutely agree the current system has much room for improvement.
Currently in the US, the way the legal system is set up, your system stated in the first quote above is forced down my throat whether or not I'm business savvy or anything else. I cannot start my own company based on a wonderfully innovative idea because, in addition to needing the capital to build my invention, I need an additional $30k or so to patent it, then a legal team to enforce it. "Society" (read: government) has erected barriers to innovation which are at least equal in magnitude to the benefits rendered by any infrastructure.
It seems to me you have it backwards. You are not required to use society's system. You are perfectly free to start a business based on your innovative idea without the financial overhead of patenting it and hiring a legal team. If you do, however, your competitors will immediately steal your idea (if it's good) and likely use their deep pockets to drive you out of business. Society offers the means for you to protect your innovation, at least in theory, by providing patent and legal systems. This protection isn't a barrier, it's a shield.
There are two ways over or around these obstacles: find a venture capitalist who will pay for all of this crap, then take most of the rewards, or join a company large enough to cover the costs, then turn over even more of the proceeds to said company. Or, a third way: start by being independently wealthy. All of these cater to those who already have large amounts of wealth accumulated and present a barrier to anyone who might be otherwise able to make a chunk of change for innovating, let alone the added time required to do all of these things unrelated to innovation. In other words, the way things are now sucks and simply creates an aristocracy - why would you want to perpetuate that?
I don't, but what's the alternative? I see society adding value by offering you IP and property protection. You could hire your own army of enforcers to go after anyone who infringes your idea, but that seems even more expensive ... and doomed to fail when you're challenging someone with deeper pockets.
Society provides a level playing field with protections to allow individuals and small businesses to compete with the rich and powerful mega-corps ... in theory. This obviously is imperfect in practice, but it seems to me it's better than nothing at all. In a truly free and unregulated market, small innovators will be crushed on sight. What would you propose as an alternative?
You are still treating individuals as an "investment." This is slavery because when you buy or sell a stock to make money on your investment, the stock doesn't have to give you a part of the wealth it created. A real investor who enables innovation, such as a venture capitalist, sees the potential for innovation and gives money to support that innovation. Society renders a service (providing infrastructure), which the innovator has already paid for with his taxes. Selling a service is not the same thing as investing capital. If you are prepared to argue that the role of government is not to provide a service but to invest in individuals, then I'm prepared to argue that you're wrong. You have created a false model of what government should be. I say that it's false based on the Declaration of Independence, which states what government should be - a protector of rights and a provider of services for the general welfare, not an investor.
To be clear, I'm not saying that it's all the Constitutional role of government. I'm saying that's the reality of the United States today. The fact is Americans have this incredible "infrastructure" and it has been largely paid for by the government. It is therefore reasonable and appropriate for the government to pay for that infrastructure by collecting income taxes from those who's success has been supported by that infrastructure.
I agree it's absolutely legitimate to consider changes. To the extent that those changes reduce government's cost of supporting success, taxes should then be reduced. Unfortunately, given that the federal government is already running a crushing deficit, there is no direct correlation between government costs and taxation.
It's not my job to make sure I'm meeting society's needs any more than it is society's job to make sure it is meeting my needs. The job of society's constituent individuals is to ensure that their own needs are met. The job of government is to make sure I don't get in the way of your needs being met by infringing on your rights to life, liberty, or property. The job of society is to bring people together so that they can interact and make sure their needs are met.
IIRC, I was addressing your suggestion that serving you own interests was in society's best interest. I was pointing out that this is not necessarily true.
What's wrong with paying for services as I use them? This works in every sector of private business and is how things get done. Your method is simply allowing the seller to bill me an arbitrary amount at a later date rather than an agreed-upon price. If I drive 50 miles on a toll road and it is stated that the toll is 10 cents/mile, then I'll owe $5 when I'm done. In your system, I would drive down the road without knowing what the toll would be. Then, when I get to the end, the guy manning the booth can ask me for however much he wants and I have to pay it or be imprisoned. You don't see it this way because you are stuck in the model that says I belong to society as its investment. This is slavery.
And I have no problem doing that, as long as you can tell me what my dues are. Instead, you keep saying that I owe an undefined amount for undefined services because those services are not services - they're an investment. Thus, I am your investment property and you own me. That is slavery.
Re. "slavery" -- hyperbole noted, but it's nonsense. It's the dues you pay for living here. You have the right to opt out of your "slavery" by leaving. By choosing to remain, you have accepted the terms of living here including taxation. If you don't like those terms, you can lobby your elected representatives to change them.
Re. knowing the amount of those dues in advance -- the IRS publishes the formulas and rules that tell you what your dues will be based on a wide variety of criteria. They are subject to change, of course, but its rare for dramatic changes to occur without advance notice. If you don't feel qualified to calculate your dues in advance based on your current circumstances, there are plenty of financial advisers for hire who can.
Here I agree with you. The difference between us seems to be that you see the way things are now as the way things will always be, whereas I see things the way they are now and see how they should be in the future.
Not really. I accept that I need to pay for the way things are today while simultaneously seeking to improve them in the future.